Developed market equities, including U.S. technology stocks other than the so-called FAANG group, are expected to outperform next year, the global head of multi-asset at PineBridge Investments said.
The âFAANGâ group includes Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix, and Google-parent Alphabet.
Higher vaccination rates, an impending turnaround in the automotive industry driven by a return of chips’ supply, and a new prime minister here also be positive for Japan, Michael Kelly told the Reuters Global Markets Forum on Monday.
âJapan is a new love of ours,â he said.
Kelly expects a mild correction in equity markets from now until the end of the year, with the first half of 2022 being tough for all asset classes.
A âconfluence of headwinds,â including supply chain bottlenecks, growing energy shortage, and wage-price spirals aided by central banksâ monetary policies, have begun creating a circle of âwagon trains around markets,â Kelly said.
PineBridge, which manages $133 billion in assets, is adjusting its portfolio from âearly recovery, early cyclical beneficiaries … towards a balance between some more sustainable growth allocations,â he said.
Preparing for a âslower, choppier flatnessâ as growth peaks and central banks begin withdrawing stimulus, Kelly said: âWeâre still early enough with this in pent-up returns potential.â
Kelly was bullish on China despite the uncertainties caused by its recent regulatory changes, as it focuses on domestic consumption as well as foreign trade, specifically building up sectors essential to plug the deficits in global supply chains.