Multi-asset strategies must adapt to a promising—but changeable—environment for generating income.
In the first half of 2024, economic growth was solid and inflation rates remained sticky, leading capital markets to dial back expectations for policy rate cuts this year. Stock and bond markets, which had tracked closely in 2022 and 2023, began to diverge in 2024, with stocks rallying even with bond yields rising for a good portion of the first half.
Being too defensive in a multi-asset income strategy during 2024 might have cost investors some equity upside, even accounting for a particularly rough early August for markets. Some of the recent weakness may be technical, driven by elevated positioning. To the extent that this is true, it may point to a good entry point for investors—providing that the economy achieves a soft landing.
On the economic side, we’ve raised our gross domestic product forecast for this year, with the US forecast at 2.4%, just below last year’s growth and near the long-term trend. Europe is likely to accelerate modestly as recession fears recede. We expect inflation to continue cooling: US progress ebbed earlier in the year, but the last two releases have been softer than expected. Across several major economies, inflation is now running in the 2% to 3% range.
Lower inflation has opened the door for the Federal Reserve to start cutting rates, joining other central banks including the Bank of Canada and the European Central Bank. A soft-landing, lower-inflation scenario seems favorable for risk assets, including equities. And with bond yields still relatively high, fixed-income offers strong income and return potential. It’s a landscape that’s compelling for multi-asset income strategies—particularly those with the flexibility to shift across and within asset classes.
Equity Returns Could Be Ready to Broaden…and Rotate
Many of the first half’s equity trends continued from 2023, though signs of market returns broadening beyond a few highfliers had emerged early in the second half. Last year, the Magnificent Seven powered 60% of the S&P 500’s returns. We saw a similar share earlier this year, but investors may be becoming more discerning on fundamentals and expected earnings growth.
Signs of potential rotation are also visible. Returns for emerging market equities have lagged those of developed markets for a while but have outperformed them over the last three months. July featured the largest rotation from large-caps to small-caps in over 20 years: the Russell 2000 Index recently recorded its largest two-week rally against the Nasdaq 100 since 2002.
Given our base-case forecast for a soft landing, we think maintaining some exposure to equities makes sense in a multi-asset income strategy. But investors should also be watching for opportunities to rotate. Since early 2023, we’ve made the case for a tilt toward large-cap, quality growth stocks. We still see a core role for this segment, but richer valuations and a lofty earnings bar tilt the balance of risks toward other segments—even after some rerating in early August.
We see scope for earnings growth to broaden as growth moderates and the rate-cut cycle picks up steam. In fact, we had seen some signs of this before the early August downturn. Defensively oriented equity segments have lagged during a dominant period for mega-cap tech (Display), but they have a chance to catch up. They also offer potential downside mitigation in case the economic picture unexpectedly deteriorates.
Small-caps have rallied after trailing large-caps for a long stretch, and we see more upside possible from rate cuts and potential political tailwinds if a US leadership change increases a focus on domestic matters. But prudent position sizing and a selective approach are key. That’s because small-cap indices include many unprofitable, low-quality companies highly levered to economic conditions.