Here’s How to Rebalance Your Portfolio With Fed’s Pivot Just Around the Corner


Asset Allocation Views

EQUITIES:

Regions, sectors, and styles

We remain neutral on equities on the backdrop of a resilient albeit still slowing growth environment and elevated valuation. From a regional perspective, we continue to favor US and European equities, as China continues to battle a weak internal demand and Japan’s economic momentum remains soft.

From a sector/style perspective, we lean toward large/quality capitalization, with a reasonable valuation as some rotation is going on with investors expecting the easing cycle to start soon by the Fed. On the other hand, we don’t see yet conditions to increase exposure to smaller capitalizations and cyclicals, which would be early signs of a reacceleration of economic growth.

Earnings

The second-quarter earnings season is now behind us and was rather reassuring, with AI/technology and the high-end consumer in the US remaining resilient. Overall, guidance provided by corporations has confirmed the outlook for 2024 earnings, with negative revisions for cyclicals and smaller caps offset by positive revisions for mega caps.

Looking ahead, we speculate that the debate will center around: a) the pace of the earnings growth slowdown for large-cap tech, b) the sustainability of AI investment, and c) the realism of the sharp earnings acceleration.

Regarding the deceleration of earnings growth for large-cap tech, it is coming from a high base (+37% YoY in 2024) to still an attractive growth of >20% for 2025 that is above the market average.

On AI, more and more investors are questioning the future return on investment from the massive investments done by large technology companies. While the concern is valid, companies like Alphabet (NASDAQ:) and Meta (NASDAQ:) are already benefitting from AI-driven optimizations, and most recognize the need to keep investing to avoid falling behind competitors. Nvidia’s second-quarter results make us believe the investment cycle will likely continue into 2025. The next important milestone will be the capital expenditure (capex) guidance that large-cap tech companies, expected at the beginning of next year.

Regarding the third point, the sharp earning acceleration for the rest of the market is debatable to us. While there are some tailwinds such as lower inflationary pressure, a favourable base effect, and the prospect of lower interest rates, economic activity is not expected to accelerate meaningfully from here. Additionally, consensus earnings tend to be revised lower until the mid-year, so we should expect this negative revision process to unfold over the coming quarters for calendar 2025.

Valuations

We are turning more cautious on valuation for equities as: a) the earnings slowdown in mega-caps is pressuring multiples, b) the economic activity continues to normalize (slow), c) earnings growth expectations in areas of the market such as mid/small-caps are high and should warrant lower valuation multiple in our view and d) the equity risk premium remains unattractive.

Overall, the US market remains expensive while the smaller spectrum of this market relies on optimistic earnings growth. This indicates investors should be more sensitive to valuation, and we have seen this occur over the recent weeks with richly valued stocks performing underperforming.

Additionally, looking across assets, the equity risk premium looks unattractive by historical standards.

Tactical Decisions With Asset Allocations

We started the year with an allocation to equities which was close to our Strategic Asset Allocation (SAA). Due to market effects, the allocation has been rising progressively to OVERWEIGHT throughout the first half of the year and we didn’t sell into strength.

However, during our July Tactical Asset Allocation Committee, we decided to rebalance portfolios towards a neutral allocation to equities, which means that we effectively reduced our exposure to equities in our clients’ portfolios. We did so by rebalancing our US equity exposure towards SAA neutral point (e.g. this implied a 2% reduction in balanced accounts).

Regarding Fixed Income, we also made some minor rebalancing moves within portfolios. For instance, in a balanced account we reduced the underweight of High Yield bonds, while staying slightly underweight vs our SAA across all 4 currencies (+1%). The two changes mentioned above resulted in a cash increase, typically by around +1% in balanced accounts.

As mentioned earlier, our stance on equities remains neutral but we expect market volatility to stay elevated for a while. We also note that the correlation between equities and bonds is turning negative, which improves the diversification characteristics of government bonds.

As such, the committee agreed to continue the move further toward neutral on the fixed income side, by moving the long end government bonds back to neutral while holding our equity allocation at neutral.

Matrix of preference moves (see below)

Cash to underweight (from neutral)

  • The strong rebound of the main stock markets since the 5th of August has pushed the equity allocation to slightly overweight and lowered the cash allocation. As we are not rebalancing portfolios, we are downgrading the preference to cash from neutral to negative to represent the portfolio reality in our grids.

All currencies are back to neutral vs USD (from Negative)

  • Technical indicators have turned against the US dollar, and the Fed has sent a clear signal about coming rate cuts. As a result, the Asset Allocation Committee agreed to remove the underweight position in all currencies against the US dollar.

Asset Allocation Grid

Original Post





Source link