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AB: How Mega-Forces Will Reshape the Macro Regime and Investing

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AllianceBernstein's press release discusses three mega-forces - climate change, demographics, and deglobalization - that will reshape the investment landscape. These forces are expected to lower economic growth levels and impact inflation, government debt, and macro volatility. The PR highlights the implications of these forces on strategic asset allocation for investors.
Il comunicato stampa di AllianceBernstein discute tre grandi forze - il cambiamento climatico, le demografie e la deglobalizzazione - che modelleranno il panorama degli investimenti. Si prevede che queste forze ridurranno i livelli di crescita economica e influenzeranno l'inflazione, il debito pubblico e la volatilità macroeconomica. Il comunicato sottolinea le implicazioni di queste forze sulla allocazione strategica degli asset per gli investitori.
El comunicado de prensa de AllianceBernstein discute tres mega-fuerzas - el cambio climático, la demografía y la desglobalización - que van a remodelar el paisaje de las inversiones. Se espera que estas fuerzas disminuyan los niveles de crecimiento económico e impacten en la inflación, la deuda gubernamental y la volatilidad macroeconómica. La nota de prensa destaca las implicaciones de estas fuerzas en la asignación estratégica de activos para los inversores.
얼라이언스번스타인의 보도자료는 투자 환경을 변화시킬 세 가지 거대한 요인 - 기후 변화, 인구 통계, 탈세계화에 대해 논의합니다. 이들 요인은 경제 성장 수준을 낮추고 인플레이션, 정부 부채 및 거시 변동성에 영향을 미칠 것으로 예상됩니다. 보도자료는 이러한 요인들이 투자자들의 전략적 자산 배분에 미치는 영향을 강조합니다.
Le communiqué de presse d'AllianceBernstein discute de trois mégapuissances - le changement climatique, la démographie et la démondialisation - qui vont redéfinir le paysage de l'investissement. Ces forces devraient réduire les niveaux de croissance économique et avoir des répercussions sur l'inflation, la dette publique et la volatilité macroéconomique. Le communiqué met en lumière les implications de ces forces sur l'allocation stratégique des actifs pour les investisseurs.
Die Pressemitteilung von AllianceBernstein diskutiert drei Mega-Kräfte - Klimawandel, Demografie und Deglobalisierung - welche die Investitionslandschaft umformen werden. Es wird erwartet, dass diese Kräfte das Wirtschaftswachstum senken und Inflation, Staatsverschuldung und makroökonomische Volatilität beeinflussen. Die Pressemitteilung hebt die Auswirkungen dieser Kräfte auf die strategische Vermögensallokation für Investoren hervor.
Positive
  • Climate change, demographics, and deglobalization will likely lead to lower economic growth levels.
  • Demographics show a decline in the global working-age population, potentially impacting productivity.
  • Climate change could depress growth, with varying impacts across regions, and increase the need for the global energy transition.
  • Deglobalization may reduce growth rates through declining trade and geopolitical tensions.
  • AI could boost productivity but may not be enough to offset the macro forces' impact.
  • Inflation is expected to rise due to various factors like demographics, deglobalization, and climate change.
  • Government debt monetization and macro volatility are linked to the mega-forces discussed.
  • Corporate profit margins are likely to decline, especially in the US, due to various structural reasons.
  • Real interest rates are expected to remain low due to lower economic growth projections.
  • Strategic asset allocation should consider higher inflation, lower growth, and lower margins.
Negative
  • The decline in the working-age population could significantly impact productivity.
  • Climate change may have uneven impacts across regions, with poorer countries facing worse outcomes.
  • Deglobalization could lead to reduced growth rates and corporate margins.
  • AI's potential to offset macro forces may be
  • Higher inflation rates could pose challenges for investors and economies.
  • Government debt monetization could lead to sustainability issues.
  • Corporate profit margins may decline, affecting profitability in the long run.
  • Low real interest rates may impact investment returns and savings.
  • Strategic asset allocation may become more complex due to changing economic landscapes.

NORTHAMPTON, MA / ACCESSWIRE / April 24, 2024 / AllianceBernstein
Inigo Fraser Jenkins| Co-Head - Institutional Solutions
Alla Harmsworth| Co-Head - Institutional Solutions; Head - Alphalytics

Three mega-forces seem set to dominate the investment landscape for the next decade or longer, with major implications for the macro regime and portfolio design.

Each of these far-reaching forces - climate change, demographics and deglobalization - is significant in its own right. Where they're likely to interact in a directionally similar way, they have the power to reshape financial outcomes, creating a new world for investors to navigate.

