What You Need to Know
- “It’s like we’re almost in a melt-up,” said David Kudla, founder of Mainstay Capital Management.
- One of the year's worst performers is the iShares Select Dividend ETF, which returned just 0.8%.
Handpicking sectors, sheltering in trendy options strategies, going all-in on dividends — none of it has worked as well this year as simply owning the S&P 500.
As 2023 winds down, investors are taking the year’s keep-it-simple lesson to heart.
Amid a 4% rally this month that’s propelled the index’s 2023 advance to 24%, they’ve been pouring money into plain-vanilla stock funds.
Equity ETFs have taken in nearly $69 billion so far in December, the best month of inflows in two years, according to data from Bloomberg Intelligence. They have added more than $42 billion to the largest fund tracking the S&P 500 — the $494 billion SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (ticker SPY) — putting it on track for the biggest month on record in data going back to 1998.
It’s testament to what’s worked time and again — buying and holding the benchmark gauge, which is hovering near new highs. Left behind have been a litany of supposedly defensive measures that showed themselves to be something else amid 2023’s upward march: market timing in disguise.
“It’s clear that having a diversified portfolio is probably the best way to navigate the investment climate and the best way to do that is owning the S&P 500 — full stop,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Wealth. “If you were to start this year by saying ‘everyone says there’s a recession coming so I’m going to invest defensively,’ you got punched in the nose.”
Coming into the year, many strategists had expected tepid returns following 2022’s battering.
But amid signs the economy continued to hold up while inflation slowed, stocks rose steadily throughout the year. The gains were turbocharged in recent days after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell suggested interest rates are likely to come down next year.
Nothing has slowed the inbound flow of funds — not even in a week that saw the S&P 500 post one of its worst sessions of the year. Despite Wednesday’s 1.5% drop, the index still managed to advance 0.8%, its eighth straight week of gains and the longest streak since 2017.
“It’s aggressive, but it’s also not entirely unexpected,” said Seema Shah, chief global strategist at Principal Asset Management. “As soon as we saw any indication that chair Powell was having a slight shift in stance, that was opening the doors to a huge flood into the equity space.”
A measure of aggregate equity positioning kept by Deutsche Bank AG has been rising in recent weeks, pushing into “overweight territory,” with systematic strategies also raising their stock exposure further above average, wrote a team led by Parag Thatte.
Its measure of discretionary positioning has also advanced, likely to the top decile of readings. And alongside massive flows into equity ETFs last week, net call volumes in ETF options rose to the highest in five years, the bank’s data show.