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Global Market Outlook

Einblicke   •   Trend-Themen

The Relay Recovery

Since our Global Market Outlook update in April, shock waves from the COVID-19 crisis have continued to flow through global markets, economies, and societies.

As we look forward to the remainder of the year, uncertainty abounds. Equity prices seem thoroughly disconnected from fundamentals. Few companies are willing to provide guidance on earnings and other dimensions of performance. Additional near-term risks to shareholder returns are materializing, as companies cut back on buybacks and dividends in a bid to conserve cash. Volatility as measured by the VIX seems to have fallen back, but the SKEW remains elevated — and dispersion among views on key forecasts, including GDP, is exceptionally wide.

Amid all of this uncertainty, much ink has been spilled in an attempt to predict the “shape” of the recovery: Will we see a V-shaped recovery? A U? A W? If a letter must be chosen, then we believe that the recovery will take the shape of a V — with a great deal of variability across sectors. But we also believe that focusing on the shape of the recovery is less useful than thinking about the nature of the recovery. In this case, we believe that recovery from the COVID-19-induced crisis resembles a high-stakes relay race — a layered recovery that is unfolding in overlapping stages, with risk at every transition point.

The Relay Recovery

We’re already in the middle of a relay recovery. The first stage of the relay, led by central banks and governments, has so far been carried out successfully, as emergency monetary stimulus prevented a liquidity crisis from devolving into a solvency crisis. Emergency fiscal stimulus followed close behind, helping to shore up personal incomes and savings rates despite the loss of millions of jobs. These stimulus efforts took shape very quickly — that which took years to accomplish during the Global Financial Crisis took mere weeks in the COVID-19 crisis.

We’re now in the second stage of the relay — the economic reopening — led by a patchwork of government authorities and businesses. Crucial to the success of the second stage is not just reopening, but staying open. On the surface, recent virus outbreaks in the wake of resumed economic activity (for example, in the southern and western United States) may seem
discouraging, especially as some localities return to restrictive policies and shutdowns. It is possible, however, that these early experiences may encourage practices that will help to limit the spread of the virus ahead of a potential second wave this fall, thereby boosting business and consumer confidence. Reopening experiences have also been far from universally negative, as many countries, regions, and localities have gradually restarted their economies while keeping COVID-19 cases under control.

Ultimately, it will be challenging to sustain investor confidence through the end of the year unless the third stage of the relay — the development of a vaccine (or an effective, scalable medical treatment) — is accomplished so that the most vulnerable populations can benefit by the end of 2020 or early 2021. There will be no complete recovery without a medical solution to COVID-19.

Although each relay stage carries substantial risk, there are reasons to feel good about where we are now. Second-quarter economic data was horrible, as expected — yet there were also some positive surprises, including a big bounce in retail sales and in PMIs. Building on that near-term momentum, industrial production may also surprise to the upside, as manufacturers adjust their operations to allow for social distancing.1 Recent weeks have also seen renewed fiscal stimulus efforts, as the EU agreed to a EUR750 billion recovery fund (taking a major step toward greater EU unity in the process), and negotiations continue (as of this writing) on a new US stimulus package that could deliver $1 trillion or more in additional relief.2

Risks to the Recovery

While the relay recovery has gone well so far — economic data is improving, and consumer spending has been supported by stimulus measures — pressure on personal incomes may increase toward the end of the year as governments begin to weigh the provision of additional stimulus funding more carefully. The US election poses another risk — not just in terms of the election outcome, but also the prospect of a disputed election and potential Constitutional crisis.

Inflation is another risk, as MMT3 — once nearly universally dismissed — has essentially become the norm. In the near term, the pandemic has been mostly a deflationary event (aside from a few pockets such as food prices). We don’t expect inflation to spiral out of control anytime soon, particularly in light of the deflationary forces that the pandemic has also unleashed, including accelerated technology adoption. Nevertheless, inflation uncertainty has spiked recently, and inflation does bear watching in light of this global sea change in monetary policy interaction.

Finally, the successful fulfillment of the third relay stage — the attainment of a medical resolution to the crisis within a relatively short time frame — does represent a key risk to our outlook. Indeed, the medical situation, including the possibility of a severe second wave necessitating widespread shutdowns, will remain a major risk until a vaccine or cure is developed and widely distributed.

Economic Outlook

Historically swift and sizable monetary and fiscal stimulus will not be enough to prevent an outright contraction in global GDP this year (see Figure 1). In our last Global Market Outlook update, we projected recessions in Japan and across European economies. Unfortunately, recession has since become unavoidable almost across the globe.

