Stock rallies 'ripe for trimming' in bearish market: Liz Ann Sonders

Charles Schwab Chief Investment Strategist Liz Ann Sonders joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss market volatility, inflation, consumer expectations, and the outlook for stock prices.

Video Transcript

- Welcome back to Yahoo Finance Live, everyone. One contributing factor to market volatility. It came during the earnings season as investors evaluated the relationship between consumer spending and the largest retailers and household brands. Our next guest says that there is a big gap between consumers' expectations for the future and their assessment of their current situation.

Let's welcome in Liz Ann Sonders who is the Charles Schwab Chief Investment Strategist. Liz Ann, great to have you here with us this morning. First and foremost, what do you believe that the expectation is from the consumer right now, especially as we've been watching this kind of cyclical shift from goods to services as we do on an annual basis, but even more so where they're seeing value actually be delivered.

LIZ ANN SONDERS: So I think the primary contributor to that spread between present situation and expectations, which by the way, both have been trending down, it's just the forward looking component has been coming down at a more rapid pace, is the inflation backdrop. But not just specifically the impact it's having on just the day to day expenses, real personal income being negative, wage growth being positive, but real wage growth being negative.

So I think it's the noticeable difference. As strategists or economists, we talk about nominal versus real. And I don't think the consumer lives in that world of those monikers. But I think the understanding of their purchasing power having been greatly dented by inflation is the primary contributor to that very widespread recession levels type spread,

- Liz Ann, given where inflation levels are right now, do you think corporate profit estimates are about to fall off a cliff? And what would that mean to the markets?

- I wouldn't say fall off a cliff but, depending on what measure of earnings revisions you look at, they certainly have been trending down. City's Revisions Index popped up a little bit recently but there's an IBest version that has still been trending down.

And I do think that there will be increasing pressure, not just on profits broadly, but profit margins. We've seen a very sort of healthy level of profit margins able to be maintained, although down a bit from the peak of mid last year. I think that's likely to be the more discussed hit, that is the setup for once we get to second quarter earnings season.