A 2021 vision: what every fund manager is buying (or selling)
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[January 04, 2021] By
Marc Jones and Sujata Rao
LONDON (Reuters) - Dump the dollar! Buy
emerging markets! Stay sustainable! These are among the consensus trades
investment banks and asset managers reckon will dominate financial
markets in 2021.
Vaccines will - hopefully - make 2021 the year of recovery from the
COVID-19 pandemic, which has upended some sectors and reinforced the
dominance of others.
Here are five trades the world's biggest investment houses seem to agree
on:
1/ THE MIGHTY (DOLLAR) FALLING
COVID-19 ended a decade of dollar strength, and expectations are for
2021 to bring more greenback pitfalls.
BofA's December investor survey showed 'shorting' the dollar was the
second most crowded trade. Another gauge - U.S. Commodity Futures
Trading Commission data - shows $30 billion in net dollar shorts,
swinging from last December's $17 billion net long.
The reasoning, says Peter Fitzgerald, chief investment officer for
multi-asset and macro at Aviva Investors, is that no central bank can
"out-dove the Fed".
In other words, when the Federal Reserve cut interest rates near 0%, it
kicked away the dollar's yield advantage over peers. And it still has
room to ease policy.
President Donald Trump's imminent exit should also reduce trade and
political tensions, which were dollar-supportive.
How much and for how long will the dollar fall? Analysts polled by
Reuters predict weakness to endure until mid-2021, capped by COVID-19
uncertainty.
But asset manager PIMCO notes dollar declines are fastest after deep
recessions, with five instances of 8%-10% annual depreciations recorded
between 2003 and 2018.
Vaccines and rebounding economies will "hasten the dollar's fall from
grace", PIMCO predicted.
(Graphic: Unloved dollar -
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2/ RE-EMERGING MARKETS
With developing economies seen benefiting from recovering global trade,
tourism and commodities, a weaker dollar and a more predictable White
House, Morgan Stanley's message is: "Gotta Buy EM All!"
It's recommending currencies from China, Mexico, Brazil, South Africa
and Russia, alongside bonds from Ukraine and Mexican oil firm Pemex.
Rival banks Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan are also backing EM for 2021,
with the BofA survey showing the sector the main favourite, or
'overweight'.
Debt in emerging market currencies will net investors 6.2% next year,
more than the S&P500, BofA expects.
The sentiment swing towards a sector that's languished for a decade is
driven of course by hopes of a China-led growth recovery but also the
lure of higher emerging market interest rates, given 0% or negative
yields across richer countries.
EM currencies also have 25% of undervaluation to recoup, asset manager
Pictet estimates.
(Graphic: Emerging markets ready to rise? -
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Institute of International Finance (IIF) data shows investors shovelling
money into EM assets at the fastest rate in nearly a decade.
But some remain wary. Higher Treasury yields could spark a 2013-style
"taper tantrum", Citi suggested. Investment-grade credit ratings are at
risk in some countries such as Romania or Mexico, while more debt
defaults are likely in weaker nations.
(Graphic: Emerging hopes -
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3/ (CENTRAL) BANKING ON IT
Underpinning most bets is the view that the Federal Reserve, European
Central Bank, Bank of Japan, Bank of England and People's Bank of China
will keep the cheap money flowing.
[to top of second column] |
A man wearing a facial mask, following the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak, runs past an electric board showing Nikkei
index outside a brokerage at a business district in Tokyo, Japan,
January 4, 2021. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
Central banks worldwide spent $1.3 billion an hour since March on asset
purchases, BofA calculates. There were also 190 rate cuts in 2020 year - roughly
four every five trading days.
But with global GDP seen expanding 5.4% next year - the most since 1973 - it
might be hard to justify pushing the pedal further to the metal, especially if
inflation creeps higher.
And not much policy room is left anyway. JPMorgan estimates that over 80% of
sovereign bonds from richer nations pay negative yields after factoring in
inflation. Many investors including BlackRock are now underweight the sector.
Still, the Big Five's asset purchases should total $3 trillion, Pictet
strategist Steve Donze predicts, down from this year's $8 trillion but enough to
keep bond yields extremely low.
A note of caution from JPMorgan - consensus forecasts in the past 10-15 years
have correctly called the direction of Treasury yields only 40% of the time.
(Graphic: Central bank balance sheets swell -
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4/ ESG - HERE FOR GOOD
The assets of investment funds adhering to environmental, social and governance
(ESG) principles doubled this past year to over $1.3 trillion, and the IIF
predicts the pace will accelerate in 2021, especially if U.S. President-elect
Joe Biden pursues a greener agenda
Concerns about pollution, climate change and labour rights are the main drivers.
But the IIF also points out 80% of "sustainable" equity indices outperformed
non-ESG peers during the pandemic-linked selloff, while renewable energy has
been the runaway outperformer since then.
BlackRock describes ESG as "the tectonic shift transforming investing",
forecasting "persistent flows into sustainable assets in the long transition to
a less carbon-intensive world."
Two-thirds of ESG fund assets are in equities, but sustainable debt has grown
20% in 2020 to more than $620 billion. Governments are stepping up green debt
issuance while central banks are eyeing more sustainable bond-buying and reserve
strategies
(Graphic: Electric (vehicle) dreams -
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5/ BIDEN TIME ON TECH
Many of the above investment strategies are premised on a very different
approach to trade and geopolitics under Biden.
He has vowed the United States will be "ready to lead" again on the global
stage, but BofA cautions that China, North Korea or Iran may look to test him
early on with "provocative actions".
In some areas - big data, 5G, artificial intelligence, electric vehicles,
robotics, and cybersecurity - Biden's policies might be just as combative as
Trump's. That may speed up the move towards what's dubbed 'splinternet', with
dual or multiple tech systems.
Tech and e-commerce companies account for almost a quarter of U.S. corporate
profits, while tech comprises 40% of MSCI's emerging equity index. So watch this
space.
(Graphic: Could a splinternet pop big tech's bubble? -
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(Reporting by Marc Jones and Sujata Rao; Editing by Jan Harvey)
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