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UBS Says Annualised Returns From Equities Will Halve In 2014
Tom Burroughes
29 November 2013
There is scope for earnings growth in 2014, which should
drive global equity markets higher but investors shouldn’t expect a repeat of
the 15 per cent annualised returns they have enjoyed since 2008, and returns
are likely to halve to around seven to eight per cent, UBS predicts. The wealth management arm of the Swiss firm, with a total of
SFr1.7 trillion ($1.87 trillion) of assets, argues that valuations of equity
markets have not yet been pushed beyond reasonable levels. The firm, like many of its peers, is trying to figure out
whether the rise in equities since the financial crisis of 2008 – fuelled in
part by money printing by central banks such as the US Federal Reserve – can
continue at its recent pace, particular if, or when central banks begin to turn
off the monetary taps. Expectations that some of the worst financial news has now happened can be seen in the fall in the price of gold – a traditional “safe
haven”, from its September 2011 record high above $1,900 per ounce. In December, UBS is overweight both the US and the eurozone markets. It argues
that strong private sector demand, especially through consumption in the US, should accelerate US real gross domestic product growth
in 2014. UBS expects US
real growth of 2.3 per cent annualised in the fourth quarter of this year.
Meanwhile, growth in the eurozone will be at around 0.2 per cent in the
quarters ahead, the bank said. “Economic activity in emerging markets showed further signs
of marginal improvement in October, a trend UBS forecasts to continue
throughout December. Export-orientated countries are expected to do better than
those driven by credit growth,” the bank said. UBS said it expects stabilisation in the Chinese economy in
2014, and for its 2014 growth target to be changed to 7.0-7.5 per cent from 7.5
per cent currently. The Zurich-listed firm said its preferences include US high-yield corporate bonds, which are fundamentally
well supported; corporate hybrids, where UBS expects yield pick-up; and US financials,
which have stronger balance sheets, more liquidity and better asset quality
than their global counterparts. On commodities, UBS noted that broad commodities have
recently struggled, with price weakness particularly acute in precious metals.
On gold, the bank thinks the yellow metal could fall further and it has a
six-month price target of $1.15 per ounce. (Gold is currently fetching around
$1,250 per ounce. In the case of foreign exchange, UBS said the UK pound offers upside potential against the Swiss
franc due to strength in the UK
economy; it expects the Bank of Japan to counter economic weakness by more
monetary easing in 2014 so it is bearish on the yen exchange rate against the
dollar.