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09.01.2024
#MACROECONOMICS

Investment Strategy Focus January 2024

Edmund Shing, Chief Investment Officer

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      Summary

      1. Lower monthly inflation figures underline lower central bank rates. Monthly inflation prints have declined sharply over the last 6 months. Central banks should cut interest rates starting in March. Lower deposit and money market rates could boost flows to other asset classes.

      2. Euro area sovereign bonds deliver strong finish to 2023. Thanks to a sharp fall in bond yields over the last 2 months, euro area bonds delivered a 7% annual return last year. We remain neutral on euro area sovereign bonds at these lower yields, awaiting a better entry point

      3. Gold poised for further gains after +13% over 2023, supported by a weaker US dollar, lower long-term interest rates and continued central bank buying. It remains an excellent diversifier from stocks and bonds. Gold could decisively break a new all-time high in the weeks ahead.

      4.Risks remain contained, stay positive on Equities. Our risk radar shows little cause for concern, with most components still benign. Liquidity and financial conditions support stocks. The Spanish IBEX 35, Italian FTSE MIB, Brazilian Bovespa and Mexican IPC indices lead globally.

      5. Reiterating our top 2024 convictions. In fixed income, we favour emerging market sovereign bonds. In equities, we highlight Japanese and Latin American stocks. In alternatives, we like precious metals and energy infrastructure funds

      Macro: Inflation eases, central banks to change course soon

      Was inflation transitory after all?

      Both headline and core inflation rates have slowed sharply over the last 6 months in Europe and the US, while China has even slipped into disinflationary territory (annual core inflation of just 0.6%). Annualising the last 6 months of core inflation prints gives an underlying inflation run-rate of 1.9% for the US (core PCE) and just 0.8% for the eurozone.

      Energy remains the key driver of both headline and core inflation over time – in November, euro area energy prices were falling by 11.5% annually thanks to lower oil, natural gas, and electricity prices. We should also take note of sharply slower growth in the US, and an absence of growth in the euro area.

      As a result of weaker inflation and growth, the dominating economic narrative has decisively shifted since October from “higher for longer” to expectations of more rate cuts and sooner from the Federal Reserve and ECB in 2024. Today, interest rate futures markets price 6 rate cuts by the Fed and ECB by December, giving a December 2024 reference rate of 4% in the US, and 2.5% in the eurozone. Given the much higher starting point for rates in the US (5.5%) versus the eurozone (4%), we would expect more rate cuts from the Fed than from the ECB over this rate-cutting cycle.

      US and European domestic manufacturing is already in recession according to PMI surveys, while consumption is slowing. The twin supports to households from falling energy costs and wage growth that is finally higher than overall inflation should underpin household spending going forwards. Lower interest rates are a further support. 

      A huge easing in financial conditions

      Over the last 2 months, US financial conditions indices eased to their  loosest since August 2022. Long-term interest rates fell sharply, credit spreads tightened, and financial market volatility receded. This is not only a relatively immediate boon to financial markets but is also a boost to the real economy over time. 

      Financial markets price in too many rate cuts?

      Since mid-October, the US 2-year Treasury bond yield has dropped from 5.2% to 4.3%. This reflects growing expectations of a Federal Reserve monetary policy pivot. Rather than keeping interest rates high to curb inflation, they will now focus on supporting faltering economic momentum by cutting rates rapidly.

      At the same time, long-term interest rates have declined by around 1% over the same period to under 4% on the US 10-year Treasury yield and around 2% on the German 10-year Bund yield. Lower long-term inflation expectations and real yields have contributed equally to this dramatic fall in long-term rates. But the obvious question is:

      Have financial markets priced too aggressive a move in central bank and long-term interest rates over the last 2-3 months?

      In my opinion, it is likely that the markets are today pricing in too many 2024 rate cuts in Europe. We expect just 3 ECB rate cuts in 2024. As a result, long-term bond yields could well drift higher in the near term, as some of this sharp decline unwinds. Hence, we remain neutral on euro area sovereign bonds at these levels, awaiting a better entry point.

      Prefer shorter bond duration; Stay with stocks

      Prefer shorter US bond duration

      The decline in bond yields has surprised many investors both in terms of speed and magnitude. And the Fed did little to stop it at the FOMC December meeting, which further exacerbated the trend.

