Third Quarter Review of Asset Allocation: Risks and Opportunities

The third quarter of 2020 featured a major rebound in economic data amid an intense battle for the presidency and an uncertain future for COVID-19 cases as some states are seeing higher positivity rates. GDP growth for the quarter is expected to come in at +35.2% YoY, higher than analyst expectations, which helped to propel equity markets higher during the quarter. In addition, the unemployment rate dropped to 7.9% but is expected to remain elevated until additional clarity regarding COVID-19 becomes available. Below are some highlights from the quarter:

  • Biden is favored over Trump in the election race, as mail-in ballots and virtual town halls instead of debates have proven that this election will be unlike any before it.
  • The country has widely reopened, though concerns in some larger states of increased positivity rates have caused some rollbacks ahead of the winter season.
  • A vaccine is in the works and anticipated to be ready by April 2021, with widespread vaccinations likely around mid-2021.
  • Schools have moved to a hybrid model of in-person and online classes, causing logistical problems for parents as many balance jobs and at-home learning.

The election is sure to bring additional volatility through the end of the year. Biden and Trump have vastly different tax plans and a Democratic sweep could drive a sell-off in equity markets. Economic data is still pending through 3Q, though most forecasts show large rebounds in data as states reopened from COVID-19 closures. Big questions regarding vaccines and if the winter will see a resurgence in coronavirus cases remain. We analyze what all of this means for each asset class in the remainder of this newsletter.

Read > Third Quarter Review of Asset Allocation: Risks and Opportunities

 

The opinions expressed herein are those of Marquette Associates, Inc. (“Marquette”), and are subject to change without notice. This material is not financial advice or an offer to purchase or sell any product. Marquette reserves the right to modify its current investment strategies and techniques based on changing market dynamics or client needs.

Q3 2020 Market Insights Video

This video features an in-depth analysis of the third quarter’s performance, coinciding with our 3Q Asset Allocation Update newsletter reviewing risks and opportunities heading into the final quarter of the year.

Our Market Insights series examines the primary asset classes we cover for clients including the U.S. economy, fixed income, U.S. and non-U.S. equities, hedge funds, real estate, infrastructure, private equity, and private credit, with presentations by our research analysts and directors.

Sign up for research alerts to be notified when we publish new videos here.
For more information, questions, or feedback, please send us an email.

ESG AUM Continues to Grow

Over the past five years, there has been a substantial increase in assets under management (“AUM”) for ESG (environmental, social, and corporate governance) mandated funds, as investors are placing greater emphasis on environmental and social issues while realizing that performance is not a tradeoff for sustainable investments. Since 2015, there has been a 147.5% increase in AUM for ESG-mandated funds, specifically looking at U.S. Equity, U.S. Fixed Income, Global Equity, and Global Fixed Income.

Going forward, we expect to see a larger increase in ESG investing as the COVID crisis further unfolds against the backdrop of other significant environmental and social issues. The recent inflows into ESG funds are a combination of new funds and the restructuring of old non-ESG funds. During the first half of 2020, over 20 new ESG funds have been launched in the U.S., making it the sixth consecutive year of 20+ new launches, and the U.S. is expected to set a new record by the end of the year. Clearly this is a trend that is gaining momentum across the investment universe and bears watching in future years. For more information on sustainable investing, reference our Sustainable Investing Video Series.

Print PDF > ESG AUM Continues to Grow

 

 

The opinions expressed herein are those of Marquette Associates, Inc. (“Marquette”), and are subject to change without notice. This material is not financial advice or an offer to purchase or sell any product. Marquette reserves the right to modify its current investment strategies and techniques based on changing market dynamics or client needs.

Can Real Assets Help Protect Portfolios from Inflation?

Against the current backdrop of unprecedented monetary stimulus, investors have become increasingly wary of future inflation and its potential degenerative effect on portfolio returns. While deflationary pressures appear more likely in the near term, the COVID-driven stimulus packages have created the potential for inflation once the pandemic has subsided. Predictably, investors are contemplating which asset classes can help hedge inflationary risk and real assets are a natural asset class to offset this risk.

