Pictet Group
Secular outlook 2024
Overview: What to expect from markets over the coming five years
The global economy rests on less robust foundations compared to the days when interest rates and inflation were both heading lower and international trade was booming.
Productivity is unlikely to rise much over the remainder of this decade as globalisation stalls and businesses struggle with the growing costs of net zero and labour shortages. As a consequence, we expect only modest GDP growth over the next five years.
Inflation should also prove a stubborn foe; although it will eventually settle within central bank target ranges by the end of this decade, it will be more volatile than policymakers would like.
For active investors, securing superior returns in such an environment means viewing the investment landscape through a different lens.
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Asset class returns, 5-year forecast, %, annualised*
Credit: An attractive entry point?
From US high yield bonds to European private debt, we believe that credit markets offer some of the most attractive entry points and some of the best prospects for returns over the next half a decade. In listed credit, returns are likely to be on a par with equities, but with less risk, less volatility and a broader investment universe. Valuations are attractive, defaults should remain benign, corporate leverage low and interest rate coverage comfortable.
Credit gives better balance
Annualised USD return, volatility, %, for global equity/sovereign bonds portfolio vs enhanced portfolio with global HY/IG credit**
In private debt, too, yields look attractive relative to equities on a risk-adjusted basis. This rapidly growing market benefits from floating rates and strong covenants. Across both private and public credit, we see strong investor demand, underpinned by the retirement of baby boomers and by the re-allocation of the trillions of dollars currently parked in money market funds.
Did you know?
That the private borrowing market is set to reach USD2 .8 trillion in 2028 from the current USD1.6 trillion.
Source: Preqin.
**Based on volatility matching portfolio, with global high yield added to risk allocation and with global investment grade added to risk-free allocation, while keeping notional risk allocation the same. For optimised portfolio, allocations are as follows: for 60/40, 47.2% equities, 12.8% HY, 40% IG; for 50/50, 34.3% equities, 15.7% IG, 50% HY; for 40/60, 21.4% equities, 18.6% HY, 60% IG; for 30/70, 8.5% equities, 21.5% HY, 70% IG. Benchmarks are MSCI ACWI, FTSE WDBI, ICE BofA Global HY, ICE BofA Global IG. Data covering period 01.05.2004-30.04.2024AboutPictet Asset Management's Strategy Unit (PSU)The PSU is composed of 23 of Pictet Asset Management’s most experienced multi asset and fixed income portfolio managers, economists, strategists and research analysts. The group is based across six locations globally. They are responsible for providing asset allocation guidance over short-term and long-term horizons across stocks, bonds, commodities and alternatives.