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Pictet AM Leans Toward US, UK Equities In 2025

Amanda Cheesley

22 November 2024

Luca Paolini and Arun Sai at Pictet Asset Management are quite optimistic about the equity market in 2025, favoring US and UK equities in particular, and seeing the UK as something of “a wild card.”

“We prefer US equities due to strong earnings and “Trumponomics,” they said at a media event in London this week. Other wealth managers such as Goldman Sachs Asset Management also favor US equities in 2025. See more commentary here.

Although Pictet AM still has a neutral position on UK equities, it sees value in them, believing the UK to be the place to be over the next 12 months. “UK equities are cheap, they have good energy exposure and are strong on defensives,” Paolini said. Banks, utilities, communication services and small caps should outperform, whilst value stocks should stabilise. “UK equities are one of “the wild cards” for 2025. There is a case for the UK to outperform, along with the US,” Sai added.

“The UK is also less exposed to tariff hike risks than Europe which has a big manufacturing base,” Paolini said. “Politically, Europe is also weak, with a total lack of leadership.” 

“However, there is more value in European bonds,” Paolini added. "European and UK government bonds, short-term developed market corporate bonds and emerging markets bonds should all outperform. Government bond yields will be volatile, but investors will be rewarded with positive total returns,” they continued. Nevertheless, they have a relatively low allocation to bonds overall.

They also consider the yen to be an attractive major currency, although Paolini is not as confident on Japan as he used to be, saying equities are not as cheap there anymore. He sees the Swiss franc as a safe haven and believes that the US dollar will peak after an overshoot. Meanwhile, the price of gold will continue to plateau.

Macroeconomic outlook
The asset manager believes that global growth for 2025 should remain stable at 2.8 per cent. Inflation will continue to decline slowly, although central banks in developed markets are unlikely to hit their 2 per cent targets in the coming year.

US growth will decelerate from 2.7 per cent to 1.9 per cent, whereas the European Union, Japan and China should all stabilize or recover. However, although China is stabilizing, Paolini doesn’t believe there is enough evidence to fully invest in China. “It is not the right time,” he said. “The European Union and China continue to disappoint.” 

The German elections in the first quarter of 2025 pose a potential inflection point for the European Union’s fiscal policy going forward. Economic growth momentum is expected to slow in the first half of 2025 and re-accelerate to above-trend in the second half of 2025.

The implementation of Donald Trump's trade and tax policies will reinforce US exceptionalism, the firm continued.

The asset manager thinks that the breadth, rather than the size, of monetary easing will support risk assets in 2025. It forecasts that the US Federal Reserve rate will be cut to 4.25 per cent by end of 2025 . It sees the European Central Bank cutting rates to 2 per cent or below . The Fed should end quantitative easing in the first quarter of 2025.

Globally, bank lending standards are loosening and the demand for credit is rising. Private money creation is set to improve. Real money supply growth has turned positive in all major economies for the first time since 2022.

The G5’s excess liquidity is set to rise to 2.6 per cent in 2025, which is slightly positive for equity multiples.

Trumponomics
The asset manager’s assumption is that roughly 50 per cent of what US President-elect Donald Trump proposed during the election campaign will be implemented. The four key policy areas to monitor are: trade, taxation, immigration and deregulation. Their combined overall impact over the next four years should be inflationary although tax cuts and deregulation will boost sentiment and growth.

Overall, US gross domestic product will be 0.6 per cent lower and inflation 1.4 per cent higher relative to our baseline in four years’ time. All other things being equal, this should boost bond yields by about 75 basis points and lower the 12-month price to earnings ratio of the S&P 500 Index by around 15 per cent.

The firm highlighted that the market has so far only priced in “Good Trump,” namely deregulation and tax cuts. However, two big tail risks are underpriced: an all-out global trade war and a surge in bond yields due to concerns over the US deficit and/or the economy overheating. “The US has the worst budget deficit of all countries which will eventually have an impact, but not now,” Paolini said.

Paolini and Sai also believe that the UK could do well in a trade war while the US is insulated from one, as it has a big domestic market.