July 2023 Equity Market Outlook: Positive Sentiment Emerges as Inflation Slows

Executive summary:

  • Q2 2023 was a more favorable environment for Emerging Markets, Europe, Australia and Real Assets managers.
  • There was no single style factor that dominated returns across markets, with country and sector positioning being more relevant.
  • Managers are optimistic about the decline in inflation across the globe but still expect a mild recession.

As inflation continues to subside, is investor sentiment turning more positive?

Investors have been encouraged by the ongoing deceleration in inflation rates around the globe, as well as by expectations that policy rates are near peak levels. In addition, the agreement on raising the U.S. debt ceiling, retreating concerns related to systemic risks in the wake of the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) and Credit Suisse, and continued excitement around artificial intelligence (AI) are adding to the positive momentum.

However, with a mild recession still expected, managers have a preference for companies with resilient balance sheets and strong business models that can weather the current challenging environment, where cost pressures are impacting margins and investments. Managers also remain cautious about China, due to slowing growth and weak consumer confidence.

On balance, the second quarter of 2023 proved to be a more favorable environment for active managers in Emerging Markets, Europe, Australia, and Real Assets equities, while being more challenging for U.S. Large Cap, U.S. Small Cap, Long/Short, Global, Global ex-U.S., Japan, UK and Canada managers.

Contrary to previous quarters, there was no single style factor that dominated returns across markets, with country and sector positioning being more relevant. However, the growth and quality factors continued to be rewarded in the U.S., while the value factor outperformed in Emerging Markets, Japan and Europe.

Information technology was again the best-performing sector across most regions, while energy, materials, real estate and consumer staples generally underperformed. Financials typically also fared well, with the exception being in the U.S.