Bridgewater eyes end to US equity outperformance and FX volatility ahead

A demand shock is fuelling inflation and the supply chain crisis. Elsewhere, investors need to prepare for lower returns in US equities and diverse economic performance from different regions as individual country’s pandemic response plays out.

Don’t expect another decade of outperformance from US equity while inflation, fuelled by a demand shock, is set to spike foreign exchange volatility impacting total portfolio returns, warned Rebecca Patterson, director of investment research, Bridgewater Associates speaking at FIS Digital 2021.

Perhaps one of Patterson’s more surprising comments was her argument that today’s supply chain crisis is the consequence of a surge in demand rather than a supply shock – and is here to stay for a while yet. Strong demand in both absolute terms and historically has produced a once-in-a-generation shock that hit companies dependent on just-in-time inventories.

The demand shock is evident in Chinese factories scrambling to meet US demand. They are running at maximum capacity (20 per cent higher than pre-COVID industrial production) so much so they have now usurped local energy supply. The demand shock is clogging up shipping lines and ports and the time needed to meet orders is taking longer. It is also spiking labour costs.

“We are seeing the tightest labour market we’ve seen in the US for generations; firms are saying they can’t fill their positions,” she said.

It will continue as US householders with cash in hand and rising disposable incomes (as wages go up) continue to spend with confidence. It will also support inflation into 2022, something she said many investors were not doing enough to integrate into their portfolios.

Sponsored Content

“Most don’t have protection for very high inflation; we also think they should focus on how to benefit from rising inflation.”

Countries different responses to COVID will also begin to play out in the investment world. While the US, Europe and the UK embarked on massive fiscal stimulus and held down borrowing costs, other governments (like Mexico) did very little. The different policy reaction is resulting in a dispersion of economic conditions across different countries providing a rich seam of investor opportunities. “We are excited,” she said.

US underperformance

Using the US (where there was a strongest monetary and fiscal response to COVID) to illustrate how this dispersion could impact the investment environment, she flagged challenges ahead for portfolios with large US exposure. The stimulus has continued long after households began to recover their finances after the pandemic. Moreover, there is more to come as Congress readies a huge infrastructure bill that will lead to trillions more stimulus.

She noted that investors tend to extrapolate from the past to help explain the future. But in a new investment climate, last decade’s US corporate winners are most likely to be this decade’s losers. Investors are currently allocating more to US stocks and bonds now than at any time since the mid-1980s, and assets will have to grow beyond what is already priced in to attract more money.

But US companies will increasingly feel the pinch from less favourable tax and regulatory regimes compared to the last decade that have supported earnings. Now, new regulatory proposals are set to weigh on margins like taxes on big tech.

“We think the bar is high for the US to be an outperformer over the next decade,” she said, advising investors to expect better equity returns from outside the US, and ensure geographic diversification.

Currency volatility

The dispersion in global economic performance, and inflation levels, will trigger currency volatility. It could have an impact on total portfolio returns, she warned, urging investors to check their hedging position. In the past, a decision to hedge or not to rarely impacted total portfolio returns. Now, higher inflation and more volatile Central Bank reactions to its spike, could have a big impact on total returns, she said.

She warned that China’s renminbi will also get more volatile. She said China’s central bank is increasingly prepared to have a flexible policy as the RMB becomes a bigger, global currency which will trigger volatility.

Moreover inflation will be fuelled by commodity price spikes, heighted by the lack of capex investment by mining groups in recent years which is destined to keep commodity prices supported for now.

Fixed income

She advised investors to seek out bond-like returns that avoid traditional fixed income and said any bond risk premium will remain scarce ahead.

Responding to a question from Jean David Tremblay-Frenette, director of investment strategy research at AIMCo, on what the future holds for fixed income, she said high bond yields are emerging across different economies but from very low levels.

Investors should look at ways to engineer return seams that feel bond like, investing in companies that have stable, bond-like cash flows that provide a similar return seam to government bonds.

She also stressed the importance of diversification and inflation-proofing linkers and commodity baskets, as well as gold.

Leave a Comment

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

Sort content by

Lessons from the middle: Leadership, resilience and the courage of conviction

The principles of high-performance leadership – whether in business or sport – remain remarkably consistent and include the ability to maintain clarity, integrity, and conviction under immense pressure. Former Australian test cricketer Usman Khawaja told the Fiduciary Investors Symposium that the only time you really lose is when you stop trying.

Steering portfolios through a fragmented world

As stagflationary shocks flip stock-bond correlations and the illiquidity premium in private markets proves elusive, the investors best placed to navigate a fragmented world are those with the governance infrastructure to deploy capital when others are forced to sell.

Private markets enter era of ‘true alpha’

Allocators are interrogating their private markets investments more rigorously as institutional investors question whether unlisted asset classes are entering an era of “true alpha” where managers skills are put to test. This trend is especially salient in private equity, and at FIS Singapore, asset owners and managers weighed the thesis around the asset class.

‘Math wins’: Why investors should push harder on fiscal discipline

Investors need to start demanding that governments act with more fiscal discipline as ballooning debts on sovereign balance sheets around the world approach a breaking point, MFS Investments, one of the world’s oldest asset managers, said at FIS Singapore.

‘We are way ahead’: How Fairfax County bagged staggering crypto returns

Fairfax County Employees’ Retirement System says its allocation to digital assets has become the best-performing investment in the fund’s history. The $6.3 billion pension plan first invested in blockchain infrastructure and digital assets through venture funds in 2019, and early distributions are now beginning to arrive.

IMCO World View: Active strategies, diversification and liquidity focus

Canadian pension investor IMCO is bracing for higher inflation and a weaker US dollar in 2026, as the $62 billion fund said investors need to protect diversification and liquidity in a volatile environment and be wary of risks in passive investments. In a podcast, chief strategist Nick Chamie unpacked the asset allocation insights, which were released in the annual IMCO World View paper, in conversation with Top1000funds.com editor Amanda White.

Previous