Weekly Market Update

Leadership in times of volatility | Geopolitics and inflation with Ambassador Sinodinos

September 18, 2024
Why investors need to stay alert but not alarmed.

At the recent H&B Wealth Symposium in Perth, Director Jonathan Ramsay sat down with The Hon. Arthur Sinodinos to get his insights on a range of geopolitical issues. From rising tensions to shifting global supply chains, Ambassador Sinodinous highlighted how these factors are likely to shape markets and portfolios in the years ahead. In this article, we explore 7 key themes from the discussion and their potential investment implications.  

1. Rising geopolitical risks: The potential for a U.S.-China conflict over Taiwan remains a significant threat, potentially disrupting trade and markets in the region.

Investment Implication: Factor these risks into medium and long-term portfolio allocations.

 2. Cautious on China exposure: While China offers compelling opportunities, political uncertainties introduce material risks. Many businesses are managing this through separate China-focused units to handle the unpredictability.

Investment Implication: Be selective with China allocations while remembering that the advantage of investing in listed markets is that one can adapt and change your mind if the facts change.  

3. Shifting alliances and supply chains: Australia is deepening partnerships with the U.S. and others (AUKUS, Quad) to counter China. This may generate opportunities in defence, critical minerals, and emerging tech. 

Investment Implication: Monitor these policy-driven sectoral trends to make sure that they represent tailwinds for portfolios rather than headwinds. Markets are forward looking and it would be difficult to argue that this is not already factored into, for instance, iron ore prices. However, market cap weightings are inherently backward looking and this is an issue which a benchmark aware Australian investor with a domestic bias can’t ignore.   

4. U.S. economic strengths offset by election uncertainty: America's economic fundamentals remain robust, but a Trump presidency could bring aggressive trade measures and Fed interference. Prepare for election-related volatility.

Investment Implication: Ambassador Sinodinos did not dismiss the suggestion that the potential Trump administration's position on trade could be to some extent ‘Art of The Deal’ style posturing but he also alluded to the fact that there was a strong ideological element within the Trump camp which could also assert itself. This is another left field risk which we cannot fully assess until later this year or early in 2025. In the meantime, betting against the U.S economy bears certain risks, even if it is difficult to bet against the U.S. economy to a significant degree even if valuations are stretched.    

5. Engaging emerging Asia: The Australian Government wants to catalyse more private investment into Southeast Asia and India. These markets entail risks but provide diversification potential as they develop. Assess opportunities case-by-case.

Investment Implication: Will we see more country or theme specific ETFs to address this or does it come down to conversations with individual fund managers? Either way the demographics and projected economic growth rates and geopolitical backdrop for Asia ex-China seem promising. 

6. Regulatory pendulum swinging back: Signals suggest advice regulations are moderating from the post-Royal Commission peak. Ambassador Sinodinos suggested that industrial policy frameworks moved in long arcs where the pendulum swings one way or the other for extended periods and that for the advice industry, the long-term trend should be towards greater pragmatism from here. Still, the industry should proactively engage policymakers in pursuit of a more balanced framework and Your Future Your Super (YFYS) was discussed as an area where constructive dialogue was needed.

Investment Implication: Overall this segment seemed to substantiate a broader theme at the conference that the future was relatively bright for the financial planning industry but, on the investment front, a coordinated response to (YFYS style) performance tests may be needed if the worst unintended consequences are to be avoided. In our view this would primarily be due to the concentration of benchmark risks which allocators are disincentivised to mitigate. 

 7. Structural housing pressures: Political consensus is building to boost housing supply, though NIMBYism persists. Higher supply could influence housing's long-term risk/return profile as an asset class.

Investment Implication: Given the significant role of residential housing in many portfolios, it may be useful for advisers to develop frameworks for assessing long-term return expectations for housing alongside other asset classes. 

In summary 

For Australian investors heavily exposed to domestic banks and China-dependent materials, the shifting geopolitical landscape presents both risks and opportunities. Stress testing portfolios for Taiwan conflict scenarios, diversifying concentrated sector bets, and engaging active managers to navigate China uncertainties should be key considerations.

Additionally, policy-driven tailwinds in sectors like defence, tech, and critical minerals deserve close attention. Maintaining exposure to the U.S. while exploring opportunities in emerging Asia can help enhance diversification. While the road ahead may be complex, disciplined portfolio construction and a willingness to look beyond the ASX200 can help build resilience and capture the upside of Australia's unique geopolitical position.

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