The likelihood that the world is moving towards a higher structural inflation regime in the medium term (the next three or four years) is a potentially important planning horizon for many investors. How should they think about, and prepare for, the likely risks and opportunities?
There are many investment strategies they can consider. All, in our view, should have one thing in common: they should be active. That’s because active strategies are well suited to navigating changing investment environments over the short, medium and long terms.
Below, we recap our short-term outlook and provide three checklists to help active equity investors navigate the post-COVID economic recovery. (In future articles, we’ll look in more depth at appraising stocks appropriately in the current environment, and at the medium-term outlook.)
CHECKLIST 1: INFLATION RISK
Now that vaccination roll-outs have started to contain the pandemic in some countries, the global economy is beginning to normalize, which means that economic growth will probably face many of the same challenges that prevailed before the pandemic.
While there is room, in our view, for stocks to advance in this recovery, there are risks, too. They can be divided into two groups: policy risks and the risks that go with a “return to normal”. The policy risks concern inflation and interest rates.
There has been much debate recently about whether higher inflation outcomes reflect temporary factors (such as the low base effects for year-on-year readings created by the COVID-induced slowdown in 2020) or more permanent ones.
The consensus favours the temporary view, and markets—which are not pricing in a significant shift in inflation relative to where it stood pre-COVID—seem to agree. The point for investors, however, is that inflation risk is now much more on markets’ radar than it was a year ago.
(Note that this debate mainly concerns the short-term inflation outlook; our outlook for higher structural inflation in the medium term draws on factors which are longer-term than the cyclical inputs that tend to inform monthly or quarterly CPI readings.)
As our first checklist shows, active investors can prepare for higher inflation in three ways: