Wealth Strategies
Swiss Private Bank Optimistic About Equities In 2024
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Paris-based Edmond de Rothschild Asset Management has just released its ‘Outlook and Convictions” for 2024. The comments come as a raft of wealth management houses in the US, Europe, Asia and elsewhere have set out their ideas for how clients should position their portfolios for 2024.
Two sharply contradictory trends have dominated 2023 so far: growth has been more resilient than expected, at least in the US, while bank lending has contracted both in Europe and the US, according to Edmond de Rothschild Asset Management. The business is part of Geneva-headquartered Edmond de Rothschild, one of the world's oldest private banking houses.
“In fixed income, credit is contracting in the US and Europe and central bank surveys show that banks don’t want to lend,” CIO Benjamin Melman at Edmond de Rothschild Asset Management said. This situation could continue for some time unless there is some monetary action, he added.
Melman believes that interest rates can’t stay at this level, and cited how the Fed Chairman Jerome Powell has already indicated that rates will be cut next year. “The market is right to price in more rate cuts. That’s why we are overweight in fixed income, not only because there is room to have more rate cuts, but also as there is a good relation between fixed income and equities,” Melman said. “Rates should become a good diversification into equities,” he said, adding that over-optimistic inflation forecasts are the only reason not to be positive on duration in 2024, he said.
“We are overweight in fixed income, favoring investment grade, hybrid corporate debt, hybrid financial debt and emerging debt,” Melman continued.
The comments come as a raft of wealth management houses in the US, Europe, Asia and elsewhere have set out their ideas for how clients should position their portfolios for 2024. Common themes have been concerns of slowing growth and a possible recession in 2024; the likely peaking of US and European rate rises, and concerns about geopolitics and market volatility.
Emerging debt
Outlining his stance on emerging debt, Melman said that China was
in the doldrums and the Fed was hiking rates. “The Fed is now
reducing rates. We also see a strong willingness from China to
put a floor on Chinese growth. It’s not a great revival. They
could do more but this floor is providing better visibility on
China,” he added. “As investors are significantly underweight in
emerging debt globally, flows will be back, and we are increasing
our allocation to emerging debt.”
“We are overweight in fixed income and neutral but quite positive in equities,” Melman said. “We are comfortable on equity markets, waiting for the first Fed interest rate cut. We also see a huge discount on small-caps. We think there are opportunities for European small-caps and it could be a good year for them.”
Explaining the optimism about prospects for equities in 2024, the firm highlighted how central banks had won the fight against inflation. The main risk is if there is a recession in the US but, if it happens, the asset manager expects it to be relatively mild. It is also even more optimistic about thematic equities, notably healthcare, the energy transition, and artificial intelligence.