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Real Estate

The previous Insight showed that REITs in other parts of the world are outperforming smartly, but lagging in the U.S. We expect a re-convergence. Already a yawning gap has opened between REITs and Treasury yields (shown inverted). That is not sustainable, especially in view of positive underlying cash flow fundamentals. Our proxy for the REIT occupancy rate is still trending higher (third panel), supporting good growth in REIT pricing power proxies. Importantly, pipeline supply pressures look set to ease, based on the downturn in multifamily home construction. All of this points to decent cash flow growth prospects. Against a backdrop of still attractive value in a world starved for yield, we continue to recommend an overweight portfolio position in the defensive S&P REIT index. (Part II)...But REITs Are Oddly Out Of Favor In The U.S. (Part II)...But REITs Are Oddly Out Of Favor In The U.S.
Our cautious outlook on corporate profits amid ongoing deflation pressures is reason enough to favor non-cyclical equity sectors. But the surprise Bank of Japan move to introduce negative deposit rates adds yet another catalyst for defensive and fixed-income proxies. On the margin, capital is likely to seek out high yielding government bond markets. The U.S. still has comparatively juicy yields compared with other developed countries. In fact, a growing swath of the euro area bond market has negative yields. In addition, the U.S. has a strong currency. That could create a self-reinforcing feedback loop, as the exchange rate will sustain imported deflationary pressures over and above the additional pressure on China and the rest of Asia if the yen weakens. When the ECB announced negative deposit rates in the spring of 2014, the U.S. dollar immediately vaulted higher and Treasury yields declined for the rest of the year (see the vertical line). At the same time, long duration sectors such as health care accelerated, while utilities and REITs caught a bid. We expect these sub-surface equity trends to repeat, and broaden, as telecom services should now fit into the mix, because unlike 2014, overall corporate profits are falling and financial conditions are much more restrictive. The implication is that a defensive portfolio structure remains appropriate. Another Wave Of Deflation Favors Long Duration Sectors Another Wave Of Deflation Favors Long Duration Sectors

An improvement in the euro area credit impulse is encouraging, but we explain why it is not enough to sustainably boost risk-assets.

Central banks follow backward-looking indicators but economies follow forward-looking indicators. So which indicators should investors follow? And what is the current message? Also, we see signs that London is cooling.