A weakening cyclical momentum outside the US meets a more hawkish Fed policy stance than expected only a few weeks ago.
The overall picture in the US remains supportive as confidence is high, as seen by the surge in consumer confidence to a near-record high and the rise in the ISM manufacturing index. In addition, labour markets are tight, wages are gradually accelerating and house prices are increasing. The new Fed Chair Jerome Powell reached a similar conclusion during his testimony to Congress last week. Clearly, the transition to the Powell Fed coincides with a robust macroeconomic context, increased fiscal spending and a protectionist stance on trade – all this might well lead to a more hawkish monetary policy stance than expected last December.
Moreover, valuations are less demanding now, but fiscal reform is already priced-in by analysts as expected earnings growth in the US for 2018 is now close to 20%, leaving little upside.
As a result, we see a less favourable risk-reward on the short term and we therefore adopt a neutral stance on equities.
Our current investment strategy on traditional funds:
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grey : no change
blue : change
EQUITIES VERSUS BONDS
We adopt a neutral equity stance by reducing our euro zone exposure. The rise in US inflation uncertainty should not mask a temporarily weaker global economic news flow.
- Global growth momentum outside the US is likely to have peaked.
- US trade policy (including USD) appears as a major policy unknown, as risks start to materialise.
- Global monetary tightening is progressive, but the US are tightening first:
- The Federal Reserve started its balance sheet reduction in October, hiked in December and should continue its hiking cycle in March.
- The ECB has recalibrated its programme, buying less bonds as of January. A rate hike should not occur before 2019.
- Geopolitical risks remain an obstacle.
REGIONAL EQUITY STRATEGY
- We have reduced our euro zone equity exposure to neutral. Recent data show the first signals of a lower cyclical growth. The economic expansion in the region remains solid, but markets expectations have increased, and this is more likely to lead to disappointments.
- We have kept a neutral –tactical- stance on emerging markets equities.
- We have become less negative on UK equities.
- We remain neutral on US equities. The US policy mix is evolving as fiscal policy becomes more accommodative and monetary policy more restrictive. We note that economic activity has further accelerated at the turn of the year implying that the growth/inflation mix is not deteriorating yet.
- We are positive on Japanese equities as earnings have been progressing so far without a depreciation of the JPY. Being overweighed on Japanese equities has been a winning trade for us so far. Japan benefits from the global expansion and the BoJ will not join other central banks in tightening its monetary policy, leaving credit conditions accommodating.
BOND STRATEGY
- We are negative on bonds and keep a low duration.
- With a tightening Fed and expected upcoming inflation pressures, we expect rates and bond yields to continue their uptrend towards 3% on 10Y US government debt.
- We continue to diversify out of low-yielding government bonds:
- We have a neutral view on credit, as spreads have already tightened significantly and a potential increase in bond yields could hurt performance.
- We have a diversification in inflation-linked bonds.
- We keep our positive stance on emerging market debt, as the on-going monetary easing represents an important support.
- We are neutral on high yield.





