Visit Investors & Advisors Site | Support |
  • Australia

  • Austria

  • Denmark

  • Finland

  • Germany

  • Iceland

  • Italy

  • Luxembourg

  • Netherlands

  • Norway

  • Spain

  • Sweden

  • Switzerland

  • United Kingdom

  • United States

  • Location not listed

My Account
Macro and Market
Fixed Income

CIO Roundtable: Eyeing a Post-Election World

10/30/2024

Two weeks before the U.S. presidential election, Client Portfolio Manager Balaji Venkataraman sat down with our CIOs for a conversation on a range of topics top of mind for investors.

Hear our investment professionals’ views on consumer spending trends, inflationary pressures, prospects for a recession, the tension between monetary and fiscal policy, the broadening of market leadership and the market implications of key Democratic and Republican policy priorities.

Watch the Replay

Read key takeaways from the event below.

Key Takeaways

Edited excerpts from our conversation

Macro View

Victor Zhang, CIO, Senior Vice President

A year ago, I had a very different outlook on what was most likely to happen in our economy. There has been so much doubt about the prospects for economic growth, inflation, interest rates and employment.
And yet 12 months later, every market around the world has been celebrating the progress global economies have made. We're sitting here 12 months later with lower interest rates, not just in the U.S. but virtually in every other developed economy.
There are geopolitical risks and there are company-specific risks that we have to manage and be on top of. But I don’t think this environment presents more risk than we were sitting with a year ago.

Soft Landing Vs Recession

Charles Tan, co-CIO, Global Fixed Income

We think the likely outcome is somewhere between a soft landing and a mild recession. That means growth should subside to maybe just above zero, but it does not collapse. It's more like a bumpy landing.
There are still a lot of downside risks to the economy. And we don't think we are in the clear yet.


What's Next for the Fed?

Charles Tan

The Fed, at least in my mind, is inherently dovish. It was OK for the Fed to lean dovish in the world prior to COVID, when you had structurally lower inflation. But now you have higher inflation and structurally it might be problematic and risky.

We also need to keep in mind that this cycle has been very different from prior cycles. In fact, all of the traditional forecast models have broken down. I think the big reason really is because of the unprecedented level of a fiscal stimulus.


Consumer Spending Trends

Kevin Toney, CFA, CIO, Global Value Equity

Consumer spending has been declining moderately over the last few years as the personal savings rate has been normalizing back to pre-pandemic levels. … But you really have to dig in and peel back the layers to understand it.
Low-income consumers have almost been behaving like there’s recession. They have less cushion and less discretionary income, and so inflation really hits them hard. And SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) benefits have been rolling off over the last year. And that pulls away from some of their spending. We see middle- and high-income consumers spending—but they're worried.
Overall, credit looks pretty good for the consumer. But if you look deeper, lower-income credit is deteriorating quite significantly.
I’d say the jury is still out on whether we’re going to see a typical recession pattern that starts with weakness in lower-income consumers and then it moves up to the middle- and high-income consumers and eventually moves into industries being harmed by high inflation or high interest rates.


Growth to Value Rotation

Kevin Toney

Growth versus value and large versus small cap—we're seeing multidecade valuation dispersions.

Patricia Ribeiro, co-CIO, Global Growth Equity

Earnings growth has turned positive across the globe and is starting to accelerate again. Earnings revisions are actually coming through, which is really encouraging at this point. And valuations are very attractive relatively speaking.


AI Story Extends Beyond Large Cap and Developed Markets

Patricia Ribeiro

We see artificial intelligence as a very long secular story. We’re just at the very beginning of it. What we've been seeing is more of the hardware side of the growth, and there is a lot that we don't even know yet.
A few companies have benefited early on, but that is starting to extend and spread. For example, if I look at the emerging markets world, Taiwan is a big beneficiary of this supply chain, and we are seeing that coming through. It's not only large cap—it’s going into even smaller-cap names.
We're also seeing countries like Malaysia trying to attract investments in data centers. Why? Because they have an excess of energy. Enough energy to supply data centers.


Opportunities in Fixed Income

Charles Tan

Fixed income as an asset class has become much more attractive. You can find high-quality yields, between 5% and 6% without taking on much duration risk. The traditional role for fixed income, in terms of a downside protection and a risk diversification, has been largely restored.


Politics and Policy

Richard Weiss, CIO, Multi-Asset Strategies

Our multi-asset strategy team did a deep dive into the election and examined the policy platforms of both parties. We evaluated all aspects of the policy platforms available on both sides, and we did it in terms of risks.

In short, both parties have inflationary programs going on. There's no question interest rates and inflation would go higher if they were to enact their policies in full force. It would hurt the deficit, of course, and the debt burden, and both parties would hurt growth at the margin.

You have to look at this as the low-income subsidies and social programs on the one hand versus the tariffs on the other—they're both detrimental to inflation. We see the Republican platform a little more inflationary, but the Democratic platform a little more harmful to equities.

Inflation and Interest Rates

Charles Tan

Both parties share of love of spending—especially spending money they don't have—which means they have to borrow. Republican policy is a bit more about tax cuts, while the Democrats are more focused on social spending—but the end result is probably similar.
From our perspective, we're prepared for higher spending and a higher deficit and more bond issuance, which will put pressure on inflation and higher rates. So that fits into our overall theme of that inflation will be down over the next 12 to 18 months, maybe one to two years, but beyond that there are secular forces driving up rates and inflation.


Active Vs Passive Management

Richard Weiss

I would go so far as to say index investing is about as risky as it's ever been in history. An index fund is not going to have any risk control.

Authors
Victor Zhang, Chief Investment Officer
Victor Zhang

Chief Investment Officer

Senior Vice President

Patricia Ribeiro.
Patricia Ribeiro

Co-Chief Investment Officer

Global Growth Equity

Charles Tan.
Charles Tan

Co-Chief Investment Officer

Global Fixed Income

Kevin Toney, CFA
Kevin Toney, CFA

Chief Investment Officer

Global Value Equity

Rich Weiss
Richard Weiss

Chief Investment Officer

Multi-Asset Strategies

Balaji Venkataraman
Balaji Venkataraman

VP, Client Portfolio Manager

Explore More Macro & Market Insights

The opinions expressed are those of American Century Investments (or the portfolio manager) and are no guarantee of the future performance of any American Century Investments' portfolio. This material has been prepared for educational purposes only. It is not intended to provide, and should not be relied upon for, investment, accounting, legal or tax advice.

References to specific securities are for illustrative purposes only and are not intended as recommendations to purchase or sell securities. Opinions and estimates offered constitute our judgment and are subject to change without notice.