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The immediate horizon
The immediate horizon is largely impacted by what’s happening in the news – elections, wars, government action – and causes the short-term ups and downs in markets. It’s important to remember, though, that the immediate horizon is not just a few months from today, but the few months after events that are continuously happening.
For illustrative purposes only.
The cyclical horizon
The cyclical horizon tends to capture the impact of past and expectation of future government and central bank policy decisions. These include things such as the effect of interest rate changes on inflation and growth, or taxation and public spending. This is the ideal horizon to tactically tilt portfolios one direction or another.
For illustrative purposes only.
The structural horizon
The structural horizon covers the time it takes for markets to adjust to long-term trends such as sustainability and energy transition, demographic changes including an ageing population, technological innovations and so on. Markets can adjust to these trends quickly, as we’ve seen with ChatGPT and AI, or China’s demographic inflection point, in 2023. Typically, though, it takes many years. This time horizon is often ideal for thematic investing, which plays out over extended periods.
For illustrative purposes only.
For illustrative purposes only.
Tactical Positioning
N = neutral weighting of asset class vs strategic (long-term) asset allocation.
US | Feeling the gravity pull
The US economy has been defying gravity for some time, with very strong growth and high inflation. This is now changing, and we think both trends will likely come back to Earth. With high interest rates feeding through and supply chains working better, inflation has steadily fallen over the past year, though it remains fairly elevated. But the economy has remained surprisingly resilient. Having said that, the US labour market has started to weaken, and manufacturing activity has contracted for a year. Services activity is only growing marginally. This is important because services have kept US growth ahead of the other major regions. US services growth combined with some long-term structural shifts in the economy (such as supply-chain fragmentation) means we’re unlikely to see the US Federal Reserve (Fed) reach its 2% inflation target next year. More likely is that we’ll see a stabilisation between 2-3%, a much lower level than the 9-10% we experienced a year ago.
As with the other major Western central banks, the Fed is at peak rates. To keep downward pressure on inflation, we believe it will keep rates elevated over the coming months before cutting from mid-2024 to support growth.
As a result, some weakness is on the cards for the dollar once the Fed starts cutting rates, combined with some other fundamental factors such as an overvalued currency, and fiscal and trade deficits. However, as other central banks, too, will likely cut rates, any downside for the dollar could be limited.
The campaign trail for the US election in November 2024 will start in force in the early part of the year, and we expect this could make some noise in markets. Voters often put the economy at the top of their list of issues, so we expect this to be a hotly debated topic amongst the candidates. While this could cause some short-term market implications, it’s important to see it as such – short-term noise that will likely dissipate. While candidates may promise tax cuts (as Trump enacted at the start of his Presidency, leading to a strong equity rally), the US debt ceiling may have other ideas.
Central Bank Policy Rates (%)
Source: In-house research, Fed, BoE, ECB.
Eurozone | Mild recession before recovery
The Eurozone is currently in a mild technical recession. Manufacturing activity has been contracting since the start of 2023, while services have started decelerating more visibly in recent months. However, inflation has continued to fall further than expected lately, leading to speculation on when the European Central Bank (ECB) could start cutting rates. Our view is that the ECB will hold rates during the first part of 2024, before it begins lowering them to stimulate growth from mid-year.
As such, a shallow recovery seems likely for the second half of 2024. Until then, the tug of war between the euro and dollar will continue. Once the Fed starts to cut rates, we could see the euro gain back some ground.
Purchasing Managers' Indices (>50 = expansion; <50 = recession)
Source: In-house research, Refinitiv.
UK | Playing catch-up on inflation
The rapid rise in interest rates has fuelled volatility in UK financial markets, and there are concerns that the British economy could soon stall or enter a mild recession. This is something the UK has been flirting with for most of 2023, with quarterly growth near zero throughout the year. Services activity had remained fairly resilient in the first half of 2023, which has counterbalanced the weak manufacturing activity. However, now that services activity is slowing, a recession is on the cards, despite the efforts of the Autumn Budget to mitigate that risk.
Higher rates are putting downward pressure on the economy and inflation, which has been much stickier compared to the US and Eurozone, is now falling more decisively. While it remains above the 2% target, the pressure to grow the economy will likely outweigh the pressure to hit that target. As such, we believe the Bank of England (BoE) will keep rates as they are for now before cutting them from mid-2024 in an effort to revive growth. A shallow summer recovery may be on the horizon.
