By Henry H. McVey Sep 19, 2016
Rising macroeconomic and geopolitical tensions are creating both opportunities and risks for global investors across global capital markets. KKR’s Global Macro and Asset Allocation team continues to emphasize five key macro themes amid the tumult, many of which we think can perform against a variety of economic backdrops. We note the following:
Interest rate outlook.
We remain in the
lower-for-longer camp regarding rates. Significantly, recent
events across Asia and Europe — the Brexit vote in
particular — only give us further confidence in our
outlook. We also think that it is critical for investors to
understand that the U.S. Federal Reserve may be signaling that
it is now actually at an already modestly accommodative stance,
with rates at record lows and the Fed’s balance sheet near
a record high. If we are right, then the traditional neutral
rate for the federal funds rate could be significantly lower
than many economists now think. Not surprisingly, given this
backdrop, we remain overweight both opportunistic liquid credit
and private credit, including direct lending and
mezzanine/asset-based lending. We also favor real assets
that can produce both yield and growth, including midstream
assets such as pipelines and real estate credit.
Chinese GDP growth is still slowing.
Despite temporary periods of economic reacceleration, we
believe that China is structurally slowing. Embedded in this
view is our cautious outlook for global trade, particularly as
it relates to
traditional Chinese imports. On the export side, our
research shows that China is making huge inroads into higher
value-added exports. This transition is a big deal and warrants
investor attention, for both offensive and defensive reasons,
in sectors such as telecommunications equipment, health care
equipment, and optical equipment. Also of note, China appears
to be flooding certain global markets with excess capacity in
low-value-added exports. If we are right, then it is too early
to fish on the bottom in several cyclical industries,
particularly those with excess capacity, unless valuations are
extremely compelling. We also see additional margin headwinds
in industries previously dominated by U.S. and European
multinationals. By comparison, we think that there are
increasing opportunities to partner with Chinese firms as they
expand abroad.
New outlook for certain economies.
We expect an upward revaluation in countries that have large
domestic-oriented consumer economies in the wake of the Brexit
referendum, particularly relative to trade-oriented economies
that rely more on exports to grow. The U.S. is clearly the most
obvious beneficiary, given its economy’s absolute size, as
well as the health of its consumers. However, we also
anticipate India,
Indonesia, and Mexico to be major beneficiaries of this
change in investor perception. If we are right, then valuations
in these countries could actually hold or even increase from
current levels in certain instances.
The ongoing dismantling of levered financial
services intermediaries.
Our travels across Europe,
the U.S. and parts of Asia lead us to believe that the trend of
traditional financial services companies becoming more
ultilitylike is ongoing, given the move toward low and negative
rates by central banks, as well as the desire by governments
for significantly heightened regulation. Somewhat ironically,
one outcome of trends across traditional financial
intermediaries is that credit creation will actually be harder
to stimulate, which means that central banks will likely have
to continue to overcompensate with even more aggressive
monetary policy initiatives. The other consequence of the
current financial services backdrop is that more and more
complex transactions will move into the nonbank market, which
could provide significant opportunities for investors to step
in and serve as important providers of liquidity.
Buy complexity; sell simplicity.
Given today’s increasingly bifurcated market, we want to move
capital to take advantage of the arbitrage we now see between
complexity and simplicity. Indeed, despite record highs in the
S&P 500, we are increasingly finding attractively complex
stories that the market does not like because of limited
earnings visibility, increased volatility or being cyclically
out of favor. For our nickel, we think that — with some
value-added restructuring, repositioning and maybe tuck-in
acquisitions — there is a significant opportunity today to
dramatically boost valuation by merely improving a
company’s earnings visibility, something that the market
desperately craves in today’s low-rate, slow-growth world.
In contrast, it also feels to us that investors are now willing
to potentially overpay for earnings visibility and yield.
Indeed, with simplicity being such a hot topic, we believe
opportunities exist across the corporate and real asset sectors
to carve out and monetize distinct earnings streams that are
trading at what we believe are premium valuations relative to
their long-term intrinsic value.
In summary, rising macroeconomic and geopolitical tensions are creating opportunities and risks for global investors across both equities and fixed income. Overall, our message is that the current environment is not likely to change materially in the near term and, as such, pursuing idiosyncratic themes is likely to yield better performance results than increasing exposure to beta plays at this point in the cycle.
This article was originally posted on Institutional Investor.