What’s fueling the change?
We believe we have moved from the relatively stable environment of the 2010s to an economic regime characterized by:
1. Structurally higher inflation driven by a tighter labor market, higher fiscal spending, underinvestment in commodity production, and deglobalization
2. A tricky monetary policy balancing act for central banks as they try to keep inflation in check while also supporting economic growth, resulting in more economic uncertainty and policy variations across regions
3. More active government involvement in the economy via regulation and industrial policy
We expect all of this to spark higher levels of macro volatility and dispersion in economic outcomes at the country level, which, in turn, should drive more dispersion in the performance of individual securities (fluctuations in interest rates, inflation, and growth impact companies differently). In addition, structurally higher and more volatile inflation, combined with increased fiscal and industrial policy, should lead to higher interest rates.
For a sense of how this could benefit hedge funds, Figure 2 looks at the performance of equity long/short funds depending on the level of security dispersion. The left chart shows the five-year rolling beta-adjusted outperformance of equity long/short funds relative to the global equity market. The funds generated strong outperformance during periods of above-average security dispersion (shaded in light blue). The right chart shows average annualized returns in periods of low/normal security dispersion and in periods of high security dispersion. It’s clear that long/short managers generated their outperformance in the latter.
Equity Market Outlook
In our Equity Market Outlook, we offer a range of fundamental, factor, and sector insights.
By
Andrew Heiskell
Nicolas Wylenzek