Showing posts with label Hard Landing. Show all posts

Monthly Market Commentary and Crystal Gazing through 2016



"The individual investor should act consistently as an investor and not as a speculator." - Ben Graham
  
While staring at the world of the past year, I was desperately trying to look for any bright spots and I found nothing much except my unwavering hope. The lower bids in the recent months at the AP Govt.’s & Indian Govt.’s auctions on the solar projects is an important and promising development in this field, esp. with the falling crude and commodity prices.

A New Neutral has set in the world with an overall lower trend growth rates. Global growth remained weak and at an uninspiring range of 2.5-3%. Falling oil prices, low interest rates, massive monetary accommodation and lower global aggregate demand has contirbuted to a continued sluggish growth. The effects of lower oil prices and expansionary monetary policy could prove much more dramatic than many anticipate.

Chinese engineered soft-landing seems to be having hiccups with a miscalculation of the ground level. This could mean not just a hard landing but also an inevitable crash though it has the tools to manage, only time would tell us how it fared.One shouldn't forget the fact that Chinese economy has always been managed. By concentrating more on the quality parameters, private/foriegn participation & transparancy the way forward won't be all that easy & controlled.

EU seems to be determined with its “whatever-it-takes-attitude” and pump in more liquidity. While Japan is unsure of its situation and its demographics are not helping much either. The US is a sole large economy seems to have put a brave face in this adversary.

Fed rate hike would be gradual and prolongedstretching into 2018-19 and follow a lower trajectory; the neutral policy rate is well below the historic levels – a new neutral. Post the initial hike, it would proceed very gradually, all the while attuned to the global implications of their actions.

On the domestic front, the lower commodity prices have been a big boon for the margins but the continued weakness in the demand is a concern. Capacity utilization is at multi-year low in the manufacturing and we could see a gradual improvement in the demand from the 2nd quarter of the year.

What’s in it for you?

This never-seen-before environment demands a more dynamic strategy and a multi-asset allocation is needed to beat the volatility.

Equity: The last leg Dec rally helped post positive returns on the monthly basis and covered some ground on the yearly basis, though generating negative returns. The major indices never delivered negative returns in consecutive years since 2001 and hope for the history to repeat.
The market provides ample opportunities for entry and any systematic approach is recommended with a horizon of 1 year.     

Debt: The central banker still has room for rate cuts, though he would keep an eye on the US Fed and the inflation greatly influenced by the oil/commodity prices.
Stay put in long duration funds with a play in the mid & short term for arbitration as the spread narrows between the repo and benchmark yield.

Commodities: Commodities would bottom-out this year along with Oil, limiting the volatility. Oil could well see a little uptick from the current sub-40 levels while gold would continue to be under pressure.

Currency: Strengthening of the USD continues and as the volatility settles across the other asset classes, it would reach equilibrium, another new norm.

Disclaimer: The views expressed here are personal and any investment decisions to be made in consideration with the risk appetite, timelines and needs.