UBS unveils Year Ahead outlook for 2019
Investors will need to weather more
volatility in order to capture opportunities in 2019, according to the Year
Ahead report from UBS, the world's leading wealth manager. Global economic
growth will decelerate next year to 3.6% from 3.8% in 2018, and company
earnings will grow at a slower rate. However, a 2019 recession still looks
unlikely, and the price of many financial assets has already moved to reflect
uncertain prospects.
UBS Global Wealth Management's Chief
Investment Office (CIO) enters the year with an overweight position in global
equities. However, as the market cycle matures, investors should diversify and
hedge their portfolios to guard against volatility as well as political and
other risks. They should also take advantage of growth in fields like
sustainable and impact investing, and pockets of value where financial asset
prices are excessively low.
Mark Haefele, Chief Investment Officer at
UBS Global Wealth Management, says:
"Investors should retain positions in global equities but plan for market
volatility. A slight slowdown in economic and earnings growth doesn't mean no
growth, and the recent sell-off has left a number of assets more attractively
valued, but investors must also take into account the tense geopolitical
environment as well as monetary policy tightening."
To read the Year Ahead in full, visit ubs.com/cio.
Clients' and professional investors'
outlooks diverge
In its investment process, CIO seeks to
test its ideas against professional investors' views. Surveys of professional
investors and wealthy US-based individuals reveal divergent outlooks for the
year ahead.
- Close to half of professional investors see the
US lagging global markets next year, while two-thirds of individual
investors surveyed expect US stocks to match or beat global equities.
- Nearly half of the professionals surveyed
anticipate the US dollar declining versus the euro, compared with less
than one-sixth of individual investors.
- The most popular asset class for professional
investors entering the new year is emerging market equities. For
individual investors the top pick is US stocks. Professional investors are
nevertheless more optimistic than individual investors on how much upside
remains in the US equity bull market.
- Few professionals regard US political risk as a
bigger threat than US-China trade tensions and higher interest rates.
Individual investors are more concerned about US political risks than
professionals are.
- When asked when the next recession will start,
the most common answer among professional investors is 2021. Half of the
individual investors surveyed expect the next recession to start within
two years.
Investment recommendations
CIO recommends that investors should
retain an overweight position in global equities as we enter 2019.
Nevertheless, they should also hedge against volatility by holding overweight
positions in medium-duration US government bonds and the Japanese yen, as well
as focusing on quality companies and avoiding excessive credit risk. They
should also look to neglected areas of the market, including value stocks in
the US and emerging markets, energy equities globally, and shares of financial
companies in the US and China. Sustainable and impact investing continues to
provide longer-term growth opportunities, as do emerging market and Japanese
stocks, and US dollar-denominated emerging market sovereign bonds.
Americas
The US Federal Reserve should approach the
end of its tightening cycle in 2019, while the support from US fiscal stimulus
should wane. In this context, the US's twin fiscal and current account deficits
will likely weigh on the US dollar. Within Latin America, investors should keep
an eye on Brazil, where the incoming administration has proposed a range of
reforms that could improve the country's fiscal sustainability.
Europe, Middle East, and Africa (EMEA)
& Switzerland
The European Central Bank should start to
normalize interest rates in 2019, which would support the euro against the
greenback. A clear recovery by the euro is needed before the Swiss National
Bank will hike rates, although the Swiss franc has limited scope to depreciate
against the euro. Within emerging EMEA, CIO sees the recent sell off in crude
oil prices as overdone, and expects prices to rise towards USD 85 / barrel over
the next six to 12 months, supporting prospects for the Middle East. However,
investors should continue to diversify globally to avoid idiosyncratic
political risks in emerging EMEA as well as the Eurozone and the UK, which is
scheduled to leave the European Union next year.
Asia Pacific
The Chinese yuan should continue to
decline, easing 5% in trade-weighted terms against a backdrop of ongoing
US-China trade tensions, slowing Chinese economic growth, and a diminishing
current account surplus. By contrast, in the wake of Japan's Abenomics program,
the yen is more than 30% undervalued relative to its estimated equilibrium on a
purchasing power parity basis. Japanese bond yields could also rise as the Bank
of Japan embarks on a slow normalization of monetary policy.
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