by lamont » Thu Dec 04, 2008 12:50 pm
I think the consumer recession has taken on a life of its own now due to layoffs, the equity extraction ATM having been shut off a long time ago, and credit cards becoming maxed out and with tighter credit standards preventing the expansion of credit. High gas prices may have been the nail in the coffin of the consumer, but relaxing that isn't going to remove all the other factors which are a drag on spending now.
The lower commodity prices across the board will show up first, probably, in producers of things which are somewhat recession-proof. Consumer staples will probably perform well because people still eat during a recession, and the collapse of corn and oil prices will increase their margins. Its possible that other companies that have large exposure to oil (e.g. UPS) might also do better than expected, but that has to be balanced by the demand destruction they're facing. As an obvious example, airlines are highly exposed to fuel prices and should perform better than expected given their top-line revenue -- but their top-line revenue is collapsing right now. Drug stocks and healthcare should also do reasonably well and should have some upside surprise as their input costs come down.
But beware -- a lot of companies with significant commodity/oil exposure were hedging against inflation by locking in prices, and they will have locked in some prices near the commodity/oil peak in prices and it will take some time for those contracts to unwind and for them to start benefiting from lower input prices.