As the tenth anniversary of the Global Financial Crisis passed
this month, our thoughts turned to the ongoing muted volatility in
financial markets. The 'Goldilocks' conditions of improving growth
without price pressures are something of a surprise, yet appear to
be increasingly discounted in analysts' and investors'
expectations. This situation may appear to be benign, but with
valuations across many asset classes appearing full (not to mention
negative term premia in bonds) potential risks are mounting.
Among the risks we see on the horizon are geo-politics, changes
in central bank leadership, taper tantrums, and the dollar and
emerging markets.
Political risk remains elevated in the United States, but had
also been rising in Japan with polls indicating Prime Minister
Shinzō Abe was falling out of favour with the Japanese electorate.
Japan is a favoured equity allocation across our managed funds, so
the possibility of Abe losing his position was of some concern to
us. However, the panic appears to be over, at least for now.
Improved economic growth data and a less hostile attitude from the
public following recent scandals looks to have headed off any
political crisis for Abe. Moreover, two recent cabinet appointments
have been particularly encouraging, with two potential opponents of
Abe given prominent positions within his Liberal Democratic Party,
meaning neither are likely to pose a challenge to the Prime
Minister. Our base case is that Abe survives this scare and
political stability remains until at least 2021.
A change in central bank leadership could challenge the easy
monetary policy conditions that have underpinned risk assets in
recent years, threatening the 'lower for longer' rate environment.
In Europe, Mario Draghi's term ends in October 2019, but he could
bid for the Italian leadership next year; while in the US Janet
Yellen's tenure ends in January 2018 - although her position is, to
a degree, dependent on President Trump. In Japan, Bank of Japan
governor Haruhiko Kuroda's term ends in April and he could be
replaced by a Bank of Japan traditionalist who may be swift to
normalise monetary policy. We are mindful that accelerated central
bank normalisation could have serious repercussions for global risk
assets.
Taper tantrums are possible in Europe as the European Central
Bank turns less accommodative, especially as the ECB is the
marginal buyer of bunds: Mario Draghi has talked of a strengthening
and broadening recovery in the euro area and has signalled further
tapering of his QE programme as we go into 2018. Ditto with the
Fed, where term premia in US rates has turned negative once again.
With share buybacks having slowed dramatically, equities may be
vulnerable - although we do note that they price in greater risk
premia than the likes of corporate bonds. The dollar has been weak
of late, which has helped emerging market rates in particular and
risk assets more broadly. But if the dollar reverses course, there
could be meaningful impacts on other asset markets.
We have also been looking at the health of emerging markets
excluding Asia, where we have a neutral allocation, noting that
countries that were hit hard by the taper tantrum of 2013 - such as
Brazil, Mexico, Russia and South Africa - have undertaken
meaningful reforms, with higher quality growth as a result. Russia
remains intimately linked to the price of oil, but oil at $50 a
barrel is seen as manageable for both Russia's economy and oil
companies. South Africa is probably the weakest spot in EM ex-Asia,
with soggy growth, growing political risk and low real interest
rates limiting the scope for policy stimulus. While in Mexico,
weakness around the US elections provided an opportunity to build
into well-supported companies, against a backdrop of strong
consumption prospects that may be helped by policy easing as
inflation comes off the boil. Corporate sentiment in Mexico is
positive, not withstanding the evolution of US trade policy and
timing of further rises in US interest rates.
Taking all of the above into consideration, we have made no
changes to our broad asset allocation this month. However, our
global equities team has downgraded three sectors: industrials and
financials have moved to neutral from favour, while technology has
moved from strongly favour to favour. We remain positive on
technology, but the valuations were such that we felt it was
prudent to clip back our exposure to the sector.
Asset allocation snapshot

Source: Columbia Threadneedle
Investments, as at 28 July 2017.
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