Macro Mega-Forces and the Impact on Economic Growth

Generally speaking, we think that one key implication of these mega-forces is a lower baseline level of economic growth. Here's a brief overview of each force and how it could play into growth prospects.

Demographics: The global population of working-age people has peaked and is set to decline in coming decades. Boosting labor participation could help counter the decline, but a relatively small share of workers are in scope for extended careers, and efforts to raise retirement ages have been controversial.

Also, a growing need for long-term care could impair productivity by crowding out research and development or infrastructure spending while requiring a growing share of people engaged in the care sector, which doesn't contribute to measurable growth. Artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to boost productivity, which could help offset demographics.

Climate Change: The growth effect of climate change may be the hardest force to assess, given the diverse variables from rising temperatures to migration pressure and resource conflict. Focusing here on rising temperatures alone, accumulated research implies that this would likely depress growth, though with a very uneven impact across regions and countries - and a materially worse outcome for poor countries.

Could the response to climate change help growth too? One possible avenue is investment in the energy transition, including a sizable amount of government spending that could offset some extent of negative growth forces. However, research suggests that this impact would likely be smaller than some of the downward forces - and subject to sustained capital expenditures globally.

Deglobalization: The retreat of the long era of globalization will likely continue. There's general dissatisfaction with globalization in the internal politics of developed economies, and relations between the US and China - two major global players - are hardening. This will likely push down on growth rates and corporate margins.

Deglobalization can affect growth through declining trade, a fragmenting of the global labor force and reduced capital mobility, along with possible secondary forces such as political instability and geopolitical conflict. Deglobalization would likely be tempered by a partial partitioning of countries into trade blocs, but overall it dampens the growth outlook.

We're often asked whether the onset of AI could improve productivity enough to offset these macro forces. It might, but the impact would have to be at the top of the range of historical improvements under economic regimes. So, building in such expectations would take a significant step.

Higher Inflation Is Likely over a Strategic Horizon

In our view, all three mega-forces have direct implications for inflation, but both inflationary and deflationary forces are at work over strategic horizons (Display).

The impact of demographics is hotly debated, with Japan often cited as an example of the first country to see a rapid, sustained aging followed by deflation. But this example has been relatively isolated - in coming decades, nearly all regions should see such a demographic change.

Increased labor bargaining power from deglobalization and a greater focus on the social element of ESG imply a higher wage path. Deglobalization also increases inflation by reducing firms' ability to engage in labor-cost arbitrage. And it unwinds aspects of the supply chain infrastructure that were developed in recent decades, a trend that increases input costs.

Climate change has a route to drive higher inflation through higher input costs to energy and the need to fund the global energy transition, though the impact may wane over time. Once the required infrastructure for renewable power generation has been installed, economies could become somewhat delinked from commodity prices.

AI introduces plausibly deflationary forces, but we maintain our view that equilibrium inflation will remain above the pre-pandemic level, given the influence of the other large macro forces at work that point to higher inflation.

The Link of the Government Debt Burden to Mega-Forces

In addition to the mega-forces we've described, there's also the question of whether governments attempt to monetize their debt. Because this is a question of future policy decisions, we see it as somewhat apart from the other forces acting on inflation - but there is a link.

So far, the massive buildup of public-sector debt in developed economies hasn't mattered, because the combination of favorable demographics and deglobalization has helped drive debt costs down. Now that the cost of debt has risen, sustainability could become a much bigger issue.

The debt/GDP ratio for developed economies is the same today as it was at the end of WWII. However, there was a need to rebuild the capital stock in that earlier era, and the population in these economies was much younger, so there was a way to grow out of the burden. That would seem much harder to do now, given the likely growth constraints. As a result, inflating away the debt problem might be the more attractive path out of this impasse.

Macro Volatility Likely to Retrace Higher

The pre-pandemic period saw an unusually large decline in the volatility of macro variables, especially with respect to inflation. If some of this decline was a result of globalization helping to cushion against inflation shocks, we would expect a retracing to a somewhat higher level of inflation volatility. GDP volatility has been more episodic but was still below the pre-pandemic average.

The forces we discuss imply a generally higher level of macro volatility. One reason is that governments will likely play a larger role in economies in the post-pandemic era. Also, migration can magnify political uncertainty, and there's more risk of extreme weather events occurring. In the background, the end of the post-WWII US-led order implies more economic risk.

