Mercer going cold on global shares as valuations pushed

Mercer Investment Consulting has revised down its view of global equities markets, suggesting the rally has pushed prices to fair value from their previous rating of undervalued.

A Mercer report on Dynamic Asset Allocation (DAA), which draws upon Mercer research in the US, UK and Australasia, says: “Whilst we accept that equity markets may outperform their long-term assumptions in the short-to-medium term, we feel that the risks to them achieving this are elevated and have revised the view of the asset class back to a neutral level.”

DAA refers to a service which provides advice on medium-term asset allocation (in between strategic at the long end and tactical at the short end) and combines Mercer views on valuations, momentum, sentiment and liquidity which may influence market returns.

Simon Calder, a principal in the Mercer Melbourne office, said that with the latest quarterly view, the Mercer analysts in Australia agreed with their US counterparts that global equities were no longer undervalued. In the previous review the Australians had maintained an undervalued rating for global equities because they felt that momentum factors would push prices a little higher (which turned out to be correct for Australian investors despite a firming Australian dollar).

The consistent Mercer view also is that global sovereign bonds (hedged) are overvalued, while global credit remains at fair value).

Sponsored Content

For other international shares, Mercer sees both global small caps and emerging markets as neutral. Small caps are being supported by improved consumer confidence and better credit conditions but valuations appear reasonable rather than compelling. Emerging markets have strong economic prospects but this is offset by high price:earnings ratios and price-to-book valuations.

Emerging markets turned out to be the star performers for 2009, beating their developed market counterparts by about 35 percentage points on average, in local currency terms, over the calendar year. The top performer was India, up 92 per cent in local currency terms, with other BRICs (Brazil, Russia and China) also having strong performance.

Mercer has a negative medium-term view on the Australian dollar versus the US dollar.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Jeremy Grantham on just desserts and silly markets

The GMO chief argues why honouring Ben Bernanke is similar to saluting the captain of the Titanic, and why making banks that are ‘too big too fail’ even bigger is sheer lunacy, while identifying other instances in which many of the people enjoying financial incentives, rewards and public praise in the US are unworthy recipients.

P8 told to cut developing world’s carbon

Gareth Thomas, Minister of State with the Department for International Development in the United Kingdom, has urged pension funds to help boost private funding for low carbon investments in the developing world, calling on the group of investors at the P8 Summit to consider potential public financing mechanisms emerging from the private sector, including advanced

Joe Dear warns of “reform facade”

Chief investment officer of CalPERS, and chair of the Council of Institutional Investors, Joe Dear, has warned of a “reform facade” as memories of the crisis fade and resistance to reform instensifies, calling for a more comprehensive regulatory umbrella, and specifically for most over the counter derivatives to be traded on exchanges, in a speech

Momentum’s at the heart of market dysfunctionality: Paul Woolley

When Paul Woolley, academic-turned funds manager-turned academic, set up his research Centre in 2007, the two main associated universities, London School of Economics and University of Toulouse, didn’t like the name. But he insisted and now the Paul Woolley Centre for (the study of) Capital Market Dysfunctionality has a significant body of work in progress.

CalSTRS shortlists general consultant under new approach to advisers

CalSTRS has named three consultants in its shortlist to act as general consultant, including for the first time Meketa Investment Group, long-time consultant to Harvard Management Corporation and more commonly known as a specialist in infrastructure, under a new tiered approach to the use of consultants introduced by chief investment officer, Chris Ailman. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored

Russell’s Doman looks to be ‘Intel inside’ retail land

Russell Investments’ newish president and chief executive, Andrew Doman, the first ‘outsider’ to take the top job, has notched up nine months at the firm. The ex-McKinsey & Co executive spoke to GREG BRIGHT about the evolution of Russell. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous