Financial Markets
This week's <i>Special Report</i> written by <i>Geopolitical Strategy's</i> Managing Editor Marko Papic discusses the "bull market" in terrorism and the limited impact on risk assets from terrorist attacks. The rise in attacks will not necessarily lead to anti-establishment politicians taking power.
While the BoE and the Fed are increasingly committed to letting inflation expectations rise, the BoJ disappointed once again. The dollar and the pound are likely to experience broad weaknesses, while gold, the euro and commodity currencies have upside. USD/ZAR will fall further in the short term, but the cyclical bull-market is not over.
The current risk premium embedded into Brazilian financial markets is too low and will widen as investors come to realize Brazil's unsustainable public debt dynamics. The government is planning a major shift in its fiscal policy framework that will ease pressure to cut budget expenditures, but is bearish for the nation's public debt trajectory. Although the economy could stabilize going forward, financial markets are already discounting a lot of good news. Stay put.
The Chinese manufacturing sector has remained under downward pressure, but the stress level has alleviated compared to a few months ago. The Chinese labor market will likely continue to deteriorate, which will force policymakers to stay accommodative. Despite the recent rally, Chinese investable stocks remain exceptionally cheap.
The GAA DM Equity Country Allocation model is updated as of July 29, 2016. The non-U.S. (level 2) model made some changes by increasing the overweight in Sweden and Italy while reducing the overweight in Netherland and Germany such that now Germany is in underweight position.
The odds of an inflation "mini-scare" are rising, although deflationary tail risks from abroad cannot be dismissed.
It is dangerous to equate recent equity strength with economic vitality, as history shows that liquidity-fueled equity advances favor non-cyclicals over deep cyclicals. Take profits in gold, buy rails and sell industrial machinery.
In July, the model outperformed both global equities and the S&P 500 in local-currency terms, while underperforming in U.S. dollar terms. For the monthly of August, the model made no changes to overall risk exposure.
The U.S. and the global economies are improving. A synchronized upswing normally trumps the Fed in determining the path for the dollar. U.S. inflation expectations are likely to rise relative to the rest of the world, weighing on the dollar. The risks for EUR/USD have risen. We are hedging our long EUR/USD position by shorting the euro on some crosses. Buy CHF/JPY.
The recent rally in risk assets is walking a very fine line. If the Fed turns more hawkish, or U.S. growth slows, it could fall over.