Supported by fiscal and monetary stimulus, the pace of vaccine distributions in western economies is largely dictating the speed of economic recovery. Inoculations in the UK and US are both proving that the economic rebound after lockdowns can be rapid, after China paved the way to recovery in Asia last year. This is reassuring for the European Union where many states, including France and Germany, have been forced to re-impose new restrictions.
Investor attention is poised to shift
March underlined again that 2021’s equity markets continue to be driven by macroeconomic reflation expectations, rather than stock-specific factors. In this environment, equities remain the most attractive asset class since the global recovery is fuelling earnings growth, offsetting any increases in fixed income yields. Indeed, the Fed has consistently reminded markets that it will tolerate rising yields as long as they are driven by the improving economic outlook, itself positive for equities.
As this recovery matures and we move into the first quarter’s reporting season we expect markets to become more responsive to stock-specific fundamentals, and so start to differentiate between sectors and firms. Investors’ attention will then return to sectors where there is appetite for more quality stocks, such as technology. Until then, we maintain our cyclical bias to sectorial and geographical equity allocations and remain cautious on fixed income assets, which are subject to upward pressures on long- term rates.
The pandemic has not exposed fragilities in the credit markets, supported as they are by central bank liquidity and governments’ fiscal policies. Corporations have used the opportunity to refinance at very favourable rates. And although high yield credit remains correlated to equity values, commercial lending has been supportive. We see no catalysts to change that for the moment.
We are not yet at the end of this reflation cycle, and do not yet see signs of returning to the longer-term ‘Japanification’ trend in the global economy. With the normalisation of interest rates and the end of monetary and fiscal stimulus still distant, it is certainly too early for radical portfolio adjustments.
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• Overall, the overall macro and liquidity conditions are rather positive for risk assets. Still, equity market valuations are rich, especially in developed markets and some risks are under-priced. Consequently, while we keep our preference for equities over bonds, we refrain to increase exposure at this stage. We keep our neutral stance on equities. • Our view on Eurozone equities is downgraded from neutral to negative, mainly due to weakening economic trend, while we upgrade our view on emerging markets from negative to neutral (China stimulus, improving earnings dynamic, room for easier monetary policy). • Within rates, we continue to favour the 1-10 years segment over long-dated bonds. • We keep our gold and hedge funds exposure for diversification purposes. Our stance on currency (neutral dollar against major pairs) is unchanged.
We expect the Fed rate cut cycle to start soon and proceed gradually. Barring a financial crisis or a sharp and unexpected change in the path of inflation or unemployment, the upcoming rate-cutting cycle won’t be dramatic; we expect the Fed to make incremental, 25 bps cuts to its policy rate. Moreover, the Fed is going to stay highly data dependent and will calibrate accordingly. Overall, this is a rather positive scenario for risk assets. Still, equity market valuations are becoming rich, especially in developed markets. Consequently, we keep our neutral stance on equities. We are upgrading all currencies (EUR, CHF, CHF, JPY, EM currencies) back to neutral vs USD (from Negative). Technicals have turned against the US dollar and the Fed has sent a clear signal about coming rate cuts.
We believe that the current market correction is driven by technical factors rather than macro and fundamentals. The unwinding of the yen carry trade was an accident waiting to happen (see our June 2022 FOCUS note “Has Japan’s central bank created a monster?”). The heavy net long positioning by CTAs, the traditional low liquidity of August and the high valuation ratios of some crowded trades (e.g Mag 7) created the perfect “summer cocktail” for pullbacks of major global equity indices and a spectacular spike of the VIX. As explained in our FAQ, there is no reason to panic as macro and fundamental conditions remain favourable to equity markets. Still, history shows that stock markets remain bumpy in the 4 to 6 weeks which follow a spike in the VIX. As such, we’re keeping the current equity allocation unchanged (neutral vs. SAA) and adding some long duration bonds to portfolios as a diversifier.