Economic and investment highlights
Economic, politics and markets
- In September, market volatility increased and risk asset prices weakened, due to the combination of growth concerns and rising rates
- With rising prices, central bankers’ inflation rhetoric is shifting away from “transitory” to acknowledging post pandemic inflation may be higher for longer
- We expect the theme of inflation and how persistent it becomes will continue in the coming months
Global Credit Strategy
How we did in September: The fund returned between -0.3% and -0.5% across the different share classes, compared to SPX -4.7%, SX5E -3.4%, EUR BAML HY (HE00 Index) -0.1%, US BAML HY (H0A0 Index) 0.0% and EM bonds (EMGB Index) -2.6%. Performance in September, gross of fees in EUR, was from: (i) Credit: -40bp, with -36bp from cash and -5bp from CDS; (ii) Rates: +27bp; (iii) FX: +1bp; (iv) Equity: -24bp, and (v) Other: -3bp.
In September, volatility increased and risk asset prices weakened, due to the combination of growth concerns and rising rates. Growth concerns were weighed by continued weakness in the China property sector, prolonged supply-constrains and rising energy costs. To address these concerns, central bankers have attempted to maintain an accommodative stance in recent speeches. However, with rising prices, their inflation rhetoric is shifting away from labelling it “transitory” to acknowledging that post pandemic inflation may be higher for longer. This shift, along with the Fed signaling the start of tapering in 2021, has caused rates to move wider.
What we are doing now: Investor expectations are oscillating between reflation and stagflation scenarios. While both scenarios would be negative for rates, stagflation would benefit commodity price and lower equity valuations. In this environment of slightly higher volatility and weaker asset prices, we are carefully adding in credit. We are selecting those which may benefit from higher rates (e.g. banks) or those with positive catalysts and able to pass on inflationary pressures (e.g. reopening sectors like cruises). Overall, we maintain a cautious attitude towards credit as spreads are still near all-time tights. We keep the fund 55-60% invested in selected areas, leaving room to add on weakness, as Chinese tensions and tapering discussion may raise volatility in Q4.
In credit, we focus on sectors which we think could weather a stagflationary environment– travel/ reopening (e.g. airlines, cruises), cyclicals that benefit from higher rates (e.g. financials) and defensive consumer discretionary (e.g. luxury cars). We maintain a high allocation to convertibles with low credit risk and positively convex upside/downside, in similar sectors. We added convertible exposure in airlines (e.g. Lufthansa, JetBlue) and senior bank convertibles with equity exposure to Chinese companies (e.g. JPM bond referencing Alibaba equity). We added credit protection in companies with low margins and that will be hurt by supply-chain bottle necks (e.g. Jaguar and Iceland supermarket). We remain overall lightly positioned in emerging markets, however have added on weakness in energy-exporting economies (e.g. Russia local currency bonds).
We are well positioned to capture opportunities arising from the start of Fed tapering and geopolitical risks.
Financial Credit Strategy
September was a negative month for risk assets across geographies. Sharp increases in energy and gas prices, combined with an ongoing struggle of supply chains globally led commodities higher, boosting concerns around inflation, which in turn led credit and equities lower.
Rates sold-off in response to these growing inflationary concerns with core US 10y and Bund 15-20bps wider, fuelled in addition by ongoing discussions around tapering before year-end. That being said, credit spreads remained broadly unchanged as backstop measures should stay in place to dampen any default concerns. Meanwhile, equities were broadly negative after several months of positive returns, with few exceptions including banks. Banks outperformed broader equity markets in September, thanks to the positive correlation to rates and inflation, with the European and US banks gaining +3.7% and +2.3% respectively.
On an issuer level, September saw some ratings agencies’ updates, with the most notable being Fitch’s upgrade of Deutsche Bank’s subordinated debt back to Investment Grade. The bank has delivered successfully on its restructuring plan since the new CEO took over in late 2018 and completion should be straight forward from here. Furthermore, at a recent Financials Conference management guided to a better operating performance across its Investment Bank, leaving the potential for incremental positive ratings’ actions from other agencies.
Although the ECBs monetary policy decision meeting in September was largely as expected, the Bank has put the European financial sector on notice that it would be taking a deeper dive into individual banks’ impact from climate change out to 2050s. For the time being, this does not appear to be too concerning for the sector overall as capital levels are sufficiently robust to withstand the projected worst scenario of c8% loan losses by 2050s. That said, the range of loan losses would vary significantly across countries as those in the periphery, namely Greece, Cyprus, and Portugal, have over 65% of their loans exposed to physical risks, i.e. wildfires and flooding.
Primary issuance picked up in September to EUR30bn, with the bulk concentrated in the Senior format as banks continued to fill-out their MREL requirements. In addition, European banks with upcoming AT1 calls over the next quarters decided to pre-finance these deals early, slightly extending duration and locking in attractive reset spreads which on average were 200bps lower than outstanding deals. We continue to believe that a disciplined and selective approach is warranted with respect to new deals and overall remain unexcited by them. It is noteworthy that all $10bn worth of AT1s issued in the third quarter of this year are trading firmly below par.
Financial Equity Strategy
One name we have been adding to recently is HSBC. The shares have been weak over the summer on the back of the emerging concerns in China. The bank has disclosed a total exposure to Chinese property developers in aggregate of $6.3bn, or just 0.6% of its loan book. Nevertheless, shares have traded down to 7x 2023 earnings, a significant discount for one of the largest, most diversified banks that has historically traded at a 10-15% premium to the rest of the sector vs a ~15% discount today. In addition, HSBC is poised to benefit more than most European banks from rate hikes in the US and UK. Based on company disclosures, every 25bps rise in interest rates in the UK, US and Hong Kong (which is implicitly tied to US rates due to the currency peg) results in an approximately 7% increase in net profits. Trading at just two-thirds of tangible book value, we believe there is over 50% upside as the recently elevated cost of equity normalizes, earnings are upgraded as loan growth resumes, excess capital is returned, and ROTE accretes to 10%+. With a total yield north of 8% today, shareholders are also well compensated in the meantime.