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Economic and market outlook for 2024: Global summary

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Higher interest rates are here to stay. Even after policy rates recede from their cyclical peaks, in the decade ahead rates will settle at a higher level than we’ve grown accustomed to since the 2008 global financial crisis (GFC). This development ushers in a return to sound money, and the implications for the global economy and financial markets will be profound. Borrowing and savings behaviour will reset, capital will be allocated more judiciously, and asset class return expectations will be recalibrated. Beliefs believes that a higher interest rate environment will serve investors well in achieving their long-term financial goals, but the transition may be bumpy.

 

Monetary policy will bare its teeth in 2024

The global economy has proven more resilient than we expected in 2023. This is partly because monetary policy has not been as restrictive as initially thought. Fundamental changes to the global economy have pushed up the neutral rate of interest—the rate at which policy is neither expansionary nor contractionary. Various other factors have blunted the normal channels of monetary policy transmission, including the U.S. fiscal impulse from debt-financed pandemic support and industrial policies, improved household and corporate balance sheets, and tight labour markets that have resulted in real wage growth. In the U.S., our analysis suggests that these offsets almost entirely counteracted the impact of higher policy interest rates. Outside the U.S., this dynamic is less pronounced. Europe’s predominantly bank-based economy is already flirting with recession, and China’s rebound from the end of COVID-19-related shutdowns has been weaker than expected.

The U.S. exceptionalism is set to fade in 2024. We expect monetary policy to become increasingly restrictive as inflation falls and offsetting forces wane. The economy will experience a mild downturn as a result. This is necessary to finish the job of returning inflation to target. However, there are risks to this view. A “soft landing,” in which inflation returns to target without recession, remains possible, as does a recession that is further delayed. In Europe, we expect anaemic growth as restrictive monetary and fiscal policy lingers, while in China, we expect additional policy stimulus to sustain economic recovery amid increasing external and structural headwinds.

 

Zero rates are yesterday’s news

Barring an immediate 1990s-style productivity boom, a recession is likely a necessary condition to bring down the rate of inflation, through weakening demand for labour and slower wage growth. As central banks feel more confident in inflation’s path toward targets, we expect they will start to cut policy rates in the second half of 2024.

That said, we expect policy rates to settle at a higher level compared with after the GFC and during the COVID-19 pandemic. Research has found that the equilibrium level of the real interest rate, also known as r-star or r*, has increased, driven primarily by demographics, long-term productivity growth, and higher structural fiscal deficits. This higher interest rate environment will last not months, but years. It is a structural shift that will endure beyond the next business cycle and, in our view, is the single most important financial development since the GFC.

 

2024 economic forecasts

GDP Growth

Country/region

2024

Consensus 2024

Trend

United States

0.5%

0.8%

1.8%

Euro area

0.5%-1%

0.8%

1.2%

U.K

0.5%-1%

0.4%

1%

China

4.5%-5%

4.5%

4.1%

Australia

0.75%-1.25%

1.4%

2.6%

Unemployment rate

Country/region

 2024

Consensus 2024

NAIRU

United States

4.8%

4.4%

3.5%-4%

Euro area

7%-7.5%

6.8%

6.5%-7%

U.K

4.5%-5%

4.8%

3.5%-4%

China

4.8%

5%

5%

Australia

4.75%

4.7%

4.25%

Core inflation

Country/region

 2024

Consensus 2024

United States

2.5%

2.5%

Euro area

2.1%

2.5%

U.K

2.8%

N/A

China

1%-1.5%

N/A

Australia

3%

N/A

Monetary policy

Country/region

Year-end 2023

Year-end 2024

Neutral Rate

United States

5.5%-5.75%

4%-4.5%

3%-3.5%

Euro area

4%

3.25%

2%-2.5%

U.K

5.25%

4.25%

3%-3.5%

China

2.3%-2.4%

2.2%

4.5%-5%

Australia

4.35%

3.85%

3%-3.5%

 

Notes: Forecasts are as of November 14, 2023. For the U.S., GDP growth is defined as the year-over-year change in fourth-quarter GDP. For all other countries/regions, GDP growth is defined as the annual change in GDP in the forecast year compared with the previous year. Unemployment forecasts are the average for the fourth quarter of 2024. NAIRU is the non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment, a measure of labour market equilibrium. Core inflation excludes volatile food and energy prices. For the U.S., euro area, and U.K., core inflation is defined as the year-over-year change in the fourth quarter compared with the previous year. For China, core inflation is defined as the average annual change compared with the previous year. For the U.S., core inflation is based on the core Personal Consumption Expenditures Index. For all other countries/regions, core inflation is based on the core Consumer Price Index. The neutral rate is the equilibrium policy rate at which no easing or tightening pressures are being placed upon an economy or its financial markets.

current as of November 14, 2023.

