The business cycle: Equity sector investing | Fidelity (2024)

Understanding the cycle may suggest what to expect from your portfolio.

Fidelity Viewpoints

The business cycle: Equity sector investing | Fidelity (1)

Key takeaways

  • Economic conditions may affect investment performance.
  • Measures of economic activity have historically risen and fallen in a pattern known as the business cycle.
  • The business cycle contains 4 distinct phases: early, mid, late, and recession.
  • History offers guidance as to how various types of investments might perform during each phase.

Corporate earnings, interest rates, inflation, and other factors that change as economies expand and contract can affect the performance of investments. Understanding how various types of stocks, bonds, and other assets have historically performed at various points in the business cycle may help investors identify opportunities as well as risks.

Knowing the cycle may also help investors evaluate and adjust their exposure to different types of investments, as the likelihood of a shift from one phase of the cycle to the next increases. This business-cycle investing approach differs from both short- and long-term approaches because shifts from one phase of the business cycle to the next have historically taken place every few months or years on average.

Fidelity's Asset Allocation Research Team believes long-term historical average returns provide reasonable guidance for allocating assets in portfolios. However, over periods of 30 years or less, short-, intermediate-, and long-term factors may cause performance to deviate significantly from those averages, so analyzing factors and trends over shorter time periods can also be an effective approach to asset allocation.

Investment performance is driven by short-, intermediate-, and long-term factors

The business cycle: Equity sector investing | Fidelity (2)

For illustrative purposes only. Source: Fidelity Investments, Asset Allocation Research Team (AART).

Understanding business cycle phases

Every business cycle is different, but certain patterns have tended to repeat over time. Changes in the cycle reflect changes in corporate profits, credit availability, inventories of unsold goods, employment, and monetary policy. While unforeseen macroeconomic, political, or environmental events can sometimes disrupt a trend, these key indicators have historically provided a relatively reliable guide to recognizing the phases of the cycle. Bear in mind, though, that the length of each phase has varied widely.

A typical business cycle contains 4 distinct phases.

  • Early cycle: Generally, a sharp recovery from recession, as economic indicators such as gross domestic product and industrial production move from negative to positive and growth accelerates. More credit and low interest rates aid profit growth. Business inventories are low, and sales grow significantly.
  • Mid-cycle: Typically the longest phase with moderate growth. Economic activity gathers momentum, credit growth is strong, and profitability is healthy as monetary policy turns increasingly neutral.
  • Late cycle: Economic activity often reaches its peak, implying that growth remains positive but slowing. Rising inflation and a tight labor market may crimp profits and lead to higher interest rates.
  • Recession: Economic activity contracts, profits decline, and credit is scarce for businesses and consumers. Rates and business inventories gradually fall, setting the stage for recovery.

How investments have performed during each phase

Historically, different investments have taken turns delivering the highest returns as the economy has moved from one stage of the cycle to the next.* Due to structural shifts in the economy, technological innovation, regulatory changes, and other factors, no investment has behaved uniformly during every cycle. However, some types of stocks or bonds have consistently outperformed while others have underperformed, and knowing which is which can help investors set realistic expectations for returns. Recently, of course, COVID-19 has had a significant impact on investment performance.

Investments in the early cycle

Since 1962, stocks have delivered their highest performance during the early cycle, returning an average of more than 20% per year during this phase, which has lasted roughly one year on average. Stocks have typically benefited more than bonds and cash from the typical early cycle combination of low interest rates, the first signs of economic improvement, and the rebound in corporate earnings. Stocks that typically benefit most from low interest rates—such as those of companies in the consumer discretionary, financials, and real estateindustries—have outperformed. Consumer discretionary stocks have beaten the broader market in every early cycle since 1962.

Other industries that typically benefit from increased borrowing—including diversified financials, autos, and household durables—have also been strong early cycle performers. High-yield corporate bonds have also averaged strong annual gains during the early cycle.

Investments in the mid-cycle

As growth moderates, stocks that are sensitive to interest rates and economic activity have historically still performed well, but stocks of companies whose products are only in demand once the expansion has become more firmly entrenched have also delivered strong returns. Annual stock market performance has averaged roughly 14% during the mid-cycle. Bonds and cash have typically posted lower returns than stocks but the difference in returns among the 3 has historically not been as great as during the early cycle.

Information technology stocks have been the best performers during this phase, with semiconductor and hardware stocks typically picking up momentum once companies gain confidence in the recovery and begin to spend capital.

At nearly 3 years on average, the mid-cycle tends to be longer than any other phase and is also when most market corrections have taken place. No single category of investments has outperformed the broader market more than half of the time during the mid-cycle.

Investments in the late cycle

The late cycle has historically lasted an average of a year and a half, with the overall stock market averaging an annualized 5% return. As the recovery matures, inflation and interest rates typically rise, and investors shift away from economically sensitive assets. Higher inflation typically weighs on the performance of longer­ duration bonds. Energy and utility stocks have done well as inflation rises and demand continues. Cash has also tended to outperform bonds, but investors should be cautious about making changes to their asset allocation in pursuit of opportunities during the late cycle.

