A PIVOTAL OCTOBER. Issue #14. October 2018

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Transcription:

A PIVOTAL OCTOBER Issue #14 October 2018 Stock markets tend to post their best returns from October to April but October itself can be the most volatile month of the year. The tug of war between good news out of the US and bad news out of China could make this October no exception. However, we would see volatility as a potential buying opportunity for stocks. With fiscal policy loose in America, interest rates low elsewhere and China easing policy to offset trade war fears we expect the expansion to continue into 2019. In addition, this issue provides suggestions on how to prepare UK-based portfolios for Brexit risk. October, a pivotal month Multi asset views from RLAM Royal London Asset Management manages 117.1 billion in life insurance, pensions and third party funds*. The Multi Asset team manages the Governed Range pension funds and Global Multi Asset Portfolios (GMAPs) available on a wide range of platforms. Trevor Greetham Head of Multi Asset Hiroki Hashimoto Senior Quantitative Analyst Melanie Baker Senior Economist Nersen Pillay Investment Director *As at 30/06/2018 Stock market volatility tends to reach its peak in October as news starts to filter through about the strength of the world economy heading into the seasonally important fourth quarter of the year. Stock markets exhibit a very high degree of seasonality. It s hard for financial markets to make headway over the summer when trading is thin and there isn t much going on in the world economy. As a result, an amazing 97% of global stock market returns since 1973 have accrued during the seven months from October to April. However, volatility also tends to reach its peak in October (see focus chart), a fact underlined by famous October crashes in 1929, 1987 and, more recently, 2008. The Investment Clock: In Stagflation Cross-currents in the world economy make this October particularly pivotal. The Investment Clock that guides our asset allocation is in Stagflation. Economic growth is slowing outside of the US, inflation is rising from low levels and the US Federal Reserve (Fed) is raising rates. This is usually a bad configuration for stocks but we are living in a two speed world with the emerging markets under pressure while President Trump s tax cuts and spending increases keep the US economy strong. Broadly neutral on equities but ready to buy dips We bought stocks aggressively during weakness in the first quarter of 2018 and derisked the Royal London Global Multi Asset Portfolio (GMAP) funds again heading into the early summer as markets recovered, taking emerging market equity and commodity exposure underweight. We would see October volatility as a potential buying opportunity for stocks. With fiscal policy loose in America, interest rates low elsewhere in the world and China easing policy to offset trade war fears we expect the economic expansion to continue into 2019. How to prepare portfolios for Brexit Brexit is a known unknown but a diverse set of outcomes is still possible, ranging from a No Deal exit to a referendum on the final deal that could see the UK remain in the EU on current terms. But how do you prepare portfolios for Brexit when you don t know what Brexit is? We outline a pragmatic approach. Focus chart: Seasonality of stock market volatility (VIX) 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 Please visit www.investmentclock.co.uk for our blog and information about our multi asset range. For product details, contact: multiassetsupport@rlam.co.uk 16 15 Source: RLAM, Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE); Average calendar year profile of VIX implied volatility for the S&P 500 index from January 1990 to September 2018. 1

GROWTH MOVES ABOVE TREND INVESTMENT CLOCK: IN STAGFLATION Chart 1: Investment Clock Our Investment Clock model relates the performance of different investments to the prevailing economic backdrop. We tell the time on the Clock by plotting growth indicators against inflation indicators in two dimensions to see which assets should be doing well at this stage of the business cycle, if history offers a reliable guide. The Investment Clock has been in Stagflation since July, with global growth coming off the boil and inflation rising from low levels. Historically, Stagflation has not been a good stage of the cycle to own stocks. RECOVERY Corporate Softs Government INFLATION RISES Industrial Metals STOCKS BONDS COMMODITIES CASH OVERHEAT High Yield Energy Inflation-Linked GROWTH MOVES BELOW TREND REFLATION Precious Metals STAGFLATION INFLATION FALLS Source: RLAM. For illustrative purposes only. The red dot signifies this month s reading from our global growth and inflation indicators with the trail showing the evolution of readings over the previous 12 months. Chart 2: RLAM Global Growth Scorecard & stocks vs bonds Stocks usually underperform government bonds when global growth is slowing. RLAM s Global Growth Scorecard has been pointing downwards for the last six months and yet global stock prices have risen, led by the US. Source: RLAM, Thomson Reuters Datastream 05/10/2018; RLAM s Global Growth Scorecard factors in the monetary policy stance of the major central banks along with lead indicators and trends in business confidence surveys and consensus GDP forecasts. 2

EMERGING MARKETS AND USA DIVERGE We are living in a two speed world with China slowing while President Trump s tax cuts and spending increases keep the US economy strong. The emerging economies are caught in the crosshairs with weaker activity in China putting downward pressure on exports while US interest rate hikes increase the cost of US dollar finance. Add in trade war concerns and geopolitical instability and you can see why the emerging markets are in bear market territory, down more than 20% since the January highs. Chart 3: Emerging market equities and Wall Street Source: RLAM, Thomson Reuters Datastream as at 05/10/2018. Chart 4: Stocks vs bonds with unemployment and Fed Funds Meanwhile, the bull market in US equities has continued to march to new highs, supported by the second longest economic expansion in US history. The unemployment rate has fallen from 10.0% of the workforce in 2009 to just 3.7% today. A tighter labour market eventually stokes wage inflation but US interest rate rises have so far been modest. Source: RLAM, Thomson Reuters Datastream as at 05/10/2018. 3

