Central banks were at the forefront last week. Following its meeting on Thursday, the Bank of England has increased interest rates for the first time in a decade, raising its base rate by 0.25% to 0.5%. The BoE governor Mark Carney intended to send a hawkish message that at least two further hikes would be needed over the next two years to bring inflation back to target. However, the BOE left its quantitative easing target unchanged at £435 billion.
In the US, Jerome Powell was nominated as the next Fed chair once Janet Yellen’s term expires on 3 February 2018. Investors warmly welcomed this announcement as Jerome Powel is likely to provide monetary policy continuity by adopting Janet Yellen's framework of gradually normalising rates and predictably reducing the Fed's balance sheet.
Our current investment strategy on traditional funds:
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grey : no change
blue : change
EQUITIES VERSUS BONDS
We are positive on equities and remain negative on bonds, maintaining a short duration:
- Global economic momentum is accelerating further with economic news-flows surprising on the upside, adding to the ongoing good earnings season.
- We concentrate our portfolio’s regional positioning on the euro zone, Japan and the Emerging markets. While we are positive on Japan, we suspect that Emerging Markets could face some headwinds if the USD strengthens.
- Central bank divergence becomes more obvious:
- The Fed has started its balance sheet reduction and forecasts another rate hike in December.
- Although, the ECB has announced that it would start its balance sheet reduction next January, asset purchases will continue for at least 3 quarters in 2018 and interest rates increases should not happen before the second semester of 2019.
- Equities have an attractive relative valuation compared to credit.
- The main risks for equity markets remain (geo)political, with different degrees (i.e. Catalonia and North Korea). We added the US to the list as the debt ceiling and government funding issues are looming by mid-December.
REGIONAL EQUITY STRATEGY
- We remain positive on euro zone equities which are supported by a strong economic and earnings momentum and relatively attractive valuations. The recent decline of the EUR/USD provides additional support, confirmed by the latest earnings reports, which were in line with analysts’ targets.
- We have kept a neutral tactical stance on emerging markets equities, as a result of the USD stabilisation and technical indicators.
- We remain negative on UK equities. Beyond the difficult “Brexit” negotiations, the shift in the BoE’s monetary policy stance has put a halt to GBP depreciation, weakening the repatriation of overseas profits realised by UK corporates.
- We remain neutral on US equities. There is an execution risk in the announced fiscal stimulus and pro-growth policies. We note that the House and the Senate Budget Committees both approved versions of the FY 2018 budget that included general directions to act on tax reform.
- We are positive on Japanese equities. A strengthening growth and a supportive domestic policy mix are among the main performance drivers and we have gained more conviction that the Bank of Japan will not join other central banks in tightening its monetary policy anytime soon, which should ultimately lead to a weaker JPY. Furthermore, Japanese earnings remain positive so far without depreciation of the JPY.
BOND STRATEGY
- We are negative on bonds and have a low duration. We expect rates and bond yields to resume their uptrend, driven by a tightening Fed, and potential upcoming inflation pressures. The improvement in the European economy could also lead EMU yields higher.
- We continue to diversify out of low-yielding government bonds:
- We have a neutral view on credit, as spreads have already tightened significantly and a potential increase in bond yields could hurt performance.
- We have a diversification in inflation-linked bonds.
- We keep our diversification to emerging market debt, as the on-going monetary easing represents an important support.
- We are more or less neutral on high yield.





