Investment Strategies
Citi Private Bank Says Get Positioned For Moderating Stock Gains This Year

Citi Private Bank is bullish about the prospects for global economic growth this year and is positioning its portfolios to capture outperformance by stocks over fixed income for a “meaningful period” in 2014.
Citi Private Bank is bullish about the prospects for global
economic growth this year and is positioning its portfolios to
capture outperformance by stocks over fixed income for a
“meaningful period” in 2014.
The US private banking firm said, however, that investors should
be cautious of how developed market equities are likely to see
more moderate gains this year after strong risk-adjusted returns
in 2013.
“Global equity returns in 2014 should be closer to 10 per cent
than 30 per cent, even in the sustained recovery we expect,” the
bank said in a note on its asset allocation and investment views
for this year.
The bank noted that global fixed-income returns were near zero in
2013 after many years of bond price appreciation and it expects
close to zero returns for high-grade bonds and about 4 per cent
for high-yield instruments.
With its eye on more moderate market performance, Citi Private
Bank said investors should position their portfolios accordingly.
“Hedges of many kinds are valuable assets that have been `left in
the dust’ amid a roaring bull market for equities and credit.
Wise investors should be buyers of cheap hedging when market
volatility is low. This is such a time,” it said.
“Have investors raised their risk tolerance too much while
reducing their liquidity preference too little? The value of
select less liquid investments may be underestimated. For
investors with flexible time horizon, we believe that the return
characteristics of certain private equity, real estate and hedge
fund strategies may perform better, on a risk adjusted basis,
than public markets at current relative valuation levels,” it
said.
The bank said there has been a quickening of developed
markets growth rates, but this has yet to fully affect emerging
markets.
“We identify equity opportunities in select emerging market
countries that possess external surpluses and low valuations. In
contrast, investors should remain cautious of emerging markets
which are likely to be negatively impacted by rising rates and
changing growth patterns in developed markets,” the bank
said.