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Last week, we published our mid-year outlook, it is available here. For private equity, there are three themes:
1. Interest rates will remain higher for longer due to strong near-term growth, deglobalization, the energy transition, increased defense spending, rising Treasury issuance, and US fiscal deficits.
2. With rates higher for longer and growth eventually slowing down, opportunities in private equity will likely continue to emerge among potential distressed companies.
3. Ongoing uncertainty and volatility in the broader market call for a flexible, value-oriented strategy in private equity. Strategies with the ability to invest opportunistically across the capital stack are well-positioned to capitalize on the shifting fortunes of companies seeking financing in these turbulent times.
Our private equity chart book is available here.
See important disclaimers at the bottom of the page.
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Last week, we published our mid-year outlook, it is available here. For real assets, there are three themes:
1. Interest rates will remain higher for longer due to strong near-term growth, deglobalization, the energy transition, increased defense spending, rising Treasury issuance, and US fiscal deficits.
2. Office remains particularly weak for a variety of reasons, including work from home and higher interest rates, but other real asset sectors are showing resiliency. Secular growth trends continue to persist for industrial, multifamily, as well as specialty areas such as data centers, cold storage, self-storage, and student housing.
3. The opportunity remains more compelling towards real estate debt than equity on a risk-adjusted basis in the current cycle. Real estate credit can offer a more attractive proposition due to high base interest rates, widening spreads, more protective loan structures, as well as expectations of higher-for-longer rates.
Our real assets chart book is available here.
See important disclaimers at the bottom of the page.
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The FOMC has started to revise higher its estimate of where the fed funds rate will be in the long run. This is likely driven by upward pressures on inflation and rates from deglobalization, the energy transition, more restrictions on immigration, more defense spending, and higher levels of government debt.
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There is a major gap opening up between the mean and the median of long-term inflation expectations, which means that half of the population has long-term inflation expectations that are dramatically higher than the other half, see charts below and in this chart book. This is a very significant challenge for the Fed because it cannot cut interest rates when inflation expectations are out of control.
See important disclaimers at the bottom of the page.
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Since the Fed started talking about rate cuts, households have turned more and more positive on equities, see chart below.
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While the Fed’s rate hikes have reigned in growth, especially among over-levered consumers, corporates, and banks, the easing of financial conditions since the “Fed pivot” in December continues to offset the effect of higher rates. Through the remainder of 2024, we expect above-consensus economic growth. Inflation will remain above the Fed’s target and interest rates will remain higher for longer.
We published our consolidated views in my newest white paper, 2024 Mid-Year Outlook: An Unstable Economic Equilibrium. You can download it here.
I will also be discussing the contents of the paper and my views in detail in an Apollo Academy class today, June 20, at 11:00 ET (eligible for a CE credit). Register here.
See important disclaimers at the bottom of the page.
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When the Fed raises interest rates, money market funds pay a higher dividend to households. The chart below shows that this effect is very significant and currently running at $500 billion, or around 2.5% of consumer spending. Put differently, Fed hikes are boosting consumer spending through higher money market fund dividends.
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Our updated banking sector chart book is available here.
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The foreign-born labor force has grown 11% since February 2020, and the native-born labor force has remained unchanged over the same period, see chart below.
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The Fed’s pivot from hawkish to dovish and associated easing in financial conditions have boosted expectations for US consumer spending, see chart below.
See important disclaimers at the bottom of the page.
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