Figure 1 - State Street Global Advisors Forecast, Real GDP Growth

  2020 (%) 2021 (%)
Global -2.8 4.7
US -3.4 3.9
Australia -2.2 3.9
Canada -5.6 5.7
Eurozone -6.6 5.0
France -6.9 5.0
Germany -5.0 5.2
Italy -8.5 5.0
UK -6.7 4.4
Japan -4.2 2.5
Brazil -7.0 5.0
China 1.8 7.0
India -4.0 7.0
Mexico -7.0 4.0
South Africa -7.0 6.0
South Korea -0.7 3.2
Taiwan -1.0 3.2

Source: State Street Global Advisors, as of 7 August 2020.

As the virus spread globally, even emerging markets that at one point were viewed as unlikely to resort to lockdowns have since been forced to adopt them; India is a case in point. In fact, one reason that global economic performance is decidedly worse than it was during the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) is the current lack of resilience in emerging markets. China served as a growth anchor for the world economy in the last global recession, but it cannot play that role today. (China is, however, one of the very few economies likely to record modest positive GDP growth this year.)

United States
The United States is officially in recession as of June, according to the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER).4 The NBER noted that “the usual definition of a recession involves a decline in economic activity that lasts more than a few months.” However, other considerations such as intensity and breadth matter; these warranted “the designation of this episode as a recession, even if it turns out to be briefer than earlier contractions.”

The US recession may turn out to be not just briefer, but much briefer. Throughout this episode, we’ve been highlighting many data incongruities that illustrate the unusual nature of this economic contraction and which suggest that the recovery could be unprecedentedly swift as well. Extraordinary monetary and fiscal stimulus will play a key role here. With Fed monetary policy seemingly here to stay, fiscal stimulus so far has delivered support to consumer spending. Personal income in the US spiked 10% in April, despite a 15% unemployment rate. The personal savings rate shot up to a never-before-seen 33%, implying a decent financial cushion for consumers. It’s not all that surprising that US retail sales jumped by a record 17.7% in May, and that mortgage applications for home purchases are at an 11-year high. This is clearly not a typical recession. And although the recovery will vary across sectors – e.g., travel, hospitality, and events will likely be under pressure for some time – evidence of improvement can be found.

For these reasons, we continue to lean more positive than consensus on US GDP growth: We expect a 3.4% decline in 2020. We also expect stronger-than-consensus 3.9% GDP growth in 2021, based on our expectation that the policy response to a second-wave outbreak will not include broad lockdowns, and that there will be measurable progress on medical solutions to the virus that will allow the most vulnerable populations to benefit by late 2020 or early 2021.

Europe
The eurozone presents an especially interesting case in the current COVID-19 drama. Cyclically, it has been one of the worst-affected regions, with vulnerabilities stemming from high levels of economic openness, dependence on global tourism and demand for luxury goods, elderly populations, and macro policy constraints. But this is also the region that may emerge from this crisis in much better shape from a structural standpoint — the intensity of this shock is energizing transformative integration efforts to a much greater extent than was seen during the GFC or the Euro crisis.

After years when monetary policy in the form of ECB rate cuts and quantitative easing seemed to mark the limits of macro policy support available to the region’s economy, we are now finally witnessing a meaningful fiscal policy response. This is not just at the national level (including traditionally austere countries like Germany) but also — most importantly — at the supranational level. The EU has adopted a EUR750 billion recovery plan that represents a major step forward in unity. A sizable increase in the EU budget is currently under debate and, with the support of core allies, Germany and France, will likely be approved. At the same time, the European Central Bank is stepping on the stimulus gas pedal, having nearly doubled the size of its Pandemic Emergency Purchase Program to EUR1.350 billion.

We expect the eurozone economy to contract by 6.6% in 2020, before rebounding to grow by 5.0% in 2021. Unsurprisingly, Germany is expected to outperform that trajectory, given sizable counter-cyclical stimulus, stronger consumer finances, and less dependence on tourism. Also unsurprisingly, Italy is likely to underperform this year, although a normalization in tourism flows and favorable base comparisons should allow it to keep up with the rest of the region in 2021. France’s experience will likely fall in-between these two.

Emerging Markets
The COVID-19 crisis negates many of the structural long-term advantages of emerging market (EM) economies while accentuating their shortcomings. Prime among EM’s perceived advantages had been broadly favorable demographics. Abundant and relatively cheap labor resources had been a structural advantage that supported an export-led growth approach in many emerging market economies in Asia and beyond. But abundant labor is not an advantage when that labor is idled by the necessities of social isolation policies. In fact, last quarter we noted high population density as a key risk factor that could greatly exacerbate disease containment difficulties and escalate healthcare costs.

Unfortunately, over the last two months, Brazil and India have become poster children for a demographic advantage turning into a drag, as infection rates spiked. If there is a silver lining here, it is that EM populations are generally younger, and youth seems to greatly reduce COVID-19 mortality rates. Nonetheless, the containment measures and the loss of economic activity associated with these outbreaks mean that GDP in emerging markets as a whole will contract by close to 2.0% this year, an extraordinary development given typical annual expansion rates over 4.0%. In effect, COVID-19 has wiped out emerging markets’ structural growth advantage. This will not be a permanent change, but it is noteworthy nonetheless.

