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Investment and economic outlook, February 2024

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U.S. consumers in aggregate remained financially healthy entering 2024. That’s the conclusion of new research, which highlights wealth effects, accumulated savings, and normalising credit usage as sources of strength. Our findings suggest that if consumers don’t stoke continued U.S. economic growth, they will at least mitigate downward pressure in the event of a U.S. recession.

Among the key findings of the research, led by Bob Behal of our Fixed Income Group and Josh Hirt of our Investment Strategy Group: real estate values have driven atypical wealth gains across income distributions since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, and distress in lending markets is largely confined to the least creditworthy borrowers who drive the least amount of spending.
 

Sources: calculations using data as of December 31, 2023, from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Equifax.

The chart above shows that, as a proportion of both gross domestic product (GDP) and disposable personal income, revolving credit such as credit card debt and home equity loans remains below its pre-pandemic trend and is likely to normalise only in the fourth quarter of 2024. The likely upshot? More room to run for the U.S. consumer.

Vanguard’s outlook for financial markets

Our 10-year annualised nominal return and volatility forecasts are shown below. Equity returns reflect a range of 2 percentage points around the 50th percentile of the distribution of probable outcomes. Fixed income returns reflect a 1-point range around the 50th percentile. More extreme returns are possible.

Australian dollar investors
  • Australian equities: 4.3%–6.3% (21.7% median volatility)
  • Global equities ex-Australia (unhedged): 4.9%–6.9% (19.4%)
  • Australian aggregate bonds: 3.7%–4.7% (5.5%)
  • Global bonds ex-Australia (hedged): 3.9%–4.9% (4.8%)

Notes: These probabilistic return assumptions depend on current market conditions and, as such, may change over time.

Source: Investment Strategy Group as at 14 February 2024.

Region-by-region outlook
Australia

Leading indicators suggest that resilient but subdued economic conditions will prevail early in 2024, with a gradual acceleration in the first half supported by rising real household incomes, a reflating housing market, and firming business investment.

  • We expect both growth and inflation to be weaker than consensus as restrictive monetary policy takes hold. In our base case, the cash rate of the Reserve Bank of Australia is at its peak for the cycle, at 4.35%. We believe the RBA will start to cut interest rates only late in 2024.
  • Forecasts a year-end 2024 cash rate of 3.85% (down from the current 4.35%), and that the rate will eventually settle in the 3%–4% range, in line with our assessment of the neutral rate, the theoretical rate that would neither stimulate nor restrict an economy.
  • We expect real (inflation-adjusted) economic growth of 0.75%–1.25% for all of 2024. Having benefited from elevated commodities export prices, monetary policy less restrictive than that of other developed markets, and supportive fiscal policy, Australia has high odds of avoiding recession this year, even if only narrowly.
  • We expect the unemployment rate, which touched 50-year lows after the pandemic, to rise throughout 2024 to about 4.6% as financial conditions continue to tighten. Unemployment stood at 3.9% in December.
United States

Recent growth and labour market data suggest the U.S. economy remains robust as debate continues over the timing of potential cuts in the Federal Reserve’s target for short-term interest rates. Inflation continues to ebb, but remains alert to risks posed by still-strong wage growth.

  • The U.S. economy created 353,000 jobs in January, nearly double the consensus estimate, and revisions to November and December data lifted the average monthly jobs gain over the past three months to 289,000. Geographic and industry trends suggest an improvement in labor market momentum, raising the odds that the unemployment rate will not rise as high as our year-end forecast of 4.8%.
  • We continue to expect shelter inflation—an amalgamation of, for renters, rents plus utility payments, and the cost if homeowners rented similar houses—to moderate by mid-2024 and further progress toward the Fed’s broader 2% inflation target. Sticky services inflation will remain a headwind.
  • For 2024, we foresee real (inflation-adjusted) economic growth of 0.25%–0.75%. However, the economy appears to be starting the year strong. A real-time  estimate is tracking first-quarter growth at a nearly 3% annualised pace.
China

High-frequency housing and auto sales data as well as data from purchasing managers’ indexes suggest that weak economic growth has carried into the new year. As a structural property downturn drags on the economy, private demand and business confidence remain subdued. The government has responded with broad but incremental stimulus measures, including support for the ailing housing and equity markets.

  • China’s economy is increasingly reliant on government support, with the public share of total fixed investment at a 12-year high, but we don’t anticipate large-scale stimulus. With economic growth below potential and continued deflationary pressure, more concrete and decisive policy support may be needed for China to achieve its anticipated growth target of “around 5%.”
  • We continue to expect consumer prices to rise by 1%–1.5% in 2024. Pro-growth measures could help stimulate prices. But we expect any reflation to be modest, below the central bank’s 3% inflation target. Consumer prices fell on a year-over-year basis for a fourth consecutive month in January, while producer prices have fallen 16 months in a row.
  • To mitigate deflationary pressure, we expect the People’s Bank of China to ease its policy rate from 2.5% to 2.2% in 2024, as well as to cut banks’ reserve requirement ratios.
Euro area

We believe the Governing Council of the European Central Bank (ECB) will look to first-quarter inflation and wage data, the latter of which will be available only in late spring, to confirm that it can sustainably return inflation to the ECB’s 2% target. That would allow the ECB to initiate a rate-cutting cycle with its June 6 policy announcement, with 25-basis-point cuts potentially at each of its final five policy meetings of the year.

