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Asset allocation Who will suffer most from US tariffs? Not China or the EU!
Welcome to Uncommon Truths, Paul Jackson and Andras Vig’s regular in-depth look at the big topics impacting markets.
Markets are moving quickly and surprisingly, we now find ourselves attracted to government bonds, an asset class we’ve shunned for some time.
The backdrop to this publication is that inflation is peaking higher and later than expected. The Federal Reserve (Fed) and some other central banks are tightening aggressively1. Government bond yields have risen to levels not seen in more than a decade (in the US) and the global economic cycle feels more fragile by the day. Central bank aggression risks turning economic slowdown into recession.
Following the results of our optimisation process, we’re increasing government bonds to Overweight (for the first time since 2016) and reducing equities to Underweight within our Model Asset Allocation*. But we don't go as far as suggested by the optimiser, as we’re wary of having too few equities after the recent sell-off. We fear that bond yields, though more generous than for some time, can still go higher. Adding to the de-risking, we also eliminate the exposure to high yield credit.
To some extent, that dampening of portfolio risk is offset by an increase in the allocation to real estate (to Overweight) and reductions in the allocations to investment grade credit and cash. Both of these remain Overweight and we remain zero allocated to commodities, including gold.
From a regional perspective, we favour UK and emerging assets (EM). Indeed, our best-in-class selection of assets (based upon 12-month projected returns) is: UK government bonds, EM real estate, Chinese equities and USD cash.
Based on annualised local currency returns. Returns are projected but standard deviation of returns is based on 5-year historical data. Size of bubbles is in proportion to average pairwise correlation with other assets. Cash is an equally weighted mix of USD, EUR, GBP and JPY. Neutral portfolio weights show in Figure 3. As of 13 June 2022. There is no guarantee that these views will come to pass. See appendices for definitions, methodology and disclaimers. Source: BAML, MSCI, GSCI, FTSE, Refinitiv, Datastream and Invesco.
*This is a theoretical portfolio and is for illustrative purposes only. It represents the views of the authors and does not represent an actual portfolio. Nor is it a recommendation of any investment or trading strategy.
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