Equities
It is highly unusual for equities to enter a bear market without the economy going into recession. Since we see the risk of recession as low, we recommend a neutral allocation between bonds and equities.
The oversold bounce is not supported by policy or profits, and should be treated as countertrend. Lift machinery to neutral and differentiate between pharmaceuticals and the unwinding of the biotech mania.
Any recovery in risk assets and selloff in safe havens is unlikely to extend into the cyclical horizon.
Last month, the model outperformed both global and U.S. equities in local-currency and U.S.-dollar terms. For February, the model is aggressively increasing its risk exposure and has included a bet on commodities for the first time since 2012. For equities, the largest overweight remains Europe, but EM and Canada enjoyed significant upgrades. For bonds, the model favors the European periphery.
While cyclical factors have contributed to the recent trade slowdown, there are many longer-term structural forces that will pose headwinds to globalization. A lack of aggregate demand will constrain growth and hurt trade in a global economy attempting to increase savings. Meanwhile, the bulk of economic dividends from free trade have already been reaped. The direct casualties from slowing global trade are economies with large export sectors: most commodity-producing countries and some south-east Asian nations.