 

A return to sound money

For households and businesses, higher interest rates will limit borrowing, increase the cost of capital, and encourage saving. For governments, higher rates will force a reassessment of fiscal outlooks sooner rather than later. The vicious circle of rising deficits and higher interest rates will accelerate concerns about fiscal sustainability. Research suggests the window for governments to act on this is closing fast—it is an issue that must be tackled by this generation, not the next.

For well-diversified investors, the permanence of higher real interest rates is a welcome development. It provides a solid foundation for long-term risk-adjusted returns. However, as the transition to higher rates is not yet complete, near-term financial market volatility is likely to remain elevated.

 

Bonds are back

Global bond markets have repriced significantly over the last two years because of the transition to the new era of higher rates. In our view, bond valuations are now close to fair, with higher long-term rates more aligned with secularly higher neutral rates. Meanwhile, term premia (compensation investors may expect for the unknowns associated with holding longer-term debt) have increased as well, driven by elevated inflation and fiscal and monetary outlook uncertainty.

Despite the potential for near-term volatility, we believe this rise in interest rates is the single best economic and financial development in 20 years for long-term investors. Our bond return expectations have increased substantially. We now expect Australian bonds to return an annualised 4.3%-5.3% over the next decade, compared with the 1.3%-2.3% 10-year annualised returns we expected before the rate-hiking cycle began. Similarly, for global bonds, we expect annualised returns of 4.5%–5.5% over the next decade, compared with a forecast of 1.6%-2.6% when policy rates were low or, in some cases, negative.

If reinvested, the income component of bond returns at this level of rates will eventually more than offset the capital losses experienced over the last two years. By the end of the decade, bond portfolio values are expected to be higher than if rates had not increased in the first place.

Similarly, the case for the 60/40 portfolio is stronger than in recent history. Long-term investors in diversified portfolios see a dramatic rise in the probability of achieving a nominal 7% return, from 11% in 2021 to 38% today.

Moving up the risk spectrum, credit valuations appear fair in the investment-grade space but relatively rich in high-yield. What’s more, the growing likelihood of recession and declining profit margins skew the risks toward wider spreads.

 

Higher rates leave equities overvalued

A higher-rate environment depresses asset price valuations across global markets while squeezing profit margins as corporations find it more expensive to issue and refinance debt.

Valuations are most stretched in the U.S. As a result, we have downgraded our U.S. equity expectations to an annualised 4.0%-6.0% over the next 10 years from 4.6%-6.6% heading into 2023. Within the U.S. market, value stocks are more attractive than they have been since late 2021 and small-capitalisation stocks also appear attractive for the long term.

U.S. equities have continued to outperform their international peers. The key drivers of this performance gap over the last two years have been valuation expansion and dollar strength beyond our fair-value estimates, but these are likely to reverse. Indeed,  projections suggest an increasing likelihood of greater opportunities outside the U.S. We project 10-year annualised returns for non-U.S. developed markets of 6.7%-8.7% and for emerging markets of 6.3%-7.3%

The global equity risk premium that emerges from current stock and bond market valuations is the lowest since the 1999–2009 “lost decade.” The spread between global equity and global bond returns is expected to be 0 to 2 percentage points annualised over the next 10 years. In contrast to the last decade, we expect return outcomes for diversified investors to be more balanced. For those with an appropriate risk tolerance, a more defensive risk posture may be appropriate given higher expected fixed income returns and an equity market that is yet to fully reflect the implications of the return to sound money.

