Coffee Break 7/20/2020

LAST WEEK IN A NUTSHELL

  • China's GDP growth swung back to the black in Q2, driven by a recovery in production and spending amid coronavirus-induced headwinds, signaling a major turnaround.
  • A European Council meeting took place in Brussels to discuss the recovery fund to tackle the Covid-19 crisis and a new long-term EU budget. Discussions are due to resume on Monday as no major progress was made during the weekend. 
  • US. retail sales jumped by 7.5% in June for the second consecutive month as the US economy reopened, but experts warn that the recovery remains uncertain given the new spikes in Covid-19 cases.
  • The ECB announced a pursuit of its emergency coronavirus bond-buying programme and left current rates unchanged while urging for equally ambitiuous and coordinated fiscal packages.

 

WHAT’S NEXT?

  • Earnings season will pick up pace and markets expect the greatest contraction of the current crisis: -43% vs. Q2 2019. For now, results have surprised by +13%, more than any quarter since 1Q10.
  • In the US, both Houses are back from July 4th recess and have only a handful of days to negotiate the next package before the extra USD600 / week Federal unemployment checks expire on 31 July.
  • The data highlight will be the flash PMIs for July. Forecasts are mostly just around the 50-point threshold between contraction and expansion.
  • Regarding central banks, Fed speakers are on blackout period ahead of next week’s FOMC, but we will get decisions from some EM central banks, including Turkey, South Africa and Russia.

INVESTMENT CONVICTIONS

  • Core scenario
    • Our central scenario forecasts a gradual recovery of financial markets, mainly thanks to abundant liquidity and government support. In the coming months, markets should nevertheless continue to trade in a wide and choppy range.
    • The European policy response has given some reassurance: policymakers have successfully addressed several flaws in the past weeks which could result in a decline in euro zone equities’ risk premium. The past weeks could be seen as the fiscal equivalent to the monetary “Whatever it takes”.
    • Our main convictions are twofold :
      • First, stay with the medium-term “winners” of the crisis, such as Technology, Healthcare, Sustainable themes.
      • Second, add positions in assets at historically attractive valuation levels, as it provides investment opportunities. We have identified Banks among value sectors, Emerging market debt and cheap currencies. We have also increased some regional accents (Europe and Emerging Markets vs. US and Japan).
  • Market views
    • The rate of contagion is falling in spite of re-opening in many countries. In the US, however, the trend is a concern: the US have not been able to curb the virus infections to the low levels seen in Asia and continental Europe.
    • Fiscal and monetary policy responses will outlive the virus. Monetary policy responses aim at ensuring ample liquidity and, for some regions, further asset purchases programmes.
    • Volatility is here to stay as visibility on the epidemic and its aftermath remains low, notably in the US, where the election campaign is heating up. As a result, US-China relations remain on edge.
    • From a short-term perspective, some reassurance can be found in the bottoming of economic indicators, the rise in economic surprises and stabilising earnings revisions.
  • Risks
    • The coronavirus pandemic is a risk until it is contained or a vaccine is found, successfully tested, mass-produced and commercialised. Local outbreaks are likely, a second wave is possible but a worldwide generalised shutdown is unlikely.
    • US election risk. The handling of the coronavirus crisis, economic strains, social unrest and a potential fiscal stimulus cliff at the end of July are triggering uncertainty at a time when valuation is no longer appealing vs. historical levels. A Democratic sweep on election day could represent a risk for the stockmarket due to a possible tax reform and increased regulation.
    • The US-China relations will likely remain on edge and are clouding global growth. Neither country can afford a revival of a trade war.
    • Trade negotiations between the UK and the EU. EU negotiator Michel Barnier expects the “moment of truth” for any potential trade deal in October. A “thin” free trade agreement is a realistic assumption.

RECENT ACTIONS IN THE ASSET ALLOCATION STRATEGY

We remain overall underweight equities and keep some protection on equities via options. We also maintain gold and yen as portfolio hedges. That being said, we have deep convictions in the structural reduction of the euro zone risk premium. It translates into an overweight EMU equity vs US equities. We are also neutral UK equities: the region offers opportunities as it should benefit from better economic data, government fiscal support and a better control of the epidemic. We are overweight emerging markets equities (via Chinese A-Shares equities) vs. an underweight Japanese equities. Finally, we keep an exposure to emerging debt and investment grade bonds.

 

CROSS ASSET STRATEGY

  • Our equity exposure is slightly underweight, but with an increased selectivity in regional equity allocation.
    • We have a overweight euro zone vs. a underweight US equities. The coordinated reponse of member states to the virus has strengthened ties while valuation still offers a relative discount vs the US and positioning is just starting to pick up. Usually, a recession-resilient country, the US now appear more fragmented than Europe. Besides the electoral uncertainty, valuations are no longer attractive vs. historical levels. Also, buybacks, an important driver in the past 5 years, should be much lower.
    • We are opportunistically neutral UK equities. There is potential in a short-term catch-up by UK equities after a disappointing month of June. The strong underperformance in the rebound shows a disconnect between the index and the state of the economy.
    • We are overweight emerging markets equities (via Chinese A-Shares) and underweight Japanese equities. China is rapidly recovering from the coronavirus crisis while Japan is likely to suffer from declining profit forecasts.
    • We keep key convictions in various thematic investments. Technology, Oncology and Biotech sectors prove relatively resilient in the current context and reveal high growth potential driven by innovation and pricing power. Climate action and circular economy themes enable exposure to key solutions for a cleaner future. We believe that sustainability will continue to gain in importance for the social and environmental aspects. A robust governance appears to deliver better results during the pandemic, both at company and state level.
  • 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 which provide no return potential except in risk-off phases and their accompanying flight to quality. We prefer peripheral bonds vs. core European countries.
    • In a multi-asset portfolio, diversification into credit appears attractive. We are overweight US and EUR investment grade as central banks’ buying represent a support.
    • We are also overweight Emerging debt, including corporate bonds, with a preference for hard currency and ESG.
    • We have an exposure to the NOK, which appeared attractive during the crisis, as well as gold and the JPY, which are risk mitigators.



coffee break