Debt levels point to subpar growth in years ahead

The unprecedented level of government debt signals sub-par economic growth ahead, warned Farouki Majeed, chief investment officer, Ohio School Employees Retirement System speaking at FIS Digital alongside Rich Randall, head of global debt at IFM Investors.

Debt beyond a certain point becomes a risk according to Farouki Majeed who applies this same value judgement to assess any asset to the current levels of sovereign debt.

As part of a a discussion panel focused on the dangers inherent in historically high levels of sovereign debt to GDP, he told delegates that debt involves borrowing from the future, and that all studies show that countries that have high levels of debt have lower rates of GDP growth.

Reflecting on the best allocations in the current environment, Majeed noted that government bonds were no longer a defensive asset: the downside risk of holding government bonds has increased and the negative correlation with equity reversed.

“We don’t expect government bonds to play the favourable role in diversification we would normally expect,” he said. The pension fund is currently underweight US government bonds relative to its broad benchmark, and overweight investment grade fixed income.

Private debt

Sponsored Content

One area investors can find opportunity coming out of COVID is private debt. Allocations to this asset class offer highly secured assets like infrastructure or transport assets with predictable cash flows, said Rich Randall, global head of debt at IFM Investors.

IFM, which only invests in corporate debt, has found valuable pickings in the sector in the wake of bank disintermediation since the GFC. Banks have ceded much of their lending in developed markets to the capital markets he said, estimating around $3 trillion of private debt is now in the hands of the capital markets rather than banks.

Moreover, the capital markets are a more efficient provider of that debt, lending to sectors banks haven’t like SMEs. Institutional investors are finding returns while companies are able to tap sources of capital, he said. IFM, a big investor in the US energy space, sees opportunities ahead in brownfield development and renewables.

Although Majeed noted the benefits of private debt, he also highlighted the challenges. For sure, infrastructure debt constitutes a defensive asset, however private assets hold illiquidity risk as opposed to tradeable government bonds.

“You can’t allocate a whole chunk of the portfolio to infrastructure debt,” he said. Even so, in recent years Majeed has increased the allocation to real assets including infrastructure equity and debt, the portfolio is also overweight cash and he has increased the allocation to stressed and distressed credit coming out of the pandemic. The private credit portfolio has a higher distributed yield than infrastructure and fixed income, reflecting a wider strategy to increase the income component of the total return component of the fund, he said.

Corporate washouts

Randall expects more (corporate) washouts to occur as economies recover from COVID. Companies that were hanging on before the pandemic and that got rescued will now face a reckoning. He also flagged the importance of a keen eye on corporate leverage levels, particularly in certain sectors. For example, service-type companies are over-leveraged, and airlines are also highly leveraged. Here he noted fallen angel opportunities as investment grade companies fall into the sub investment grade market.

He also expects opportunities to occur in markets like Australia and Asia where bank disintermediation is less developed. Debt capital provided by non-banks in the US and Europe is developed, but in Asia only around 10 per cent of debt capital is provided by non-bank institutions. He also warned investors to cast a wary eye on manager exaggeration and profile – equity-like returns in the private debt space are unlikely.

“Debt is debt… and if managers are claiming such high returns, a lot will be leveraged at the asset or portfolio level,” he said.

Hedge against inflation

Randall said that the private debt market also offered a degree of hedge against inflation given the majority of loans to infrastructure are floating rate. He also voiced his concerns about changes in political leadership causing the pendulum to swing back and forth between disparate ideologies. The transition of power can have a dramatic effect on how we look at infrastructure, he said citing current unknowns in the political debate in the US around financing social infrastructure.

IFM’s investment is primarily focused in OECD countries, said Randall. Although the firm has done some deals in Latin America, the accompanying volatility didn’t get the risk premium. He also noted a supply and demand imbalance given regional banks’ role in providing capital.

Tackling the sovereign debt mountain will require either selling assets, or raising taxes but panellists concluded that their is a reluctance by political leaders to do either.

Economic growth, the most desired solution, is unlikely. It is tough to get sustained growth rates anymore, said Randall adding that a 5 per cent growth on a sustainable basis is not going to happen.

Leave a Comment

A post-COVID economy

A post-COVID economy

The big difference between the vaccine rollouts and the scale of the stimulus measures across the world could result in a K-shaped global economic recovery, with much of the developed world booming but poorer countries continuing to struggle. However the

Sort content by

Potential storms ahead in the banking sector

Panellists discuss the possible impact of corporate failures on European banks coming out of the pandemic, and note central banks juggling act around digital currencies; unable to halt their arrival but still having to marshall progress and ensure the technology doesn’t weaken financial stability. The session examined the structural trends in the financial sector that have been entire amplified or altered by the COVID crisis.

Bridgewater’s Prince: Time to think differently in an MP3 world

Bridgewater’s co-CIO Bob Prince explains the perils of MP3 and suggests investors need to think differently, shaping strategies around cash-flow yields - connecting equity cash flows to stable sources of spending in the economy.

Accessing the new economy the key to emerging markets growth

Investors need to ensure they are accessing the new economy if they are to benefit from the growth story that drives emerging markets returns. Investors at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium talk about how they allocate to emerging markets.

Venture capital: how it adds value in a diversified portfolio

One of the silver linings of the pandemic has been that location is not a restraint on investment when it comes to investing in venture capital with investors seeing venture opportunities springing up in all corners of the world.

New managers struggle to get ahead via zoom

The interruptions to work and the revolution of technological tools in 2020 have changed thee way investors assess funds managers. A discussion around due diligence in a lockdown environment finds  that allocators have tended to stick with existing relationships through the pandemic making it difficult for managers approaching investors for the first time to form relationships and win mandates.

Debunking distressed debt

The sharp market falls triggered by the pandemic brought the longest recovery ever in modern finance to an abrupt end. But despite the turmoil unleashed by COVID, it has not wrung out the market excesses of the last 13-year cycle. It means another wave of corporate failures could appear on the horizon in a shorter timeframe than expected, and offer more opportunities for distressed debt investors, according to Victor Khosla founder of SVP Global.