Economic Backdrop

Prime Minister Theresa May declared that Brexit negotiations had reached an impasse by the second half of September. EU leaders rejected her so-called Chequers plan, which had become a rallying point for cabinet officials (besides those who resigned early in the third quarter in protest of the plan’s “softness”). May reminded EU officials that she believes no deal is better than a bad deal; her government began planning for the growing probability of a “hard Brexit.” She used an interview on the sidelines of a September United Nations summit to assert her ambition that, in the post-Brexit world, Britain will offer the lowest corporate taxes in the G-20 (the international forum for economic decision-making that comprises 19 countries plus the EU). UK and US market regulators made a shared appeal to the EU in early September for deference in letting other countries monitor their qualifications for access to EU securities markets. The EU and Japan finalised a major trade deal early in the third quarter that eliminated most tariffs between the two trading partners; the EU-US trade relationship warmed in July following a meeting between European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and US President Donald Trump.

The US escalated its trade fight with China late in the third quarter, enacting tariffs of 10% on $200 billion of Chinese products and promising to increase them to 25% in the New Year. President Trump pointed to an additional $267 billion in Chinese products that could also be subjected to tariffs if China were to retaliate—which it did, although on a significantly smaller scale (applying tariffs of 5% to 10% on $60 billion of US exports to China). China asked the World Trade Organization (WTO) to impose sanctions on the US twice during the quarter in response to disputes dating back several years. NAFTA’s successor came into focus during the third quarter—first when the US and Mexico came to agreement in August, and then when the US and Canada finally ironed out their differences in the last few hours of September. Now called the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), the revised deal is expected to strengthen its predecessor’s “made in North America” provisions and improve labour standards. The US is projected to offer Canada and Mexico relief from automobile-related trade barriers as a result of the new agreement, although aluminium and steel tariffs will remain.

The EU, Russia and China established a vehicle that can accommodate international banking with Iran. The system was developed to circumvent sanctions against Iran that were applied by the US after the Trump administration withdrew from a multi-lateral nuclear accord. (The International Atomic Energy Agency has since said that Iran still complies with its responsibilities to the accord). Elsewhere, India took over a major infrastructure finance company at the end of the third quarter on the belief that it was at risk of failing and potentially destabilising the financial system. The financing agreement between Argentina (South America’s second-largest economy) and the International Monetary Fund increased to $57 billion late in the third quarter. Argentina and Turkey both faced currency collapses during the third quarter when their respective domestic economic situations deteriorated amid less accommodative global financial conditions.

UK equity shares fell a bit during the third quarter after partially recovering from an early September selloff; European shares were slightly positive after doing the same. US equities climbed throughout the quarter, while Japanese shares finished higher after a late-quarter rally. Brazilian equities were positive for the third quarter, albeit below their early-August highs. (Equity performance references country- and regional-level performance within the MSCI ACWI Index). Government bond yields climbed across all maturities in the UK, EU and US.

The Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee increased the bank rate by 0.25% in early August and then abstained from further action at its mid-September meeting. Governor Mark Carney announced that he will delay his departure from the central bank until January 2020 in order to offer a measure of stability during the Brexit transition period. Neither the European Central Bank (ECB) nor the Bank of Japan announced new policy actions following their separate late-July and mid-September monetary-policy meetings. The US Federal Open Market Committee increased the federal-funds rate at the end of the third quarter, as anticipated, for the third time in 2018. Expectations remained for one additional rate hike in December.

23


UK services sector growth slowed notably to start the quarter, but partially recovered in August. Manufacturing activity recovered in September after bordering on slow-growth territory in August. The claimant-count unemployment rate edged up to 2.6% in August. The unemployment rate for the May-to-July period held firm at 4%, and average year-over-year earnings growth increased from 2.4% to 2.6% for the same three months. Overall economic growth maintained a pace of 0.4% for the second quarter, yet slid to 1.2% year over year from the first quarter.

European manufacturing growth levelled off to start the third quarter, yet dipped at the end of the period; services growth slowed to start before partially recovering in September. The eurozone unemployment rate continued to edge lower through the quarter, finishing August at 8.1%. The final reading of broad second-quarter economic growth registered 0.4% (in line with the first quarter) and 2.1% year over year (down from 2.5% in the prior quarter).
US services growth moderated through July and August, albeit at healthy levels, and slowed further in preliminary reports for September. Non-manufacturing sector activity fell in July from red-hot levels and reaccelerated in August. Manufacturing growth jumped to start the quarter, retreated in August, and then recovered during September. Consumer confidence climbed to its highest level in 18 years during the third quarter; jobless claims continued to trend downward, attaining new 50-year lows along the way. Overall economic growth increased by an annualised 4.2% in the second quarter, up from 2.2% in the first quarter.