      After falling by 57 bps in November, the US 10-year yield fell again by 47 bps in December (36 bps and 42 bps respectively for the German 10-year yield), leading to an impressive total return over the last two months for government bonds: +7% in the US and +6% in Germany.

      Such a rally is unlikely to continue in our view in the next few months. Issuers traditionally frontload their refinancing needs and the beginning of the year is associated with an elevated level of bond supply.

      It is not certain that this supply will be easily absorbed at current yields. Hence, we think the risks are skewed to higher bond yields in the near term. As a result, we believe interest rate sensitivity should be reduced so we now switch our preference towards short-term US Treasuries. The Bloomberg US government bond index with bonds maturing between 1 and 3 years shows a yield of 4.4%.

      We believe US Treasuries remain attractive and offer better value than German government bonds. The current US Treasury yield (4.1% as of 29/12/2023) remains well above the average of the last 20 years (2.4%). By comparison, the spread is smaller for German government bonds and the current level is lower: 2.3%, while the 20-year average is 1.5%.

      Edouard Desbonnets

      January could be trickier for stocks, but no change in strategic positive preference for equities

      Since the end of October, abundant liquidity and dramatically improved financial conditions have propelled US stocks to a 16% rebound, and eurozone stocks to a 13% rebound to the beginning of January. Key benchmark US and European stock indices have returned close to their all-time high marks reached at the end of 2021. After such an impressive rally in such a short timespan, it is only natural to think of taking at least some profits.

      But, even though any rise in long-term bond yields could temporarily halt the advance in stocks, I would not rush to cut stock exposure (except in the Magnificent Seven US mega-cap technology stocks).

      2023 fund flows massively favoured money market and bond funds and ETFs, while stock funds received relatively limited inflows by comparison. We could well see a rebalancing towards stocks in January, as retail investors chase recent performance. In addition, companies themselves continue to be a source of demand for stocks as they continue their existing stock buyback programmes.

      Seasonal patterns remain favourable for stocks up to May, while a number of key benchmark stock indices around the world (including the S&P 500, the Euro STOXX 50, the French CAC 40, the Japanese Nikkei 225, the Mexican PIC,  and the Indian Sensex) returned close to multi-year or all-time highs. Should these indices establish new multi-year highs, there is a strong possibility of further upside momentum, as frequently occurs post key breakouts.

      Risk Radar: No particular concerns

      Economic, financial market indicators stay benign

      In our proprietary Risk Radar model, we monitor 9 key economic and financial market indicators that have historically given advance warning of rising risk to the global economy and financial markets.

      Typically, when between 3 and 5 of these indicators are triggered (amber risk zone), this suggests that investors should watch markets more carefully, and be prepared to take a more defensive position in their portfolios.

      At 6 indicators triggered and above (red risk zone), investors should definitely sell down stocks and credit and retreat to safe havens like cash, gold and government bonds. This risk radar peaked last at a reading of 5 out of 9 components in June and September 2022.

      Currently, only 2 out of 9 indicators signal any concern, the US yield curve (which remains inverted, i.e. short-term yields higher than long-term yields) and the rising trend in US unemployment (the unemployment rate rising and above its own trailing 12-month moving average).

      This suggests that the overall level of risk remains relatively low, supporting our positive stance on stocks and corporate credit. 

      3 top convictions: Latin America, EM bonds, Gold

      Equities: Latin American stocks. High commodity exposure (energy, metals), robust nominal growth and appreciating currencies are three drivers of outperformance by Brazilian and Mexican stocks. Valuations remain cheap (8x P/E for Brazilian, 13x P/E for Mexican stocks) and dividend yields are attractive, while strong Brazilian real and Mexican peso momentum also helps US dollar and euro-based performance. Latin American equity funds, ETFs.

      Fixed income: Emerging market sovereign bonds (local currency). An attractive gross yield of 6.5%, stronger EM currencies against a weaker US dollar, and emerging market central banks which are already cutting reference rates as inflation pressure weakens are all favourable factors for emerging market sovereign bonds. Emerging market local currency sovereign bond funds, ETFs.

      Alternatives: Precious metals (gold, silver). Boosted by i) continued central bank buying, ii) lower bond yields, iii) a weaker US dollar and iv) global geopolitical tensions, gold has just reached a new all-time high. Gold has typically performed very well in the past during Fed rate-cutting periods. We like the diversification benefits of precious metals, which today are ever more valuable in a balanced portfolio. Physical gold, silver, precious metals miners.