By Riva Gold and Georgi Kantchev
LONDON -- Every winter, senior managers at Barings gather at
their central London office to iron out their 10-year investment
forecast.
On next year's agenda for the $275 billion asset manager?
Another haircut to what they call the "globalization premium" on
stocks -- or even its outright elimination.
An acceleration of global trade and the freer flow of capital
have boosted U.S. equity prices for nearly three decades, in part
by lifting economic growth and allowing companies to take advantage
of new markets and economies of scale, fund managers say. Barings
calls it the globalization premium.
But now a broad slowdown in world trade coupled with unruly
politics from Brexit to the U.S. presidential election have some
money managers worried that a slowdown in globalization could be
the next big drag on global stocks.
"We believe globalization has probably reached its peak," said
Marino Valensise, head of the multi-asset team at Barings. "The
market won't like it."
Global trade this year will grow at the slowest pace since 2007,
according to the World Trade Organization, just as protectionist
policies are on the rise and efforts to liberalize trade have
stalled. The International Monetary Fund recently warned that
anti-trade trends such as increases in tariffs could cause
long-term damage to the world economy.
Some are worried this could spill over to corporate profits.
Global stock-index provider MSCI estimates that if policies such
as trade protectionism and government deficit spending increase
significantly in the developed world in the next two years, U.S.
equities would shed more than 17%, while European equity markets
would fall by close to 20%. In a stress test run by MSCI, the firm
assumes that such policies would lead to stagflation, a toxic
combination of higher inflation and lower growth.
Michael O'Sullivan, chief investment officer for Europe at
Credit Suisse, said investors are facing a "post-globalization"
landscape. "For markets, the slowdown in globalization means even
more uncertainty," he said.
Companies around the globe, from shippers to manufacturers, have
already pointed to slowing trade and rising protectionism as a drag
on profits.
U.S.-based Deere & Co., the world's largest seller of
tractors and harvesting combines, said earlier this year that
protectionism and trade restrictions could hurt its results.
In Australia, Ansell Ltd., one of the world's biggest makers of
condoms, sees the rise of political risk clouding its long-term
outlook. The U.K.'s vote to exit the European Union added "an
element of uncertainty in all of Europe," Chief Executive Magnus
Nicolin said on the company's latest earnings call.
It wasn't supposed to be this way.
Equity valuations spiked in the early 1990s after the fall of
the Berlin Wall ushered in the end of the Cold War. World trade
boomed, McDonald's Corp. started flipping more burgers in China and
Ford Motor Co. could manufacture pickup trucks cheaply in
Thailand.
U.S. stock valuations jumped above their 120-year average on the
assumption of ever increasing global trade and easier movement of
goods, services and capital across borders, said Christopher Mahon,
director of asset allocation research also on the multi-asset team
at Barings.
The globalization premium meant that U.S. stocks collectively
traded at a price-to-earnings ratio roughly one whole number higher
they otherwise would have, Barings estimates. P/E ratios,
calculated by dividing stock prices by earnings per share, are a
common measure of how expensive shares are.
Barings calculated the premium by analyzing historical
valuations and stripping out the impact of other variables such as
inflation dynamics and central-bank policies. Calculating the
globalization premium is the result of extensive debate among
senior investment strategists at the firm, who pore over economic
data, forecasts and research reports before deciding on a number
every year.
But that equation is changing.
Over the past decade, Barings has cut the premium by half, and
the firm's outlook for stocks is going down with it. Other fund
managers say they are becoming more selective, shunning the sectors
and countries they view as most likely to suffer from the resulting
slowdown.
"Globalization is increasingly coming under siege," said Stefan
Scheurer, senior market strategist at Allianz Global Investors.
Mr. O'Sullivan of Credit Suisse said the U.S. profit cycle
correlates well with world trade. "And in the past two years we had
falling profits and slowing trade," he said.
Companies listed in the S&P 500 derive more than 30% of
their revenue overseas, according to FactSet.
Global container-shipping operators have already cited the
slowdown in trade as a major drag on profits, with the shipping
industry facing its worst year since the 2008 financial crisis.
The number of protectionist measures implemented around the
globe so far this year has climbed to 338, according to researchers
at Global Trade Alert, the highest for the corresponding period
since they began tracking the figure in 2009 and up from 61 in the
same period that year. Global Trade Alert is a trade-monitoring
group coordinated by the Centre for Economic Policy Research, an
independent research think-tank based in London.
Efforts to liberalize world trade have also stalled, including
the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, the potential
free-trade deal between the U.S. and the European Union.
In the U.S., the Peterson Institute for International Economics
said the proposed trade policies of presidential candidates Donald
Trump and Hillary Clinton would deeply hurt the American economy by
slowing productivity growth.
"We're very concerned about the positions of both parties in
trade," Fred Smith, chief executive at FedEx Corp., said on the
company's latest earnings call.
Some investors argue that even as globalization may be on the
decline in the West, pockets of the world continue to open
themselves up for trade, creating new investment opportunities.
Sandra Crowl at French asset manager Carmignac points to Argentina,
for instance, as a country that may benefit more from opening
itself up to the world even as other countries, such as the U.S.,
become more protectionist.
Mr. O'Sullivan of Credit Suisse said that investors can protect
themselves long-term against the slowdown of globalization by
switching from multinational companies to national champions like
Chinese internet companies or Latin American airlines.
At Barings, managers favor a different approach: moving away
from equities and into fixed-income securities like bonds, which
are likely to be more insulated from the turmoil.
"In March, I daresay we will be once again putting a haircut to
our globalization premium," Mr. Mahon said. "Or possibly cut it to
zero."
Write to Riva Gold at riva.gold@wsj.com and Georgi Kantchev at
georgi.kantchev@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 16, 2016 15:11 ET (19:11 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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