Our View

The ratcheting-up of trade-war tensions between the US and China has become the #1 preoccupation of investors. And with good reason: Whatever happens between the two countries has global implications. China and the US together accounted for 42% of world nominal gross domestic product (GDP) last year.

China’s currency has fallen sharply not only against the dollar but also against a broader basket of currencies. The weaker currency partially offsets the impact from tariffs imposed by the US. The competitiveness of Chinese exporters against other countries has also improved as a result of this year’s devaluation.

On the downside, the weak Chinese currency makes it almost certain that the Trump administration will increase the tariff rate to 25% at the beginning of January. It also could raise the ire of other big importers of Chinese goods, perhaps making it easier for the US to enlist the support of other WTO members in its attempt to sanction China over unfair trading practices.

The US is in strong shape economically. Although nobody wins in a trade war, even White House advisors with a pro-trade bias believe that the US will be the least hurt of the two countries. Investors appear to have reached the same conclusion. While the US flirts with new all-time highs, the Shenzhen Stock Exchange Composite Index fell into bear territory in the third quarter, declining more than 25% from the peak recorded in late January. Remember that China made up more than 31% of the MSCI Emerging Markets Index as of the end of the third quarter.

Although the near-term view is fraught with uncertainty, we continue to believe in diversifying portfolios with emerging-market exposure. The alpha opportunities (that is, the ability to achieve return in excess of benchmarks) also are much greater, given the economic and political idiosyncrasies inherent in the asset class. The price-to-earnings ratio for the MSCI Emerging Markets Index is running at about a 30% discount to that of the MSCI USA Index, near attractive relative-valuation levels last seen in early 2016.

As the trade war with China heats up, the Trump administration has turned more conciliatory toward other countries with which it has picked fights. Broad agreement has been reached with Mexico and Canada on the new trilateral USMCA, which replaces NAFTA. The threat of tariffs on European and Japanese autos and auto parts has also been taken off the table. This may be a temporary truce, but we are hopeful that it represents a realisation by the White House that it’s better to gain allies in its battle against China than fight on multiple fronts.

45

In Europe, there are business-as-usual problems: sluggish economic growth, still-high unemployment and the never-ending disagreements over how expansive monetary policy should be. Europe also faces trade tensions of its own. The UK is far more dependent on the EU as an export market than the other way around. A “hard” Brexit will severely affect the UK’s export of financial and other services (keep in mind that manufacturing accounts for only 10% of the UK’s GDP nowadays, while services account for 80%).

Although a last-minute agreement or a mighty kicking of the can down the road is possible, widespread fear of a hard Brexit can be seen in the economic data. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s Leading Economic Indicators show that the UK has experienced the most dramatic deterioration of the world’s major developed economies.

As if the future departure of the EU’s second-largest member isn’t bad enough, Italian government-bond yields have risen sharply higher this year as the Lega/Five-Star coalition pushes to make good on some of its campaign promises. Italy is the third-largest eurozone economy, and has the fourth-largest debt-to-GDP ratio in the world. To say the least, a debt crisis in Italy would not be as easy to handle as the Greek one (which wasn’t all that easy).

A complicating factor for Italy and other highly-indebted countries is the tapering of asset purchases by the ECB. Since the program’s inception, the ECB’s purchases of Italian bonds equate to 53% of the country’s cumulative deficit, according to the Centre for European Economic Research (commonly known as ZEW), a Germany-based think tank. Italy will be losing a large price- and risk-insensitive buyer of its bonds at an inopportune time. The ECB is set to finish its taper at the end of the year.

It’s been quite a run for US equities for much of the past nine years. The relative performance of the US against other developed- (MSCI World ex USA Index) and developing-country (MSCI Emerging Markets Index) stock markets has been stellar, whether the yardstick is in US dollar
or local-currency terms.

The fundamental outlook remains favourable for US equities, despite trade-war concerns and the rising trend in interest rates. Tax cuts, deregulation and strong revenue growth have provided an ideal backdrop for US equities to appreciate, but performance could be constrained if earnings estimates fade in light of increasing tariffs on tradable goods. Valuations also could fall if interest rates climb at a faster-than-expected pace. That said, we still think it’s premature to turn negative on the near-term US outlook given today’s mosaic of economic fundamentals. SEI views the risks to the US stock market as evenly balanced.

The multi-year persistence of high US corporate profit margins is unusual. Margins have spiked higher in the past two quarters, reflecting the impact of the US tax cut and the acceleration of sales growth. In the latter stages of an economic expansion, margins normally contract on a sustained basis as higher costs for labour, interest-expense and depreciation take a larger slice of the pie.

