Quarterly Outlook
Macro Outlook: The US rate cut cycle has begun
Peter Garnry
Chief Investment Strategist
Chief Investment Strategist
The difference between risk and uncertainty might sound subtle but it is not. Risk relates to things we can quantify based on a reasonable data sample size whereas uncertainty is about things that cannot be quantified. Geopolitical events are inherently about uncertainty and have a wide range of unknown outcomes.
The picture that is emerging from everything that has happened since Russia invaded Ukraine is that of a war economy, especially for Europe, with the natural outcome of fiscal expansion and likely persistent inflation. Trade policies are part of a changing geopolitical landscape and the growing friction between Europe/US and China is also a source of uncertainty and inflation. China’s intense export-driven economy means China is pursuing policies that are inconsistent with national security in Europe and the US. Predictably tariffs and industrial policy will increase in importance over time.
China’s intense export-driven economy also means that it is sensitive to FX levels against competitors and here the JPY is obviously a key risk as explained by Charu Chanana, our Head of FX Strategy, in her note Chinese Yuan’s Double Whammy – Dollar Strength and Yen Weakness. Maybe we are approaching a big reset in currency markets. South Korean policy makers made it clear today that the excessive one-sided FX moves would not be tolerated.
Asset allocation was easy in the past with 40 years of falling bond yields, a rather stable geopolitical landscape, positive demographics, no climate disasters and low inflation. Going forward the clever investor will take the changing world into consideration. Could the investor not just be 100% in equities and then bet that history repeats itself? Given the emerging picture of many structural breaks in our global economy across the factors described above, it would be too naïve to just do what worked since early 1980s.
These are some of the components investors should consider in their portfolio to strengthen it for a wide range of outcomes in the era of the war economy and severely negative demographical trends. In essence the suggestions below deviate from the traditional 60/40 portfolio (60% in equities and 40% in long-term bonds). We are not providing any portfolio weights to each category as each investor is different.