Investment Strategies
Northern Trust AM Likes Risk Assets; Sees Opportunities With "Money In Motion"
This publication caught up with the Chicago-headquartered financial services group for its views about investment and its own business strategy.
Rises and falls in central bank interest rates, among other forces, have put “money in motion," creating opportunities for fixed income and other assets, Northern Trust argues.
The US Federal Reserve cut interest rates by 50 basis points last
week, while the European Central Bank trimmed its key lending
rate by 25 basis points on September 12. The Bank of England has
held fire at its latest gathering, but the outlook appears to
suggest that cuts are coming.
When rates rose sharply after inflation spiked during the
pandemic, it rapidly increased the attractions of holding
fixed income and money market funds. Trillions of dollars, for
example, flowed into the money markets sector. (See
this interview with Aviva Investors.) With rate cuts now
taking place, some of those flows might change, the
US-headquartered banking and financial services group told
journalists at a London briefing yesterday.
“We will see money in motion,” Daniel Farrell, head of
international fixed income, Northern Trust Asset Management, said
at the briefing. Farrell spoke alongside Anwiti Bahuguna, chief
investment officer of global asset allocation for NTAM, and John
McCareins, head of NTAM, International.
Farrell reflected on the divergence of central banks' rate policy
(Fed and ECB cuts, no change by the BoE). He expects the BoE will
cut rates into 2025, probably at a pace of 25 bps.
Bahuguna said the firm has a “risk-on position in all of our
portfolios and have had it there for the past five
months.” In general, NTAM is overweight risk assets.
Within the equity space, NTAM is adopting a “barbell” stance
– overweight US equities and emerging market stocks, while
neutral on other developed countries’ equities, she said. US
stocks are benefiting from a stronger economy, although
valuations are relatively high; valuations for emerging market
equities are attractive.
“Growth is weakening quite sharply in the eurozone,” Bahuguna
said, noting that some survey evidence points to further
weakness, which is a cause for concern.
Within the fixed income slice of the pie, Farrell added that NTAM
is overweight on higher-yielding bonds in the US, for
example, while it is underweight the investment grade side.
NTAM has also been adding to infrastructure and certain other
areas within the real assets space, the briefing heard.
Asked why US Big Tech stocks such as Amazon, Nvidia and Microsoft
had at one point appeared to exert an unduly heavy weighting in
the overall US stock market, Bahuguna said that a partial
sell-off to these tech stocks had seen their overall market cap
position fall relative to the wider stock market, a welcome step.
“The markets are rotating without a big selloff in the market,”
she said.
Positioning
Talking about the business strategy of NTAM, McCareins said the
firm is continuing to recruit, for example adding people to
its fixed income business outside the US.
“In the UK we are redoubling our efforts to build our business,”
he said. More broadly, NTAM has been working on building
capabilities in areas such as wealth management and family
offices – a fact also noted by this news service in a
recent interview.
“Changes in the UK,” he said – alluding to the election of a
new, Labour-led government, and likely spending and tax
changes – “will create opportunities because money will be
in motion.”
Globally, NTAM has $152 billion of fixed income assets under
management. “Fixed income keeps coming up as a large allocation
that was once unloved.”
Bond vigilantes on vacation
During questions, this news service asked Bahuguna whether it was
an issue that neither of the US presidential candidates – Donald
Trump and Kamala Harris – appear to be publicly concerned
about high US public debt and the state of the federal
budget.
Whenever there has been added debt issuance, there has not yet
been a shortage of buyers for it, she said. “Bond vigilantes
seem to be missing in action,” Bahuguna said. She used a term
associated with the 1990s debt markets, when it was held that
bond investors had the ability to rein in spendthrift
governments.
During questions, the ability of the US government to run high
deficits/debt was contrasted with the experience of former UK
prime minister Liz Truss, whose tax cut/spending package of
September 2022 was associated with a sharp fall in UK government
bond prices and worries about a run on sterling. This showed how
the UK tends to be more internationally exposed when its public
finances are perceived as unsound.