Investment Strategies
Trade War Angst Worsens: Wealth Managers' Comments

As the trade protectionist trend rolls on, wealth managers comment on latest developments.
Escalating protectionism between the US and China shows few signs
of abating any time soon. A week ago, President Donald Trump
jolted markets by tweeting about raising tariffs on China to 25
per cent, on the existing $200 billion of tariffed goods. Those
tariffs came into effect last week. He said that he is also
considering higher tariffs on the remaining portion of $325
billion of imports. China has retaliated.
Wealth managers continue to figure out the impact the moves will
have on the global economy and investors in the short to medium
term. The standard default assumption is that protectionism –
taxing imports or hobbling them in various ways (tariffs are not
the only way to frustrate trade flows) - is almost universally
agreed to be a bad thing. It is one of the few areas on which
economists, ranging from a Paul Krugman on the Left to the late
Milton Friedman on the classical liberal side, have agreed. The
issue is complicated by China being accused (with justification)
of state backing for industries, manipulating its yuan currency
exchange rate, and using joint venture deals to take Western
intellectual property.
Here is a further round of economists’ reactions to developments.
(To join the debate, email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com)
Luca Paolini, chief strategist, and Patrick Zweifel,
chief economist, of Pictet Asset
Management
When trade breaks down, everybody loses. Investors should brace
themselves for a new fallout from the latest tit-for-tat trade
dispute, where Beijing announced retaliatory tariffs in response
to Washington’s move to increase duties on $200 billion of
Chinese goods.
Our calculations show a full-scale trade war between the US and
China has the potential to tip the global economy into a
recession and lead to a sharp decline in world stocks. Our model
shows that if a 10 per cent tariff on US trade were fully passed
on to the consumer, global inflation would rise by about 0.7
percentage points. This, in turn, could reduce corporate earnings
by 2.5 per cent and cut global stocks’ price-to-earnings ratios
by up to 15 per cent.
All of which means that global equities could fall by some 15 to
20 per cent. This in effect would turn the clock back on the
world stock market by three years. US bond yields may fall, but
the scale of decline will be limited due to an inflationary
impact from tariffs. Washington and Beijing may still be able to
reach a deal at the June G20 meeting. But should they fail, the
planned tariff increases would cause both economies to suffer: we
estimate that existing trade measures would reduce China’s growth
by 0.5 per cent and the US’s by some 0.2 per cent.
To make matters worse, the impact of a trade war will be felt far
beyond the world's largest two economies. Open economies in
countries such as Singapore and Taiwan in Asia and Hungary, the
Czech Republic and Ireland in Europe are potentially more
vulnerable than the US and China. As for equity markets, Wall
Street would suffer more from an escalation in the trade war than
other stock markets, contrary to conventional wisdom. This is
because the US is the most expensive market in our valuation
model and its sector composition is more cyclically sensitive. On
a 2019 price to earnings basis, it trades about 30 per cent
higher than its European, Japanese and emerging market
counterparts.
Richard Hodges, manager of the Nomura Global Dynamic Bond
Fund, at Nomura.
We believe the US/China trade tensions could now be key to
sentiment. Any expectation of a resolution will be greeted
positively by the markets, although our central belief is that,
whilst a deal will eventually be done, the market may have a
longer wait than it currently expects. President Trump’s
interests in a second term are best served by the perception that
he is talking tough on China, whilst continuing to avoid tariffs
that severely damage trade and therefore the economy and his
voters’ wealth. In other words, if the talks drag on, that suits
the President.
(The fund remains long of risk across credit asset classes and
has a relatively high duration exposure, the firm said.)
Dylan Cheang, senior investment strategist, DBS Bank
Worst-case scenario: An “all-out” trade war will hit US economic
and earnings growth. Everybody hurts. The latest USTR
announcement marks a sharp escalation of the US-China trade war.
Thus far, global investors have assumed that the US and China
will eventually reach a peaceful resolution on the trade
front.
But this assumption may turn out to be overly optimistic, as
recent rhetoric from US President Donald Trump suggests
otherwise. In such an environment, it is worth running some
worst-case scenarios of what will transpire in an “all-out” trade
war.
According to DBS economists, real US gross domestic product (GDP)
growth will be reduced by 0.6 percentage points from 2.5 per cent
to 1.9 per cent. With headline inflation expected at 1.5 per
cent, this translates to an approximate nominal GDP growth (real
GDP plus inflation) of 3.4 per cent, vs the consensus forecast of
around 4.5 per cent. Based on simple regression, an “all-out”
trade war will shave 3 percentage points off US earnings growth –
from our model-based forecast of 5.8 per cent to 2.8 per cent in
2019.
Robert Horrocks, PhD, chief investment officer, Matthews
Asia
The issue here is twofold: first, the impact on sentiment,
mostly corporate investment, is far greater in both the
US and China than in reality. That means that actual effects
are borne by the economy and reflected in the market to a much
greater extent than are warranted, giving rise to opportunity.
Second, the fear that the tariffs may signal something more than
the current dispute - a full blown trade war that could rip apart
supply chains and undermine the global economy. This is far more
serious, but yet not enough to derail domestic economies. It
could lead to a dismantling of the US’s international
influence and signal the rise of China and a different kind of
world order. But this is something that I suspect neither
the US nor China is ready for and they are unlikely to
accept.
So the likelihood remains that a trade deal is done, albeit one that doesn’t clear up the fundamental tension between the two powers and doesn’t remove the incentives for China to continue to expand its economic sphere of influence and expansion of manufacturing supply chains into Southeast Asia and even further afield.
Cédric Özaman, Nicolas Besson, and Marco Bonaviri (head
of investments and portfolio management, head of fixed income and
senior portfolio manager, respectively), at REYL, the Switzerland-based
private bank and wealth management firm.
This year, there are good reasons to believe that a risk
reduction among portfolios is wise. The global economic backdrop
remains fragile and not as strong as last year. The positive Q1
US GDP growth looks good on the surface (3.2 per cent vs 2.3 per
cent expected) and bolstered hopes that the US economy is on
track to rebound after its recent soft patch.
However, when drilling down into the details, the picture is not
so rosy, with consumer spending only rising 1.2 per cent, while
business investment decelerated. Moreover, the main positive
contributors were a rise in inventories and trade balance
(downturn in imports), meaning that this trend should not
continue into the coming quarters and can easily reverse. Weak
indicators in the US manufacturing sector keep rolling in, with
the ratio of new orders/inventories falling to the 2013 low. If
history is any guide, when reaching such a level, the fair value
of the S&P 500 at the end of the current month is lower than
current prices.