LAST WEEK IN A NUTSHELL
- The US Fed announced that it would keep buying bonds, maintain low rates and support the economy. Chairman Powell spoke of a long road to recovery. Markets reacted nervously.
- ECB President Lagarde justified the recent increase of bond buying within the PEPP by worse economic projections and deflationary risks in the euro zone.
- The Michigan preliminary consumer sentiment confirmed that US consumers are more optimistic than anticipated. A timely omen as consumer spending will be a key contributor to the activity.
- President Trump has been losing ground to his opponent, Democrat Joe Biden, and election risk has risen. It contributed to a rise in volatility on Wall Street.
WHAT’S NEXT?
- A EU Council will take place to start discussing the recovery fund. Nobody should expect that ways to raise the money, without triggering division among member states, will be found in just two days.
- PM Johnson and EU leaders will have a virtual meeting as they are negotiating post-Brexit trade relations. The BoE will convene, too.
- US Fed Chairman Powell will testify before Congress in hearings on the central bank’s semi-annual policy report.
- In terms of data, the week will offer further insight on how well countries are handling their exit strategies. As mobility is increasing, so should industrial production, retail sales and employment.
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INVESTMENT CONVICTIONS
- Core scenario
- Recent market performance has revealed two messages: Stay with the medium-term “winners” of the crisis (e.g. Technology, Healthcare, Sustainable themes) and start looking for assets at historically attractive valuation levels, also providing investment opportunities (we have identified Emerging market debt, value sectors in Europe or cheap currencies).
- We are watching various indicators to assess our stance and conclude for now that the rate of contagion is falling in spite of re-opening. Most countries managed to successfully control the virus progression. In the US, however, the trend is a concern. The country has not been able to curb the virus infection to the low levels that would help avoid a second wave.
- Mobility indicators continue to improve fast and there is an overdispersion in Covid-19 transmission and the effective reproduction number could be drastically reduced by preventing relatively rare superspreading events.
- In the medium term, policy easing from virtually all central banks and fiscal easing represent a support. The Fed, the ECB and the BoJ keep on easing policies further. It is crucial that fiscal measures are taken, notably in Europe, to support a kickstart of the economy at a future stage, especially if deflation sets in.
- From a short-term perspective, some reassurance can be found in the bottoming of economic figures and the rise in economic surprises. Volatility is nevertheless here to stay as visibility on the aftermath of the epidemic remains low.
- Market views
- Most countries have reached their peak in terms of active Covid-19 cases. The epicentre has now moved to South America.
- Confinement and social distancing measures have widely differed from country to country. But the economic impact and fall in activity has been massive for all. The current re-opening of economies is a necessity and is not a one-size-fits-all measure.
- Fiscal and monetary policy responses will outlive the virus. Monetary policy responses aim at ensuring ample liquidity and, for some regions, further asset purchases programmes.
- Risks
- The coronavirus is a risk until it is contained or a vaccine is found, successfully tested, mass-produced and commercialised.
- The European political response has given some reassurance. EU leaders agreed on the need for a post “corona” stimulus and will discuss the European Recovery Fund at the upcoming EU council on June 19. There were hints of coordination in the policy response.
- The US-China relations will likely remain on edge and are clouding global growth.
- Domestic political issues in the US. Joe Biden is now leading Donald Trump in polls for the upcoming election. Trump's approval rating is taking a toll.
- Trade negotiations between the UK and the EU. The UK made clear that the withdrawal would not be delayed beyond 31 December 2020.
RECENT ACTIONS IN THE ASSET ALLOCATION STRATEGY
We remain underweight equities. We have increased our equity exposure to the EMU region but keep protective derivative strategies. We keep a bias towards value sectors, including banks but took profit on the automobile sector. We have decreased our US equity exposure. We stay underweight Europe ex-EMU. We are neutral emerging markets and Japan. In fixed income, we have increased our exposure to peripheral bonds vs. core European countries. We also hold emerging markets debt (in both LC and HC), European corporate bonds, gold, NOK and JPY.
CROSS ASSET STRATEGY
- Our equity exposure is slightly underweight, while increasing the exposure towards a reduction of the euro zone risk premium.
- We have become overweight EMU equities vs. US. Policymakers have successfully addressed several flaws in the past weeks which could result in a decline in EMU equities’ risk premium.
- We have become underweight US equities. The handling of the coronavirus crisis, upcoming presidential elections and social unrest are triggering uncertainty at a time when valuation is not so appealing vs. historical levels.
- We stay slightly underweight UK. Covid-19 has changed priorities in the UK. There is rising concern about a no-deal end to the transition period for the UK’s exit from the EU. A ‘thin’ free trade agreement (incorporating zero-tariff/zero-quota trade in goods, but significant non-tariff barriers on trade in services) to be struck by the end of the year is a realistic assumption. A no-deal end to the transition (or just rising uncertainty around any deal or lack thereof) would hit foremost UK domestic stocks.
- We stay neutral Japanese and Emerging markets equities. Uncertainty surrounding the aftermath of the coronavirus crisis weighs on investors’ sentiment. On the other hand, the fiscal and monetary responses are massive.
- Since the onset of the coronavirus crisis, some assets have been badly hit and now offer historically attractive valuation levels, providing investment opportunities. While it is not easy to find the best entry point, it makes sense to strengthen some positions opportunistically. For instance “value” sectors such as European banks are already integrating a lot of bad news.
- We keep key convictions in various thematic investments. Technology, Oncology and Biotech sectors prove relatively resilient in the current context and reveal high growth potential driven by innovation and pricing power. Climate action themes enable exposure to key solutions for a cleaner future. We also believe that sustainability will continue to gain in importance for the social and environmental aspects. A robust governance appears to deliver better results during the pandemic, both at company and state level.
- We are underweight bonds, keeping a short duration, but highly diversified as the current environment has the potential to create opportunities on bond markets.
- We are underweight government bonds which provide no return potential except in risk-off phases and their accompanying flight to quality. We prefer peripheral bonds vs. core European countries.
- In a multi-asset portfolio, diversification into credit appears more attractive. We are overweight US and EUR investment grade as central banks buying represent a support.
- We are also overweight Emerging debt, including corporate bonds, in both local and hard currency.
- We have an exposure to the NOK, which appeared attractive during the crisis, as well as gold and the JPY which are risk mitigators.
