MIDYEAR 2024 INVESTMENT OUTLOOK: EQUITY AND FIXED INCOME MARKETS ADJUSTING TO ACCOMMODATE CENTRAL BANK POLICY EXPECTATIONS
Active Investing Appears Primed to Favor Shifting Market Conditions and Identify Pockets of Opportunity for Investors
- Broadening global growth in light of decreasing recession risk
- Elevated potential for Fed surprises
- Risk of reaccelerating inflation, driven in part by sticky services inflation
- Increased opportunities in equities, specifically in value and potentially small-cap
- A reduced liquidity preference in favor of equities and short-duration bonds
While there continues to be a place for both active and passive management in investor's portfolios, this challenging market environment, including higher rates, continued asset price dispersion and more volatile markets, supports conditions for active managers to outperform.
QUOTES
"The global economic outlook consensus has markedly changed over the last six months. While in late 2023 falling inflation supported expectations of brisk rate cuts, today we foresee a broadening of global growth, resilient inflation pressures, and limited easing from central banks."
"In the U.S., the Fed is more likely to surprise with fewer cuts rather than with more. We expect to see the Fed cutting 25 basis points (0.25%) at its December policy meeting, after the November elections are out of the way, and possibly once in the late summer. The outlook for Fed easing in 2025 is less clear, one or two rate reductions seems realistic."
"While inflation is notoriously difficult to predict, it's clear that it isn't going anywhere. Last year we saw a decrease in global inflation due to goods disinflation; now services inflation is driving a renewed upward pressure. This is sticky, and needs to fall, but several factors would need to adjust, including wage pressures, fiscal spending, and energy prices. In this type of environment, investors may benefit from exposure to short duration credit – such as loans and ABS – Asian government bonds, and inflation protected bonds."
"In
"As fears over a recession have receded, it's likely the current preference for liquidity will ease. The focus has shifted from recession risk to inflation risk, and investors are moving out of cash in favor of equities and short‑duration bonds. In the current environment, energy stocks may offer best hedge against inflation. Shorter‑term bonds also provide attractive yield levels and the potential for price appreciation if yields move lower."
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SOURCE
T. ROWE PRICE, Bill Benintende, +1-410-345-3482, Bill.Benintende@troweprice.com; Lara Naylor, +1-410-577-8077, Lara.Naylor@troweprice.com; Bill Weeks, +1-914-762-2858, Bill.Weeks@troweprice.com