Unlike the US Presidential Election, we’re all still in the dark on the exact date of the UK General Election. Some commentators suggest that the recent tax cuts announced in the Autumn Budget point to a spring/summer election but, for now, only time will tell. Should UK Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak, bring the date forward (the official deadline isn’t until January 2025), expect some short-term market noise as economic growth will be a key battleground between parties. But it’s important to remember that campaign promises do not always come to fruition. So, while elections can move markets in the short term, we remain mindful of the risks and think in terms of scenarios, given the unpredictable nature of these events.
Inflation Rate (%Y)
Source: In-house research, Refinitiv.
China | A question of stimulus
The pick-up of the Chinese economy post-Covid didn’t materialise to the extent markets envisaged initially. Instead, China is suffering from a real estate crisis, low consumer confidence and lower-than-target inflation. Given the headwinds China is facing domestically and abroad, we’re forecasting that the pace of Chinese growth in the years ahead will fall below the average of the past decade. To turn things around, more stimulus is needed, and expected. The key question is how decisive it’s going to be. We think not too much.
Chinese policy rates (there are several) are in the 2-4% range, so the People’s Bank of China certainly has room for rate cuts, particularly as inflation is below target. Boosting domestic demand, and in turn economic growth, is vital – especially because global export demand remains depressed.
The waning export demand is unlikely to just be a short-term effect from Covid. More countries and economic blocs will start focusing on local control in key sectors and technologies, reducing their reliance on Chinese manufacturing. Foreign direct investment has continued to fall and is now at its lowest point since the early 1990s. Couple this with an ageing population and a shrinking workforce and China has to think about more than just cutting rates to turn this long-term trend around.
Another factor worth keeping in mind is the election in Taiwan in January, which adds another layer of uncertainty as the run looks quite open. The current ruling party – the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) – prefers to strengthen Taiwanese identity, while the opposition parties aim to renew talks with China. With two conflicts ongoing, heightened tensions between China and Taiwan (and potentially the US) could increase market volatility. However, we have also seen how some of the geopolitical events had limited or no impact on markets, and so we think that, rather than timing and attempting to predict such outcomes, portfolio diversification (and a good dose of humility and open-mindedness) are the best defences.
China Net Foreign Direct Investments as a % of GDP
Source: World Bank.
Japan | All eyes on the BoJ
While the West has been raising rates to pre-Global Financial Crisis levels to battle spiralling inflation, Japan likely welcomed the post-Covid price pressures after a period of deflation during the pandemic (and several bouts before that). The Bank of Japan (BoJ) has kept interest rates in negative territory all year (where they have been since 2016) despite inflation continuing to be above the 2% target.
Now the market expects the BoJ to finally normalise rates and bring them back into positive territory at some point in 2024, most likely at zero or just above zero. However, before it increases rates, we believe the BoJ will remove its control of the yield curve, a policy it has employed to keep the 10-year bond yield below 1%. The BoJ could be out of sync as it may raise interest rates at a time other central banks are cutting them, which create hurdles for the Japanese economy. In turn, this could strengthen the yen, which has typically negatively affected Japanese earnings growth.
Investment Strategy
Daniele Antonucci
Co-Head of Investment & Chief Investment Officer
Nicolas Sopel
Head of Macro Research & Chief Strategist, Lexembourg
Robert Greil
Chief Strategist, Germany
Henrik Drusebjerg
Head of Nordic Investment Strategy
Pinaki Das
Head of Thematic Research
Marc Eeckhout
Client Investment Specialist
Asset Allocation & Asset Class Research
Thomas Bilbé
Head of Asset Allocation
Lionel Balle
Head of Fixed Income Strategy
Marc Decker
Co-Head of Direct Equities
Joost Van Beek
Co-Head of Direct Equities
Paul Linssen
Head of Fund Solutions
Raphael Drescher
Head of Alternatives
Dennis Jung
Asset Allocation Strategist
Adam Lavelle
Asset Allocation Strategist
Portfolio Management
Warren Hastings
Co-Head of Investment & Head of Portfolio Management
Cyrique Bourbon
Head of Portfolio Construction
Jean-François Jacquet
Portfolio Construction Strategist
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Information correct as of 12 December 2023.
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