investment insights

    Moving beyond the inflation shock

    Moving beyond the inflation shock
    Samy Chaar - Chief Economist and CIO Switzerland

    Samy Chaar

    Chief Economist and CIO Switzerland
    Christian Abuide - Head of Asset Allocation

    Christian Abuide

    Head of Asset Allocation

    Key takeaways

    • As tighter financial conditions start to bite in the second half, consumer resilience should falter
    • We see recession risks in late 2023 and early 2024, with rate cuts a story for 2024
    • Markets have largely brushed off still-high inflation, slowing growth, banking sector and geopolitical risks, focusing instead on a potential monetary policy pivot and a technology sector seemingly unaffected by credit tightening
    • We see attractive risk-reward in high grade fixed income, and prefer equity markets outside the US as earnings downgrades unfold.

     

    A mild, short-lived US recession?

    With price pressures gradually easing across the developed world, macroeconomic risks have shifted from inflation to growth. The latter looks very uneven. In the US, rate-sensitive areas: housing, investment, manufacturing, and trade are slowing or contracting, while services have been more robust. Fiscal policy will be tight this year or next – considering the modest adjustments factored in the bi-partisan deal to raise the debt ceiling.

    Credit conditions are at levels consistent with prior recessions, amid banking sector woes and the most aggressive interest rate hiking cycle in 40 years. Yet so far, the US consumer has proved surprisingly resilient, delaying expectations of when a recession will start, if at all. Unlike their eurozone and Japanese peers, Americans have been spending some of the excess savings they accumulated during the pandemic, which has acted as a shock absorber. Labour income remains solid amid low unemployment and months of strong wage growth. Key factors to watch in the second half include labour market developments, and how tighter lending standards at small banks affect small businesses and their employees, challenging consumer resilience. Historically, such effects have been felt around two quarters later, indicating the impact should fall largely in Q4. Recession risks for late 2023/early 2024 remain high. However, we would expect any recession to be mild and short-lived, and for the US economy to register 0.9% growth for the full year.

    We would expect any recession to be mild and short-lived, and for the US economy to register 0.9% growth for the full year

    Banking problems looks contained

    We do not think the US is in the early stages of a significant financial crisis. Bank credit has not been a major source of financing for either consumer or business spending since the 2007-2009 crisis, another factor behind the current resilience of demand. Americans today have borrowed remarkably little relative to their income, and only some of that from banks. Loan growth is slower than in the 2000s and much slower than the 14% annualised growth seen as recently as mid-2022. Relatively low reliance on debt makes current US banking turmoil fundamentally different from previous credit cycles, including the late 1980s/early 1990s and 2000s, when bank failures were harbingers and amplifiers of severe economic downturns and slow recoveries.

    Relatively low reliance on debt makes current US banking turmoil fundamentally different from previous credit cycles

    Rate cuts a story for Q1 2024

    Slowing developed market growth is helping inflation to fall. Demand for goods and supply chain disruptions have eased. Energy prices have fallen. Services inflation is starting to decline. In the US, we expect housing costs to follow suit in the coming months, leading consumer price inflation down to around 3.0% by year-end. Wage growth has been declining slowly but steadily, yet the disinflationary trend is still too slow for the Federal Reserve (Fed) to pivot towards cutting rates before early 2024.

    In Europe, the banking sector looks generally more insulated from stresses, and wages have risen less sharply. Trends here have been following those in the US with a lag. Core inflation – stripping out food and energy costs – has only recently started to decline. We believe the European Central Bank (ECB) is very close to the peak of its hiking cycle, with rate cuts also likely in the first quarter (Q1) of 2024, following full-year 2023 growth of 0.7%. We do not see rate cuts in either the US or eurozone giving the global economy any significant support before the second half of 2024.

    We do not see rate cuts in either the US or eurozone giving the global economy any significant support before the second half of 2024

    Consumption to underpin Chinese growth

    The Chinese economy is on a different trajectory to most in the West, largely because of its later post-pandemic reopening. Fragilities remain in real estate – with a knock-on effect on consumer confidence – and in manufacturing, as global demand slows. Yet while the sustainability of its Q1 recovery has been questioned, we see consumption remaining a key growth anchor in Q2 and beyond. Inflation remains contained, and authorities may also choose to support the economy further in the second half, e.g. via more regulatory easing or cuts to banks’ reserve requirement ratios. For now, we retain our full-year growth forecast of 5.5%.

     

    Asset allocation – false positive, or fresh dawn?