Margins Likely to Fall…and the US Stands to Lose More

Corporate profitability has been very high, especially in the US. There is somewhat of a cyclical element to this trend, but a likely structural component exists too. In the long run, we see no good societal reason why the higher margins of recent years (Display) should be maintained, though AI could delay the mean reversion.

Key influences are likely to include greater labor-bargaining power, rising effective corporate tax rates, the loss of efficiency and knowledge transfer due to declining global trade, and a fading of the flattening effect of mega-cap efficiency on cap-weighted corporate margins.

As a result, we expect the US after-tax profit share to decline back to its long-run average. Other regions and countries haven't seen the same sustained increase in profit share, so the case for downward mean reversion is weaker elsewhere. Profit share is one area where the US has more to lose.

Expect Real Interest Rates to Remain Very Low

If real interest rates reflect expectations of future economic growth, our lower-growth outlook implies that real rates are set to remain low.

Could the retirement and savings drawdown of retiring Baby Boomers imply an upward rate path instead? We think that upward pressure may be offset somewhat by the younger cohorts' greater need to save, wealth creation in Asia over the past four decades and the opening up of China's economy. These economies have shown a very high propensity to save, which has plausibly pushed yields down.

There can clearly be very large cyclical fluctuations in real rates, with 2022 a recent case in point. However, from a strategic viewpoint, the possible forces collectively at work imply that - at the very least - investors should not expect a secular rise in real yields. On balance, our view is that they stay very low (Display).

Implications for Strategic Asset Allocation

An environment of higher (but not unanchored) inflation, lower economic growth, and lower margins isn't a bearish conclusion for investors, but it demands a response in strategic asset allocation. For investors with known nominal liabilities, the yield increase over the last two years is an opportunity to de-risk. But investors who need to protect the purchasing power of liabilities would need to take on more risk.

In a baseline outcome, equities would still deliver a positive real return, despite lower real growth and margins. Higher inflation implies a greater need for other real assets versus a traditional 60/40, including inflation-protected bonds and physical real assets such as commodities, infrastructure and real estate. So, for investors who need to protect the purchasing power of their portfolio, equities should be an anchor position. Diversifiers and other return sources, such as private assets, can be added around stocks.

The good outcome represents a dampened return experience from the pre-pandemic era, albeit with somewhat lower growth and constraints on how much further risk premia can compress.

The hardest outcome is the bad scenario where inflation rises, real growth falls and risk premia rise - essentially stagflation, with neither equities nor nominal bonds enhancing portfolio returns. This implies the need for a more extreme shift into physical real assets, gold and inflation-protected bonds. We also think that factor strategies, such as free-cash-flow yield, should be considered.

The views expressed herein do not constitute research, investment advice or trade recommendations and do not necessarily represent the views of all AB portfolio-management teams. Views are subject to revision over time.

Learn more about AB's approach to responsibility here.

View additional multimedia and more ESG storytelling from AllianceBernstein on 3blmedia.com.

Contact Info:
Spokesperson: AllianceBernstein
Website: https://www.3blmedia.com/profiles/alliancebernstein
Email: info@3blmedia.com

SOURCE: AllianceBernstein



View the original press release on accesswire.com

FAQ

How will climate change, demographics, and deglobalization impact economic growth?

These mega-forces are expected to lower baseline economic growth levels due to factors like declining working-age populations, geopolitical tensions, and the need for the global energy transition.

What are the implications of AI in boosting productivity amidst these macro forces?

While AI has the potential to increase productivity, it may not be sufficient to counter the impacts of climate change, demographics, and deglobalization on economic growth.

How will inflation be affected by demographics, deglobalization, and climate change?

These forces are likely to drive inflation higher through factors like rising input costs, reduced labor-cost arbitrage, and the need for the global energy transition.

What is the link between government debt monetization and the discussed mega-forces?

The buildup of public-sector debt may be impacted by demographics, deglobalization, and climate change, influencing inflation and sustainability.

How will corporate profit margins be influenced by the macro forces discussed?

Corporate margins, especially in the US, are expected to decline due to factors like rising labor-bargaining power, higher effective corporate tax rates, and declining global trade efficiency.

What are the projections for real interest rates in light of lower economic growth expectations?

Real interest rates are anticipated to remain low as a result of reduced economic growth prospects, offsetting potential upward pressure from factors like retiring Baby Boomers.

How should investors approach strategic asset allocation given the changing economic landscape?

Investors need to consider higher inflation, lower growth, and lower margins in their strategic asset allocation, potentially including real assets, inflation-protected bonds, and diversified return sources.

AllianceBernstein Holding, L.P.

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