Putnam Officials Optimistic about U.S. Economy
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(PLANSPONSOR.com) --
January 27, 2012 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - At a recent Putnam Investments media
briefing, company officials said they predict the U.S. economy could surprise
on the upside in 2012.
In the
context of the negative market tone of the second half of 2011, the U.S.
economy saw positive surprises around July, a pattern that Putnam predicts
could continue in 2012.
“I’m
actually fairly optimistic on 2012,” said Jeffrey Knight, head of global asset
allocation at Putnam, adding that the U.S. is “pretty resilient.”
Putnam
officials outlined the biggest investment themes they predict for 2012:
- Opportunity
lies in the middle. In 2012, opportunity may lie between the ultra-safe
assets that outperformed in 2011 and the crisis-sensitive investments that fell
sharply. “It’s the investments in the middle that I think are most attractive,”
Knight said. Putnam cites high-yield bonds and U.S. large-cap stocks. Even as
credit fundamentals improved in 2011, high-yield spreads widened. As 2012
begins, these spreads are above 7%, a significant premium over Treasuries that
yield about 2%. Regarding large-cap stocks, Putnam said that the U.S. economy
could surprise on the upside in 2012, and U.S. stocks are likely to appear very
attractive globally.
- Growth
rate of non-deleveraging sectors will continue. Putnam said that while the U.S. economy
has been facing a headwind from deleveraging in the past several years, it’s important
to remember the deleveraging does not affect all sectors of the economy.
Non-deleveraging sectors have been expanding at a brisk pace and consistently
adding jobs. In addition, an equally weighted portfolio of stocks from
non-deleveraging sectors made near the market peak of 2007 would have delivered
positive returns through the end of 2011. Putnam officials said they see no
reason why these trends should reverse in 2012.
- Geography
will continue to be meaningful. In 2012, Putnam predicts Europe will continue to fight its debt
crisis, while Asian countries like China will be ready to reaccelerate. Equity
market performance could follow, with leadership returning to emerging markets
and the U.S. as capital is withdrawn from Europe and placed in more attractive
areas.
- The
U.S. economy should remain supportive. Housing, jobs, consumer confidence and spending have all
improved, and corporate profitability as measured by margins is quite high. The
U.S. economy should remain self-sustaining in the coming quarter.
- Non-U.S.
equity markets will continue to be affected by European risks. In the first
quarter of 2012, Putnam expects non-U.S. equity markets to be affected by risks
from Europe including heavy sovereign funding schedules and continued elevated
borrowing costs for countries such as Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and
Spain. Putnam officials predict the European Union will likely have the
political will to remain intact through this period of macroeconomic
instability. Market observers may continue to worry about a European recession
affecting recovery in the U.S. Putnam officials added that they do not believe
Europe will derail long-term growth of emerging markets.
- The
fundamentals across a range of fixed-income sectors remain attractive. Defaults
in corporate debt are far below the long-term average, and Putnam predicts the
default rate will remain low, even in a relatively weak economy. In 2011,
corporate earnings measured by the S&P 500 may hit an all-time high.
Non-agency securities should generate attractive cash flows, even if housing
prices continue to struggle.
- Concern
remains with technicals, rather than fundamentals. The U.S. Federal Reserve
and European banks have large exposure to non-agency RMBS. If the market supply
increases dramatically as these entities sell their positions, it could
undermine prices.
Putnam’s Capital Markets
Outlook report is available at https://content.putnam.com/literature/pdf/CM0100.pdf
Corie Russell
editors@plansponsor.com