(Bloomberg) — Bank of America Corp. strategists are bearish on markets next year and urged investors to focus on preserving cash as faster inflation and higher interest rates upend the trajectory of global asset prices.
Most Read from Bloomberg
New York City Is Building a Wall of Oysters to Fend Off Floods
Asia’s Richest Man Looks to Walton Family Playbook on Succession
A Denser City, But at What Cost?
The Women Behind Historic House Designs
From Bathhouses to Fisheries, Hidden Inflation Is Creeping Across Japan
In a note to clients, strategists led by Michael Hartnett listed macro trade recommendations, including long positions on volatility gauges, oil, energy, the U.S. dollar, and real assets. Investors can expect a “rates shock” in 2022, following the “inflation shock” of 2021 and “growth shock” of 2020, they wrote.
“We are therefore bearish and believe capital preservation will grow as a theme in the year ahead,” the bank strategists said.
Their forecast contrasts sharply with bullish views at other Wall Street banks, including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co., who see stock markets climbing at a more muted pace next year.
Wall Street Says Buy the Dip as Virus Fears Won’t Halt Rally
Risk assets roared higher on Monday, sending the S&P 500 to a new all-time high, as investors cheered the nomination of Jerome Powell for a second term at the head of the Federal Reserve.
Bank of America’s strategists cautioned that this is a “most unconventional of cycles” and its end is “highly unlikely to follow a conventional path.” They draw parallels between today’s investment backdrop and the “early stagflation” of the late 1960s and early 70s.
In the bull case for equities, asset prices could keep going higher if the Fed is determined to keep real rates deeply negative, they wrote.
The strategists also reiterated concerns about the risks building in frothy market corners. “The-mother-of-all bubbles in crypto & tech remains a ‘fat tail,’” they said.
Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek
Wildfires Are Getting Worse, and One Chemical Company Is Reaping the Benefits
Medical Debt Is Crushing Black Americans, and Hospitals Aren’t Helping
How Child Care Became the Most Broken Business in America
Boeing Built an Unsafe Plane, and Blamed the Pilots When It Crashed
©2021 Bloomberg L.P.
Comments