Another feature of the COVID-19 crisis is that it heightens heterogeneity in EM economic performance. At the moment, it appears to be more of a duality story — China on one hand, and most other EM countries on the other. As China contained its virus spread early on, its economic recovery began as early as Q2 — one quarter ahead of the rest of the world. China’s superior policy implementation capacity — both social and economic — place it favorably within the EM universe. In fact, one could even describe its performance as unique: It is the only large economy, advanced or developing, that is likely to eke out modest positive GDP growth this year.

Our Current Asset Allocation

Notwithstanding our broad expectations for the global economy and continued monetary and fiscal support, in this highly uncertain environment we’re currently modestly underweight equities while shifting toward corporate credit within fixed income. We continue to apply the majority of our risk budget to relative value positions, favoring US large cap within equities and credit over government bonds within fixed income. Our proprietary Market Regime Indicator (MRI), which measures risk sentiment, has continued to ease from extreme levels and has moved into more neutral territory. The change in sentiment was driven by meaningful declines in implied volatility on equities and a decrease in risky debt spreads, which point to further improvement in risk appetite. A spike in implied volatility on currencies has kept the full MRI just outside of the high-risk range, suggesting that a variety of risks continue to weigh on investor’s minds and global equity markets therefore remain susceptible to shocks. We continue to hold tactical hedges, especially in gold.

With respect to risk assets, the relatively high equity risk premium continues to warrant exposure to equities. But given a lack of company guidance, low visibility on earnings growth, and near-term threats to buybacks and dividend payouts, we believe investors should be selective in terms of investment style and region. As slow-moving and uncertain company earnings estimates make valuation analysis unreliable, our focus in equities has shifted to sustainable growth and high-quality business models.

Against that backdrop, we favor US equities, where we believe the worst has been priced in and where company guidance is gradually returning. US equity markets have a higher concentration of quality firms (i.e., companies with relatively strong cash flow, robust balance sheets, etc.), and US equities are benefiting from more positive investor sentiment compared with other regions.

Our views on European equities are somewhat less favorable. Recent steps toward greater fiscal unity in Europe and relative outperformance in European equities appear promising, but we believe that this outperformance may have more to do with the recent outperformance of US large caps and tech firms more generally. The top stocks in Europe in terms of market capitalization are global companies, with large businesses – and risk exposure – outside of Europe. More broadly, there is a paucity of choice in European stock markets compared with the US, especially in the tech hardware and software segments, and many of Europe’s domestic companies look weak. In Europe, we prefer an allocation toward debt and unhedged currency, at least for now.

For the moment, we’re also slightly overweight EM equities to hedge against further recovery in cyclical assets; however, earnings estimates in EM continue to appear over-optimistic and will bear close scrutiny in the months ahead. Meanwhile, the COVID-19 crisis has pressured both residential and commercial real estate, leading us to reduce our exposure to REITs.

We’re taking on risk through overweights in both investment grade (IG) and high yield (HY) credit, driven by central-bank support and growing cash on corporate balance sheets. Corporate credit valuations remain attractive as we anticipate further tightening in spreads for both IG and HY. This is partially driven by historically low interest rates, as well as the potential for a steepening yield curve as the economic backdrop improves. Momentum for equities weakened slightly, but it remains supportive and, combined with relatively lower volatility, suggests a beneficial environment for HY credit going forward. Despite the potential for an increase in defaults, the US Federal Reserve’s commitment to limiting downside risks in credit markets, along with increasing cash on corporate balance sheets, support further spread tightening. We are underweight government bonds and neutral duration, as quantitative easing purchases keep rates low and in a range for the balance of 2020.

As we review the COVID-19-influenced landscape, one area of the markets that draw our particular attention is cyclical assets, including EM assets. In the aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis, US hegemony drove cyclical-asset prices, with high cross-asset correlations and high correlation with the US dollar and US monetary policy. Looking forward, the outlook for the USD is likely to be choppy in the near term, due to global uncertainty. We expect near-term declines in the USD to be rangebound as investors continue to treat it as a hedge of choice. Beyond a six-month horizon, however, the outlook for the USD is decidedly negative; the dollar is currently expensive relative to fair value and has lost its yield support.

Given our expectations for a secular bear market in USD and the elevated risk premium for cyclical assets, we believe selective risk-taking in cyclicals with a close eye to value makes sense for investors with a medium-term horizon. We favor local currencies in EM. Given the level of yield support (around 200 basis points at the time of this writing), we believe investors should consider EM debt as a path to gaining exposure to EM currencies.

