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What valuations and narratives tell us about the current regime shift

Pascal Blanqué
Pascal Blanqué • 7 min read
What valuations and narratives tell us about the current regime shift
In 2020, global debt has grown to U$24 trillion and now stands at 355% of world GDP. Now, new priorities are emerging.
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It has been one year now since the Covid-19 pandemic disrupted the world. It changed our lives, but financial markets seem to have side-lined this dramatic event as a temporary pullback, which was quickly recovered and forgotten as most risk assets achieved new highs.

Hopes persist that a “here and now” vaccine will rescue the global economy and overshadow unexciting recent economic data and the uncertainties of the virus cycle. This translates into an unprecedented divergence between markets and the real economy, raising questions about the sustainability of current valuations.

Central banks’ extraordinary monetary reaction to disinflation, and then deflationary tensions, has been the key market driver of the regime that followed the Great Financial Crisis. This has sanctioned the victory of monetary and liquidity factors over real factors.

The dominance of the monetary factor and, most recently, the rise of irrational forces in the market as well as psychological drivers leading to further market exuberance, is resulting in the temptation to give up on traditional valuation metrics or to “adjust” absolute valuation indicators in order to justify the current extremes in the market.

A sign of the times is the fact that even Nobel prize-winning economist Robert Shiller has recently worked on revising his own CAPE indicator to try to make it more accurate and consider interest rates when valuing equities.

The new indicator, the Excess CAPE Yield, gives some comfort in the current valuations for equities: no major markets are flashing red in terms of valuations versus bonds.

This, however, does not answer the question of whether there is still absolute value in equities, puzzling the most the reading of where markets are today. The CAPE Ratio (also known as the Shiller P/E or PE 10 Ratio) is an acronym for the Cyclically-Adjusted Price-to-Earnings Ratio. The ratio is calculated by dividing a company’s stock price by the average of the company’s earnings for the last 10 years, adjusted for inflation. Excess CAPE Yield (ECY) is the inverse of the CAPE minus real bond yield.

Rising scepticism

Despite this rising scepticism regarding the traditional investment approach based on long-term horizons and valuations, we believe that a long-term perspective is key for investors, and this is even more relevant when we live in a period of transition towards a possible new regime, such as the one we are facing today.

What investors need is to enhance their investment approach to include other elements that go beyond traditional economic variables (such as inflation, growth and earnings). In this respect, they also need to consider the monetary factor (policies at work that can distort market behaviour) which remains highly relevant in the current environment.

In addition, a third element: Market narratives that can affect either economic variables or monetary policy. In fact, narratives can confirm the direction of the market, but can also push it in a different one. When there is a strong market detachment from the economic reality, as it is the case today, a prevailing narrative can signal a change in regime. This leads to an important turning point for investors.

Currently, there are three narratives driving markets. They are interconnected and dynamic as they evolve over time. The one that prevails will characterise the new financial regime.

The deflationary consequences of the 2008 crisis have strengthened the first narrative, the secular stagnation of forever-low growth and low inflation. The foundations of this narrative rely on the long-term memory of what has been the effective story for developed economies throughout centuries into modern times, if we exclude the inflationary episode of the 1970s (and to some extent the two world wars).

The inflation pressures from protectionism and post-Covid-19 value chain disruption, rising demand for a minimum living wage and the monetisation of debt are the seeds of the shift towards a higher inflationary regime, bringing us back to the 1970s.

The second market narrative, that is currently sustaining the high valuations in equity markets, relates to earnings growth being pushed by technological disruption (the creative destruction narrative). However, the assumption that earnings growth will deviate upward from its historical trend, thanks to technological revolution, seems unlikely assuming the current trend in labour force growth, stock of capital and productivity and the high share of profits on value added. If this is the case, as we believe, growth will remain sluggish following the first post-Covid-19 bounce and may end up moving back to the “secular stagnation” environment, in which equity markets should readjust to the downside to absorb the current excess of optimism.

New priorities

However, we believe that the prevailing narrative will be the third option, the monetary one, from orthodox/anchored to magic/de-anchored central banks. Today, for the first time in more than three decades, narratives are explicitly expressing a preference for inflation as a way out from the current pandemic. Inflation has ceased to be a negative. It is a desire, as it can help make the debt burden originated by the crisis sustainable.

In 2020, global debt has grown to U$24 trillion and now stands at 355% of world GDP. New priorities for populations and institutions are emerging. The huge debt pile that will weigh on future generations has to serve to help to fight climate change and make the overall economic model more inclusive, reducing inequalities.

This mantra is vocal among politicians and central bankers globally and shared by the wider society. This leads to the dominance of the market narrative that pushes for a continuation of extraordinary monetary policy, with central banks further evolving their roles into new territories including green topics (see recent ECB members talking about decarbonising the ECB balance sheet) or targeting inequality (the Federal Reserve moving into the full jobs market target, for example).

A change of regime often occurs with a change in the mandate of Central Banks, as it happened in the late 1970s, with the arrival of Paul Volker at the helm of the Federal Reserve. The transition phases not surprisingly see the coexistence of previous and new mandates. Here is exactly what we are starting to see today. The narrative of higher inflation and higher growth after the crisis is gaining stage, thanks also to the “money in the pocket” measures embarked by governments and unprecedented interconnection between Central Banks and fiscal policies.

Slow reactions to inflation pressures are in the cards and temporary measures will likely remain well beyond what is needed. The risk of overheating is concrete, especially in the US. Considering this possible outcome, investors should make themselves ready for a process of rebalancing of risk premia and portfolio construction re-design. Higher inflation challenges traditional diversification, as correlation between equity and bonds turns positive.

To build an inflation-proof portfolio, investors should consider increasing their allocation to pockets of assets such as inflation-linked bonds, real assets (real estate and infrastructure in particular) and commodities. In a world of stretched absolute equity and bond valuations, relative value is the only value left in markets. Investors should look at relative value “within” and “across” asset classes. Absolute return approaches that seek to extract relative value in markets, with limited directional risk, could enhance diversification.

The role of equities will be key both in tactical (attractive valuations versus bonds) and strategic asset allocation. Despite their stretched absolute valuations they are the “must own” assets, in a world of lower expected returns (due to the lack of returns on the bond side). Investors will have no choice, but to increase equity allocation. A

higher inflationary regime will drive a multi-year rotation from growth to value stocks. Lower interest rates, used to discount future profits, have amplified growth outperformance and therefore growth stocks are now vulnerable to higher rates. Investors should focus on sector allocation with a preference for sectors linked to real assets (like commodities, energy and infrastructure).

It will be important to manage this transition from overvaluation towards a new regime while building a strategic asset allocation resilient to higher inflation. This is not the time to give up on valuation, but instead stick to value in search of opportunities while carefully following the evolution of market narratives. Be prepared, as this is the time to play opportunities in the market.

Pascal Blanqué is the group chief investment officer at European asset managers Amundi

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