• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Subscribe
  • Twitter
  • RSS Feed

Investment News NZ

Investment News provides financial advisers news stories from the financial industry in New Zealand. Subscribe to our free weekly newsletter.

  • Home
  • News
  • Kiwisaver
  • Subscribe
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
You are here: Home / Investment News / UK vote not wake-up-and-buy alarm, Russell

UK vote not wake-up-and-buy alarm, Russell

July 10, 2016

Graham Harman: Russell senior investment strategist
Graham Harman: Russell senior investment strategist

Russell Investments has adopted an after-Brexit stay-in-bed policy, according to the group’s latest quarterly market outlook.

The Russell report says share prices would have to experience “substantial moves” up or down before the global multi-manager executed its current strategy “to buy equity market dips and sell rallies”.

“This happened in mid-February when global equities had fallen nearly 20% from their 2015 highs, as measured by the MSCI All Country World Index, triggering our contrarian ‘buy’ signals,” the Russell report says. “There has been plenty of volatility subsequently, but even after the Brexit vote, it has not been of a magnitude to trigger another signal.”

While the UK vote has ramped up market volatility, Russell says investors have broader concerns to ponder.

“Fading cycle fundamentals and flat equity market momentum suggest that markets are being driven more by noise than fundamentals,” the report says. “We worry that risk assets, like equities and corporate credit, are vulnerable to bad news given the backdrop of very expensive US equity valuations, a potentially more hawkish Fed, poor corporate profit performance, and uncertain global growth trends.”

In an era Russell Investments has dubbed “the new mediocre”, Asia-Pacific is the stand-out region with projected annual growth of 3.5-4 per cent for 2016.

The result, low by recent historical standards, “still compares very favorably to the US and Europe”, the Russell report says, where growth is tipped to hit 2 per cent and 1.5 per cent respectively over 2016.

In a statement, Graham Harman, Russell senior investment strategist-Asia Pacific, said the region is “providing few surprises” at the mid-year point.

“The latest Chinese GDP numbers, at 6.7%, may be the slowest since the financial crisis, and ‘mediocre’ in that sense, but it’s a very creditable pace of expansion for all that,” Harman said.

Meanwhile, he said national income growth in Australia and NZ was being hampered by poor terms of trade.

“However, strong export volumes are supporting the real GDP readings at close to 3% growth, a little ahead of our prior expectations,” Harman said.

Despite the relatively strong performance of the Australasian economies, the Russell report says “it’s hard to envisage meaningful upside to the slow-and-steady paths that are currently being traced out”.

“Australia and New Zealand are both buoyed by effervescent housing cycles at present and, while we are not forecasting crashes, we do see headwinds ahead in that sector,” the report says.

Overall, Russell has maintained a “broadly neutral” allocation between equities and bonds in the wake of the shock British vote to quit the European Union. On balance, the report says modest rate rises in the US coupled with “unconventional easing” in Europe and Japan will keep the bond cycle in check.

“The net result is that the upward pressure on bond yields from inflation pressures in the US will be muted by deflation pressures in the rest of the world. Bond yields are likely to rise, but only modestly,” the report says.

In equities, Russell says it remains underweight the US and UK and with small overweights to other developed regions “fairly evenly distributed”.

“We’re neutral emerging markets, where attractive valuations are offset by business cycle headwinds from deleveraging risks, along with the potential for further Fed tightening,” the Outlook report says.

Last week Russell also told clients London-based global fixed income manager, Albert Jalso, would decamp to Seattle to assume portfolio management duties in the US bond team.

After nine years based with Russell in the UK, US ex-pat Jalso would be replaced by, James Mitchell in September.

Mitchell has served 17 years on the Russell fixed income team, the last 10 as back-up manager for Jalso, the client note says.

 

Read More » Investment News

Recent articles

  • Consilium sells to FirstCape May 19, 2025
  • KiwiSaver cuts mooted as government sharpens knife May 18, 2025
  • Mercer diversifies from Harbour in responsible NZ shares shake-up May 18, 2025
  • FNZ share moves; Trust bolsters board; NZ Super consolidates to operate; Booster finds new client exec in supermarket May 18, 2025
  • Allspring is coming; Bagnall fund tops $500m; QuayStreet wins INFINZ accolade May 18, 2025
  • Four (investment) seasons in one day: Makao, Nikko check the market weather for Wealthpoint May 18, 2025
  • Second chance for India May 18, 2025
  • Unsafe words: Bloomberg finds generic genAI is financially flawed May 18, 2025
  • Token rule: why there can only be one May 18, 2025
Finished reading? Why not subscribe? To receive a weekly email enter your email address here.

Primary Sidebar

WEEKLY NEWSLETTER

Sign up here to receive our weekly newsletter.
Learn More »

Most Recent Investment News

Consilium sells to FirstCape

May 19, 2025

KiwiSaver cuts mooted as government sharpens knife

May 18, 2025

Mercer diversifies from Harbour in responsible NZ shares shake-up

May 18, 2025

FNZ share moves; Trust bolsters board; NZ Super consolidates to operate; Booster finds new client exec in supermarket

May 18, 2025

Allspring is coming; Bagnall fund tops $500m; QuayStreet wins INFINZ accolade

May 18, 2025

Search by Keyword

INVESTMENT NEWS

  • Consilium sells to FirstCape May 19, 2025
  • KiwiSaver cuts mooted as government sharpens knife May 18, 2025
  • Mercer diversifies from Harbour in responsible NZ shares shake-up May 18, 2025
  • FNZ share moves; Trust bolsters board; NZ Super consolidates to operate; Booster finds new client exec in supermarket May 18, 2025
  • Allspring is coming; Bagnall fund tops $500m; QuayStreet wins INFINZ accolade May 18, 2025
  • Four (investment) seasons in one day: Makao, Nikko check the market weather for Wealthpoint May 18, 2025
  • Second chance for India May 18, 2025

Quick-links to Popular News

  • FAP Compliance
  • Coronavirus
  • New Appointments
  • Financial Markets Authority (FMA)
  • Kiwisaver
  • Climate Change
  • Crypto Currency
  • Blockchain
  • Insurance

Sponsored Content

Trade walls, profit falls: NZX 50’s tariff exposure unpacked

Building a smarter portfolio: strategies for diversified growth 

Five strategies for dealing with market volatility

Unlocking the potential of smarter portfolio management for New Zealand’s largest investors

Bullish on bullion? Discover gold’s role as a diversifier

Climate disclosures and transition finance: APAC’s path forward

More Sponsored Posts >>>

Secondary Sidebar

Recent News

  • Consilium sells to FirstCape May 19, 2025
  • KiwiSaver cuts mooted as government sharpens knife May 18, 2025
  • Mercer diversifies from Harbour in responsible NZ shares shake-up May 18, 2025
  • FNZ share moves; Trust bolsters board; NZ Super consolidates to operate; Booster finds new client exec in supermarket May 18, 2025
  • Allspring is coming; Bagnall fund tops $500m; QuayStreet wins INFINZ accolade May 18, 2025
  • Four (investment) seasons in one day: Makao, Nikko check the market weather for Wealthpoint May 18, 2025
  • Second chance for India May 18, 2025
  • Unsafe words: Bloomberg finds generic genAI is financially flawed May 18, 2025
  • Token rule: why there can only be one May 18, 2025
  • Trade walls, profit falls: NZX 50’s tariff exposure unpacked May 15, 2025

Footer

Copyright ©2025 InvestmentNews.co.nz — All Rights Reserved — Terms & Conditions