Investment Strategies
Widen Investment Horizons To Get Diversified – HSBC Private Banking
The firm is generally overweight equities – with exceptions to certain countries' stocks – mildly negative on fixed income, and likes hedge funds and gold, with core exposures to areas such as infrastructure and private markets. We speak to its chief investment officer.
HSBC Private Banking’s enthusiasm for US equities hasn’t
waned but the organisation is widening the type of stocks it
holds beyond the “Magnificent Seven” large tech players such as
Nvidia, Amazon and Apple.
And the private bank notes that with interest rates trending off
their recent highs – as seen with a cluster of central bank cuts
– “cash is not the base to be,” as explained in a briefing by
HSBC
Global Private Banking's global chief investment officer,
Willem Sels. He spoke alongside Cheuk Wan Fan, Asia CIO.
The bank likes industrials and healthcare stocks, among others,
Sels continued. HSBC also holds hedge funds and gold to spread
risk.
In its presentation to journalists, HSBC warned against
clients holding excess cash, because this will be a drag on
perfornance; it expects equities to outperform bonds; cyclical
and defensive stocks should be balanced for diversification;
leading domestic Asian equities should be held to guard against
concerns about tariffs, and there are opportunities to be found
in hedge funds, private markets, and infrastructure.
The bank is underweight cash, and mildly underweight fixed
income, such as Japanese government bonds. It is mildly
overweight equities, such as on the US, UK, Japan, India and
Singapore markets, while underweight Europe ex-UK, emerging
markets, Europe, Middle East and Africa, and Latin America. It is
overweight hedge funds and gold, and has core allocations to
private markets and infrastructure.
A theme from the bank that is echoed by a number of its peers,
such as BNP
Paribas (an interview is forthcoming with that bank) is a
desire to diversify to a wider range of US equities, going beyond
areas such as Big Techs. After the gains to markets for much
of this year, wealth managers are working out how to capture more
gains while protecting against the downside. The MSCI World Index
of developed countries' stocks shows total returns (capital plus
reinvested dividends, in US dollars) of 19.5 per cent.
Sels said that adopting a thematic approach to investing tends to
encourage a wider risk of equity holdings.
HSBC Private Banking sees more dollar strength against the euro,
citing sluggish growth and eurozone interest rate expectations,
and sees the dollar/euro rate at 99 cents by the middle of 2025.
Investment and capital flows into the US economy will support the
greenback, Sels said.
“The US is our biggest overweight [asset allocation vs
benchmark]…mainly because of its resilient economy and having the
largest opportunity set,” Sels continued. “The private bank is
looking for opportunities that go beyond technology."
Asked about geopolitical uncertainties, Sels said that markets
tend to be affected more by underlying economics rather than the
vagaries of politics and conflict, although the largest example
of a geopolitical impact was Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in
2022.
In other predictions and positions, Sels said the bank expects
the Swiss franc to remain strong against the euro, and weaken a
touch against a strong dollar.
When asked by this news service about the election of Donald
Trump to the US presidency and his nomination of vaccine sceptic
and foe of Big Pharma, Robert F Kennedy Jnr for the health
secretary spot in the cabinet, Sels said clients will watch what
the Trump administration actually does, and that is why HSBC is
so diversified in its investments.
While the Kennedy nomination creates uncertainties, North
American healthcare benefits from innovations in medicines and
technologies that propel the sector, he added.