Global De-Risking - Cross-Assets Implications
Twin headwinds: US labour market weakness and the unwinding of yen carry trade. The global de-risking that started last week continued today as Asian and European markets plummeted across the board. ...
Chief Investment Office - Hong Kong5 Aug 2024
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Twin headwinds: US labour market weakness and the unwinding of yen carry trade. The global de-risking that started last week continued today as Asian and European markets plummeted across the board. Apart from weaker-than-expected US labour data, risk sentiments also took a severe hit as the unwinding of the yen carry trade intensifies across the globe. The acute sense of market panic saw traders pricing in a 100% probability of a 50 bps policy rate-cut at the upcoming September FOMC meeting. Given the current risk-off mode in financial markets, listed below are our cross-assets views.

CategoryCIO Commentary
Asset Allocation
  • Our CIO asset allocation is well positioned for the current market sell-down as we are Underweight on equities and Overweight on fixed income, gold, private assets, and hedge funds.
  • On a quarter-to-date basis, bonds and gold are up 4.3% and 4.0% respectively while equities are down 1.7%.
Equities
  • Equity carnage has been driven predominantly by valuation multiple contraction amid broad-based derisking and unwinding of yen carry trade. There is little bearing on corporate fundamentals.
  • Unless the US labour market deteriorates sharply from here (which is not our base case), corporate earnings outlook remains intact.
  • Sell-down in Tech presents entry opportunities for the A.I. theme via exposure to Big Tech.
Rates
  • Weakening data cements start of easing cycle in September; odds of an aggressive recalibration cycle are now more significant.
  • As policymakers execute rate-cuts in the coming quarters in light of growth risks, front-end rates will benefit more, which likely results in the bull steepening of the US rates curve.
  • On the back of changes in expectations, we have revised our Q4 projections of the 10Y yield to 4.05% (from 4.50%) by end-2024, and to 4.10% (from 4.50%) by end-2025.
Credit
  • Negative economic surprises have impacted credit modestly – since end-June 2024, IG spreads have widened c.11 bps and HY spreads have widened c.44 bps. We maintain a preference of IG over HY.
  • Continue to advocate a duration barbell of (a) short-duration (1-3Y) IG credit to mitigate reinvestment risk, and (b) longer duration (7-10Y) IG credit for wider spread premiums and larger sensitivity to a declining rates environment.
FX
  • Lowered forecast for USD (after Fed signalled interest rate cuts in September) is on the table, a decision further reinforced by July's unemployment figure of 4.3% (vs 4.1% in June).
  • AUD/JPY fell 5.2% last week due to various factors, including disappointing Chinese economic data, potential Fed cuts, and Japanese monetary policy changes. The Reserve Bank of Australia's upcoming meeting will be closely watched for its stance on future rate cuts and inflation targets.
Gold
  • Continue to overweight gold amid softening economic conditions; impending rate cuts and rising recession probability bode well for bullion.
  • Safe haven gold to benefit from general risk-off conditions, elevated geopolitical tensions and volatility from US elections in November.
  • Long-term tailwind in the form of strong central bank buying, driven by monetary debasement, fiscal sustainability concerns, and de-dollarisation.

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