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These trends could well be what Gulf investors must keep an eye out for

Gulf investors should divert some of their funds into Europe, especially infrastructure



Where should Gulf investors look next?
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In the current environment it is more important than ever to identify growth opportunities early, while mitigating portfolio risks. These are the Top 10 investment tips for Gulf investors in the second-half of 2021:

Stay invested in risk assets

The strong macroeconomic recovery and stimulus are supporting risk assets, especially those sensitive to the economic cycle. While macro and policy momentum is likely to tail off into 2022, this stage of the cycle favours equities over bonds, as long as corporate earnings remain robust and valuations attractive.

Continuation of outperformance

This environment of decent growth with transitory inflation points to high single-digit total returns over the coming year, with possible volatility in response to evolving US monetary policy. Valuation levels will remain challenged by rising yields, but we still see stronger earnings.

This scenario supports cheap, recovering equity sectors, particularly within energy, financials and automakers. While most cyclical stocks are now trading higher and offer a more balanced risk/reward, value names will be supported by above-trend economic growth, rising yields, and a steepening US yield curve.

Preference for European and UK equities

We concentrate our overweight equity allocations in economically sensitive pan-European stocks. These are where we see the greatest likely benefits from economic re-openings, an acceleration in relative earnings momentum as well as attractive valuations. Eurozone and UK equities still trade at relatively cheap multiples, despite their exposures to both the global recovery and the reflation themes.

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Rising yields

Over the next 12-to-18 months, we expect long-term government bond yields to rise gradually as economic conditions normalise. With the Fed unlikely to tighten monetary policy before mid-2023, we expect these rises to be visible initially in long-dated yields, which should lead to a steepening of the yield curve.

On a 12-month horizon, our expectation is that 10-year US Treasuries and 10-year German Bunds will reach 2.25 per cent and 0.25 per cent, respectively. Given this, we favour low exposure to government bonds as well as a defensive portfolio duration. Improving economic growth is likely to support corporate credit fundamentals in both developed and emerging markets.

Use carry strategies

Despite a recent tightening in credit spreads, we continue to see value in carry strategies, high-yield and hard currency emerging market bonds. We continue to favour spread risk over duration risk, with Chinese debt in renminbi offering useful diversification, solid fundamentals, good credit quality and an attractive yield, along with a low correlation to US rates.

We also like emerging market corporate bonds, which should benefit from improving economic fundamentals and lower leverage, while offering decent yields and spreads.

Dollar to depreciate

Despite the Fed’s increase in interest rate projections, we still expect moderate US dollar depreciation in the second-half. We base this forecast first on the dollar remaining 20 per cent overvalued by our estimates and, second, ongoing improvements in global activity and trade, both of which historically trigger dollar weakness. In particular, a rotation in growth towards Europe, re-opening economies in the region and support from the EU’s ‘Next Generation’ funds should directly underpin the euro with improved sentiment and increasing portfolio flows.

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A more hawkish Fed, and/or any delay in European re-openings from Covid’s latest ‘delta’ variant, would undermine this outlook.

Renminbi strength

We remain positive on the Chinese renminbi, given still positive portfolio flows and solid exports. Recently increased foreign currency reserve requirements from the People’s Bank of China suggest that they aim to cool, rather than reverse the pace of renminbi appreciation. We believe this reflects the large build-up of onshore currency deposits in the past year, which could be reconverted into renminbi.

We therefore keep our year-end USD/RMB forecast of 6.22. This assumes the possibility of improving US-China trade relations. The main risks stems from weaker exports or the prospect of even higher tariffs.

Gold to trade lower

We remain underweight gold as rising yields and healthy risk appetite should continue in line with the economic recovery. Although inflationary pressures pushed gold prices higher in the second quarter of 2021, the recent shift in the Fed’s stance offered a reminder that real rates remain the major driver for gold in the recovery.

Since inflationary pressures should prove transitory and nominal interest rate expectations rise, the risk is that prices fall. Combined with still-long speculative positions that may unwind, and despite an expected modest depreciation of the dollar, we see gold at $1,600 by the end of this year.

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Infrastructure spending

Alternative assets continue to play an important role in terms of return and risk diversification. The Biden administration’s historic spending plans and the EU’s NextGeneration recovery fund, promise strong inflows and investor interest in more sustainable infrastructure.

We retain our overweight allocation to infrastructure investments as this asset class is poised to be one of the main beneficiaries of governments’ post-pandemic spending. In addition, we expect European real estate to continue its recovery, offering additional opportunities for investors.

Transition to a net-zero economy

Investors will increasingly price the impact of the transition to a net-zero economy into assets, creating shifts in market sentiment as they differentiate between long-term winners and losers. Consumer behaviour is already changing many industries and we believe that it makes sense for investors to apply a thematic approach, favouring those companies furthest along the path to zero emissions.

Investment strategies must reflect this transition, favouring solution-providers, as well as those business models in carbon-intensive industries that are working to cut their emissions and meet the Paris Agreement’s targets.

Stephane Monier
The writer is Chief Investment Officer of Lombard Odier's private bank.
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