 


 

Notes:

This article contains certain 'forward looking' statements. Forward looking statements, opinions and estimates provided in this article are based on assumptions and contingencies which are subject to change without notice, as are statements about market and industry trends, which are based on interpretations of current market conditions. Forward-looking statements including projections, indications or guidance on future earnings or financial position and estimates are provided as a general guide only and should not be relied upon as an indication or guarantee of future performance. There can be no assurance that actual outcomes will not differ materially from these statements.

 

 

 

 

Vanguard
November 2023
vanguard.com.au

 

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Michael Campbell

Role Credentials

Michael Campbell

Michael Campbell is the founding Director of Portfolio Professionals. He is a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER® professional with a wealth of experience, having commenced in the financial services industry in 1996.

Michael began his financial planning career with Colonial First State and then moved to Sunsuper. At Sunsuper Michael was responsible for establishing and building their financial planning arm. During Michael’s time at the helm the number of clients grew from one to many hundreds.

Michael then went to ING where he was the State Manager for Distribution. During his time with ING, Michael used his planning skills and managerial skills to help planners to improve their business.

Michael’s passion for planning and helping clients has driven him to form Portfolio Professionals. He strives to help clients empower themselves with strategies and advice that makes sense.

Michael Campbell

Michael Campbell

Senior Financial Adviser Dip. Fin Plan., BEd., BEcon., MBA (Accounting), CFP®, ASCPA

Michael Campbell

Michael Campbell is the founding Director of Portfolio Professionals. He is a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER® professional with a wealth of experience, having commenced in the financial services industry in 1996.

Michael began his financial planning career with Colonial First State and then moved to Sunsuper. At Sunsuper Michael was responsible for establishing and building their financial planning arm. During Michael’s time at the helm the number of clients grew from one to many hundreds.

Michael then went to ING where he was the State Manager for Distribution. During his time with ING, Michael used his planning skills and managerial skills to help planners to improve their business.

Michael’s passion for planning and helping clients has driven him to form Portfolio Professionals. He strives to help clients empower themselves with strategies and advice that makes sense.

Patricia Kristjansson

Patricia Kristjansson

Senior Financial Adviser Dip. Fin Plan., BBus (Marketing), BEcon., Grad Dip Fin Mkts

Patricia Kristjansson

Tricia has been with the team since 2013.

She has held a number of roles within the Financial Planning industry over the past 28 years.

Tricia commenced her career with a large Insurance and Superannuation company before moving into a Financial Planning role with a large Queensland Financial Planning practice. Tricia enjoyed providing tailored financial plans aiming at helping her clients achieve their financial goals.

Tricia then moved into senior management roles where she performed specialised support within Funds Management and Marketing.

Tricia has qualifications to support her practical experience. She holds a Bachelor of Economics, a Bachelor of Business (Marketing), a Post Graduate Diploma in Financial Markets and a Diploma of Financial Planning.

Tricia enjoys helping clients to achieve their financial goals.

Kim Tran

Kim Tran

Senior Financial Adviser Dip. Fin Plan., B.Comm., GradDip (Inv & Fin), CFP®

Kim Tran

Kim joined Portfolio Professionals in 2023. Kim has been a financial adviser since 1999, starting her career with Lend Lease Financial Services, which eventually became NAB. She remained with them for 20 years.

Kim builds strong relationships with her clients, with many having started their planning journey with her over a decade ago. She enjoys providing comprehensive, holistic advice after realising the difference it can make in her client’s lives.

Kim’s goal is help clients make sound financial decisions today so that they can have the retirement they deserve in the future.

She is a Certified Financial Planner and has completed her Diploma of Financial Planning as well as a Bachelor of Commerce and a Graduate Diploma in Applied Finance and Investment.

Kim is a highly qualified and experienced financial planner who is passionate about helping her clients achieve their financial goals.

Holly Hudson

Holly Hudson

Client Services Coordinator

Holly Hudson

Holly has 3 years’ experience in Financial Services, Holly’s role is to assist our clients and the advice team in delivering high quality service that exceeds their expectations.

Holly is quite often the person our clients talk to first when they call, she prides herself on ensuring that they receive a great experience and have their questions answered.

Outside of work Holly is continuing her education through university studies and is very active in the community.

Ken Bunney

Ken Bunney

Private Client Adviser Bachelor of Business, Advanced Diploma of Financial Services (Financial Planning), Certified Financial Planner

Ken Bunney

Ken joined Portfolio Professionals / My Super Future in January 2022. Ken has been a financial adviser since 2004, starting his career with NAB Financial Planning, where he remained until 2021.