  • Amid moderating inflation and wage gains, we have revised our outlook for ECB policy rates. We foresee the ECB cutting its deposit facility rate by 100 to 150 basis points (1 to 1.5 percentage points) in 2024 to a year-end range of 2.5%–3%. That’s greater than the 75 basis points of rate cuts we foresaw in our economic and market outlook for 2024.
  • We expect headline inflation to reach the ECB’s 2% target by September 2024 and core inflation, which excludes volatile food, energy, alcohol, and tobacco prices, to reach target by December 2024.
  • We forecast real (inflation-adjusted) economic growth of 0.5%–1% in 2024 and continue to expect that any recession will be mild.
  • We don’t believe the euro area will enjoy a “painless disinflation.” We anticipate a softening labor market as economic activity falls below its potential amid restrictive monetary and fiscal policy. We expect the unemployment rate to rise to an above-consensus range of 7%–7.5% in 2024, up from 6.4% in December.
United Kingdom

The U.K. economy may have fallen into a technical recession, marked by two consecutive quarters of declining activity, in the second half of 2023. But high-frequency indicators suggest that a modest return to growth, around 0.1%–0.3%, may be underway in the first quarter.

  • For all of 2024, we foresee below-trend economic growth of 0.5%–1% from the effects of contractionary monetary and fiscal policy. But recent easing in financial conditions, particularly mortgage rates, should relieve pressure on households and pose an upside risk to our forecast.
  • In our base case, we foresee a first policy rate cut by the Bank of England in August, and a total of 100 basis points—or 1 percentage point—of cuts in 2024. The current bank rate is 5.25%.
  • We have trimmed our forecast for year-end 2024 core inflation—which excludes volatile food, energy, alcohol, and tobacco prices—from 2.8% to 2.6%.
  • We foresee the unemployment rate rising to 4.5%–5% over the course of 2024 amid restrictive monetary and fiscal policy. It was 3.8% in the October–December period.
Emerging markets

Emerging-market central banks were ahead of their developed-market counterparts in raising policy interest rates during the latest hiking cycle. Now, with inflation slowing, interest rates becoming more restrictive, and growth concerns rising, emerging-market central banks are leading the cutting cycle. Examples of banks that have lowered their policy rates include Banco Central do Brasil, Banco Central de Chile, and the Czech National Bank.

  • Banco de México (Banxico), meanwhile, left its target for the overnight interbank rate unchanged at 11.25% for a seventh consecutive policy meeting this month. Banxico noted that core inflation has decelerated but remains high. It also stated that expectations for headline inflation for year-end 2024 had increased, while expectations for longer-term inflation remained stable but above Banxico’s 3% inflation target.
  • Foreseeing full-year 2024 economic growth of 1.5%–2%, core inflation falling to 3.6%–3.8% by year-end, and the overnight interbank rate being cut to 9%–9.5% by year-end.
Canada

Canada’s economy contracted in the third quarter compared with the second, but it avoided falling into a technical recession because second-quarter economic activity was revised from negative to positive.

  • We foresee Canada falling into a mild recession early in 2024, with recovery later in the year in response to expected monetary policy rate cuts. We expect full-year 2024 economic growth of about 1%.
  • We forecast that core inflation will fall to 2%–2.5% on a year-over-year basis, within the central bank’s target range, by the end of 2024, with house prices moderating in response to declining affordability. The latest reading was 3.4% for December.
  • We expect the unemployment rate to rise to the 6%–6.5% range in 2024 amid weak economic growth. In January, it was 5.7%.
  • We foresee the Bank of Canada leading a developed markets rate-cutting cycle as inflation eases and the economy contracts. We anticipate cuts to the overnight rate of 2 to 2.5 percentage points, to a range of 2.5%–3%, by the end of 2024.

IMPORTANT: The projections and other information generated by the Vanguard Capital Markets Model® regarding the likelihood of various investment outcomes are hypothetical in nature, do not reflect actual investment results, and are not guarantees of future results. VCMM results will vary with each use and over time.

The VCMM projections are based on a statistical analysis of historical data. Future returns may behave differently from the historical patterns captured in the VCMM. More important, the VCMM may be underestimating extreme negative scenarios unobserved in the historical period on which the model estimation is based.

The Vanguard Capital Markets Model is a proprietary financial simulation tool developed and maintained by Vanguard’s primary investment research and advice teams. The model forecasts distributions of future returns for a wide array of broad asset classes. Those asset classes include U.S. and international equity markets, several maturities of the U.S. Treasury and corporate fixed income markets, international fixed income markets, U.S. money markets, commodities, and certain alternative investment strategies. The theoretical and empirical foundation for the Vanguard Capital Markets Model is that the returns of various asset classes reflect the compensation investors require for bearing different types of systematic risk (beta). At the core of the model are estimates of the dynamic statistical relationship between risk factors and asset returns, obtained from statistical analysis based on available monthly financial and economic data from as early as 1960. Using a system of estimated equations, the model then applies a Monte Carlo simulation method to project the estimated interrelationships among risk factors and asset classes as well as uncertainty and randomness over time. The model generates a large set of simulated outcomes for each asset class over several time horizons. Forecasts are obtained by computing measures of central tendency in these simulations. Results produced by the tool will vary with each use and over time.

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. To the full extent permitted by law, Vanguard Investments Australia Ltd (ABN 72 072 881 086 AFSL 227263) and its directors, officers, employees, advisers, agents and intermediaries disclaim any obligation or undertaking to release any updates or revisions to the information to reflect any change in expectations or assumptions.

 

 

 

February 2024
Vanguard
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.

Advice Warning

This website is intended to provide general information only and has been prepared by Portfolio Professionals ABN 28 138 147 896 (Authorised Representative No. 339850) without taking into account any particular person’s objectives, financial situation or needs. Investors should, before acting on this information, consider the appropriateness of this information having regard to their personal objectives, financial situation or needs. We recommend investors obtain financial advice specific to their situation before making any financial investment or insurance decision.

My Super Future Limited AFSL 411440 is located at 2/15 Mayneview Street, Milton QLD 4064.

Complaint Resolution

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.

Privacy

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