Closing Thoughts

As we look forward to the remainder of 2020, we offer the following key takeaways for investors:

  • Central-bank support and rising cash on corporate balance sheets have created strong opportunities in investment grade and high yield corporate credit.
  • Given the deep disconnect between fundamentals and earnings and the abundance of uncertainty confronting markets, risk awareness will be crucial in the months ahead. Investors should build tactical hedges – we currently favor gold – and consider additional approaches to help manage their overall risk exposure, including low-volatility and defensive equities.
  • As companies continue to hesitate to issue guidance and valuation analysis becomes less reliable, we strongly favor quality as an investment theme. Stocks issued by companies with strong quality characteristics (e.g., strong cash flow, sturdy balance sheet) tend to outperform in challenging circumstances. Quality outperformed in the aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis, and it has outperformed again in the wake of the recent drawdown.
  • At the same time, it’s important to consider the potential that the macro recovery could be relatively strong; this may warrant some exposure to assets that tend to be sensitive to the business cycle (i.e., cyclical assets, including EM assets). Post-GFC, cyclicals’ performance has been highly correlated to US monetary policy and the US dollar. A weakening US dollar in the short term, and the prospect of a secular bear market for the dollar over the longer term, create both the opportunity (in the form of a degree of market recovery and an elevated risk premium) and the motivation for investors to re-consider their exposure to cyclicals. We favor EM currencies in this space, accessed through EM debt.

    We will continue to update our outlook and its implications for investors in the weeks to come.

Implementation with SPDR ETFS

The positive but uneven recovery foretold in our Global Market Outlook demands a pragmatic approach to investment and the need to be selective by asset class to balance return opportunities with possible pitfalls. We have constructed the following implementation guide using SPDR’s European-domiciled ETFs taking full advantage of the breadth and depth of the range.

 

Key takeaway Suggested action Implementation by ETF
Overall: We are in a neutral risk regime.  Implement select exposure to risk assets. Target asset class by region, sector or factor.   
Attractions of Fed support, strong cash balances and yields  Fixed income exposure biased towards corporate bonds.  
  • SPDR® Bloomberg Barclays 1-10 Year U.S. Corporate Bond UCITS ETF (Dist) IUCB LN
  • ·SPDR® Bloomberg Barclays Euro Corporate Bond UCITS ETF (Dist) EUCO LN
  • SPDR® Bloomberg Barclays 0-5 Year U.S. High Yield Bond UCITS ETF (Dist) SJNK LN
  • SPDR® Bloomberg Barclays Euro High Yield Bond UCITS ETF (Dist) JNKE LN
Uncertainty rising across the board Earn returns from dividends, not reliant on capital
  • SPDR® S&P® U.S. Dividend Aristocrats UCITS ETF (Dist) UDVD LN
Opportunity for carry and currency appreciation  Maintain a preference for large cap and developed market equities; Sectors can target style exposure
  • SPDR S&P 500 ESG Screened UCITS ETF (Acc) SPPY GY
  • SPDR® MSCI EM Asia UCITS ETF SPYA GY
  • SPDR® S&P® U.S. Technology Select Sector UCITS ETF (Acc) ZPDT GY
  • SPDR® MSCI World Health Care UCITS ETF WHEA NA
Expect a secular bear market in USD Use currency hedging for protection
  • SPDR® Refinitiv Global Convertible Bond EUR Hdg UCITS ETF* (Acc) SPF1 GY
  • SPDR® S&P® 500 EUR Hdg UCITS ETF (Acc) SPPE GY 
  • SPDR® MSCI ACWI EUR Hdg UCITS ETF (Acc) SPP1 GY
  • SPDR® S&P® U.S. Dividend Aristocrats EUR Hdg UCITS ETF (Dist) SPPD GY
Value in cyclicals if yield curve steepens Selective risk-taking in equities
  • SPDR® MSCI Europe Materials UCITS ETF STP FP
Inflation Risks Be alert and protect
  • SPDR® Morningstar Multi-Asset Global Infrastructure UCITS ETF (Dist) MAGI LN
  • SPDR® Bloomberg Barclays U.S. TIPS UCITS ETF (Dist) TIPS LN
  • SPDR® MSCI USA Value UCITS ETF ZPRU GY

*Previous to 29 May 2020, the Fund was known as SPDR® Thomson Reuters Global Convertible Bond UCITS ETF (Dist).

About the Global Market Outlook

As investment challenges grow more complex, State Street’s Global Market Outlook was created to alert investors to portfolio risks and opportunities in the coming year, based on the research of our investment teams. Research around near-term and longer-term market issues is at the heart of who we are as investors. It drives the kinds of outcome-oriented portfolios we create for clients, drawing on the full range of our beta and alpha solutions as well as our asset allocation expertise.