- Risk looks attractive as economies across the globe remain strong.ย
- 2024 will be a period of ‘controlled stabilisation’ for China.ย
- Some regions are starting to tread separate paths, uncovering idiosyncratic opportunities.
Is this the post-pandemic normalisation we were waiting for? Economic activity has held up this year as labour markets and consumer demand find a healthier balance. These improving fundamentals have shaped Fidelity Internationalโs thinking around three main themes heading into Q3, asย Henk-Jan Rikkerink, Global Head of Solutions & Multi Asset at Fidelity Internationalย outlines:
- Soft landing, risk on
โThe story of 2024 so far has been one of solid economic fundamentals. Signals suggest that the US still leads the pack, but Europe and the UK appear to be turning a corner, while continued stabilisation in China should mitigate its drag on the global economy.
โSticky inflation continues to temper expectations, however. Labour market reports for June looked hotter than the Fed would like, but softening inflation in May adds to our growing confidence that price rises wonโt reaccelerate from here. The range of outcomes when it comes to the magnitude of potential rate cuts by the Fed have narrowed significantly since the start of the year. We think that the bar for the cutting cycle to start remains high but recent progress on the inflation front has been encouraging.
โA soft landing is the most likely outcome – and thatโs a good thing for global growth and investors who are willing to take on additional equity risk.
- Controlled stabilisation in China
โItโs unwise to take your eye off the worldโs second largest economy, even if investors have withdrawn from its shores for now.โ
โWe continue to believe that 2024 will be a period of ‘controlled stabilisation’ for China.
โPolicymakers are attempting to reduce the dominance of the property sector and rebalance the economy towards higher-end manufacturing and consumption.
โIt has taken some time for investors to adapt to this change – especially following the anaemic comeback of the economy after the pandemic turned appetite away from China – but sentiment has begun to re-establish, if at low levels. Chinaโs economy is normalising as demand for goods and services gradually improves.
โPolicy shifts are starting to bear fruit in certain corners of Chinaโs economy. The most obvious is manufacturing, supported by a resurgence in overseas demand. There are some upbeat signals from consumption too, led by the rebound in holiday travel.
โThis stabilisation is good news for China. It also bodes well for other economies in the region and for investors, who will be breathing a sigh of relief over the retreat in negative sentiment that pervaded the country in the first half of the year.
- Time to be tactical
โSolid fundamentals and a strengthening China mean we are adding risk to our portfolios. But doing so requires a nose for nuance: we expect divergence between regions and sectors is likely to be high in Q3, which means being tactical with that risk.
โOne point of divergence is monetary policy across developed markets. The eurozone has cut rates ahead of the US, as we expected. While this lays some groundwork for Europe to build on the positive momentum itโs established over recent months, the risk of a devaluing euro means that the European Central Bankโs (ECB) easing path from here is closely tied to the Fedโs. We think itโs unlikely the ECB will cut much further without the Fed following suit.

โConditions look ripe for US and Japanese equities to continue their strong run. Robust growth and healthy earnings in the former, coupled with structural tailwinds and corporate reforms in the latter, go some way to justifying rising valuations in these regions. But they donโt go all the way – in the US in particular, weโre looking beyond frothier parts of the market to uncover value. Mid-caps offer strong long-term growth potential at a reasonable price, and they should also prove resilient to higher rates.
โOn a sectoral basis, itโs hard to look beyond the earnings momentum of technology companies, and we also like the positive earnings revisions of US and European financials.
โWe like convertible bonds, which can benefit from any continued momentum in equities and can offer some protection if credit spreads donโt widen substantially. Itโs a segment of the market thatโs becoming increasingly populated by higher quality issuers, including some from attractive growth sectors like technology.
โItโs finding seams in the market like these which could lift portfolio performance this quarter. The global economy now marches to a positive beat, but diverging policy will breed differentiating performance across assets.โ




