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Global

Although the sector composition of growth and value indexes have changed over time, growth stocks have tended to underperform value stocks over the past several years when bond yields have risen. The basis for this relationship is that investors view growth…
Special Report

When complexity collapses, it is a red flag for impending tail-events, heart attacks, and reversals in the markets. We describe how to measure complexity, how to spot the red flag that it has collapsed, and list some investments that are approaching potential turning-points.

Global PMIs delivered a poor signal about manufacturing activity in March. The J.P. Morgan Global Manufacturing PMI ticked down from 49.9 to 49.6. It marks the seventh consecutive month below the 50 boom-bust line and indicates a slightly faster pace of…
In the monthly Daily Insights Survey we conducted last week, we asked about our readers’ expectations for Fed policy and the US economy. The majority of respondents (67%) expect the Fed to end the tightening cycle in H1 and subsequently pause for the…
March was a month of two halves. The turmoil that erupted in the wake of the failures of SVB and Signature Bank led to a bout of risk-off sentiment in the first half of March. Equities sold off globally, oil prices fell, and government bonds rallied amid…

Stay defensive in the second quarter. We can see a narrow window for risky assets to outperform but we recommend investors stay wary amid high rates, supply risks, extreme uncertainty, peak polarization, and structurally rising geopolitical risk.

In this Strategy Outlook, we present the major investment themes and views we see playing out for the rest of 2023 and beyond.

In Section I, we discuss the implications of the banking crisis that emerged in March. We do not expect what happened in the US or Europe to morph into a full-blown meltdown of the financial system, but this month’s events will likely lead to a further tightening in bank lending standards, raising further the odds of a US recession over the coming year. We continue to recommend an underweight stance toward risky assets versus government bonds over the coming 6-12 months, and defensive positioning within a global equity portfolio. In Section II, we estimate the impact of recently-passed US legislation on US business investment over the structural horizon and conclude that it will indeed boost capex growth over the coming several years. Assets poised to benefit from this trend will likely underperform over the coming year but should be bottom-fished following the next recession.

It is a big mistake to think that rate cuts or lower bond yields will ease credit conditions. Quite the contrary. After an aggressive tightening of monetary policy, the first rate cuts always coincide with much tighter credit conditions. We discuss the implications for credit, government bonds and equities. Plus, we find a startling anomaly in equity sector performance.

After the shotgun marriage of Credit Suisse to UBS last weekend and the “bail-in” of Credit Suisse’s AT-1 bonds, which were written down to zero, and the failure of two regional US banks, investors are worrying which other banks might be at risk, and whether…