Portfolio Advisory Insights - A positive outlook
Our Oreana 2020 Medium-term Outlook, published in February, warned of a likely recession over 2020-21. We recommended focusing on resilient portfolios to reduce surprises. We made several key suggestions, including:
1) Improve portfolio diversity,
2) Review liquidity risks using scenario analysis,
3) Increase exposure to high quality sovereign debt and reduce exposure to lower quality high yield debt, and
4) Reduce risk now to increase risk later.
We expected these actions – while difficult to implement – would improve resilience through a challenging period including a significant equity market drawdown.
The recession has come. Equity markets had a significant drawdown. Low quality debt suffered liquidity issues. Exposures to sovereign debt improved portfolio resilience. Portfolios with less risk suffered smaller drawdowns.
Fundamentals have changed
While we did not predict the cause, our forecast for recession has become reality. The Fed and other global central banks have cut rates and introduced aggressive quantitative easing, as we had anticipated (Chart 1). Fiscal policy has been more supportive than we expected. The recession looks likely to be two quarters in length, in line with our modelling. The recovery looks most likely to be in line with our “Recessionary” scenario, as opposed to our worse “Depression” or better “V-shaped recovery” scenarios.
Chart 1: Global central banks cut policy rates to historic low levels
As the outlook became clearer and risk premia widened in equity markets, our process led us to increase our exposures to equity. We reduced our exposure to sovereign debt. Our portfolios went from being low risk to a neutral risk setting.
Markets have recovered and economic data are showing signs of improvement. The critical question for us is whether the fundamental outlook – embodied in our 2020 Medium-term Outlook – has changed.
We think it has.
No recession on the horizon
We do not expect another recession over the coming five years. Central banks, and the Fed in particular, have implemented incredibly accommodative monetary policy settings. Fiscal policy has been eased and will continue to support growth through 2021. Many of the fragilities that worried us, including excess leverage and declining credit quality, have been kicked down the road.
Instead of recession, we expect a solid recovery in 2021. Not a “V-shape”. The level of activity will take some time to grind back up to where it was at the end of 2019. But growth rates will be high. Global job growth will remain positive as economies undergo a gradual reopening. And inflation is likely to remain contained as economic slack is only slowly reined in.
A positive outlook…
This is a significant fundamental change in our view. Some of it has been priced in by equity markets that have rebounded over Q2 2020 (Chart 2). But we think markets will move to price a rebound in growth and a reduced risk of recession over the coming five years.
Chart 2: Equity markets have rebounded over Q2 2020
Risks remain. Lower quality credit could suffer a surge in defaults. A sharp rise in inflation could lead a disruptive sell off in high-quality sovereign bonds. Equity markets may be in for a period of volatility as policy uncertainty increases. But we no longer think these risks dominate the medium-term outlook.
… which is not consensus
We held an out-of-consensus view in late-2019. Expecting a recession, and positioning for it, was not a widely held expectation.
We think now the consensus view is that risks are skewed to the downside. This rally has been distrusted and disliked by many in the market.
We think we are now at the beginning of a multi-year economic recovery. There will be some bumps along the road. But our outlook includes new record prices being established in major developed market equities over the next five years.
A new outlook
We ended 2019 expecting a recession in 2020. It is happening now. We expect the recession to end in Q2 or Q3, before a recovery takes place. We think that will drive returns above historic averages over coming five years.
The changes to our fundamental outlook have resulted in material improvements to our return expectations. Returns will vary across asset classes and within asset classes. Diversification, clarity of implementation, and a strong governance framework around the risk budget will be necessary to improve return outcomes. Reach out to find out how Oreana can assist with managing your investment challenges.