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Awareness of potentially high-impact but improbable developments should help investors prepare for unexpected changes in market conditions
In our base case, the global economy is poised to improve in 2020 and the outperformance gap between the United States (the US) and other developed market economies is likely to shrink. After all, December 2019 brought to fruition the US–Mexico–Canada Agreement, the phase 1 US-China trade deal, a US budget agreement and a clear mandate by the British electorate to follow through on Brexit. Consequently, we expect global growth to reach 3.5% barring additional geopolitical shocks. We see interest rates remaining low and inflation being contained but moving a bit higher globally.
Our base case incorporates the dynamics we see as most likely. Here, we consider the grey swans – alternative scenarios outside the scope of our base case but not beyond the realm of possibility. The market may discount their likelihood, but if any one were to happen, it has the potential to materially move markets. Our grey swan scenarios are as follows:
Although the European Central Bank (ECB) has been providing ample monetary stimulus, the region’s economy has been stuck in low levels of growth. As a result, European equities have lagged their US counterparts and continue to trade at deep discounts relative to the US. However, with large swaths of debt still reading at negative yields, it appears that monetary stimulus alone is not enough. In this context, additional fiscal stimulus could prove to be an important lever. In fact, the ECB and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) have specifically called for countries with budget surpluses to invest to stimulate growth and reduce surplus to 0.5% of national GDP.
The challenge, of course, lies in the willingness of such countries to adopt these measures. The German government, for example, may not be willing to risk its political commitment to keep its federal budget in surplus.
Under our grey swan, European national governments and the ECB move toward a grand bargain, where the ECB gradually withdraws stimulus in exchange for small incremental fiscal spending from multiple countries. The Netherlands, Sweden, Ireland and over a dozen more countries have capacity for fiscal stimulus in addition to Germany under the ECB and OECD proposal (Figure 1). A series of small steps could aggregate to effective economic stimulus.