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House View, April 2018

Summary:
Pictet Wealth Management's latest positioning across asset classes and investment themes.Asset AllocationWhile macroeconomic and corporate fundamentals still favour risk assets, challenges have been steadily increasing and a lot of good news is already priced into valuations. We sold part of our equity overweight during the early March rally.Even though we have become more prudent about equities’ short-term prospects, we expect to be able to redeploy the cash generated from this sale as new opportunities arise.The rise in volatility was fully expected but emphasises the need for caution. We are closely monitoring the market’s perceptions of the competitive and regulatory risks emerging for the small number of high-growth tech stocks that have led market performance.We remain optimistic

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Pictet Wealth Management's latest positioning across asset classes and investment themes.

Asset Allocation

  • While macroeconomic and corporate fundamentals still favour risk assets, challenges have been steadily increasing and a lot of good news is already priced into valuations. We sold part of our equity overweight during the early March rally.
  • Even though we have become more prudent about equities’ short-term prospects, we expect to be able to redeploy the cash generated from this sale as new opportunities arise.
  • The rise in volatility was fully expected but emphasises the need for caution. We are closely monitoring the market’s perceptions of the competitive and regulatory risks emerging for the small number of high-growth tech stocks that have led market performance.
  • We remain optimistic about select parts of the US high-yield universe (less so euro high yield), with a particular emphasis on bond issuers in the upper reaches (BB) of the non-investment-grade ratings scale.

Commodities

  • Recent rises in oil prices will contribute to higher headline inflation until the middle of this year. Having reached around USD65 (our price equilibrium), there are signs the oil market may be moving toward oversupply.

 Currencies

  • Renewed concerns about the US budget deficit, on top of tax cuts and the potential two-year increase in federal spending limits, may have weighed on the US dollar.
  • We believe that global risk appetite will remain healthy during 2018, suggesting that the recent outperformance of other funding currencies such as the Swiss franc and Japanese yen may not be sustainable.

 Equities

  • Implied volatility rose again in March and equity prices fell. But the fears of a trade war that weighed on equities for some of the month look excessive. Valuations have eased and earnings remain strong.
  • In the US, the prospects of select stocks in a range of consumer-related sectors such as building materials, restaurants and apparel still look strong.

House View, April 2018

Fixed income

  • The Fed’s quarter-point rate rise initially pushed bond yields higher, but political and market tensions mean long-term yields fell in March and the yield curve flattened.
  • Renewed cautiousness among investors has led to a widening of spreads in the credit market. They may continue to increase, although credit fundamentals remain good and credit ratings have been moving upwards.

Alternatives

  • In hedge funds, relative-value credit books have held up well in spite of the VIX spike in February. We are maintaining our focus on arbitrage strategies.
  • We also see opportunities in the convertibles space, with robust issuance providing fodder for managers. Meanwhile, fixed income arbitrage has been looking particularly attractive.
  • In private equity real estate, investors’ concerns about valuations, deal flow and interest rates are still being tempered by longer-term trends such as co-working, which could boost demand for buildings to be adapted to better suit modern needs.
Perspectives Pictet
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