During periods of upward price pressure, both real estate and infrastructure funds have at least some degree of pricing power, meaning they can boost rental income and revenue streams from their underlying holdings. In some cases, the embedded lease and contractual agreements of these holdings are linked to an inflation index, particularly for infrastructure. Therefore, the incomes of such holdings will rise as inflation rises and thus unlike fixed rate bonds, the real rate of return will not be eroded.

In order to examine this hypothesis, we compared traditional asset classes — stocks and bonds — to the real assets mentioned above: real estate and infrastructure. We compared cumulative returns during periods of above average inflation and during positive inflation surprises.¹ Although data is limited for real assets (particularly infrastructure), we analyzed cumulative returns for these four asset classes back to the earliest common date of index inception. Since the 2006 inception of the FTSE core infrastructure index, both real estate and infrastructure assets significantly outperformed U.S. equities and bonds during all periods when U.S. CPI rose above the period’s historical YOY average (1.9%). And during all quarters over the same period when developed world inflation experienced a material positive shock (“positive inflation surprises” defined previously), real assets also significantly outperformed both bonds and equities. Thus, while we have only experienced marginal inflationary pressure over the past 15 years, the data indicates that the inflation hedging mechanisms of real estate and infrastructure assets have been effective in protecting the purchasing power of portfolios. While it is difficult to forecast the ultimate timing, duration, and magnitude of inflation from this point forward, it is clear that real assets should offer a degree of insulation from the adverse effects of inflation.

Print PDF > Can Real Assets Help Protect Portfolios from Inflation?

¹ Surprises to developed world inflation are defined as periods where the expectations to the GDP weighted CPIs of the U.S., UK, and EU were below the actual CPI level by more than 10 bps.

 

 

The opinions expressed herein are those of Marquette Associates, Inc. (“Marquette”), and are subject to change without notice. This material is not financial advice or an offer to purchase or sell any product. Marquette reserves the right to modify its current investment strategies and techniques based on changing market dynamics or client needs.

Resilience in U.S. States, Cities, Health Systems, and Universities: Municipal Asset Class Review & Outlook

To date during this COVID-19 pandemic, both U.S. municipal bond issuers as well as municipal bond strategies have proven to be resilient despite the mounting adversity brought on by the nationwide lockdowns and other social distancing guidelines. The broader market recovery has been relatively quick as the S&P 500 is now back to pre-COVID highs, corporate credit spreads are back to pre-COVID tights, and overall volatility has mostly stabilized. The rebound in the economy is proving to be slow, however — with recent signs of leveling off — and is not expected to fully rebound until a vaccine is approved and distributed.

In the following, we provide a quick review of how municipal bonds have weathered the crisis so far in 2020; an assessment of key valuation, fundamental, and technical indicators to formulate a thesis for investing in municipal bonds going forward; and perspectives on how specific segments of the asset class such as investment grade municipals vs. high yield municipals and select sectors of the municipal bond market such as healthcare and education are expected to fare during the balance of the recession and recovery.

Read > Resilience in U.S. States, Cities, Health Systems, and Universities: Municipal Asset Class Review & Outlook

 

The opinions expressed herein are those of Marquette Associates, Inc. (“Marquette”), and are subject to change without notice. This material is not financial advice or an offer to purchase or sell any product. Marquette reserves the right to modify its current investment strategies and techniques based on changing market dynamics or client needs.

A Key Rebalancing Consideration: Drawdowns

In times of market turbulence, investments may sustain peak-to-trough declines known as drawdowns. The COVID-induced drawdown in March was no exception. Our chart this week illustrates the drawdown history for core bonds, bank loans, high yield bonds, and hard currency sovereign emerging markets debt (“EMD”) compared with the S&P 500. While past performance is not indicative of future returns, historical drawdown risk associated with past market volatility is a helpful metric to consider in the recovery from the current global health pandemic. As evident in the chart, each of the fixed income plus sectors¹ is correlated with the S&P 500, but the magnitude of plus sector drawdown risk is much less than the magnitude of equity drawdown risk — with one notable exception. In the 1990s EMD exhibited larger drawdowns than equity. At that time, EMD was very thinly traded, less mature, and more susceptible to dramatic swings.

