Coffee Break 20.08.2018

LAST WEEK IN A NUTSHELL

  • Equity markets had another doubtful week, but for the time being, the constructive technical medium-term set-up prevails.
  • The risk of contagion from Turkey to the emerging markets or the European banks appear overdone.
  • US equities continue to outperform, supported by the domestic consumption.
  • The EUR/USD broke the 1.15 level and is looking for stabilisation at the next support level.

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

  • The flash August PMIs across the globe and durable goods orders in the US will be an important economic gauge.
  • We are looking forward to the start of the Jackson Hole Economic Symposium on Thursday.
  • US/China trade talks should resume towards the end of the month.
  • Meanwhile, the US might impose new sanctions on Russia and is expected to start imposing 25% tariffs on USD16bn of Chinese imports.

INVESTMENT CONVICTIONS

  • Core scenario
    • Trade war risks remain high but eased somewhat as US/China trade talks are set to resume. This is hitting the global expansion via a lower confidence level.
    • Growth of around 3% is expected in the US economy, while the economic outlook in the euro zone is also positive, but just over 2%.
    • Gradual rise in inflation in the US and in the euro zone, but no inflation fear.
    • The Fed is on a progressive normalisation path but being criticised by Donald Trump for doing so.
  • Market views
    • Spillovers from Turkey into global assets are adding to investors’ concerns.
    • The solid Q2 2018 earnings season is coming to an end and is still supporting equities, with Walmart’s figures as an example last week.
    • US equities are supported by the tax reform, buybacks and still attractive valuations vs. bonds.
  • Risks
    • Trade war: higher tariffs and protectionism could slow down global economies, deteriorate international relations and ultimately corporate margins.
    • Slowdown in Emerging Markets: the tightening US monetary policy and a stronger USD could impact some emerging countries. The orthodox response to the recent EM currency stress should see central banks hiking rates. China’s slowdown is also still at stake and this risk could resurface in the coming months if the implemented easing measures do not work out.
    • EU political risks: euro scepticism could continue to rise as opinions diverge on a growing number of issues: “Brexit”, US and EU trade negotiations outcomes, while populism is creeping back in some countries.

 

RECENT ACTIONS IN THE ASSET ALLOCATION STRATEGY

We are overweight equities vs. bonds via US and EM equities as we expect the trade conflict and the crisis in Turkey to remain contained. We keep a short duration, and expect the EUR/USD to find support close to the current levels.

 

CROSS ASSET VIEWS AND PORTFOLIO POSITIONING

  • We maintain our equity exposure to overweight as we expect the underlying favourable economic background to prevail in spite of the aggressive trade conflict rhetoric.
    • US growth re-accelerates and global growth momentum outside the US is expected to continue, albeit at a slower pace.
    • We are overweight US equities. The improving earnings growth and the positive impact of Donald Trump’s tax reform and deregulation are a support for the asset class. In addition, valuations are not too expensive. “America first” policy is impacting other countries negatively.
    • We are neutral euro zone equities. The region still displays a robust economic expansion but uncertainties have risen recently (new Italian government, threatening trade conflict on automobiles with the US, weaker activity indicators). By ending its QE at the end of the year, the ECB remains accommodative and is in no hurry to hike rates. We prefer small and mid-caps to large ones as they are somewhat sheltered and are more sensitive to domestic demand and less FX sensitive.
    • We are underweight Europe ex-EMU equities. The region has a lower expected earnings growth and thus lower expected returns than the continent, justifying our negative stance. The outcome of the “Brexit” negotiations are unclear and the issue remains a risk.
    • We are underweight Japanese equities. Japanese stocks show a weakening earnings momentum. In addition, the leadership vote of the LDP party by September represents a risk for PM Abe. At its last meeting, the Bank of Japan signalled its readiness to leave yields drift higher, allowing a wider fluctuation range of the 10Y yield around zero percent.
    • We are overweight emerging markets equities. Emerging equities currently face trade war rhetoric and volatility spillovers from Turkey but benefit from on-going strong global growth and attractive relative valuations integrating a higher risk premium than other assets.
  • We are underweight bonds and keep a short duration
    • We expect a gradual rise in inflation, but no inflation fear.
    • Global monetary tightening is progressive. Outside of the US, other developed market central banks are in no hurry to tighten, but some EM central banks have been forced to do so to mitigate currency stress.
    • With a tightening Fed and expected upcoming inflation pressures, we expect rates and bond yields to resume their uptrend. In addition to rising producer prices, rising wages, fiscal stimulus and trade tariffs could push inflation higher.
    • The overall improvement in the European economy could also lead EMU yields higher over the medium term. The ECB remains dovish in its QE plans and is opposed to a strong euro. Political uncertainties in Italy could delay the ECB tightening, but not derail the end of the QE.
    • We have a neutral view on corporate bonds overall but prefer EU to US in both Investment Grade and High Yield. Spreads have already tightened significantly and a potential increase in bond yields could hurt performance.
    • The emerging market debt faces headwinds with trade war rhetoric and rising US rates but we believe spreads can tighten from current levels. The carry is among the highest in the fixed income universe. It represents an attractive diversification vs other asset classes.