Investments in recession

Recession has historically been the shortest phase of the cycle, lasting slightly less than a year on average and stocks have performed poorly with a −15% average annual return. Interest rates typically fall during recessions, providing a tailwind for investment-grade corporate and government bonds, which have outperformed stocks in most recessions. As growth contracts, stocks that are sensitive to the health of the economy lose favor, and defensive ones perform better. These include stocks of companies that produce items such as toothpaste, electricity, and prescription drugs, which consumers are less likely to cut back on during a recession. In a contracting economy, these companies’ profits are likely to be more stable than those of others.

High dividends paid by utility and health care companies have helped their stocks during recessions. Interest-rate-sensitive stocks including those of financial, industrial, information technology, and real estate­ companies typically have underperformed the broader market during this phase.

While every business cycle is different, an approach to investment analysis that identifies key phases in the economy and looks at how investments have performed in those phases in the past may offer investors guidance as they set expectations for their portfolios.

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The business cycle: Equity sector investing | Fidelity (2024)

FAQs

What is the business cycle approach to equity sector investing? ›

The business cycle approach to sector investing uses probabilistic analysis to identify the shifting phases of the economy, which provides a framework for allocating to sectors according to the probability that they will outperform or underperform.

What is a business cycle answers? ›

An economic cycle, also known as a business cycle, refers to economic fluctuations between periods of expansion and contraction. Factors such as gross domestic product (GDP), interest rates, total employment, and consumer spending can help determine the current economic cycle stage.

What does investing in the business cycle mean in Quizlet? ›

Investing in the business cycle pertains to assessing the business cycle for personal and business investment. This means that investors use the relevant information on the past, current, and potential business cycle to evaluate and identify where they should buy and sell investments.

Where are we in the business cycle in 2024? ›

Second Quarter 2024

Many major economies, including the U.S., remained in the late-cycle expansion phase and registered hints of stabilization and even reacceleration in some areas.

What is the 4 stages of the business cycle? ›

The four fundamental stages of the business cycle are expansion, peak, contraction and trough.

What is the equity method of investing? ›

The equity method is a type of accounting used for intercorporate investments. It is used when the investor holds significant influence over the investee but does not exercise full control over it, as in the relationship between a parent company and its subsidiary.

What is the business cycle explained? ›

Business cycle: The fluctuating levels of economic activity in an economy over a period of time measured from the beginning of one recession to the beginning of the next. Contraction: A period when real GDP declines; a period of economic decline. Expansion: A period when real GDP increases; a period of economic growth.

What are business cycle responses? ›

The business cycle model shows the fluctuations in a nation's aggregate output and employment over time. The model shows the four phases an economy experiences over the long-run: expansion, peak, recession, and trough.

What is the business life cycle in simple words? ›

The business life cycle is the progression of a business in phases over time and is most commonly divided into five stages: launch, growth, shake-out, maturity, and decline. The cycle is shown on a graph with the horizontal axis as time and the vertical axis as dollars or various financial metrics.

What is a cycle in investing? ›

Market cycles are the period between the two latest highs or lows of a common benchmark, such as the S&P 500, highlighting a fund's performance through both an up and a down market.

What is a business of investing? ›

An investment company is a specialized business that is engaged in the business of investing pooled capital into financial securities. Investment companies can be privately or publicly owned, and they engage in the management, sale, and marketing of investment products to the public.

What is investing business activity? ›

In accounting, investing activities refers to the purchase and sale of long-term assets and other business investments within a specific reporting period. Investing activities are, in fact, one of the main categories of cash activities that your business would be reporting on its cash flow statement.

Where are we in the business cycle? ›

Conventional wisdom suggests that today we are in the late stage of the business cycle, driven by extended market rallies, peak employment, and signs of inflationary pressure, typical late-cycle indicators.

What country has the best economy? ›

The United States upholds its status as the major global economy and richest country, steadfastly preserving its pinnacle position from 1960 to 2023. Its economy boasts remarkable diversity, propelled by important sectors, including services, manufacturing, finance, and technology.

Is the US economy good right now? ›

Americans' average hourly earnings are 22% higher than before the pandemic, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data. Though wage increases have been slowing, they're rising at a faster rate than prices. That's good news for consumers, since it means their income is stretching further.

What is the equity investment approach? ›

The fundamental active investment process includes the following steps: define the investment universe; prescreen the universe; understand the industry and business; forecast the company's financial performance; convert forecasts into a target price; construct the portfolio with the desired risk profile; and rebalance ...

What is the equity market life cycle? ›

The four stages of a stock market cycle include accumulation, markup, distribution, and markdown. Let's talk more about each cycle.

What is the sector approach to investing? ›

Sector investing can help investors enhance diversification or invest opportunistically. By investing in multiple sectors across the equity market, investors can help protect against the risk of any one sector lagging in the broader stock market.

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