Four Investment Controversies

16 October 2024
3 min read

What You Need to Know

While there is a very active debate between investors about the tactical prognosis for the market, and with good reason, there are also controversies that relate more to market structure. We explore a number of these topics in this note and what they mean for investor positioning.

One of the topics that comes up most frequently in meeting with clients is public sector debt and what it means for markets, the availability of a fiscal cushion in the future and the role of government bonds in portfolios. Concentration of markets is another topic with wide-reaching implications for risk and the opportunity set available to investors. Other topics covered are how high the allocation to private assets can go and de-equitization.

Inigo Fraser Jenkins| Co-Head—Institutional Solutions
Alla Harmsworth| Co-Head—Institutional Solutions; Head—Alphalytics

This note discusses four investment controversies that are concerned with market structure. We want to get away, in this note at least, from the headline issues of the next step of Fed policy and market direction. Instead, we focus on structural issues that have a very real impact on key investment decisions that allocators need to make.

The issues cover fiscal sustainability, equity-market concentration, public versus private assets and de-equitization. Fiscal largesse, with its consequences for public debt, is here to stay in the US, regardless of who wins the election. Both that and de-equitization represent a twin levering up of the system by governments and corporates.

These issues are key determinants of the investment-opportunity set, the level of volatility that investors should expect, and hence, asset allocation.

1. “I Still Owe Money to the Money, to the Money I Owe”

One of the persistent themes that pervades conversations with investors this year is debt sustainability. This comes up most frequently in the context of fiscal profligacy in the US and what it implies for debt-service costs. It is, however, a global phenomenon. In Europe, despite a tighter fiscal position, there are nevertheless concerns about sustainability. This is seen specifically in the UK, with the liability-driven investing crisis of 2022, and in France, with the run-up to the 2024 election.

Tactically, the fiscal position supports near-term growth in the US. Strategically, however, it raises a number of concerns. There is no theoretical limit to how high debt levels can go (Japan, after all, surpassed the levels in other developed nations some time ago). However, the future path of interest expense as a share of government spending implies that there are constraints in the future. We hear views expressed in meetings about the risks of this situation for bond markets, although there is no sign of an issue in US debt auctions. We do think that, when outlining capital-market assumptions, it is a reason to expect a higher level of volatility than the norm of the post–global financial crisis era.

There is a broader angle here, too. The extended period of financialization since the 1970s, which included the growth of public debt, provided huge support for financial assets relative to real assets. But alongside the contemporaneous force of globalization, the benefits were unevenly shared. It thus seems appropriate to title this section in reference to a song from indie group The National. This is not only because of the obvious hint at indebtedness in the lyric that titles this section but also the underlying worry about the social fabric. The leverage in the public sector was taken on to engineer growth, which did not benefit all. It was possible to get away with this levering up because of the large forces that suppressed the cost of debt in recent decades (including demographics, the opening up of China and an apparent need to avoid paying for negative climate externalities). However, those forces have now run their course and cannot be relied on to continue. That lack of a cushion is concerning if an already damaged social fabric is set to endure a sustained period of lower growth.

Past performance, historical and current analyses, and expectations do not guarantee future results.

The views expressed herein do not constitute research, investment advice or trade recommendations and do not necessarily represent the views of all AB portfolio-management teams. Views are subject to revision over time.


About the Authors

Inigo Fraser Jenkins is Co-Head of Institutional Solutions at AB. He was previously head of Global Quantitative Strategy at Bernstein Research. Prior to joining Bernstein in 2015, Fraser Jenkins headed Nomura's Global Quantitative Strategy and European Equity Strategy teams after holding the position of European quantitative strategist at Lehman Brothers. He began his career at the Bank of England. Fraser Jenkins holds a BSc in physics from Imperial College London, an MSc in history and philosophy of science from the London School of Economics and Political Science, and an MSc in finance from Imperial College London. Location: London

Alla Harmsworth is Co-Head of Institutional Solutions and Head of Alphalytics at AB. She was previously head of European Quantitative Strategy at Bernstein Research. Prior to joining Bernstein in 2015, Harmsworth worked for two years on Nomura's Institutional Investor-ranked European Equity Strategy and Quantitative Strategy team. Her previous experience includes seven years at Fidelity as a quantitative analyst and portfolio manager, along with stints at Nikko Asset Management and ABN AMRO. Harmsworth holds a BA (Hons) and an MA in philosophy, politics and economics from University College Oxford and an MSc in economics from the London School of Economics and Political Science. Location: London