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Federated sees a 2019 resurgence for 4 beaten up groups in the market

Federated Investors’ Steve Chiavarone sees four unloved groups bouncing back this year: Dividend stocks, cyclical names, small caps and emerging markets.

He’s pinning his bullish case on a Federal Reserve that may not be as aggressive in raising interest rates in 2019.

“I think they’re prepared not to hike any time soon,” the fund manager said Friday on CNBC’s “Trading Nation. ” He added: “They’re going to be quite patient, and that’s going to help equities over the course of 2019.”

Chiavarone blamed the market turmoil seen late last year on the Fed, which he said gave Wall Street mixed messages on its monetary policy. However, he doesn’t see it anymore as an issue that’s hanging over the market.

“I think they’re certainly going to pause in March,” he said. “We may end up with one or zero hikes in 2019.”

According to Chiavarone, doing nothing will translate into upside — especially for dividend stocks since they’re tied so closely to rising interest rates. Markets were expecting increasingly higher interest rates “until the end of days,” said Chiavarone. “That’s not going to happen.”

He also sees cyclical groups such as energy, industrials and materials, which got hammered last year, emerging as winners.

“What the market was pricing in was a recession. That’s not going to happen, and so those cyclical parts of the market, those risk on parts of the market, have a recovery coming, ” he said.

Chiavarone highlighted small caps as the third struggling group positioned for solid gains. The Russell 2000, which tracks small caps, is down 14 percent over the last six months.

“Fifty percent of their debt is variable rate. So, they’re very vulnerable in a rising rate environment,” he noted.

And, finally, he named emerging markets as the fourth area that will likely see relief. The group has tumbled 17 percent over the past 52 weeks.

“EM [emerging markets] underperformed the S&P by 20 percent last year going into the market high, ” Chiavarone said. The U.S.-China trade dispute, however,  “is still a concern we have to work through, but the fact that the Fed could be slower — that could take pressure off the dollar and help EM recover a little bit.”

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