    Could central banks cut rates and support markets as the economic outlook darkens? We think this is unlikely without a rapid fall in inflation. We expect the Fed and ECB to pause yet keep policy rates tight in 2023. Rapid cuts could follow under a more severe recession scenario than we expect, or one that sees further banking stress; neither of which would be obviously positive for risk assets. In other words, disinflationary efforts will succeed, but at the cost of inflicting pain on the economy. How much remains to be seen.

    Equities after a peak in rates

    The expectation of a pause in rate hikes has also lent support to risk assets to date; but historically, equity market performance after a peak in US interest rates has been mixed, depending on the subsequent trajectory of inflation and particularly growth. When inflation was under control, and growth stabilised, equities did well (e.g. 1995, 2006). When inflation was problematic and/or recession followed, equities suffered (e.g. 1981, 2000). Markets have already priced in a pause, which has supported growth stocks and sectors in recent months, and now leaves some room for potential disappointment. And while equities have been resilient overall at a headline index level, this has been driven by a narrow set of stocks, something not uncommon in late-cycle environments.

    Historically, equity market performance after a peak in US interest rates has been mixed, depending on the subsequent trajectory of inflation and particularly growth

    What does this mean for portfolios?

    Overall, we maintain a neutral exposure to risk, and equities, within portfolios and a defensive tilt within asset classes. So far this year, still-strong consumption and fairly resilient corporate results have wrong-footed a generally cautious positioning among the investment community. This could endure for longer. Alternatively, equity market resilience could be put to the test in a downturn. Given the broad range of outcomes, we want to avoid narrowly pre-positioning portfolios for either a ‘soft landing’ or a pronounced recession.

    Given the broad range of outcomes, we want to avoid narrowly pre-positioning portfolios for either a ‘soft landing’ or a pronounced recession

    Within equities and equity styles, quality has historically done well relative to other ‘factors’ (e.g. value, growth, small-caps) in late-cycle expansions and the following slowdowns, and we retain a preference for quality stocks, and the typically defensive businesses found in the consumer staples sector.

    Economic recessions typically see earnings per share (EPS) estimates fall by 15-20%. Equity analysts’ consensus forecast is now consistent with a 1% earnings decline for the S&P 500 in 2023, and 9% growth in 2024, whereas we believe an 8% fall this year followed by a 13% gain in 2024 is a more likely outcome1. We thus remain cautious on US equities for now, favouring markets outside the US.

     

    Leaning towards fixed income

    We maintain an overweight allocation to fixed income for diversification and capital preservation purposes. We prefer high quality government bonds, which are benefiting from higher yields, decelerating inflation, and policy rates at or near peak levels. We also favour liquid investment grade credit, as we think this could do well under most scenarios, over high yield, where we see further spread widening ahead.

    Relative valuations and slower growth should support high quality bonds over equities, especially in the US where our expectations for earnings growth remain below consensus. We also believe sovereign bonds can once again offer diversification benefits after a terrible 2022: recent correlation in returns points in this direction.

    We maintain an overweight allocation to fixed income for diversification and capital preservation purposes

    Emerging market debt and currency outlook

    Emerging market (EM) debt should remain supported in 2023 and local currency debt looks increasingly attractive. EM central banks started raising rates aggressively well ahead of their developed market peers, and most of these rate-hiking cycles are now effectively over as inflation is falling. New debt issuance has been limited while valuations and income are attractive in pockets such as Latin America. We keep a selectively positive view on Brazilian sovereign bonds, and a negative one on Chinese sovereign bonds, where we see room for currency weakness to persist.

    In currencies, we expect modest US dollar weakness and remain underweight. We believe that the dollar remains expensive from a valuation perspective and that the growth premium relative to the rest of the world will erode in coming months, as will the yield advantage of US rates versus the rest of the world as the Fed starts cutting rates earlier than other developed market central banks. The Japanese yen and Swiss franc are our most preferred currencies, while we also see relative value in the euro.

    Our full H2 Investment Strategy Outlook, including macroeconomic and asset class forecasts, can be found in the pdf at the top right hand corner of this page.

     

    1 Data as of 13 June 2023

    Important information

    This is a marketing communication issued by Bank Lombard Odier & Co Ltd (hereinafter “Lombard Odier”).
    It is not intended for distribution, publication, or use in any jurisdiction where such distribution, publication, or use would be unlawful, nor is it aimed at any person or entity to whom it would be unlawful to address such a marketing communication.
    Read more.

     

    let's talk.
    share.
    newsletter.