Weekly Market Update

How scenario thinking for tomorrow can guide portfolios today

August 28, 2024

During the Asset Class Outlook Roundtable 2024 at the PCF Strategy Summit in Sydney last week, the panel analysed four economic scenarios. Scenario analysis is helpful because it allows us to prepare for a range of possible future outcomes, rather than relying on a single prediction. It helps identify potential risks and opportunities, enabling more informed decision-making. Additionally, it encourages flexibility and adaptability in portfolio management, ensuring strategies remain resilient under varying economic conditions.

Economist Andrew Hunt & Dominique Dwor-Frecaut outline the key indicators and their potential outcomes. They are:

1. A Bullish AI/Energy Driven Productivity Boom

Productivity enhancements from AI and other technological innovations could significantly boost real incomes and alleviate social tensions.

Indicators

- Disinflation dynamics from pre-pandemic era reassert as goods prices fall and worker bargaining power declines

- Inflation durably contained to target levels without need for recession

- Fiscal prudence and strong growth solve government debt burdens over time

Potential Outcomes 

- Equities and bonds both perform well in low inflation, high growth environment

- Australia and New Zealand benefit from strong global demand and rising commodity prices, supporting income growth and investment

2. A  "Muddle Through" where central banks land the economy

Central banks opt for a cautious approach, tolerating moderate inflation levels without decisive action, which introduces policy uncertainty.

Indicators:

- Central banks tolerate 2.5-3% inflation without decisive action, causing policy uncertainty

- Periodic inflation scares and volatility spikes as markets doubt central bank resolve

- China offsets some inflation in the West through exporting deflation, but trade tensions limit impact

- Governments employ fiscal tools to stimulate growth ahead of key elections, followed by gradual fiscal consolidation.

Potential Outcomes:

- Growth slows but rebounds by late 2025, bond yields rise then fall, equities range bound

- Long-term winners in equities but index returns muted, favours active stock picking

- Australia and New Zealand navigate a middle path of moderate growth and inflation, with policy settings gradually normalising but remaining accommodative

3. A Bearish Debt Deflation Spiral

A series of financial shocks and geopolitical tensions lead to a significant deflationary spiral, affecting global economies and financial markets.

Indicators

- Private credit bust and liquidity withdrawal trigger severe asset price deflation

- Geopolitical shocks also expose fragilities, exacerbating drive credit crunch

- Job losses and deleveraging cause aggregate demand to contract sharply

Potential Outcomes:

- Inflation falls below zero as economy gets stuck in deflationary trap

- Central banks expand QE to absorb government debt issuance and cap yields

- Explicit yield curve control targets implemented to ensure accommodative conditions

- Liquidity backstops extended to a wide range of credit markets to unfreeze lending

- Australia and New Zealand face deep recessions as global demand collapses and deflationary pressures intensify, forcing aggressive policy easing

4. Stagflation - Short-term gain, long-term pain 

Loose financial policies temporarily prop up the economy, leading to inflationary pressures that eventually trigger a recession.

Indicators

- Pre-election spending and loose financial conditions delay downturn but boost inflation

- Corporate margins squeezed as input costs rise faster than pricing power

- Central banks hike aggressively to contain inflation, tipping economy into recession

Potential Outcomes:

- Inflation proves sticky as expectations de-anchor and de-globalization disrupts supply chains

- Antitrust policies perversely boost prices by weakening mega-firms' ability to squeeze suppliers

- Central banks force recession to control inflation, causing severe wealth destruction

- Private credit boom turns to bust as rising carry costs prove unsustainable, infecting public markets

- Australia and New Zealand grapple with weakening growth and persistent inflation, challenging the policy framework and eroding living standards

Conclusion

The panel rated the 'Muddle Through' scenario as the most probable but didn’t dismiss the Bullish scenario. Yet, as insights from the previous year remind us, these scenarios are just tools to help us think about what could happen, not predictions of what will happen. Through this uncertainty, diversification becomes a powerful approach.  By spreading and dynamically managing investments across different types of assets and locations, portfolios can better manage risks and take advantage of opportunities. We are currently working through asset allocation, product implications and scenario implications at what this means at a fund level in our portfolios.  

Next week we will be working through the content and outcomes from the PCF Strategies Summit and specifically applying some probabilities to the scenarios and how they impact underlying investment strategies, watch this space.

Balancing Top-Down and Bottom-Up Approaches for Concentrated Risk Exposures

May 19, 2025
Read More

Trade Truce Lifts Markets But Long-Term Clarity Still Lacking

May 19, 2025
Read More

Fundamentals vs. Flows in Australian Equities with Tim Binsted

May 9, 2025
Read More

Markets Balance Positive Signals Against Persistent Risks

May 9, 2025
Read More

Staying Focused on Long-Term Strategic Investing Amidst Tariff Uncertainty

May 5, 2025
Read More

Amid Lingering Uncertainty, Markets Rise in Relief Ahead of Important Data

May 5, 2025
Read More

Recap of 2023: Two Stories With The Same Ending

January 30, 2025
This week started with more optimism about the US economy and further stock market gains until a sharp pullback on Wednesday snapped the US market’s nine-session winning streak. Thursday then saw a recovery, putting the S&P 500 back on track for an eighth week of gains, after US inflation data showed a gradual economic cooling in line with Fed hopes.
Read More

Santa (Powell) Has Come Early For Markets

January 30, 2025
The last week in markets, as is often the case, was totally dominated by the US economy and monetary policy. In this case it was an encouraging inflation print on Wednesday, followed by the US Fed’s decision to keep rates on hold the next day.
Read More

Big Tech Flexes Its Muscles With Late Week Surge

January 30, 2025
It was a mixed week in global financial markets as the market continued to assess the likelihood of a hard or soft landing next year and the implication for inflation and interest
Read More

Booming Small Caps to Bond Spreads Tightening

January 30, 2025
It was a mildly positive week for global markets, with the S&P/ASX 300 gaining 0.7%. International developed markets were down 0.4% in AUD terms as measured by the MSCI World ex-Australia index.
Read More

Altman Drama Shakes Up Silicon Valley

January 30, 2025
It has seemed all week that, in quiet US holiday trading, the only thing moving markets was the ‘will they/won’t they’ speculation about the future role of OpenAI’s CEO Sam Altman.
Read More

Markets Trek Higher on Approach to Peak Inflation

January 30, 2025
Stocks continued their strong November rally this week, as hopes grew that inflation has peaked and the Fed is nearing the end of its rate hiking cycle. The S&P 500 rose 1.9% on Tuesday following the cooler than expected US CPI print, bringing its gains for the month so far to 7%.
Read More
No items found.
No items found.
No items found.
Icon of a letter

InvestSense insights, delivered straight to your inbox.

Icon of a letter

Get the latest industry news

Icon of a letter

Get the latest industry news

Icon of a letter

Get the latest industry news