Responsible Choice Rebalance Commentary
Overview
You’d be forgiven for thinking that anything other than the US election took place over the last three months. Blue states, red counties, polling, betting, Elon Musk – it’s felt more pervasive than any prior election. Imagine if the US devoted a similar amount of attention to UK General Elections as we do to theirs; “y’all hear the new constituency of Gorton and Denton voted Labour? Sure looks tough for that Richie Sunak guy – but great for Keith Starmer I guess”.
Let’s not jump straight into the US election then.
Over the last three months, interest rates have fallen everywhere. Yet, over that period, government bond yields have risen. Here in the UK, at the end of September the 10-year gilt had a yield of 3.75%; yet now it’s around 4.5%, despite a 0.25% cut in rates over that time. The same is true in the US and Europe. What’s happening?
Lots of investors had become overexcited about how quickly rates were falling and had expected the pace to continue. As rates fall, government bonds perform strongly, so lots of money has been sucked in. So, when central bankers started using words like ‘cautious’ and ‘slowing’ and ‘higher rates for some time’ that money flooded back out again.
We’d always said that rates would stay higher than most were hoping (it’s the only way to crush inflation), but we’ve never really thought of government bonds as a way to make a quick buck. We’ll ride out the daily or weekly ups and downs, knowing that bonds are there for when times get really tough.
The arguments over whether Donald Trump’s win was predictable ahead of time will rumble on for a long time; probably about four years – until the next cycle. And there’s a similar level of uncertainty about the impact of the outcome on financial markets.
Back to bonds; lots of commentators have been talking about the potential increase in US debt on the back of Trump’s victory, possibly impacting the US bond market as a safe haven. We’re not too worried about it. No one is suggesting the US won’t be able to pay back a higher debt load, and – perhaps more importantly – where else are you going to go? Developed governments all around the world are all in the same boat. When trouble comes, bonds will still deliver.
In the equity space, it’s still far too soon to have an opinion on what will and won’t do well under Trump 2.0. The policies are all still nebulous, and simply shouting “business confidence” doesn’t actually give businesses confidence. Tax cuts and tariffs? Crypto and climate? Migration and military involvement? Too soon to tell; and with a healthy diversified chunk of US companies in portfolios, we’ll have exposure to the winners.
Core Investment Views
After more than a decade of lurching from one financial crisis to another, the markets are gradually remembering how economic cycles work.
In those cycles, the economic world spends most of the time between extremes. There will be a mixture of good and bad data, and policy responses; but only rarely will these result in large market shifts.
Over the next twelve months, we expect:
Economic growth to be positive but slowing as the lagged impact of rate rises comes through. We wouldn’t be surprised to see US GDP growth at 2%, rather than 2.3%, for example.
Inflation to keep falling, but only because interest rates don’t. We’ve consistently said that central banks are going to make sure that inflation is crushed, before they start to really cut interest rates. And the end destination for rates isn’t zero. Looks like the market is getting the message.
So how should we invest for a world which isn’t at extremes?
Well. Basically. Like a duck.
It might sound a little silly, but hear us out. Think of a duck simply bobbing along on the current, riding over the little waves which come along, swimming out of the way of any obstacles. If necessary, it can take off and fly – or disappear under the water altogether. But most of the time, it doesn’t need to do anything extreme to get where it needs to go and do what it needs to do.
We think that’s the same with our portfolios. We want to allow market forces to work, to get our investments where they need to go. So, for most of the economic cycle, we let the smaller waves pass by. We don’t need to start flapping our wings or diving down (although it doesn’t mean we’re not alert!).
Tactical Asset Allocation
Macro | Model-driven allocations, reflecting 6-12 month macro outlook |
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Equity | Neutral : Most fundamental economic signals are around neutral; concerns around high valuations are balanced with a robust outlook for economic growth. Our model signals suggest that there aren’t any obvious risks or opportunities to position for. |
Government Bonds | Small overweight : Government bonds are, for the first time in over a decade, offering a real yield that’s compelling. And, in addition, there’s the protection that they offer during market downturns. However, given some of the unwinding in central bank books, there are some liquidity indicators which caution against a stronger overweight. |
Credit | Underweight : While corporate bond spreads (the extra money that companies pay to borrow vs governments) are at the lower end of their historical range, there are few signs of any impending crisis – instead we simply reallocate to government bonds. |
Healthcare | Overweight : Healthcare is a typically defensive sector, which we like as a diversifier against the growing concentration in US markets. At the same time, the valuations are attractive vs. history and the long-term theme has strong support. |
Diversification | Evidence-based diversifiers, which outperform through multiple market cycles |
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US Equal-weight | Another diversifying strategy with a higher expected return than market-cap weighting over the long term, with recent underperformance accelerating the likelihood of that outperformance being frontloaded. |
Put-Selling | A diversifying strategy focused on generating income through selling put options on the S&P 500 Index as a means of earning premiums, aiming for stable returns with reduced exposure to equity volatility. |
Alternatives | Diversified basket of strategies which aren’t correlated to bonds or equities. Continuing to deliver cash-plus returns while markets are stable but will tend to perform best during dislocations. |
Tactical Opportunities | Mispriced areas of the market with the potential to deliver meaningful excess returns |
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Global Miners | Mining companies are the gatekeepers of the material world. There are only a few businesses with the ability to provide the vast quantities of raw materials that are going to be needed over the next century. They have the mines, the machinery, the engineers. And they are debt-free, unloved, and ready to rally. |
7IM Responsible Choice long-term themes
Portfolio themes | Comment |
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The Future of Humanity | The COVID crisis has shown how important healthcare is and, in a world, where nearly a quarter of Europe’s population will be over 65 by 2030, healthcare will become more and more important. Over 50% of new drugs under development are targeted at the over-65 cohort. |
The World is Getting Warmer | Climate change is one of the biggest threats that humanity faces in the future. Without drastic action, the planet will warm by more than the 1.5% level agreed at the Paris Agreement. Clean energy opportunities will emerge through solar, wind and hydropower. Control of energy supplies is becoming increasingly important – governments are only going to invest more money in the area. |
Environment Social Governance Focus | Companies are cleaning up their business models (even if not helping directly with climate change), such as when a bank cuts the use of paper, or an airline goes lower carbon. |
Automation and Digitalisation | Companies are designing products/solutions which improve processing, connectivity and production and help clean up the world. Think robotics, electric cars, food chain technology and supply chain management. |
Evolving Consumption | Companies looking to design their products around consumption that fits health and wellness, the circular economy, travel and experiences and consumer lifestyles. |
Global impact | Impact investments are those that lead to a material and measurable improvement in environmental and social problems. The Bluebay Impact Aligned Bond Fund is a global corporate bond fund that invests in both ESG-labelled bonds (green and social bonds) and bonds issued by ESG Leaders. We also have the Amundi Emerging Market Green Bond fund, which helps finance much-needed environmental projects in emerging markets. |
Asset allocation changes
At the November Model Rebalance, 7IM have taken a number of actions:
- Added to equity allocations, taking our exposure to neutral vs long-term SAA, while also trimming government bonds back towards neutral. The 7IM quantitative macro dashboard suggests that neutral is a reasonable place to be, given the blend of positive and negative economic and market signals.
- We have trimmed the healthcare position and rotated into equities. This reduces idiosyncratic equity risk in an uncertain policy environment.
- We have closed out our AT1s (European Bank Debt) position completely after an extended period of price recovery, and added a small position in global high yield, remaining underweight in this part of the market.
Manager changes
This quarter, we have added the following holdings to portfolios:
- JPM Japan Research Enhanced Index Equity ESG ETF to seek consistent positive alpha at low tracking error through combining passive-like qualities, such as regional, sector and style exposures, with active management within Japan equities.
Please note: All of the comments in this document refer to the models we run on the 7IM platform, but the models are also available on a range of other platforms. As much as possible, we try to replicate the models we run of the 7IM platform across all platforms, but due to differing security availability, not all of the points outlined in this document may be relevant across these platforms. If you are unsure whether certain changes apply to models on a specific platform, please reach out to a member of the team.
You can download the commentary as a PDF here.
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