With the U.S. Federal Reserve’s recent interest rate cut, we anticipate broad easing by central banks over the next year across the developed world. However, some caution may be warranted on duration, as markets may be overly optimistic about the initial pace of reductions. Meanwhile still sturdy, if softening, economic conditions along with strong investor demand have contributed to narrow corporate credit spreads, reinforcing the value of a quality emphasis and drawing on yield and price opportunities wherever they emerge.
Commentary
The wait for monetary easing by the U.S. Federal Reserve is finally over, with the announcement of a 50-basis-point rate cut in September, starting what will likely be a series of reductions over the next year. Various other developed market central banks had already started to ease, but the move provided general comfort for these campaigns amid progress on inflation and fears of excessive economic weakness. Japan’s move toward higher rates remains an outlier, although its increases from here should be moderate.
The world’s economic trajectory appears mixed, with the U.S. likely to avoid recession and Europe more stressed by manufacturing and consumer weakness. China’s structural issues remain a concern, even as monetary and fiscal authorities have moved to support domestic sentiment. Emerging market economies remain resilient overall. In our view, key issues include the current U.S. election cycle and geopolitical developments, as well as two-way risks associated with an inflation rebound or excessive weakness.
From an investment perspective, the force of rate reductions should support fixed income assets, particularly on the shorter segment of the yield curve, although we believe markets may be overly optimistic on the initial pace of the cuts, leading to caution on duration and potential opportunity in inflation-linked securities. In terms of credit, technical demand along with extended maturities and constructive fundamentals have kept spreads narrow, so we are looking for select opportunities leveraging credit research. We continue to favor structured credits both for yield and defensive characteristics, even as our exposures have eased somewhat due to pricing improvement. In our view, emerging markets debt is also appealing given constructive fundamentals and past strength in Fed rate-cutting cycles.
Our key investment themes and market views are provided below.