LGT Private Banking House View

December 2024 - in a nutshell

"Trumponomics 2.0" has been the dominant theme in capital markets since Trump’s election victory. In his second term, the administration is likely to focus on tax cuts, spending cuts and trade protectionism. In the short term, these measures could boost investment, consumption and the labour market in the US, but in the longer term they could entail risks such as inflation, higher interest rates and rising national debt.

Data
Autore
Gérald Moser, CIO & Head Investment Services EMEA
Tempo di lettura
7 minuto

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In this context, we maintain a risk-on stance and confirm our "Overweight" in global equities, but we are making some adjustments: For example, we are upgrading eurozone equities to "Overweight" and at the same time reduce our "Overweight" in US equities. We are also reducing our US dollar position and downgrade emerging market equities to "Underweight". In addition, we are making a number of adjustments to our sector strategy, which overall results in a slightly more cyclical alignment. 

For corporate bonds, the tax cuts and deregulation planned by the newly elected US administration offer opportunities, while other measures, such as the planned tariffs and countermeasures, could also pose risks. We expect spreads to widen slightly. The US dollar appreciated briefly after the US election result, but we expect a reversal soon. We therefore favour a long position in the euro versus the greenback over the medium term.

Macroeconomic environment

After Trump’s election victory and an overwhelming Republican majority, the US faces major changes. "Trumponomics 2.0" focuses on tax cuts, massive spending reductions, and trade protectionism. In the short term, this could boost investment, consumption, and labour demand in the US, but poses significant long-term risks such as resurging inflation, higher interest rates, and growing national debt.

Investment strategy

The LGT Private Banking Europe Investment Committee is maintaining a risk-on stance despite the impact of the US elections and confirms the "Overweight" in global equities. However, we are refining our positioning in individual equity segments, introducing an "Overweight" in eurozone equities and an "Underweight" in emerging market equities. We are also reducing our "Overweight" in US equities, which allows us to reduce our US dollar exposure and take partial profits, as well as diversify our currency exposure. At the same time, we are neutralising the position in Japanese equities and setting insurance-linked securities to "Neutral".

Equity strategy

The election result in the US equals a paradigm shift towards a reflationary regime that favours economic and profit growth in the US. We remain constructive on equities as an asset class and continue to favour the US. For the rest of the world, there is likely to be greater forecasting uncertainty, coupled with correspondingly higher volatility. For Europe, however, a scenario with a stronger US economy, a currently strong US dollar and potentially looser German fiscal policy should outweigh the risks of new trade tariffs. In addition, the ECB will have a greater scope for interest rate cuts than the Fed. Overall, we see potential for moderate earnings growth for European equities, combined with moderate rerating potential. We are therefore upgrading Europe - with a focus on the eurozone - to "Attractive". By contrast, prospects of higher punitive tariffs combined with higher US government bond yields for longer appear to be reducing the risk/reward profile of emerging markets. As a result, we are downgrading emerging markets to "Unattractive". In our sector strategy, we are making several shifts that will result in an overall slightly more pro-cyclical orientation.

Fixed-income strategy

For corporate bonds, Trump’s second term offers opportunities such as tax cuts and deregulation that could support the US economy and keep risk premiums low. At the same time, planned tariffs and possible countermeasures pose valuation risks. While we expect spreads to widen slightly in the coming months, investor demand will remain strong thanks to attractive total returns. Companies benefiting from deregulation could offer limited valuation potential. Issuer and sector differentiation is likely to become more important.

Currency strategy

Trump’s election victory has led to a short-term US dollar appreciation, driven by a renewed sense of optimism about his economic policies. This boost was also supported by monetary policy divergence, with the Fed maintaining a relatively hawkish stance compared to other major central banks. We believe this US dollar upward momentum is unsustainable and will soon reverse. We therefore adjust our recommendation and now favour a long position in EUR versus USD, reflecting our expectation that the greenback is nearing a peak. 

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