Fed Warning: The End of an Era for Stocks
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A recent whitepaper by the Federal Reserve warned of "significantly lower profit growth and stock returns in the future." In that paper, End of an Era: The coming long-run slowdown in corporate profit growth and stock returns, Michael Smolyansky explained how the interest rate and corporate tax rate trends for the last 30 years were a strong tailwind for corporate profits. As a result, stocks performed better than would have otherwise been the case.
Understanding why corporate profits and, ultimately, stock prices outperformed in the past is important. But more critical for investors is the future and assessing how interest rates and tax rates will affect earnings growth and stock prices.
To expand on the article's warning, I examine a few large, well-known companies to see how lower interest and tax rates benefited their bottom lines. But first, I summarize the Fed paper.
End of an Era – Paper summary
The graph below shows that corporate earnings have grown faster over the last 30 years than in the 40 years before. The robust earnings growth occurred despite economic growth shrinking markedly.
Smolyansky's article identified two key factors that explained the significant disconnect between the two growth rates. Per the article:
My central finding is that the 30-year period prior to the pandemic was exceptional. During these years, both interest rates and corporate tax rates declined substantially. This had the mechanical effect of significantly boosting corporate profit growth. Specifically, I find that the reduction in interest and corporate tax rates was responsible for over 40 percent of the growth in real corporate profits from 1989 to 2019.
Corporate profits would have grown by 4.50%, not 7.76% annually without the boost from interest rates and taxes, assuming his 40% contribution calculation is correct. Such would be on par with GDP growth for the last 30 years. As I share later, 40% is a reasonable estimate.
Interest rates
As shown below, Treasury and corporate interest rates have fallen steadily over the last 30 years. As a result of cheap financing, corporate leverage, per the second graph below, has risen substantially to record highs. More leverage and reduced interest costs boost profits.
Tax rates
Per the article:
By 1989, the effective corporate tax rate – measured as aggregate tax expenses divided by aggregate pre-tax income – stood at 34 percent, having fallen from an average of 44 percent over the period 1962 to 1982. From 1989 to 2007, ending just prior to the financial crisis, effective corporate tax rates averaged 32 percent. They then drifted somewhat lower in the years immediately following the financial crisis. The next major step down occurred following the passage of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, which cut the statutory corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 21 percent. With this reform, effective corporate tax rates fell from 23 percent in 2016 to 15 percent in 2019.
The graph below shows effective corporate tax receipts as a percentage of pre-tax income are now around 10% versus 25% in the late 1980s.
McDonald’s, Pepsi, and Clorox
To illustrate the benefits of lower interest and tax rates, I calculated how they helped improve profits for three large, well-known companies. The table below compares the debt levels, interest, and effective tax rates from 1990 to 2022 for McDonald's, Pepsi, and Clorox.
All three companies increased their debt load proportionally much more than their interest expenses due to lower rates. The effective interest rate decline was significant for McDonald's and Pepsi. While not as dramatic, Clorox had a meaningful decline. Similarly, the effective tax rates for the companies fell between 15% and 20%.
Lower interest and tax rates had a meaningful impact on earnings, as shown at the bottom of the table. Michael Smolyansky's estimate that interest and tax rates boosted earnings by about 40% in aggregate is in the ballpark with my analysis. The graphs below the table show the change in interest and tax rates for the three companies over the last 30 years.
Future interest and tax rates
While lower interest and tax rates boosted growth significantly, the ability for that to continue is negligible. The end of a rewarding era for stocks is likely behind us. Given that federal deficits will continue to grow faster than the economy, it becomes increasingly unlikely that the government can afford to reduce corporate taxes. In fact, the odds favor raising taxes. Interest rates may fall back to the low levels of the last 10 years. But unless rates go negative, there is little room on the margin for corporations to reduce their effective interest rate meaningfully.
Consequently, corporate profit growth in aggregate will be closer to GDP growth rates in the future. The gap between GDP and profits I highlighted at the article's opening will likely close. Profit growth of approximately 4% isn't bad. But high valuations are predicated on solid profit growth. GDP-like growth is not forecasted and will likely weigh on stock prices. Simply put, investors will not be willing to pay an above-average valuation for below-average profit growth.
Summary
Per the Fed's End of an Era paper:
It may be tempting to assume that the exceptional stock market performance over the last three decades will continue indefinitely. My analysis, however, indicates otherwise. Both stock returns and corporate profit growth are very likely to be substantially lower in the future. This conclusion follows from the minimal assumption that interest rates and effective corporate tax rates have very little scope to fall below 2019-levels.
The tailwinds of the last 30 years propelling profit growth by about 3% more than GDP are likely over. Without said help, profits will track nominal GDP. But higher interest and tax rates are not out of the question. Profit growth of 4% may be the upside with a meaningful downside if interest rates stay around current levels and/or tax rates increase.
As I wrote earlier:
Simply put, investors will not be willing to pay an above-average valuation for what will seem like below-average profit growth.
Michael Lebowitz is a portfolio manager with RIA Advisors and author for Real Investment Advice. For more information contact him at [email protected] or 301.466.1204
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