Ken builds strong relationships with his clients, with many having started their planning journey with him over a decade ago. Ken provides comprehensive, holistic advice, realising the difference it can make in his client’s lives.

Ken is a highly experienced financial adviser who is passionate about helping his clients make sound financial decisions today so they can enjoy the financial freedom they deserve in the future.

He is degree qualified (Bachelor of Business, Accounting major), with an Advanced Diploma of Financial Services, and is also a Certified Financial Planner (CFP).

Memberships

Financial Advice Association of Australia (FAAA)

Brett Matheson

Brett Matheson

Personal Risk Adviser Diploma of Financial Planning, Diploma of Management.

Brett Matheson

Brett has over 35 years’ experience within the financial services industry. His work experience is extensive and has included a variety of roles in the financial services industry. His customer service philosophy has never changed and remains simple; He will provide quality professional advice and will work with you to develop a strategy tailored to your business and personal needs and being there for you when it counts at claim time.

As a member of the Portfolio Professional, Brett has the knowledge and experience to assist you in determining the most effective protection solutions for you and your business.

Roger Abbott

Roger Abbott

Chief Executive Officer Diploma of Financial Services (Financial Planning), Margin Lending

Roger Abbott

With nearly 30 years of experience in the financial services industry, Roger has had the privilege of leading and managing large teams across major corporate environments. Over the years, Roger has developed a deep understanding of what clients truly value in a financial relationship, clarity, trust, and genuine connection.

At Portfolio Professionals, Roger now leads a boutique firm that brings us closer to our clients and their goals. Our environment is built on personal relationships and tailored advice, where clients consistently tell us they feel more confident and secure about their financial future.

Whether it’s through a single meeting or a partnership that spans decades, our team is committed to ensuring every client walks away feeling better off. We also collaborate with like-minded professionals in mortgage broking and estate planning to provide a seamless, full lifecycle financial experience

Lily Tabari

Lily Tabari

Paraplanning Operations Specialist Diploma of Financial Planning

Lily Tabari

With over 11 years of experience in the financial services industry, Lily has spent the past 6 years supporting financial planning teams across a range of roles. She works closely with advisers to ensure the smooth delivery of high-quality advice by preparing documentation, managing client workflows, and maintaining compliance standards.

Throughout her career, Lily has developed a strong understanding of the financial planning process and takes pride in delivering reliable and detail-oriented support that helps clients move confidently toward their financial goals.

Lily enjoys being part of a team that values client outcomes and is committed to making a positive impact in people’s lives.

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If you have any complaints about the service provided to you, you should take the following steps.

Contact us and tell us about your complaint.

If you adviser has not satisfactorily resolve your complaint within 3 days, please contact our Complaint Resolutions team at the following address:

Complaint Resolutions Manager
My Super Future Limited
PO Box 10478
BRISBANE ADELAIDE STREET QLD 4000

Please mark the envelope “Notice of Complaint”.

If your concerns haven’t been resolved to your satisfaction you can lodge a complaint with the Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA):

Website: afca.org.au

Email: info@afca.org.au

Telephone: 1800 931 678 (free call)

In writing to: Australian Financial Complaints Authority, GPO Box 3, Melbourne, VIC, 3001

AFCA provides fair and independent financial services complaint resolution that’s free to consumers.

Time limits may apply to lodge a complaint with AFCA, so you should act promptly. You can check the AFCA website to find out if a time limit applies or when the time limit relevant to your circumstances expires.

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The privacy of your personal information is important to us at Portfolio Professionals Pty Ltd (Portfolio Professionals). We are required to comply with the Australian Privacy Principles. We will always seek to comply with the Australian Privacy Principles as well as other applicable laws affecting your personal information.

This privacy policy outlines our policy on how we manage your personal information. It also sets out generally what sort of personal information we hold, for what purposes and how we collect, hold, use and disclose that information.

Collecting Your Personal Information

Your personal information will be collected and held by Portfolio Professionals, who is an authorised representative of Godfrey Pembroke Limited trading, an Australian Financial Services Licensee, for the purposes of

You can let us know at any time if you no longer wish to receive direct marketing offers. Contact us on (07) 3871 1671. We will process your request as soon as practicable.

