Equities
Approaching the referendum on EU membership, what are the prospects for the U.K. economy and financial markets?
The Chinese corporate sector has been reluctant to expand, focusing instead on destocking inventory and hoarding cash. This protects the corporate sector balance sheet, but is not conducive for strong GDP expansion. Q1 earnings reports confirm that an upturn in the Chinese profit cycle is unfolding.
The reflation rally continues. Despite our bearish outlook for the year, we think the risks of the current rally lie to the upside given China's redoubling of stimulus at the expense of reform. Populist troubles are picking up in Europe, but we maintain our positive structural view and note that the migration crisis is slackening. Rather, the greatest risks of populism continue to flourish in the Anglo-Saxon world with Brexit and Trump.
Preliminary results from the Philippine elections suggest that policy uncertainty and discontinuity will challenge the reform trajectory of a country with one of the best macroeconomic backdrops in the emerging market universe.
We continue to view the rally in equities and high-yield corporate bonds since February as a high-risk affair.
U.S. dollar softness has failed to lift equities of late, a tentative warning that correlations are changing as the U.S. economy cools.