Back To The Vagaries Of The 70’s?

By Glenn Dyer | More Articles by Glenn Dyer

The combination of high private and public sector debt levels in developed countries, extreme swings in monetary policy and greater government involvement in the economy likely mean we have entered a more volatile macro economic environment.

This is likely to result in more volatile cycles in investment markets and more constrained returns from traditional investment markets. Investment processes will have to pay more attention to macro economic conditions and as such will likely become more short term focused.

The AMP’s chief economist and strategist, Dr Shane Oliver says this uncertainty will increase asset allocations to Asia and the emerging world, quality high yield investments and potentially gold.

Investment markets have become a lot more volatile over the last few years. Much of this of course relates to the global financial crisis and its aftermath.

However there is good reason to believe it is part of a longer term transition from the relative macro economic stability that increasingly prevailed from the mid-1980s until a few years ago, to an environment of shorter, more violent cycles like we saw in the 1970s.

This has a number of implications for investors.

The changing macro backdrop

To understand the current situation we need to understand the prior secular bull market in global shares which occurred from the early 1980s.

This was most clearly evident in the US share market as seen in the next chart.

(1 These themes were first referred to in “Where are we in the short and long term share cycles”, Oliver’s Insights, June 2009.)

The secular bull market from the early 1980s was driven by a combination of falling inflation – which allowed shares to rise faster than earnings, de-regulation and smaller government – which helped boost productivity and profits, easy credit, globalisation – which helped keep inflation down and boosted trade, the IT revolution and favourable demographics.

These considerations helped drive well above average investment returns from 1982.

For example, from 1982 to 2000 US shares returned 20% pa.

For many countries this strength continued into 2007 – e.g. Australian shares returned 16% pa over the 1982-2007 period which was well above its long term average return of 11.8%.

However since the turn of the century and increasingly through the last decade many of these favourable themes have faded or gone into reverse.

In particular:

  • The benefit to shares from the shift to low inflation over the last 25 years has run its course;
  • The global financial crisis will likely ensure a tighter credit environment for the next decade or so. High household gearing levels made worse by falls in house prices in many developed countries provide both a constraint and a degree of vulnerability going forward (as gearing can accentuate volatility);
  • The Great Recession, and the stimulus effort to combat it, have left many developed countries with dangerously high levels of public debt as is now all too evident in Europe. High public debt levels in many developed countries have left them with little scope to deal with any future downturns and market pressure is already intensifying to cut budget deficits;
  • Similarly monetary policy in many countries has been forced into extreme swings which is likely feeding back into the economic cycle;
  • The policy pendulum is swinging back to re-regulation and greater government involvement in the economy.
  • Examples of this now abound with increasing regulation of the financial system globally and the proposed resources super profit tax in Australia.

This will likely aversely affect economic dynamism and productivity growth;

  •  Demographic trends are becoming less favourable as the proportion of the population at peak spending age starts to decline and baby boomers start to retire. Poor population growth in Japan and Europe are additional constraints in these regions; and finally;
  • To the extent the world is now becoming more dependent on growth in emerging countries, this will also add to economic volatility as emerging countries are traditionally more volatile reflecting their greater exposure to manufacturing which tends to be more cyclical than services sector activity.

The outcome of these structural forces is likely to be lower average returns from traditional asset classes and a more volatile economic and investment market cycle.

The more difficult fundamental backdrop today suggests the medium term trend in US, European and Japanese shares are likely to remain weak and average medium term returns are likely to be around 5-8% pa at best.

The combination of still high private sector debt ratios, dangerously high public debt levels, the need to unwind very easy monetary policies combined with greater government intervention in the economy will also likely result in a more volatile economic and financial cycle.

There is also likely to be a positive feedback loop now underway where greater economic and investment market volatility has fed into investor skittishness which is in turn adding to volatility.

In many ways developed countries may have now come full circle and are going back to the shorter and more extreme cycles of the 1970s. (See the next chart.)

 

About Glenn Dyer

Glenn Dyer has been a finance journalist and TV producer for more than 40 years. He has worked at Maxwell Newton Publications, Queensland Newspapers, AAP, The Australian Financial Review, The Nine Network and Crikey.

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