Besides rising trade tensions with China, we see the US Federal Reserve (Fed) as another, more traditional, major potential threat to the US equity bull market. The question is how high the federal-funds rate will ultimately go, and whether that level proves to be sufficient to keep inflation near the Fed’s 2% target or turns out to be overkill. We agree with the central bank’s view that the funds rate is still below the so-called neutral rate of interest. Additional rate increases appear appropriate, as long as the Fed doesn’t keep hiking beyond the neutral rate—a level that has historically seen the stock market run into real trouble.

One can argue about whether the valuations embedded in the US equity market are high, especially when measured against other global stock markets, although earnings growth in the latter has been less robust.The extreme appreciation in some large technology companies also suggests that the US stock market could be subject to a sharp rotation from previous winners to the laggards somewhere down the road.SEI equity strategies certainly tilt in the direction of more value-oriented companies and industries.

Predicting the future is a hazardous venture most of the time. In light of the uncertainties facing investors at the present time, the prediction game is, perhaps, even more challenging. Accordingly, we believe in a diversified approach to investing. In our view, while maintaining exposure to risk assets may feel uncomfortable, investors with long time horizons should know that mistiming entries and exits into and out of equities can be costly. Today, mistiming an exit is the greater concern.

9

Glossary of Financial Terms

Bear market: A bear market refers to a market environment in which prices are generally falling (or are expected to do so) and investor confidence is low.

Bull market: A bull market refers to a market environment in which prices are generally rising (or are expected to do so) and investor confidence is high.
Federal-funds rate: The Federal-funds rate is the interest rate at which a depository institution lends immediately available funds (balances at the US

Federal Reserve) to another depository institution overnight in the US.

Fundamentals: Fundamentals refers to data that can be used to assess a country or company’s financial health such as amount of debt, level of profitability, cash flow, or inventory size.

Index Descriptions
MSCI World ex USA Index: The MSCI World ex-USA Index is a free float-adjusted market-capitalisation-weighted index that is designed to measure the equity-market performance of developed markets, excluding the US.

Shenzhen Stock Exchange Composite Index: The Shenzhen Stock Exchange Composite Index tracks performance of A share stocks (which are denominated in renminbi, the local currency) and B share stocks (which are denominated in Hong Kong dollars, an offshore currency) on China’s Shenzhen Stock Exchange.

87

 

 

 

 

 

 

Important Information

Data refers to past performance. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results.
Investments in SEI Funds are generally medium- to long-term investments. The value of an investment and any income from it can go down as well as up. Investors may get back less than the original amount invested. Returns may increase or decrease as a result of currency fluctuations. Additionally, this investment may not be suitable for everyone. If you should have any doubt whether it is suitable for you, you should obtain expert advice.

No offer of any security is made hereby. Recipients of this information who intend to apply for shares in any SEI Fund are reminded that any such application may be made solely on the basis of the information contained in the Prospectus. This material represents an assessment of the market environment at a specific point in time and is not intended to be a forecast of future events, or a guarantee of future results. This information should not be relied upon by the reader as research or investment advice regarding the funds or any stock in particular, nor should it be construed as a recommendation to purchase or sell a security, including futures contracts.

In addition to the normal risks associated with equity investing, international investments may involve risk of capital loss from unfavourable fluctuation in currency values, from differences in generally accepted accounting principles or from economic or political instability in other nations. Bonds and bond funds are subject to interest rate risk and will decline in value as interest rates rise. High yield bonds involve greater risks of default or downgrade and are more volatile than investment grade securities, due to the speculative nature of their investments. Narrowly focused investments and smaller companies typically exhibit higher volatility. SEI Funds may use derivative instruments such as futures, forwards, options, swaps, contracts for differences, credit derivatives, caps, floors and currency forward contracts. These instruments may be used for hedging purposes and/or investment purposes.

While considerable care has been taken to ensure the information contained within this document is accurate and up-to-date, no warranty is given as to the accuracy or completeness of any information and no liability is accepted for any errors or omissions in such information or any action taken on the basis of this information.

This information is issued by SEI Investments (Europe) Limited, 1st Floor, Alphabeta, 14-18 Finsbury Square, London EC2A 1BR which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Please refer to our latest Full Prospectus (which includes information in relation to the use of derivatives and the risks associated with the use of derivative instruments), Key Investor Information Documents and latest Annual or Semi-Annual Reports for more information on our funds. This information can be obtained by contacting your Financial Adviser or using the contact details shown above.
SEI sources data directly from FactSet, Lipper, and BlackRock, unless otherwise stated.