Global Equities | Neutral | - Our outlook for stocks over the next 12 months is neutral. We prefer relative value opportunities with exposure to the still-robust global growth outlook relative to outright beta exposures, which may face persistent valuation pressures from the combination of central bank tightening and geopolitical risks.
- The economic recovery is likely to continue in 2022 on the back of strong starting points for consumer and business balance sheets, still accommodative financial conditions, and improving public health outcomes. These should underpin strong earnings growth, particularly for cyclically-oriented sectors and regions.
- The direct impacts from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on economic activity are manageable at the macro level, but may keep the equity risk premium relatively elevated.
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US Equities | Light red | - US equities continue to command premium valuations. The sectoral composition drives this dynamic, with a higher weighting towards acyclical defensive technology than other markets. This characteristic has been a disadvantage as real rates rise, and may further drag on relative performance in the event that investors aim to boost cyclical exposure or expectations for the terminal policy rate this cycle increase. Accordingly, we prefer US equal weight to market cap indexes.
- The skew of fiscal and monetary policy risks has turned more negative for US equities, though earnings growth should still hold up well and balance sheets remain strong.
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Ex-US Developed market Equities | Light green | - Non-US developed market equities are attractively valued and have significant exposure to the global economic recovery.
- Earnings revisions in Europe and Japan continue to be stronger than in the US, and the extent of this superior performance has not been reflected in the relative returns for these regions over the past year.
- European equities may be particularly vulnerable following Russia’s invasion, as the direct economic impacts are larger and the hit to investor sentiment likely larger than in other regions. However, this is already partially priced in.
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Emerging Markets (EM) Equities(ex. China) | Light red | - A stabilization of growth in China amid measured policy support is a tailwind, particularly for countries with the tightest economic and financial linkages. Resilience in industrial metals continues to point to a strong foundation for real activity.
- EM equities have held up impressively in the face of challenges early in 2022 that include less impressive earnings revisions relative to DM, higher mobility restrictions relative to DM, and rising long-term real rates.
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China Equities | Light green | - There is sufficient evidence that the Chinese policy stance has turned, both on the monetary and fiscal sides. The PBOC has cut rates, the peak in credit tightening has passed, in our view, and officials are stressing an urgency in providing fiscal support.
- Manufacturing and services PMIs have returned to expansionary territory.
- From a seasonality perspective, Chinese equities have tended to outperform ahead of the China Party Congress.
- The relative valuation of Chinese internet companies compared to their US peers suggests too much embedded pessimism about their longer-term earnings prospects.
- Concern over China’s real estate market constitutes an important downside risk to activity and procyclical positions; some regulatory headwinds may also linger for domestic equities.
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Global Duration | Light red | - On a tactical basis, duration is receiving a bid as part of a flight to quality amid geopolitical-induced de-risking.
- However, we expect long-term bond yields to continue trending higher as the above-trend growth outlook stays largely intact, inflationary pressures linger with risks tilted to the upside, and most global central banks withdraw monetary stimulus.
- We expect rises in real rates to be the key contributor to higher long term yields.
- Sovereign fixed income continues to play an important diversifying role in portfolio construction, and remains particularly effective in hedging downside in procyclical relative value equity positions.
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US Bonds | Neutral | - US Treasuries remain the world’s preeminent safe haven and top source of ‘risk-free’ yield. The Federal Reserve is poised to start a tightening cycle in March and has telegraphed that the unwind of its bond purchases will follow soon thereafter, both of which should be conducive to higher yields across the curve. In the near term, however, Fed tightening for 2022 looks to be close to fully priced.
- We expect domestic activity to reaccelerate after a brief interruption due to the Omicron variant, inflation to remain uncomfortably elevated well above the central bank’s target, global activity to remain firm, and weakness in US bonds to continue.
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Ex-US Developed-market Bonds | Light red | - We continue to see developed-market sovereign yields outside the US as unattractive. The Bank of Japan's domination of the Japanese government debt market and success in yield curve control diminishes use of the asset class outside of relative value positions.
- The European Central Bank is likely to have to begin laying out a timetable for rate hikes as inflationary pressures prove more persistent and growth remains strong in 2022, though downside risks tied to Russia’s invasion are likely to delay a more hawkish pivot in the near-term.
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US Investment Grade (IG) Corporate Debt | Light red | - Spreads are at relatively tight levels amid continued policy support and minimal near- term recession risk. In our view US IG is one of the few sources of quality, positive yield available and therefore a likely recipient of ample global savings. However, the duration risk embedded in high-grade debt as the economy recovers as well as the potential for spread widening should threats to the expansion both serve as downside risks that weigh on total return expectations for this asset class.
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US High Yield Bonds | Neutral | - We expect carry, rather than spread compression, to drive total returns in HY going forward. Coupons available will continue to attract buyers in a low-yield environment.
- The asset class is more attractively valued with less sensitivity to rising interest rates than IG bonds. However, spread levels that are lower than the forward earnings yield for equities (on a risk-adjusted basis) make this asset class less attractive than stocks.
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Emerging Markets Debt - US dollar / Local currency | Dark green / Light green | - We have a positive view on emerging market dollar-denominated bonds due to the balance of carry opportunity and duration risk.
- Asian credit is attractively valued and we believe poised to perform well in environments in which growth expectations improve or plateau, so long as highly adverse economic outcomes fail to materialize.
- A more positive carry backdrop for EM local bonds following rate hikes delivered over the course 2021 has increased the resiliency of the asset class even as Fed tightening gets priced in.
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China Sovereign | Dark green | - Chinese government bonds have the highest nominal yields among the 10 largest fixed income markets globally as well as defensive properties that are not shared by most of the emerging-market universe. We believe the combination of monetary easing, stabilizing domestic activity, and continued strong foreign inflows should prevent any sustained upward pressure on yields during the next 3-12 months.
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Currency | | - Elevated geopolitical tensions may drive a renewed bid for US dollar. The country is also likely to less negatively affected economically by the Russian invasion, particularly compared to Europe. We believe real growth differentials to many other developed market economies are poised to shrink in 2022, and the Federal Reserve will not be the only DM central bank hiking rates in 2022.
- However, we do not expect to see major downside in the US dollar, which also serves a useful hedging role in portfolios where duration is underweight and procyclical relative equity positions are preferred.
- In our view, some EMFX, like COP and BRL, are well-positioned to outperform cyclical Asian currencies and select G10 commodity exporters given attractive carry.
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