Investment Strategies
JP Morgan AM Medium-Term Forecast: No Fireworks, Equity Returns To Moderate

One of the investment industry big-hitters sets out its medium-term forecasts for global growth, equity and other asset class returns.
Research from JP Morgan
Asset Management, which oversees $1.9 trillion of client
money, reckons that global economic growth will be sluggish in
the next 10 to 15 years; while equities will produce higher
returns than bonds, it looks as though the heyday for big gains
on stocks is past.
The outlook comes from the US firm’s 2020 Long-Term Capital
Market Assumptions; it covers the average annual returns
investors can expect for more than 50 major asset classes.
The report’s gross domestic product forecasts declined for
emerging markets including Asia, most notably for China. JPMAM
predicts that China’s GDP growth is likely to fall to an average
4.4 per cent annually over the next 10 to 15 years – considerably
lower than its double-digit average pace over the last few
decades, but still rapid for a large economy.
“Investors are rethinking ‘safe-havens’ in their portfolios now
that bonds simply will not offer the same combination of
portfolio protection and positive income that they have in the
past,” Patrik Schöwitz, global multi-asset strategist, JPMAM,
said.
The report also suggests that financial market trends will take
center stage in China in coming years.
“Capital markets will likely develop faster than the rate of GDP
growth, deepening opportunities for foreign investors. Sector
shifts will occur within markets and the composition of listed
equities is likely to change significantly (though banks may well
remain more prominent than elsewhere), creating nuanced
investment opportunities,” Hannah Anderson, global market
strategist, JPMAM, said.
Investment houses, while mindful that predicting the future
appears futile, typically roll out forecasts at this time of the
year, if only to give clients some idea of what sort of asset
allocation doctrine makes sense. The wealth management sector is
still grappling with how to preserve wealth in an environment
where, in many cases, cash yields are zero or negative in real
terms. This has forced many clients up the risk and illiquidity
spectrum, raising questions about how long that can endure. For
example, the US Federal Reserve has cut interest rates three
times this year, raising questions over what spare ammunition the
central bank has if or when markets fall significantly or the
economy goes into recession.
Findings
Real global growth (when inflation is stripped out) is expected
to average 2.3 per cent over the next 10-15 years, down 20 basis
points (bps) from our projections last year. The developed market
forecast remains unchanged at 1.5 per cent but emerging market
forecasts have been trimmed by 35 bps to 3.9 per cent. Population
aging is broadly to blame for the lower forecasts for global
growth.
Projections for global inflation are little changed from last
year, with the global consumer price index forecast at 2.2 per
cent. In many countries, however, inflation will remain below
this figure, particularly those such as Japan and Switzerland
which have had many years of extremely low nominal rates, the
firm said.
Global monetary policy is expected to remain “extremely
accommodative” throughout this cycle and well into the next one,
leading to a significant delay in interest rate normalization
being built into forecasts, it said.
JPMAM said the long-term return outlook for equities is slightly
better in its 2020 outlook than in the 2019 edition. Average
global equity return forecasts over the next 10-15 years will
rise 50 bps to 6.5 per cent dollar terms. The forecast for
developed markets is up 20 bps to 5.7 per cent, and for emerging
markets it is raised 20 bps, to 8.7 per cent in local currency
terms. In developed markets, the majority of this improvement is
the result of cheaper starting valuations, while in EM markets
the boost is more evenly split between earnings and
valuation.
Cash return forecasts in most major currencies are lower as
normalization assumptions have been extended. This year’s
assumptions include an explicit ranking of real cash rates across
major markets, the firm said.
The firm added that it expects private equity market returns to
rise, if not spectacularly. The 10-15 year aggregate private
equity return forecast has been raised by 55 bps to 8.8 per cent.
Private equity “continues to be attractive to those investors
looking for return uplift, as well as those seeking more specific
exposure to technology themes”, the firm said.
“This year we forecast that core US real estate returns, levered,
net of fees, will average 5.8 per cent over the next 10-15 years.
Casting the net more widely, forecast returns from global real
assets and infrastructure have held up remarkably well, and given
the resilience of their cash flows they may even act as a proxy
for duration in portfolios with limited short run liquidity
demands. Manager selection remains the primary determinant of
returns across alternatives,” the firm added.