While rebalancing from equity to fixed income plus sectors increases credit risk and introduces some drawdown risk, the magnitude of that drawdown risk from plus sectors is expected to be less than the expected drawdown risk from equity. As such, in this low Treasury yield environment, we recommend that investors consider both fixed income plus sectors and equity as ways to achieve greater total return potential and yield in portfolios. A diversified portfolio that takes advantage of the lower correlations between bank loans, high yield, EMD, and equities may benefit from greater efficiency and a higher Sharpe ratio in addition to the lower-magnitude drawdown risk from plus sectors.

Print PDF > A Key Rebalancing Consideration: Drawdowns

¹Bank loans, high yield bonds, and emerging markets debt.

 

The opinions expressed herein are those of Marquette Associates, Inc. (“Marquette”), and are subject to change without notice. This material is not financial advice or an offer to purchase or sell any product. Marquette reserves the right to modify its current investment strategies and techniques based on changing market dynamics or client needs.

U.S. Treasury Borrowings, Receipts, Outlays and Deficit

The U.S. government — including the U.S. Treasury, Federal Reserve, Congress, and executive branch — has stepped up to emergency action in rapid fashion during this coronavirus pandemic. This, along with the heroic efforts of healthcare workers, first responders, and vaccine researchers, is one of the key reasons why our financial markets have enjoyed such a quick recovery, with the S&P 500 currently back to the all-time peaks that it previously reached in February and investment grade and high yield bond spreads now having tightened back to tighter than long-term averages.

Our chart this week looks at how rapidly the U.S. Treasury raised capital by borrowing from the public and deployed that capital via the large-scale Congressional relief packages as well as Fed quantitative easing asset purchases and financial market backstops in the face of declining tax receipts. The green line represents the U.S. Treasury’s monthly borrowings from the public, which skyrocketed in March, peaked in April, and have gradually declined since. Shown in the tan are monthly U.S. Treasury receipts, which as expected gradually declined with the retrenchment in tax revenue due to the recession in which so many ill-fated businesses have shut down and millions of workers have lost their jobs. The darkest slate line shows monthly U.S. Treasury outlays, which rose steeply in March and remain high as these funds continue to be deployed for both fiscal and monetary stimulus measures. Lastly, the blue line shows a rising monthly U.S. Treasury deficit which is not surprising as U.S. Treasury outlays continue to exceed receipts.

While the financial markets have dipped and rebounded to previous highs several quarters quicker than the full circle throughout the 2008 housing crisis, there are still several challenges that lie ahead: the efficacy of the vaccine candidates currently in human trials and the ability to distribute and encourage the adoption of a final approved vaccine in a timely manner; the prospects of the Republican-led Senate and Democrat-led House to agree on a next relief package to help mitigate renter evictions and homeowner foreclosures; the risk of seasonal second or third waves of infections in various regions across the world; and the implementation of re-openings with social distancing that can successfully prevent resurgences until a vaccine is approved and distributed. We continue to expect these challenges to heighten market volatility, which will be further exacerbated by a contentious U.S. presidential election looming less than three months away. Marquette will continue to monitor these issues and provide our perspectives as further developments unfold throughout this pandemic.

Print PDF > U.S. Treasury Borrowings, Receipts, Outlays and Deficit

 

The opinions expressed herein are those of Marquette Associates, Inc. (“Marquette”), and are subject to change without notice. This material is not financial advice or an offer to purchase or sell any product. Marquette reserves the right to modify its current investment strategies and techniques based on changing market dynamics or client needs.

Trump Bypasses Congress with Coronavirus Relief Executive Actions

This past Saturday, August 8th, President Trump issued several executive actions that serve as an emergency COVID-19 aid package. The package includes three memoranda that provide assistance for the jobless, a payroll tax deferral, and an extension of the student loan payment moratorium and an executive order that provides rental and mortgage assistance to mitigate evictions and foreclosures. The executive actions came about because of a stalled Congress as negotiations over the last two weeks fell apart last Friday, August 7th, between the Senate Republicans with their $1 trillion proposal and the House Democrats with their $3.5 trillion proposal.

