23 Jun 2021
17 June 2021 | Robert Sharps, President, Head of Investments and Group CIO | Justin Thomson, Head of International Equity and CIO Equity | Mark Vaselkiv, CIO Fixed Income
Recovery is on track, but inflation pressures create risks.
The strengthening economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic appears poised to broaden across regions and countries in the second half of 2021, bolstered by vaccine progress, continued fiscal and monetary stimulus, and pent‑up consumer demand.
But this new economic landscape poses a number of critical questions for investors. A key one is whether growth will be strong enough to meet optimistic earnings expectations without fueling sustained inflationary pressures – the kind that could force the US Federal Reserve and other central banks to speed up a turn toward tighter monetary policy.
“To make the case that broad equity valuations are attractive, you have to rely on an argument that there’s no practical alternative,” says Robert Sharps, president, head of Investments, and group chief investment officer (CIO). “That would rest on a continuation of low interest rates and low inflation.”
Justin Thomson, head of International Equity and CIO Equity, suggests that equities can do well with a modest uptick in inflation but not a significant acceleration. “Historically, periods of rising inflation have been relatively good for equities in aggregate – but only up to a point. Once inflation gets beyond 3% or 4%, it has tended to choke off returns.”
“This might be better characterised as a sequenced global recovery, rather than a synchronised global recovery.”
For bond investors, rising yields pose obvious risks but could create potential opportunities, notes Mark Vaselkiv, CIO Fixed Income. Higher yields could make some credit sectors potentially attractive relative to equities, he says, prompting an asset allocation shift.
“I think at some point many equity investors will want to try to lock in the gains they’ve enjoyed from the bull market,” Vaselkiv suggests. “If so, there could be a rotation back to fixed income.”
Accelerated vaccine campaigns in the developed countries, additional stimulus, and a surge in business activity as industries reopen all appear to have set the stage for robust global economic growth in the second half of 2021 (Figure 1).
Pent‑up demand and fiscal and monetary stimulus should help sustain above‑average growth well into 2022, Sharps says. Recent forecasts from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), he notes, suggest that global gross domestic product (GDP) could grow almost 6% in 2021, and 4%–5% in 2022.1
If consumer demand continues to accelerate in the second half of 2021, Sharps adds, “we could experience an economic boom unlike anything we’ve seen in some time.”
Although China and the US have led the recovery so far, Sharps predicts that faster growth will extend to other economies as 2021 progresses. “This might be better characterized as a sequenced global recovery, rather than a synchronized global recovery,” he says. However, the timing of that sequence is likely to remain uneven, as some countries and regions, including India and Latin America, continue to struggle with the pandemic.
A quickening recovery is reshaping the demand in ways that could create both short‑term and long‑term potential opportunities for investors, Sharps says. Areas that could potentially benefit include the travel and hospitality industries, airlines, restaurants, and medical services.
By speeding up the adoption of more efficient technologies and business models, the pandemic also could set the stage for future productivity gains, Sharps argues. That could raise the long‑term global potential for economic and earnings growth.
Although signs of inflationary pressures – such as surging commodity prices and a global semiconductor shortage – periodically rattled markets in the first half, central bankers and other financial officials have taken a relatively dovish view, Thomson notes. “The received wisdom is that the monetary authorities understand inflation and have the tools to deal with it,” he adds.
The optimistic case, Thomson says, is that the acceleration is a transitory effect that will fade as supply bottlenecks are overcome and the surge in post‑pandemic demand runs its course. But Thomson cites several longer‑term trends that he thinks could produce a structural shift to higher inflation rates:
Vaselkiv says wage hikes by leading US companies also suggest that the balance of economic power has tilted toward workers in ways that won’t be reversed quickly. This is not entirely bad news, since rising consumer income could help sustain the recovery as fiscal and monetary stimulus efforts wind down.
But Sharps cites another potential inflation threat that decidedly lacks any upside: cyberterrorism. Recent extortionary attacks on a primary US pipeline and a major meat supplier show how fragile global supply chains could be in a wired age. “You could argue that these were one‑off events,” he says, “but at this point they seem to be turning into serial one‑offs.”
Corporate earnings and earnings growth expectations both surged in the first quarter, particularly in the US However, equity prices rose even faster, pushing valuations in many markets toward historic extremes (Figure 2). Year‑over‑year earnings comparisons also are becoming more challenging as economies move further away from the depths of the pandemic recession.
“The reflation theme plays well in cyclicals, and [non‑US] markets tend to be more cyclical.”
Although speculative excesses have appeared in areas such as cybercurrencies, special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs), electric vehicles, and some stocks traded by retail investors, global and US equity markets overall do not appear to be in bubble territory, Sharps contends.
That said, many broad equity averages appear stretched even after factoring in ultralow interest rates, Sharps adds. This suggests that equity investors could face more subdued return prospects going forward even if economic growth remains relatively strong.
“Valuation historically has not been a good tactical timing tool,” Sharps says. “But it’s typically been a good forward indicator of return potential relative to longer‑term averages. I don’t think the starting point today bodes very well for robust returns going forward.”
Thomson agrees that the economic recovery largely has been priced into US equities. But earnings per share (EPS) for companies in many other markets have yet to rebound as quickly or strongly as they have for the S&P 500 Index. This creates the potential for non‑US equities to outperform as the recovery broadens, he argues. “The reflation theme plays well in cyclicals, and [non‑US] markets tend to be more cyclical.”
Such a shift, Thomson notes, would break a record 12‑year‑long streak of US equity outperformance relative to non‑US markets. He cites several factors that he thinks potentially could reverse that trend:
The strength of the cyclical economic recovery also could help determine the course of an ongoing style rotation from growth to value.
