Coffee Break

The King’s Speech

Coffee Break:
  • Week

Last week in a nutshell

  • A lower-than-expected CPI report for the second month in a row increased market expectations for a Federal Reserve rate cut in September.
  • In his testimony, Jerome Powell emphasised that the Fed is now balancing "two-sided risks": inflation and a weakening labour market.
  • In the euro area, political uncertainty lingered as the French Parliament, divided, headed into negotiations for a coalition government.
  • On the geopolitical front, following his NATO summit news conference, at least three more House Democrats urged US President Joe Biden to withdraw from the presidential race.

    

What’s next?

  • In the UK, the King's Speech will introduce legislation for independent fiscal forecasts, reinforcing the Labour party's commitment to fiscal discipline, which should whet investors’ appetite.
  • In a context of heightened risk of political violence during the campaign, the Republican National Convention begins in Milwaukee, where Donald Trump is set to announce his vice-presidential pick.
  • In China, the Third Plenum will focus on fiscal reform and structural policies, while publications on GDP, the house price index, industrial production, and retail sales will paint the short-term backdrop.
  • In the euro area, the ECB meets with no rate cut expected. The focus will be on inflation and sentiment, highlighted by this week’s ZEW economic sentiment survey and the final CPI estimates for June.

 

Investment convictions

Core scenario

  • Facing a rise in political uncertainty, a higher risk premium appears justified in continental Europe. In the US, the hawkish repricing of the monetary policy from the Federal Reserve is now largely behind us.
  • Beyond the election uncertainty in the euro zone, the activity pick-up from quasi-stagnation should represent a support for equity valuations.
  • Global disinflation trends have been confirmed by the most recent inflation data. At the current juncture interest rates have peaked and growth remains resilient.
  • In China, economic activity remains fragile, and the evolution of prices continues to be deflationary as consumer confidence remains at very low levels.

 

Risks

  • Bond yields are to be monitored especially given the diverging paths taken by the US central bank and its European counterpart, and the increased likelihood of a second Trump presidency.
  • Snap elections in France have brought political risks back into focus for financial markets, especially for French stocks and government debt. Over the next year, we see a risk of downgrade or a negative outlook in all scenarios as the debt ratio is rising.
  • Although unlikely, a stickier-than-expected US inflation path while economic growth slows down too much and unemployment rises, could force the Federal reserve to reconsider its course.
  • Geopolitical risks to the outlook for global growth remain tilted to the downside as developments in the Middle East and the war in Ukraine unfold.

 

Cross asset strategy

  1. Beyond the political uncertainties, we are focusing on policy actions and are currently slightly overweight in equities.
  2. We have the following regional equity investment convictions:
    • Neutral euro zone equity as the bloc faces a rise in political uncertainty and a higher risk premium appears justified.
    • Slight overweight US, UK and Japan, neutral Emerging markets.
    • In Japan, exiting the multi-decade long deflation as well as corporate governance reforms bearing fruit should more than counterbalance a less dovish Bank of Japan.
  3. In the equity sector allocation:
    • We have a positive view on the Tech sector: good earnings and guidance, peaking long-term yields, reasonable valuations, broad market leadership within IT and the industry’s relative insensitivity to the upcoming US presidential elections.
    • A Pan-European small cap bias gives us the benefit of lower inflation, lower central bank rates and higher growth than expected.
  4. In the fixed income allocation:
    • We prefer carry to spreads, with a focus on quality issuers, hence we are neutral peripheral European bonds and prefer core countries. We continue to watch OAT-Bund spreads as key macro risk gauge.
    • We have reduced our long US duration stance after taking advantage of an attractive entry point on US government bonds when yields shot back up to 4.7% in April.
    • We have a relatively small exposure to emerging markets sovereign bonds amid very narrow spreads.
    • We are neutral on investment grade and high yield bonds, regardless of the issuers’ region.
  5. In our forex strategy, we are positive on commodity currencies, such as the Australian dollar, as the global manufacturing cycle is gradually picking up. Contrary to the ECB in Europe, the RBA has become more hawkish amid higher than expected inflation and strong economic data.
  6. We expect Alternative investments to perform well as they present some decorrelation from traditional assets and keep an allocation to gold.

 

Our Positioning

Our outlook on equity remains positive but we take into account the latest political developments in France, the UK and the U.S. We are slightly overweight developed markets equities and neutral euro zone. We are overweight US Tech and pan-European small and mid-caps, a reflection of our conviction in lower inflation, lower central bank rates and higher-than-expected economic growth. We are neutral Emerging markets equity until consumer confidence gains traction. On the fixed income side, we are positive on Core European duration as a safe haven and UK duration. The objective is to benefit from the carry in a context of cooling inflation and pending rate cuts by the ECB and BoE. In credit, we remain neutral - high yield and emerging debt - amid very narrow spreads and a strong USD. In our forex strategy, we bought some Australian dollars.

 

    

 

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