This newsletter puts these executive actions into context with earlier federal stimulus packages, including an overview of how each action will be implemented and expected economic and financial impacts.

Read > Trump Bypasses Congress with Coronavirus Relief Executive Actions

 

The opinions expressed herein are those of Marquette Associates, Inc. (“Marquette”), and are subject to change without notice. This material is not financial advice or an offer to purchase or sell any product. Marquette reserves the right to modify its current investment strategies and techniques based on changing market dynamics or client needs.

Bond Downgrades Subsiding

As a key indicator that we have come a long way from the late-March panic and that both the economy and financial markets are steadily recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic, downgrades of bonds by the bond ratings agencies such as S&P and Moody’s have been experiencing a sharp decline. Our chart this week profiles the weekly downgrade volume of U.S. investment grade corporate bonds — excluding financials — showing a precipitous drop in weekly downgrade volume from the March peaks. The reduction in downgrades for investment grade financials, as well as for both high yield bonds and bank loans, are following a similar trend, though are not shown in the chart.

Bond agencies have become more comfortable with bond issuers’ abilities to cover their debt expenses due in large part to (1) vaccine progress, (2) the commitment to stimulus by global governments, and (3) re-openings. The vaccine remains the ideal solution to this pandemic and progress has improved since March. Today, a number of vaccine candidates are in Phase II human trials, with one that began Phase III yesterday. Moderna’s vaccine started Phase III on Monday, overseen by the University of Illinois at Chicago. Pfizer/BioNTech’s candidate has been shown to produce more antibodies than those produced by people who have recovered, and last week they received from the Department of Health and Human Services and the Defense Department an order of 100 million doses for $2 billion. Oxford/AstraZeneca’s candidate has been shown to produce antibodies that may fade but it helps produce killer T-cells that may stay in circulation for years and may kill cells infected with the virus. With regard to stimulus, Senate Republicans and the White House announced a stimulus package yesterday to follow the handful of COVID-19 stimulus packages that have preceded it this year. Congress is currently working on closing the gap between this $1 trillion CARES 2.0/Safe to Work Act put forth by Senate Republicans and the $3 trillion HEROES Act put forth by House Democrats. Marquette will provide a detailed assessment of this latest package and its implications as soon as it is signed by Trump. Moreover, the Treasury continues to have the ability to issue debt at current debt-to-GDP levels in order to fund further stimulus.

All this progress is balanced by several challenges, however, with the markets having priced in the last few weeks’ rise in cases, especially from Texas and Florida — the new epicenters — and the re-closings of restaurants and bars by several states including Illinois and California, along with recent resurgences in certain countries abroad. Hospitalizations and mortality have not risen as much as cases, however, so this resurgence may be attributed to the rise in testing detecting less-serious cases, which is potentially a positive in curtailing super spreaders. As the pandemic and its recovery gradually unfold, the markets are starting to price in more non-COVID developments, such as the Biden vs. Trump campaign and recent U.S.-China tensions. The U.S. ordered China to close its consulate in Houston last Tuesday, and China took over the premises of the U.S. consulate in Chengdu, a southwestern city. Marquette will continue to assess and issue guidance on further developments related to the pandemic, the recovery, and other geopolitical events.

Print PDF > Bond Downgrades Subsiding

 

The opinions expressed herein are those of Marquette Associates, Inc. (“Marquette”), and are subject to change without notice. This material is not financial advice or an offer to purchase or sell any product. Marquette reserves the right to modify its current investment strategies and techniques based on changing market dynamics or client needs.

2020 Halftime Market Insights Video

This video features an in-depth analysis of the second quarter’s performance and coincides with our 2Q Asset Allocation Update newsletter, reviewing risks and opportunities heading into the second half of the year.

Our Market Insights series examines the primary asset classes we cover for clients including the U.S. economy, fixed income, U.S. and non-U.S. equities, hedge funds, real estate, infrastructure, private equity, and private credit, with presentations by our research analysts and directors.

Sign up for research alerts to be notified when we publish new videos here. For more information, questions, or feedback, please send us an email.