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How AI concerns are impacting India | What GDP is saying about inflation and rates | How bonds can drive gender equality
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July 26, 2023
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Underperformance in some sustainable strategies may leave investors hesitant about ESG from time to time.
But research from Pendal’s multi-asset team suggests ESG investment risks can be quantified and mitigated – and in the long run, a sustainable approach is likely to outperform.
“Investing sustainably is the right choice in the long term,” argues Michael Blayney, who leads Pendal’s multi-asset team.
“But investors need to understand how much and for how long their performance could differ from unscreened portfolios – and be comfortable with that,” he says.
Pendal quantifies the level of risk inherent to ESG portfolios by comparing the tracking error of representative ESG indexes with unscreened indexes over eight years.
Tracking error is a measure of how closely a managed fund tracks its benchmark index.
The data suggests ESG funds deliver “something like half the risk you would get from an active manager, simply from negative screening”.
Investing in “real assets” – tangible things such as roads and office buildings – provides diversification and in some case a hedge against inflation.
But complexity and lower liquidity can put off some investors.
“Investing in infrastructure is complex because it depends on a range of variables like the type of asset, the regulatory regime, how it is structured and financed, and to what extent income is inflation-linked,” says Michael Blayney, Pendal’s head of multi-asset.
But that diversity allows investors to design portfolios that better suit their needs, argues Michael.
Pendal’s multi-asset team focuses on infrastructure assets that are directly or indirectly linked to inflation, have low sensitivity (or beta) to equities and have a better environmental footprint.
Interest rates may be nearing their peak, but investors will need to manage the impact in their portfolios for the next few years, says our head of multi-asset Michael Blayney.
“Increases in interest rates usually flow through to the real economy and corporate earnings with a one-to-two-year lag,” says Michael.
“As such there may still be more negative “surprises” to come – and at least an elevated risk of recession in the second half of 2023.”
What does that mean for portfolio construction and asset allocation?
“We are slightly bearish on equities, neutral on government bonds, slightly negative on credit, but selectively positive on listed real assets.
“Global equity market valuations are broadly reasonable, and risks to financial stability appear to be contained for now.”
The first half of 2023 surprised markets with better-than-expected economic conditions.
But a key model used by Pendal’s multi-asset team is now signalling that rate rises are starting to bite the services side of the economy.
“Our economic cycle model has pretty much got it right up to this point,” says Pendal multi-asset PM Alan Polley. “Now it’s turning negative.
“That makes us more cautious on the second half of this year, so we’re slightly underweight equities in response.”
Pendal’s economic cycle model analyses the level and rate of change of economic indicators such as consumer and business surveys, while also examining how economic data surprises either positively or negatively.
The model is one of three key indicators that inform the team’s active asset allocation process – alongside a valuation model and a model that analyses market trends – and has a long-term track record of picking turning points in the economic cycle.
No matter your opinion on climate change, there’s no doubt we’re undergoing an energy transition – a global shift away from fossil-based energy to renewable sources. The evidence is in renewable power growth, electric car adoption, regulatory and policy change, public sentiment – and yes, investment trends.
There are two main reasons an investor might show interest in the energy transition: aligning a portfolio with their values and making money. And it’s not just about identifying innovative companies with strong pricing power and a growing addressable market, Michael says. Sustainable investors must also “participate across multiple asset classes as part of a broader diversified portfolio”.
That might include infrastructure or sustainable bonds for example. “Just like you don’t put all your money into one asset class, investors shouldn’t put their whole portfolio into one thematic or indeed access a large thematic via only one asset class.”
The strength of global equities continues to surprise as we near the halfway mark of 2023 – but some markets make more sense than others.
Pendal’s head of multi-asset Michael Blayney is cautious on the mega-tech-driven Wall Street rally.
“The US remains one of our less-preferred markets given stretched valuations and the heightened risk of recession,” he says.
“AI is clearly an important thematic for the next decade, but markets have a habit of getting overly exuberant in the short term when a new theme emerges – and this appears to be one of those occasions.”
Michael prefers Japan, which is up some 20 per cent this year, compared to 1 per cent for the S&P/ASX200.
“We’ve liked and been overweight Japan for some time. Japanese companies have been more profitable recently and are relatively under-leveraged, putting them in a better position as rates rise.”
Overall Pendal’s multi-asset team is “marginally underweight equities and close to neutral on bonds, while holding a little more cash and liquid alternatives, which also gives some exposure to inflation hedging assets”.
We’d all like a better idea of where cash rates are going and what returns we can expect from our investments in the future.
One of the tools our multi-asset team uses to get a better view is r*.
Pronounced “r-star”, it’s a term economists use for the real level of interest rates at which the economy neither expands nor contracts.
“Looking forward, we see the r* around the 1 per cent level – providing a reasonable compensation for the opportunity cost of supplying capital,” says Alan Polley, a PM with our multi-asset team.
“A higher r* means the forward-looking return environment is higher than it has been since the GFC.
“Another nice aspect is valuations – with r* trending down before the pandemic we had valuations going up. High valuations mean more risk looking forward.
“Now that we have r* at more normal levels, valuations are back to more normal levels as well.
“These two things suggest the return outlook is more attractive than it was before the pandemic.”
As inflation begins to fall investors can have more confidence investing in government bonds, argues Michael Blayney, Pendal’s head of multi-asset.
“Inflation in the US has come off a long way,” says Michael. “It peaked above 9 per cent last year and most recently it’s come in just below 5 per cent on a headline basis.
“This has important portfolio considerations. It means you can have a bit more confidence in your bond allocation, because the biggest risk to bonds, ultimately, is inflation.
“We have moved to slightly over-weight bonds and that’s a big change because we were underweight bonds for a long time.”
While global bond yields are broadly in line with Michael’s estimate of fair value, he cautions that elevated services price inflation and a very tight labour market remain key risks for bonds.
Offsetting this is the risk of recession, when bonds should provide their traditional “risk off” portfolio benefits.
Economists have been forecasting a US recession for months and while the timing continues to get pushed out, it’s still on the cards, says Michael.
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Get regular insights on investing, market analysis and portfolio management from the experts at Perpetual Group.