To enable your financial adviser to provide you with financial advice you request that is suitable for your investment objectives, financial situation and particular needs we need to obtain and hold personal information about you. This includes:

The personal information collected may include sensitive information such as health information and memberships of professional or trade associations.

If it is reasonable and practicable we will only collect your personal information from you. Generally your personal information will be collected when you meet with your adviser in person, provide your adviser with information over the telephone or with written material. We may need to collect personal information from third parties, such as your accountant.

We may receive personal information about you when we have taken no active steps to collect that information. We destroy all unsolicited personal information, unless the personal information is relevant to our purposes for collecting personal information.

How Your Personal Information is Held

Your personal information is generally held in client files or a computer database. Your personal information may also be held in a secure archiving facility.

We take reasonable steps to ensure that the personal information that we hold is protected from misuse and loss and from unauthorised access, modification and disclosure. Some of the measures that we have adopted are having facilities for the secure storage of personal information, having secure offices and access controls for our computer systems.

We will also take reasonable steps to destroy or permanently de-identify personal information that we no longer need for any purpose for which it may be used or disclosed under the Australian Privacy Principles.

Using and Disclosing Your Personal Information

Your personal information may be disclosed for purposes related to the provision of the financial advice you have requested. The types of service providers that may be provided with your personal information are:

In addition to the purposes of collection set out above, your personal information may also be used in connection with such purposes.

We will seek to ensure that your personal information is not used or disclosed for any purpose other than:

We may disclose your personal information to third parties who provide services to us, in which case we will seek to ensure that the personal information is held, used or disclosed consistently with the Australian Privacy Principles.

Organisations outside Australia

Currently, we do not share your information with organisations outside Australia.

We may store your information in the cloud or other types of networked or electronic storage. As electronic or networked storage can be accessed from various countries via an internet connection, it’s not always practicable to know in which country your information may be held. If your information is stored in this way, disclosures may occur in countries other than those listed. Overseas organisations may be required to disclose information we share with them under a foreign law. In those instances, we will not be responsible for that disclosure.

We will not send personal information to recipients outside of Australia unless:

Accessing your Personal Information

You can gain access to your personal information that we hold. This is subject to exceptions allowed by law such as where providing you with access would have an unreasonable impact upon the privacy of others. If we deny a request for access we will provide you with the reasons for this decision. To request access please contact us (see “Contacting Us and Privacy Issues” below).

Correcting Your Personal Information

We take reasonable steps to ensure that the personal information that we collect, use or disclose is accurate, complete and up-to-date. If you believe that any of the personal information that we hold is not accurate, complete or up-to-date please contact us (see “Contacting Us and Privacy Issues” below) and provide us with evidence that it is not accurate, complete and up-to-date.

If we agree that the personal information requires correcting we will take reasonable steps to do so. If we do not correct your personal information we will provide you with the reasons for not correcting your personal information. If you request that we associate with the information a statement claiming that the information is not accurate, complete and up-to-date we will take reasonable steps to comply with this request.

Contacting Us and Privacy Issues

You can obtain further information on request about the way in which we manage the personal information that we hold or you can raise any privacy issues with us, including a complaint about privacy, by contacting us using the details below. We are committed to resolving your complaint.

Michael Campbell

Financial Adviser

PO Box 1350 DC

TOOWONG QLD 4066

(07) 3871 1671

If you still feel your issue hasn’t been resolved to your satisfaction, then you can escalate your privacy concerns to AFCA or the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner.

The Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA)

Website: afca.org.au

Email: info@afca.org.au

Telephone: 1800 931 678 (free call)

In writing to: Australian Financial Complaints Authority, GPO Box 3, Melbourne, VIC, 3001

AFCA provides fair and independent financial services complaint resolution that’s free to consumers.

Time limits may apply to lodge a complaint with AFCA, so you should act promptly. You can check the AFCA website to find out if a time limit applies or when the time limit relevant to your circumstances expires.

Office of the Australian Information Commissioner

Online: www.oaic.gov.au/privacy

Phone: 1300 363 992

Email: enquiries@oaic.gov.au

GPO Box 5218, Sydney NSW 2001, Australia