The value style has outperformed the growth style strongly since late 2020, Thomson notes. Although that relative advantage could moderate in the second half, the cyclical recovery theme “still has legs,” he says. Global small‑cap stocks appear well positioned to benefit, as do many EM equity markets.
Thomson says the relative underperformance of Japanese equities in the first five months of 2021 was something of a surprise, given that earnings beat expectations at many firms – despite what he says is a tendency among Japanese corporate managers to give realistic guidance to analysts.
Earnings results for the broad Japanese averages should remain strong in the second half, Thomson predicts. Historically, he notes, cyclical recoveries have generated powerful tailwinds for many Japanese companies, because high fixed costs mean that revenue gains tend to translate directly into profits.
Through the first half of 2021, the correct strategy for high‑quality fixed income sectors was to keep duration2 short, Vaselkiv says. That could change in the second half, he adds, but only if demand from large institutional investors – Japanese institutions in particular – doesn’t continue to suppress US Treasury yields.
In Vaselkiv’s view, yields on US Treasuries and investment‑grade corporate bonds remain surprisingly low given the strength of the recovery. Average durations are still historically extended (Figure 3), which doesn’t suggest a market deeply worried about interest rate risk.
Part of the explanation can be found in the negligible or negative yields offered by Japanese and German government debt, Vaselkiv says. This has fueled demand for US Treasuries from income‑hungry but risk‑averse institutional investors.
Vaselkiv thinks many portfolio managers would extend duration if the 10‑year Treasury yield rose above 2.00% or 2.25%, which also would lift the income potential of mortgage‑backed securities and corporate bonds. However, such a move might attract even heavier institutional demand, pushing yields back down again.
Fixed income investors seeking attractive opportunities in the second half may need to look to riskier credit sectors, such as US and global high yield, bank loans, and EM corporate bonds, Vaselkiv says.
A number of analysts, Vaselkiv notes, have argued that credit spreads – the difference between yields on bonds exposed to default risk and those on Treasuries of comparable maturity – are extremely tight by historical standards, perhaps signaling a potential bubble. But Vaselkiv takes a contrarian view, arguing that tight spreads appropriately reflect a benign credit outlook:
Floating rate bank loans, Vaselkiv adds, currently offer a particularly attractive combination of relatively high yields and very short duration (an average of 90 days). This could provide benefits all the way through the next Fed tightening cycle, he argues.
Investors may need to factor a weaker US dollar into their thinking, Sharps says. Huge US fiscal and trade deficits, plus continued stimulus by the Fed, create room for a gradual dollar decline, he says. This could add to inflation pressures by pushing prices of dollar‑denominated commodities higher.
But the implications are not entirely negative. Risky assets historically performed well during periods of US dollar decline, Sharps says. A weaker dollar also potentially could boost returns for US companies with large overseas earnings and strengthen the creditworthiness of EM firms that borrow in dollars.
China’s economic and financial evolution appears poised to accelerate in the wake of the pandemic. The implications are sizable both for the global economy and for the geopolitical balance of power. Yet, many investors may be underexposed to one of the world’s powerhouses of growth potential.
While the change of administrations in Washington has eased some tensions, the US‑China relationship is likely to remain contentious, Sharps predicts. This doesn’t rule out cooperation on specific issues like climate change, he says. But the Biden administration’s decision to keep some of the tariffs imposed by his predecessor demonstrates that the relationship has permanently changed.
“China’s economic influence is undeniable, but I think it’s turned out differently from what most Western policymakers expected when China was admitted to the World Trade Organization,” Sharps argues. “It hasn’t necessarily resulted in China becoming a more open society.”
“Corporate defaults have plummeted, and there are relatively few distressed companies left in the high yield sector…”
Despite these frictions, China continues to free some sectors – such as financial services – for increased foreign participation, Sharps notes. But potential investors need to recognize that China is determined to control the terms of their involvement. “I think Beijing basically has decided to forge its own way and play by a different set of rules, which I think are still unfolding.”
At a time when short‑term rates in many developed countries hover near zero, China’s credit markets offer attractive current income potential, according to Vaselkiv. “With a 10‑year Chinese government bond yield sitting at around 3%, plus an appropriate credit spread above that, there clearly are opportunities for credit pickers,” he says. But active management, backed by locally based research, could be critical to success.
Although efforts by Chinese regulators to slow credit growth and several recent high‑profile defaults have raised concerns about financial stability – particularly in China’s real estate sector – Vaselkiv views stricter market discipline as a long‑term positive. “That’s how credit markets mature over time,” he says.
Chinese equities also provide a rapidly growing opportunity set for global investors, but one that may be underestimated, according to Thomson. Despite the rapid rise in China’s share of global GDP, the country still carries a relatively small weight in Morgan Stanley Capital International’s All Country World Index (MSCI ACWI) (Figure 4). Thomson cites several reasons why he believes limiting exposure to benchmark levels could be a mistake:
Yet, international investors still tend to focus on a handful of well‑known stocks in China’s e‑commerce and technology industries, Thomson says. He thinks more attractive potential opportunities may be available in areas such as biotech, health care, and financial technology. “China is innovating in these areas, and overall spending on research and development has accelerated,” he adds.
“China is innovating…and overall spending on research and development has accelerated.”
While the global economic recovery was faster and stronger in the first half of 2021 than markets seemed to expect at the start of the year, T. Rowe Price investment leaders say there also are potential risks to growth that they will be monitoring in the months ahead. These include:
That said, a transformed global economic landscape is generating potential opportunities as well as risks, the CIOs observe. Post‑pandemic trends have the potential to create both winners and losers, giving active portfolio managers greater scope to seek excess returns.
Strong fundamental research skills, backed by adequate global resources, are vital assets in that search, Vaselkiv argues. “To me, that means having analysts around the world who can meet with management and communicate on strategy and capital structure.”
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