Central bankers of the two most powerful institutions delivered their presents in advance: the ECB upgraded its growth forecasts aggressively to 2.3% in 2018 (above the expectations of the EU Commission and the OECD) and the Federal Reserve increased its median projection for growth in 2018 to 2.5%, taking the fiscal stimulus into account. The icing of the cake consisted in the fact that the FOMC did not raise its rate path for 2018 whereas the ECB increased its inflation forecast for next year only by two tenths.
Nevertheless Mario Draghi went a step further in its assessment of the price environment as he was confident that “deflation risks have disappeared” after declaring end-June that “reflationary forces have replaced deflationary forces”. We can safely say that the ECB shares our bullish outlook on euro zone growth as Mario Draghi mentioned a ”strong pace of economic expansion” and a “significant improvement in the growth outlook”.
The upcoming week will likely see the potential settlement of the tax reform story in the US, the regional elections in Catalonia and the BoJ meeting. Outside of these events, the worthwhile 2017 news flow will have run dry.
Our current investment strategy on traditional funds:
Legend
grey : no change
blue : change
EQUITIES VERSUS BONDS
While we remain positive on equities and still positive on both EMU and Japan, we approach the end of the year and want to lock in our gains while using cautiousness.
- Global economic momentum is accelerating further however, geopolitical risks remain an obstacle.
- We concentrate our portfolio’s regional positioning on the euro zone and Japan. Emerging markets could face some headwinds if the USD strengthens.
- Central bank divergence becomes more obvious:
- The Fed has started its balance sheet reduction and has just voted a rate hike at its last meeting of the year.
- The ECB has announced that it will pursue its quantitative easing but will cut the amount to EUR 30bn starting this January. Asset purchases will continue for at least 9 months in 2018 and interest rate increases should not happen before 2019.
- Equities have an attractive relative valuation compared to credit.
REGIONAL EQUITY STRATEGY
- We remain positive on euro zone equities which are supported by a strong economic and earnings momentum and relatively attractive valuations. We have increased our exposure to European small caps on the basis of good visibility on the domestic European profit cycle.
- We have kept a neutral tactical stance on emerging markets equities, as a result of the current USD level and technical indicators.
- We have become less negative on UK equities. We have reduced our underweight by 1% vs euro zone ones. The hawkish BoE monetary policy stance has put a barrier to GBP depreciation, challenging overseas profit growth and “Brexit” negotiations are progressing, but slowly.
- We remain neutral on US equities. We see progress on the upcoming tax bill. The transition from Janet Yellen to Jerome Powell should be smooth as he presents himself as “a pragmatic moderate”, who would - largely - continue the Fed’s current policies.
- We are positive on Japanese equities. A strengthening growth and a supportive domestic policy mix are among the main performance drivers and we have gained more conviction that the BoJ will not join other central banks in tightening its monetary policy anytime soon, which should ultimately lead to a weaker JPY. Furthermore, Japanese earnings have been progressing so far without depreciation of the JPY.
BOND STRATEGY
- We are negative on bonds and have a low duration.
- With a tightening Fed and expected upcoming inflation pressures, we expect rates and bond yields to continue their uptrend from September’s low.
- We continue to diversify out of low-yielding government bonds:
- We have a neutral view on credit, as spreads have already tightened significantly and a potential increase in bond yields could hurt performance.
- We have a diversification in inflation-linked bonds.
- We keep our diversification to emerging market debt, as the on-going monetary easing represents an important support.
- We are more or less neutral on high yield. The correction on US High Yield observed recently is not expected to continue.