SEASONALITY IMPROVING; LOOK TO BUY DIPS It s hard for financial markets to make headway over the summer months when trading is thin and there isn t much going on in the world economy. An amazing 97% of global stock market returns since 1973 have accrued during the seven months from October to April. However, volatility also tends to reach its peak in October, a fact underlined by famous October crashes in 1929, 1987 and, more recently, 2008. Chart 5: Seasonality of stock market return 116 114 112 110 108 106 104 October to April: average return = +13.6% May to September: average return = +0.4% Full year: average return = +14.0% 102 100 Source: RLAM. Average calendar year profile from January 1973 to September 2018 of the Datastream World USD Total Return index, rebased to 100 on 1 January. Chart 6: Contrarian sentiment indicator and stock prices We bought stocks aggressively during weakness in the first quarter of 2018 and derisked the GMAP funds again heading into the early summer as markets recovered, taking emerging market equity and commodity exposure underweight. Investor sentiment may be starting to falter once more but we would see October volatility as a potential buying opportunity for stocks. With fiscal policy loose in America, interest rates low elsewhere in the world and China easing policy to offset trade war fears we expect the economic expansion to continue into 2019. Source: RLAM. Thomson Reuters Datastream as at 05/10/2018. 4

Return in excess of inflation HOW TO PREPARE PORTFOLIOS FOR BREXIT It s hard to prepare for Brexit when you don t know what Brexit is. The UK could leave the EU with a wide range of future trading arrangements lined up. The decision will probably come late and involve last minute compromises that no one can forecast. The impact on sterling and gilt markets will be very different in each scenario. Chart 7: Sterling vs the US dollar and the euro The more disruptive outcomes would probably see a rally in gilts and a slide in the pound as the Bank of England kept interest rates lower for longer. An outcome unexpectedly close to EU membership could see gilt yields rise and the pound surge on the foreign exchanges. Source: RLAM, Thomson Reuters Datastream as at 05/10/2018. We have three pragmatic suggestions when preparing portfolios for Brexit risk. 1. Given the uncertainty, we advise against structuring portfolios for a particular outcome. This is about hedging risks. 2. Investors with a lower risk appetite may wish to consider investing in lower risk portfolios with a higher proportion of their assets in sterling-denominated investments, reducing exposure to potential currency volatility. This is the approach we take with our risk-rated GMAP funds. 3. Consider investing in growth-seeking assets that would do well in different scenarios. For example, we include commercial property alongside equities. Property may do well if the UK ends up in a closer relationship with the EU. Equities may potentially do better in a more distant relationship, accompanied by a weaker pound that would inflate the value of overseas earnings. For further details please see our blog article, How to prepare portfolios for Brexit when you don t know what Brexit is Chart 8: RLAM GMAP range with % sterling exposure for each benchmark (in centre) Dynamic Adventurous 50% Growth 61% Conservative 100% Defensive 88% Balanced 79% 68% Investment Grade credit Index-linked gilts Gilts Cash & absolute return Global high yield UK equities Property Overseas equities Commodities Risk Source: RLAM. Text in the centre of each ring refers to the Global Multi Asset Portfolios (GMAPs). Weightings may vary according to tactical asset allocation and the fund may invest outside of indicated asset classes as the manager sees fit. Inflation as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI). 5

WHERE WE STAND We are broadly neutral stocks, tilting towards more defensive US equities. We have a modest overweight position in high yield bonds. We are underweight emerging market stocks and underweight commodities. Multi Asset Stocks High Yield Property Commodities Cash -- - = + ++ Regional Equity UK US Europe Japan Pacific ex. Japan Emerging Market -- - = + ++ Source: RLAM. Tactical positions as of October 2018. Weightings may vary according to tactical asset allocation and the Fund may invest outside of indicated asset classes as the manager sees fit. Multi asset: neutral equities and overweight high yield; underweight commodities We cut the size of our overweight in equities at the late January highs and bought back aggressively during the February/March market panics. We took profits in the recovery and our overweight in equities is now at its lowest level since 2012. We are underweight commodities. With US fiscal policy loose, no central banks in a hurry to tighten policy and China easing to offset trade fears, we would probably buy stocks on weakness. We expect the business expansion to continue in 2019. We remain overweight short duration high yield as near-term recession risks remain very low. We are neutral to slightly overweight UK property. A positive supply / demand backdrop and a rental yield cushion make UK property relatively resilient, despite Brexit risks to the City of London. Equity Regions: overweight US; underweight emerging markets We remain positive on US equities and underweight the emerging markets. Trump s fiscal stimulus and tariff increases underpin this position, as does the slowdown in China. We remain overweight Japanese equities as a potential beneficiary of further US dollar strength. Past performance is not a guide to future performance. The value of investments and the income from them is not guaranteed and may go down as well as up and investors may not get back the amount originally invested. Issued by Royal London Asset Management October 2018. Information correct at that date unless otherwise stated and subject to change. The views expressed are the author s own and do not constitute investment advice. Unless otherwise noted, the information in this document has been derived from sources believed to be accurate as of October 2018. Information derived from sources other than Royal London Asset Management is believed to be reliable; however, we do not independently verify or guarantee its accuracy or validity. Royal London Asset Management Limited, registered in England and Wales number 2244297; Royal London Unit Trust Managers Limited, registered in England and Wales number 2372439. A subsidiary of The Royal London Mutual Insurance Society Limited, registered in England and Wales number 99064. Registered Office: 55 Gracechurch Street, London, EC3V 0RL. Our ref: N RLAM W 0008. 6