LAST WEEK IN A NUTSHELL
- The conditions for reopening the global economy while avoiding a second wave of infections are being investigated. Both businesses and consumers remain cautious.
- The rating agency Fitch downgraded Italian sovereign debt to just above High Yield as a result of the deterioration in public finances.
- In a first estimate, the US economy contracted towards a 4.8% annual rate, which was below consensus expectations. Let us remind that the pandemic impacted only a couple of weeks of Q1 and Q2 should be harder hit.
- Q1 earnings season is still ongoing. In line with forecasts, they are negative but fairly well received. Earnings growth is reported at -19.4% for the US and -21.2% for Europe.
WHAT’S NEXT?
- Various PMIs will be released worldwide testing again the resilience of financial markets to digest the negative impact of the coronavirus.
- The Bank of England will publish its interest rate decision. It is unlikely that it will buck the trend of the BoJ, the Fed and the ECB who emphasized the need for both long-term monetary support combined with fiscal support.
- The US Bureau of Labor Statistics will release the April job report. In the past weeks, 30 million Americans have registered for unemployment claims, likely pushing the unemployment rate into double-digit territory.
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INVESTMENT CONVICTIONS
- Core scenario
- We are watching 5 different triggers: Epidemic-linked indicators, Market risk, Activity resumption, the Policy response and Valuations. Exit strategies and finding a vaccine are the main focus.
- Currently, global economic growth contracts as activity came to a halt and social distancing impacted both supply and demand while benefiting specific sectors: Technology, health care, and in the mid-term sustainable energy and infrastructures.
- Weak economic data, significant downward earnings revisions and dividend cuts are being integrated in analysts’ forecasts.
- 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.
- From a short-term perspective, volatility is here to stay as visibility on the epidemic remains low. From a mid- to long-term perspective, equity markets are offering value and represent upside potential.
- Market views
- Since the onset of the Covid-19 crisis, we are looking at the depth (deep), diffusion (global) and the duration (longer than initially thought) to assess the economic pain of the coronavirus. This is challenging to assess: confinement and social distancing measures widely differ from country to country.
- Fiscal and monetary policy responses will outlive the virus. Monetary policy responses aim at ensuring ample liquidity and for some countries, further asset purchases programmes.
- Risks
- In the short term:
- The coronavirus is a risk until it is contained or a vaccine is found, successfully tested, mass-produced and commercialised.
- The European political response needs to be improved. EU leaders agreed on the need for a European Recovery Fund post “corona”.
- In the medium term:
- The US-China conflict will likely remain on edge and is clouding global growth.
- Domestic political issues in the US. Joe Biden is the only Democrat left running for president against Donald Trump.
- 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 maintain our slight underweight equity exposure. There is an impoved risk/reward ratio for a long-term investor but volatility remains high. Patience is key in this U-shaped recovery. In the fixed income universe, we remain cautious about exposure to government rates in Europe as central bank buying and deterioration in public finances will be huge. Our assessment of the impact of recent central banks decisions on credit led us to add to our US and European investment grade exposure. We stay diversified via alternative strategies. We keep our strategic stance on Emerging debt and we continue to hedge via gold and the JPY, among others.
CROSS ASSET STRATEGY
- Given the lack of visibility, our equity exposure is slightly underweight.
- We are slightly underweight UK and US equities. The economy has taken a massive blow and unemployment is hitting high records. Confinement measures widely differ between countries. There is also a lack of visibility on the epidemic in the UK and its impact.
- We are neutral EMU, Emerging market and Japanese equities. Uncertainty surrounding the coronavirus weighs on investors’ sentiment.
- We keep key convictions in various thematic investments. 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 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.
- In credit, we added to our investment grade exposure in the US and in Europe and are overweight.
- We added to our exposure to Emerging debt, including EM-issued corporate bonds, in both local and hard currency.
- We keep an exposure to gold and JPY, which both play the role of safe haven.
