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A Painful Epiphany

Investing in a Post-Pandemic, Post-Global World

This information is directed at Professional Clients only and is not intended for public use.

Overview

This black book assesses the investment environment from the asset owner’s perspective. The pandemic marked a break in the investment regime, and the new investment reality demands a change in the approach to asset allocation and the outlook for capital markets—one that will bring about an evolution in the investment industry.

Blackbook Teaser - Inigo Fraser Jenkins
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      1. PART II: ASSET CLASSES, FACTORS AND ALLOCATION
      2. PART III: THE INVESTMENT INDUSTRY

      Part I: The Investment Environment
       

      Our thesis is that the pandemic has marked a shift in the investment environment. Not all this change is due to the pandemic itself; some elements, such as deglobalization, the prospect of lower asset-class returns and the need for private assets, have roots from long before the pandemic. 

      The shock of 2022 was that bonds didn’t diversify equity risk. The extreme positive correlation of that year might not persist, but we show that for most of the past 250 years, a slightly positive correlation has been the norm. While it’s hard to identify the consistent forces that have driven this relationship over such an extended period, both the level and volatility of inflation point to the stock-bond correlation remaining in a range from zero to slightly positive.

      Recorded webcast

      Explore what a new investment regime means for investors. 


      We hope this black book will prompt debate about what we see as the key issues facing asset allocators and investors, including:

      • Adapting to a new investment regime after an extraordinary few decades

      • How to protect against strategically higher inflation

      • Public vs. private markets and the future of asset allocation

      • The role of ESG in investment methodology

      • A new lens on the active-passive investing debate

      • The role of digital assets in portfolios

      • Asset classes may not be the only basis for allocation—factors may work, too

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