Harnessing multi-speed growth and divergent dynamics
As we look towards the rest of the year, restrictive monetary policies and reduced fiscal expansion are curbing inflation without triggering a recession. Central banks are now set to cut rates to prevent excessive economic slowdown, despite uncertainties from varying growth rates, persistent inflations, limited fiscal space, and geopolitical risks.
The global economic outlook is mixed, with the US slowing, the EU recovering, China in a controlled slowdown, and strong growth in countries like India.
In a world with decelerating but sticky inflation and multi-speed growth, Central Banks will need to carefully assess their stance and communication. Their actions may not be synchronised, but we expect any divergences to be limited.
7 themes to keep an eye on
Global growth is expected to reach 3.1% in 2024. However, there are divergences in play: the US is slowing down (without a recession), the Eurozone is on a recovery path, India's strong growth continues while China is on a controlled slowdown trajectory. Inflation has been stickier than expected, but it is expected to further decelerate and reach central bank targets in 2025. This will allow central banks to initiate and continue the new cycle of cuts at different speeds.
Geopolitical risk is expected to increase in the coming years, with factors such as protectionism, sanctions, tariffs, export controls and trade wars intensifying and not all regions (notably Europe) being in a position to afford them. The outcome of the US election will be pivotal, as US foreign policy in particular (including trade) is expected to differ significantly under a Biden or a Trump presidency, although confrontation with China is expected to rise in any case.
Equities are still attractive, unless we enter a recession. However, there are concerns about excessive valuations in US mega caps. Opportunities abound in US quality value and international equity. In Europe, consider small-cap stocks to capitalize on the economic cycle recovery and attractive valuations.
After trading in a narrow range, yields are set for a new course with rate cuts approaching and curves expected to structurally steepen. With yields already at historically appealing levels this offer a window of opportunities. We favour government bonds and investment grade credit which keeps the best risk/reward profile. EM bonds also offer an attractive risk-return profile and will benefit from the Fed cuts in the second semester.
With resilient growth, supply chain rebalancing, and Fed rate cuts, Emerging Market equities offer interesting opportunities supported also by attractive valuations compared to the US. We favour Latam and Asia, with India in focus thanks to its robust growth and transformative trajectory. Bonds also will be lifted by Fed cuts, with local currencies set to become attractive.
It's time to strike a balance between opportunities from supportive earnings dynamics and appealing bond yields with risks from high uncertainty on both growth and inflation fronts. This means combining a positive equity stance with a long duration bias and searching for additional sources of diversification, such as commodities and real and alternative assets, including hedge funds. These assets will be key to enhancing the risk-return portfolio profile.
To achieve a low-carbon energy system, the world must triple renewable capacity by 2030.
This means investing heavily in critical minerals and expanding electricity grids. Investors should focus on companies that can enable the energy transition in both developed and emerging markets.
Investment Convictions from our CIOs
Despite the uncertain outlook, some regional markets are priced for the best outcome. We favour asset allocations that can withstand various scenarios. Equities, except for US mega caps, remain attractive, with emerging markets supported by valuations and potential Fed easing. Fixed income also presents an opportunity due to historically appealing yields. Additional diversification can be found in commodities, as well as real and alternative assets.
Dynamic asset allocation in a late cycle with inflation risk
Bonds' appeal with central banks at a turning point
Broaden the opportunity set in equities
EM winners in a fragmented world
Energy transition and structural themes
Diversify with real and alternative assets
The economic context supports earnings and risky assets, but much of the upside potential is already priced in and finding clear catalysts for further gains is challenging.
Explore our 2024 Mid-Year Outlook
Geopolitics: A new window of vulnerability opens in the second half of the year
Emerging markets: EM winners in a fragmented world
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