Regionally, we retain our preference for European corporates versus the US driven by the Credit Cycle Differentiation Theme. In Europe, balance-sheet preservation trends remain positive whilst corporate balance sheets were broadly in better shape as we entered the pandemic. We believe that Europe is now firmly in an early credit cycle phase, where the focus of CFO activity will continue to be on reducing costs, increasing cashflow and reducing leverage rather than focusing on shareholder friendly activity; hence the mid-term corporate fundamental picture remains reasonable in our opinion.
With the US leading the initial stage of the recovery due to more aggressive monetary and fiscal responses compared to other regions (this created extremely strong technicals supporting the region), we believe that the next stage of the recovery will be more fundamental and valuations driven, which will be supportive of European corporates given the greater dispersion in opportunities within the region and across the capital structure.
That said, we also expect technicals to remain positive across European credit markets through 2021. The ECB is anticipated to buy up to €10 billion of corporate bonds per month, equating to approximately 1% of the eligible index, which at this pace they will end up owning close to 30% of all eligible debt at the end of the scheduled programme. Given this global Central Bank backstop, we believe that the risk of spreads materially re-widening remains low.
In addition to Europe, we view the opportunity in Asia as even more compelling, given more attractive valuations. Fundamentally, this is driven by our First In First Out (FIFO) pandemic thesis coupled with their historical experience of managing pandemics in the region, which should lead to both a greater and more sustained recovery.
In fact, we expect that 50% of next year’s global growth estimate (mid 5%) to be driven by Asia. We have already begun to see this trend emerge in 2020, as evidenced by higher mobility rates across Asia versus the rest of the world. In addition, we continue to see strong evidence supporting our China Rebalancing Theme. Here, we expect that China will successfully transition into a consumption led service economy from one that has relied on foreign direct investments and low-cost manufacturing.
The resultant rise in consumerism from a growing middle class, urbanisation and significant ecommerce trends will see a stable growth picture and a growth outlook focused on quality rather than quantity. This consumption upgrade has already seen the composition of Chinese growth move from manufacturing, agriculture and construction to being more driven by services in the last few years, and we expect this trend to continue.
We therefore see good opportunities to invest in Chinese corporates via offshore markets (USD and EUR denominated), which on a rating and duration adjusted basis trade with an attractive yield premium to their US and European counterparts.
Within this universe we focus on sectors and names that will benefit from this consumption story i.e. the technology giants (Tencent, Baidu and Alibaba), as well as key State-owned corporates with strong strategic importance to China in implementing their long terms plans and policies (Made in China 2025 or One Belt One Road initiatives).
Our conviction in this trade has increased during the pandemic due to Asia’s effective control of the virus, resulting in less restrictions versus Western countries, hence the FIFO thesis.
In terms of capital structure, we continue to identify attractive opportunities in subordinated instruments across both financial and non-financial issuers, which help to increase the yield and carry profile of the strategy.
This is driven by two themes, the first being the Financial Deleveraging Theme. Here, we continue to witness banks becoming more utility like post the Global Financial Crisis due to increased regulation, resulting in capital levels that are materially higher today. The Covid-19 pandemic created an economic/liquidity crisis for corporates following government lockdown measures designed to slow the spread of the virus - this is not a banking crisis.
The second theme driving our preference for subordinated bonds is the Japanification of Europe which is predicated on our secular stagnation view (low growth, low inflation and easy financial conditions) and that ultimately Europe will become like Japan due to (the 3 D’s):
Demographics; Europe’s ageing demographics increase the number of savers versus spenders (capping growth)
Disruption; whilst digital disruptions should help to keep inflation in check
Debt; meanwhile, elevated levels of government debt require the ECB to keep policy easy to facilitate well-functioning capital markets
This low growth and low inflation with easy financial conditions environment is very conducive for high quality corporates and taken together with well capitalised banks, reduces the probability of default in the region. Hence, we can feel comfortable to invest down the capital structure in names we like.
In summary, whilst global investment grade corporate index level valuations have recovered since the onset of the global pandemic, dispersion and differentiation within the asset class still offers attractive opportunities to capture returns.
This also helps to ensure the strategy continues to offer a significant yield carry over the index, which in this low yield environment we believe will contribute meaningfully to overall returns through 2021.