We have initiated a preference for high-yield credit over investment-grade credit by moving our view on the latter from moderately overweight to neutral. We had previously seen investment-grade credit as a good place to generate carry, with some potential for spread tightening. Much of this spread tightening played out in the first two months of the second quarter, which caused us to moderate our view. Since then, we have seen significant volatility in the European investment-grade market, which has a large proportion of banks — potential targets of tax-raising measures that could be enacted by a newly elected government in France. We view this elevated political uncertainty as another reason to focus on higher-yielding parts of the credit markets.
Regionally, we have a slight preference for European high yield, funded from emerging market high yield. On valuation, Europe is where there is still a bit of a premium left and potential for some tightening in spreads. We are also turning more constructive on the European macro outlook, where momentum is improving and the central bank has already delivered a rate cut. We continue to monitor political developments in France (20% of the European high-yield market), which have caused spread widening in recent weeks, but we see these as an opportunity to add risk. In emerging markets, growth remains weak while many lower-rated idiosyncratic stories have played out, sometimes resulting in their spreads over-tightening relative to their fundamentals. Flows also remain lackluster.
Commodities: A stronger view fueled by oil
We have moved from a neutral view on commodities to a moderately overweight view, driven by an upgrade to oil. Oil looks fairly valued, with prices in the mid US$80s. However, we think a positive roll yield, which reflects the lower cost of longer-dated futures, warrants a more constructive stance.
We believe geopolitical risk in the Middle East limits downside to the oil price, and with supportive growth dynamics globally and a tight supply, the oil price is likely to remain range-bound at current levels. As a result, we believe that carry will primarily drive returns this year with some potential for capital gains if demand is stronger than expected or OPEC+ pricing power comes back into play.
Gold has been a strong performer in recent months, and we see limited further price appreciation from here as well as a negative outlook for carry, leaving us on the sidelines. Investors and central banks have been building gold allocations this year after weak sentiment in 2023, but with heightened geopolitical risks largely priced in, we think a lot of the positive case has already played out. We are waiting to see whether surging demand from retail investors in China will continue and whether central bank buying can further support prices.
Risks
Downside risks to our views include a reacceleration or spike in core inflation, leading central banks to push back against aggressive rate-cut expectations or even to resume hiking. In addition, our expectation of more broad-based gains in equities could be undermined by sharp upward momentum in one or more mega-cap stocks. Finally, geopolitical issues will bear watching, including the potential for election-year turmoil in the US and Europe and a broader conflict in the Middle East.
Upside risks to our views include a scenario where growth is more widespread globally and disinflation resumes, allowing central banks — and particularly the Fed — to cut rates faster than currently priced in by markets. We could also see a second-quarter earnings surprise on the upside, with a better earnings impulse outside of mega-cap tech stocks, and/or positive rotation in the market and better breadth than we expect. Additional upside risks include a resolution to the Middle East conflict and a balanced coalition emerging from the French election.
Investment implications
Consider sticking with global equity exposure — Growth and inflation are moderating from strong levels and central banks will eventually cut rates. We think allocators should keep a risk-on tilt despite expensive valuations and political noise, as we expect positive fundamentals to support earnings.
Anticipate broadening in the equity rally — We no longer have a regional equity bias and think gains could accrue to developed and emerging markets. We also see the earnings trajectory improving for areas outside of the mega-cap tech stocks, which could benefit some that have lagged, including value and small cap. Among sectors, we favor financials, utilities, and consumer discretionary over materials, staples, and communications, and we have a neutral view on information technology.
Consider overweighting duration and credit — Most central banks have pivoted to rate-cutting mode, so we see scope for lower yields across regions. We continue to like credit spreads for the carry, strong supply/demand technicals, and declining default rate. We favor high yield over investment grade given the positive macro backdrop and superior carry.
Benign expectations could be disrupted — While our risk-on tilt is supported by fundamentals, we are wary of volatility stemming from politics in Europe and the US, in particular. Depending on developments, we are biased toward using cheaper valuations as an opportunity to add risk in equities given the positive earnings backdrop and more reliable mean reversion in credit spreads.
Monthly Market Review — October 2024
Continue readingBy
Brett Hinds
Jameson Dunn