Sectors
China's current capacity utilization does not look extreme both from a historical perspective and within the global context. The markets misperception about China's overcapacity issue has heavily punished Chinese equities, which is unjustified and unsustainable. Strategically it makes sense to overweight Chinese stocks and material/energy sectors against their global peers.
Contrary to the almost universal bearish market consensus, we are raising our tactical view on iron ore to bullish from neutral. We remain tactically neutral on the steel market over the next three months. Strategically, we are bearish iron ore and steel.
Deutsche Bank's woes highlight a much wider malaise within European banks: under-capitalisation and under-profitability. We explain why getting the banks right is crucial to a successful investment strategy in equity, bond and currency markets.
There are two key risks that could derail a bear-flattening of the yield curve. The first is a Trump election victory, the second is a flaring of stress in the non-U.S. banking sector.
Since 2014, market expectations of the Fed funds rate has been the primary driver of banks stock performance. Investors' heightened focus about the positive role of interest rate hikes on bank profitability has some merit because when interest rates are near the zero lower bound, net interest margins are unduly suppressed. However, a breakout in bank stocks requires much more than a hawkish Fed outlook: without a significant pick-up in top-line growth, there is no impetus for bank stocks to sustain rallies.
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.