The NZX50 has bounced back quickly despite signs the economy is in for a rough ride ahead. Photo / Supplied
Sharemarket watchers are scratching their heads over the disconnect between the real economy and the recent bounce in share prices.
Economists are predicting the worst is yet to come, with New Zealand's unemployment level expected to rise to 9 or 10 per cent from record lows of 4 per cent,and business failures aplenty.
But the NZX/S&P50 is now just under 8 per cent down from where it started trading in January, around the same point it was in September/October last year.
After losing 14.8 per cent in the March quarter the market has bounced back strongly since its March 23 low point - hit just before New Zealand entered its strict level 4 lockdown.
Central banks lowering cash rates and "printing money" through quantitative easing is being seen as a backstop for the market. Brown said another reason was the lack of alternatives for investors looking for a return on their money.
"If you think of cash rates globally, there is just no attraction, at the end of the day people need a return of some form."
The problem is that company earnings forecasts are likely to be out of date or unknown in many cases, and dividend payouts are likely to be cut or suspended.
"There is a great level of uncertainty. But for certain, I think the trajectory for earnings and dividends has to be lower."
Sam Dickie, senior portfolio manager at Fisher Funds, says the S&P500 fell 36 per cent from its all-time high to its recent low point on March 23 but is now just 13 per cent below that high point.
Dickie says that until recently the rally was led by big high-growth tech companies Apple, Alphabet, Facebook, Microsoft and Amazon, and defensive stocks such as Berkshire Hathaway and Johnson & Johnson.
"From the 23 March bottom until 21 April, that rally was led by high-quality growth companies and defensives. In other words, some of the largest companies in the S&P500 and the world.
"So up until that date, the S&P500 was not telling us that the economy is fine and that corporate earnings will be fine. Rather, it was telling us that the largest companies in the world will trade through this crisis just fine and in fact will likely take market share off smaller, weaker competitors."
But from April 21, said Dickie, the rally had started to broaden out with cyclical stocks starting to outperform others.
"That coincided with the bottoming in oil, the ultimate cyclical indicator."
TAKING FLIGHT
One stock which has really surprised on the upside has been Air New Zealand, jumping from an 80c low to $1.305 (at Wednesday's close), putting it on track to be the best performer this month in the NZX50.
That's despite no confirmation yet on when the wider public will be allowed to travel domestically again, nor when international markets will open again.
Market players point to a lot of small trades in the stock, and say retail investors appear to be having a punt on it.
Apart from the lack of potential for revenue, also weighing on Air New Zealand is a $900 million loan to Government which it must pay back. Investors face the risk that it could be converted to equity in the future, diluting any shareholding outside of the Government's stake.
New chief executive Greg Foran is said to be handling the challenging situation at the airline well, but one can only imagine he is looking back wistfully at the share price of his former employer Walmart, which was trading at US$118 a share before the Covid-19 crisis and has since hit an all-time high of US$125.
CAPITAL RAISING
With markets on the rise again, investment bankers will be sure to encourage companies thinking of a capital raising to seize the moment.
One market player even suggested Air New Zealand would do better to replace its Government loan with a capital raising, given the high interest rate on the loan.
Milford Asset Management portfolio manager Sam Trethewey says a number of companies will be monitoring things very closely as the country moves into level 3, to see how revenue streams pick up.
Trethewey said investors had been trying to anticipate which companies were going to raise capital, leading to share price underperformance before a raising. Auckland Airport, Kathmandu and Vista's share prices had all bounced back since raising capital.
"All three are trading at premiums to where their capital raise was."
But that had also resulted in heavy dilution for shareholders who did not take part.
Names that are being talked about as potential contenders for capital raising include SkyCity, Z Energy, Fletcher Building, Metro Glass and Steel & Tube.
Casino operator SkyCity remains largely closed, which means it will be burning through cash quickly although it does have a good stockpile.
One analyst suggested this week that the company may be more likely to turn to its bankers for help rather than raising new equity.
While Z Energy has been operating as an essential service, its revenue has been very low, with most Kiwis ordered to stay home and aviation fuel demand greatly decreased.
Investors will be keen to know how much fuel revenue will pick up under level 3 as people potentially fill their tanks for the first time in five weeks.