Europe
Today's dangerous distortion does not result from credit excesses. It results from an irrational mispricing of risk caused by a protracted period of ultra-loose monetary policy. In turn, the ultra-loose monetary policy results from the dangerous dogma of the 2% inflation target. How should investors position short-term and long-term?
The median voter moving to the left has spurred paradigm shifts. These new regimes are giving way to transformational leaders who seek change by breaking convention. As they test their constraints and pursue their preferences, a cautious stance towards risk assets is warranted. In this Monthly Report, BCA's Geopolitical Strategy discusses Trump's recent comeback, rising EM political risk, and Italy's upcoming constitutional referendum.
The median voter moving to the left has spurred paradigm shifts. These new regimes are giving way to transformational leaders who seek change by breaking convention. As they test their constraints and pursue their preferences, a cautious stance towards risk assets is warranted. In this Monthly Report, BCA's Geopolitical Strategy discusses Trump's recent comeback, rising EM political risk, and Italy's upcoming constitutional referendum.
The Fed is sending signals that another rate hike is coming, despite sluggish U.S. growth and modest inflation, while both the ECB and BoJ are facing questions about the ability to maintain the pace of bond purchase programs. Amidst all this uncertainty, bond risk premiums can rise further in the near term.
Wedged between an improving labor market but icy global conditions, the Fed may be on the verge of conducting a policy mistake. This would be dollar and yen bullish. Commodity and EM currencies should bear the brunt of any pain. The pound's upside is limited, but so is the downside. NZD should soon buckle. Draghi did nothing, yet the euro rebounded little.
A common perception is that the euro has been a failure for Italy. We challenge this perception and explain why it is so important for investors, whether it is wrong or right.
The dollar is likely to enter the bubbly stage of its bull market within the next 12 months. The key culprit for this move will not be the Fed, but easing by non-U.S. central banks. The euro area economy could enter a temporary soft patch, but this will not result in an imminent easing by the ECB.
We reveal what our most-trusted leading indicators are predicting about the major economies, and end with a provocative conclusion.
Recent shifts in the Fed's policy stance are bullish for the dollar, negative for commodities and emerging markets, and positive for assets with a yield. They also suggest risk assets will continue to perform decently.
In August, the model outperformed the S&P 500 and global equities in both USD and local-currency terms. For September, the model increased its allocation to cash and trimmed its exposure to equities.