Coffee Break 1/4/2021

LAST WEEK IN A NUTSHELL

  • PM Boris Johnson finally reached a EU-UK trade deal and MPs voted to pass the agreement. The bill allows Britain to preserve its tariff and quota-free access to the bloc's consumers for goods.
  • While COVID-19 cases hit 82 million at the end of 2020, major European countries have jointly started vaccination campaigns with nursing homes as focus. 
  • In the US, the Senate did not vote to raise household stimulus package payments, attached to the new coronavirus relief bill, to $2,000.
  • The number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits decreased to 787k but trends still suggest the labour market recovery in the US has slowed during Q4.

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

  • Tuesday's Georgia election runoffs will determine who has control of the Senate. Republicans will maintain control if they win either one of the two seats. Early voting surpassed 2.5 million.
  • Key countries will publish their latest Services and Manufacturing PMIs. Last month's readings had improved and the trend is expected to persist.
  • The US December job report will be released. The unemployment rate and new job creations are expected to have barely moved in December.
  • The European Commission will publish consumer and business confidence data.

INVESTMENT CONVICTIONS

  • Core scenario
    • In our central scenario, we take into account the not-as-smooth-as-expected vaccine rollout, the few side effects and the unfortunate virus mutation. The current circumstances do not call into question the mechanical rebound of growth followed by a transition supported by central banks and governments towards a sustainable recovery in the Western hemisphere. H1 2021 will see a strong growth in corporate profit.
    • In the US, President-elect Joe Biden’s Cabinet picks are beginning to work through the confirmation process in the Republican-controlled Senate as transition officials and Democrats press to avoid delays in putting key people in place amid the pandemic. The transition team has "encountered roadblocks" from political leadership at the Defence Department and the Office of Management and Budget in working with the Trump administration.
    • In Europe, our central scenario assumes the end of social distancing in 2021 and a swift implementation of the Next Generation EU plan.
    • Our main convictions remain as follows:
      • The economy is driven by the virus. Markets are driven by the vaccine.
      • Although the post-Brexit trade deal was passed into law, its implementation and the definition of UK´s ties with Europe remains a challenging unknown.
      • We have an exposure to recovery-related assets: US small caps relative to the US market, UK mid-caps and GBP and European and US banks.
      • Simultaneously, our core portfolio remains geared towards the most resilient themes and countries while keeping protections on the European equity market.
  • Market views
    • The progress toward a Covid-19 vaccine prompted investors to rotate from the “stay-at-home” stocks to companies that benefit from the economic recovery, i.e. cyclical and value sectors. The rotation is likely to continue into H1 2021.
    • From a longer-term perspective, ultra-accommodative fiscal and monetary policies and the vaccine becoming a reality should support the transition from a mechanical rebound to a sustainable recovery of the economy.
  • Risks
    • In the short term:
      • The coronavirus pandemic is the main obstacle to the economic recovery this winter. The vaccine rollout appears underwhelming so far and the recent mutation of the virus could lead to increased efforts to reach herd immunity later this year.
      • US Senate election outcome. Joe Biden won the presidency but may face a divided Congress. The control of the Senate is in the hands of the State of Georgia and the runoffs on January 5. Republicans have at least 50 seats in the 100-member upper chamber of Congress, while Democrats currently have 48. If Democrats are able to pick up the two remaining Senate seats in Georgia, that will leave the chamber split, with Kamala Harris, the vice-president-elect, able to cast a tiebreaking vote. The State turned blue for the first time since 1992 in the last presidential election.
    • In the long term:
      • Political uncertainty: The social divide is widening between losers and winners of the health crisis.


RECENT ACTIONS IN THE ASSET ALLOCATION STRATEGY

Confident that the 2021 recovery will be accompanied by a catch-up in growth and a rebound in corporate earnings, we are overweight equities but with a protective derivative strategy on European equities as a setback cannot be excluded at the current juncture. As equity markets are rising, they also become vulnerable to negative surprises. We keep a positive assessment for European and Emerging equities, value sectors, such as banks, and US and UK small and mid-caps. There is also a positive assessment for the long-term winners of the sanitary crisis: Technology, Health care, and EU Green Deal beneficiaries, among others. Riskier bonds, such as convertible bonds, and high-carry bonds, such as emerging debt, enhance the strategy. 2021 will require continuous active management and agility.

 

CROSS ASSET STRATEGY

  • We are entering a recovery year and anticipate a strong first half, we prefer equities – less expensive than bonds despite high valuation.
    • We are overweight EMU and UK equities. We remain overall neutral Europe ex-EMU. European equities will benefit from the turn in market drivers vs. pandemic.
    • We remain overweight emerging markets equities and have a preference for the Chinese equity market. China emerges stronger as we enter 2021.
    • We are neutral US equities, with a preference for US banks and small and mid-caps.
    • We are also neutral Japanese equities.
    • We keep key convictions in various thematic investments. Global Technology, Oncology and Biotech sectors prove relatively resilient in the current context and reveal high growth potential driven by innovation and pricing power.
    • We believe that climate and environmental themes enable exposure to key solutions for a cleaner future and will continue to gain in importance as infrastructure plans are becoming green, from China to Europe, and also the US under a Biden administration.
  • We are underweight bonds, keeping a short duration, but highly diversified as the current environment is also creating opportunities in the bond market, including in convertible bonds.
    • We are underweight core government bonds and overweight European peripheral government bonds.
    • In a multi-asset portfolio, we focus on the source of the highest carry, i.e. emerging debt. We are neutral US and European investment grade credit.
    • We hold GBP, having reached some of its lowest levels since the Brexit referendum. We hold NOK, which appeared attractive during the crisis, as well as gold and the JPY, which are risk mitigators. We remain cautious on the US dollar.



coffee break