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Equities

In September, the model outperformed the S&P 500, while it underperformed global equities in both USD and local-currency terms. For October, the model trimmed its allocation to stocks and boosted its weightings in bonds and cash.

Special Report

This week's <i>Special Report</i> looks at the three controversial predictions that I made at this year's <i>BCA New York Investment Conference</i>.

It's hard to make a case for attractive returns from any asset class over the next year. We dial down risk a bit but ending our overweight on junk bonds. Investors should pick up yield where they can but without taking excessive risk.

This month's <i>Special Report<i/> looks at the Fed's policy options in the event that there is a negative economic shock while the policy rate is still very depressed. The Fed's "Plan A" is more QE and forward guidance, which are not up to the task. There is no "Plan B", which means that risk assets will be hit hard during the next downturn.

Investors stand to benefit from Czech koruna revaluation versus the euro and also from positive carry, while waiting for the central bank to remove the exchange rate floor. Go long CZK / short euro. Economic fundamentals and policy divergence between Poland and Hungary point to a stronger zloty versus the forint. Go long PLN / short HUF.

Recently, the insurance group has enjoyed yet another mini relative performance burst of strength, supported by the modest uptick in bond yields. However, we doubt that a sustainable outperformance phase can ensue. Pricing power momentum has rolled over. Total home and auto sales growth has decelerated close to nil, suggesting a slowing in new written premiums. In the meantime, insurance companies have been bizarrely aggressive in terms of hiring. Insurance headcount has vaulted higher in the last several quarters. A more onerous cost structure is not compatible with headwinds to top-line growth. As a result, we doubt that excellent value will be realized. Downgrade to neutral and please see yesterday's Weekly Report for more details. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are BLBG: S5INSU - AIG, CB, MET, MMC, PRU, TRV, AFL, AON, ALL, PGR, WLTW, HIG, PFG, L, CINF, LNC, XL, AJG, UNM, TMK, AIZ.
Data processing stocks have marked time since we took profits and downgraded to neutral in mid-February. Increasingly, this lateral move looks to be a consolidation rather than a trend change. This group fits into our consumption vs. capital spending theme, and outperforms when economic growth slippage is the dominant driver of a disinflationary macro backdrop. Data processing sales went through a rough patch, but the seeds of a recovery have been sown. Top-line performance is highly correlated with consumer sector transaction volumes. Resilient consumer confidence, a high savings rate, decent job growth, and rising incomes all imply that spending should remain an economic bright spot. The relative performance consolidation has allowed the industry to grow into premium valuations, at a time when the high margin and recurring revenue nature of the industry's operating profile stands out in a disinflationary world struggling to grow at trend, let alone above it. Please see yesterday's Weekly Report for more details on the upgrade. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5DPOS - V, MA, PYPL, ADP, FIS, FISV, PAYX, ADS, GPN, WU, XRX, TSS.

The monetary policy sweet spot won't end for equities until interest rates climb above the equilibrium rate - that won't happen even with a rate hike in December. But even though equity markets will continue to cheer a go-slow Fed in the short run, the sustainability of these gains will be dubious until a healthier environment for earnings takes hold.

Stocks are flirting with new highs, courtesy of a gradualist Fed and the reduced threat
of incremental near-term U.S. dollar strength.

Special Report

At last year's BCA New York Investment Conference, I made five controversial predictions. This week's <i>Special Report</i> looks at how they have panned out.