Q Investment View Coping with political uncertainties and divergent monetary policies

October 20, 2017 | Author: Eleanore Johnston | Category: N/A
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1 Q4 216 Investment View Coping with political uncertainties and divergent monetary policies2 2 Generali Investments Inv...

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Q4 2016

Investment View

Coping with political uncertainties and divergent monetary policies

2 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

Content Global View

p.3

Macroeconomic Outlook

p.6

Fixed Income

p.9

Corporate Bonds

p.11

Currencies

p.13

Equities

p.15

Asset Allocation

p.18

Forecasts

p.19

Imprint

p.21

3 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

Global View    

Global financial markets have weathered the uncertainties in the wake of the UK’s Brexit vote with remarkable resilience, while the adverse economic effects in the euro area have been much smaller so far than widely feared. Looking ahead, we anticipate a moderate slowdown in the euro area economy on easing investment and softening economic expansion in China. Global growth may yet accelerate slightly going into 2017 on a pick-up in growth in the United States and ending recessions in Russia and Brazil. Global equity markets have widely recouped most of the losses after the Brexit decision, despite a less favorable growth outlook. After this strong recovery, we deem the risks of setbacks on equity markets as high. This holds in particular for US stocks, whose valuations are stretched. By contrast, we anticipate European bond markets to remain underpinned by the large ECB’s asset purchases, which are likely to be prolonged beyond March 2017 amid the persistently weak inflation outlook.

The UK's vote to leave the EU on June 23 created large uncertainties, both about the economic fallout and the repercussions on global financial markets. A key concern was that political uncertainties could trigger a spiral of financial market stress and deteriorating global growth prospects. With hindsight, markets have weathered the fallout of this unprecedented event with remarkable resilience and the fallout on economic sentiment has been much smaller so far than widely feared. Following a slump over the early days right after the Brexit decision, equities started to recover quickly in July. At the time of writing, most major equity markets stand at higher levels than before the surprising 'Leave' decision by British voters. Similarly, following a short spike at the end of June, risk premia on Southern European government bonds as well as corporate bonds have come down further. By contrast, the yields on European core bonds

Risky assets recovered swiftly from their initial sell-off in the wake of the Brexit vote

BREXIT AND FINANCIAL MARKETS

RISK PREMIA ON EURO AREA DEBT 0.3

1750

200

0.2

1700

0.1 1650

1600

-0.1

-0.2 01/05

MSCI World

Graph 1

160 140

0.0

1550 01/04

180

01/06

01/07

01/08

01/09

120 100 80 01/15 03/15 05/15 07/15 09/15 11/15 01/16 03/16 05/16 07/16 09/16

IBOXX Euro Corporates Non Fin. IBOXX Euro Senior Financials Southern European government bonds

10y Bund yields, in % (rhs)

Graph 2; duration-adjusted spreads over Bunds, in bps

have barely risen from their fall into deeper negative territory right after the British decision. Also, the British pound has not recovered and is more than 12% weaker against the US dollar than before the referendum.

Moderate Brexit fallout so far Meanwhile, the fallout on the euro area economy has been moderate so far. The outlook for the industrial sector in the euro area deteriorated, with the manufacturing PMIs weakening, albeit only moderately. That said, data for the much more dominant services sector even inched up slightly in July and August, as did reported numbers

4 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

for retail sales. This resilience has largely soothed concerns about a sharper deterioration in the economic outlook. In the UK, both the manufacturing and services PMI rebounded sharply in August from an initial slump right after the Brexit vote. Looking ahead, we anticipate the further economic fallout of the Brexit decision to remain contained, but still show up in hard numbers. For the UK, we anticipate a growth slowdown, but a recession now seems likely to be avoided. While consumption in the euro area will extend healthily over the coming months, the larger political and economic uncertainties should weigh on investment. This will trigger a moderate slowdown in growth by year end. We also anticipate the pace of economic expansion in China to soften more visibly over the months to come. Following more robust data over the summer months, the Chinese government is likely to unwind its stimulus measures going forward, drawing annual growth rates closer towards 6%.

Brexit vote to cool euro area growth mainly on postponed or frozen investment decisions amid higher uncertainties

POLLS ON ITALIAN CONSTITUIONAL REFERENDUM

PROBABILITY OF FED RATE HIKE PRICED BY MARKETS

40

40

80 70

30

30

Final approval of the Constitutional reform by the parliament

20

60 20

50 40

10

10

0

0

30 20 10

-10 01/16

-10 02/16

03/16

04/16

05/16

06/16

07/16

5-polls rolling average

Graph 3; net lead of "Yes" over "No", in pp

08/16

09/16

0 01/07

11/07

21/07

31/07

December

10/08

20/08

March '17

30/08

09/09

19/09

June '17

Graph 4; % prob. that FFR is 0.5-0.75% or higher

This contrasts our outlook for the US, where a fading drag from inventories and robust consumption will take annualized growth to above 2% over the second half of the year. Among emerging markets, it is mainly the large economies of Brazil and Russia which will gear up overall growth, exiting from their deeper recessions.

Divergent monetary policies are about to become more visible

Amid this uneven macroeconomic outlook, divergent monetary policies are about to become more visible over the remainder of the year. The ECB is likely to relax the eligibility criteria of its asset purchase program, in order to overcome looming scarcity issues for some papers. Moreover, we anticipate Mr. Draghi and his colleagues to announce an extension of the asset purchase program to beyond March 2017. Also the Bank of England seems on track to extend its monetary accommodation, while the Bank of Japan has also vowed to remain accommodative for longer. In an overhaul of its monetary policy, it stepped up its inflation commitment and introduced a cap on government bond yields at its September meeting. This stands in striking contrast to the stance of the Federal Reserve. It left its key rate unchanged in September and cut its longer-term rate projections, but gave strong hints that it intends to hike the Fed Funds rate this year. We deem December the most likely date for this step, a timing only reluctantly priced by markets so far.

Risk from US elections and Italian referendum While European economics and politics are still digesting the fallout from the UK’s Brexit decision, the autumn will bring about two further political events that have the potential to affect financial markets. In the US, presidential elections on November 8

5 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

are due. A victory of the Republican candidate Donald Trump may trigger a rise in global political uncertainties, with the candidate envisaging an isolationist and protectionist stance on immigration and trade. Later on December 4, Italian voters will decide on whether to agree on the changes in the constitution, which would sharply reduce the size and powers of the Senate. If passed, the reform is not only a key step in streamlining legislation and overcoming institutional gridlock, but it would also mean an important victory for PM Matteo Renzi and his ambitions to reform Italy’s economy. If the bill is rejected, however, this would prove a major political setback. While Renzi may opt to stay PM even after defeat, doubts about Italy’s reform capabilities will rise, fuelling concerns about the country’s already meager long-term growth prospects and the sustainability of public debt.

Presidential elections in the US and the Italian constitutional referendum pose key political risks in the fourth quarter

MACRO FORECASTS

FINANCIAL MARKETS FORECASTS

Growth

Inflation

10-Year Bond Yields

Current*

3M

6M

12M

US

1.61

1.70

1.75

1.85

1.3

Germany

-0.09

-0.15

-0.05

0.05

0.4

1.4

Italy

1.20

1.20

1.25

1.30

0.3

1.2

Japan

-0.04

-0.02

0.00

0.00

Forex

Current*

3M

6M

12M 1.11

2015

2016f

2017f

2015

2016f

2017f

US

2.6

1.5

2.1

0.1

1.2

2.2

Euro area

1.9

1.5

1.1

0.0

0.3

Germany

1.5

1.7

1.2

0.1

France

1.2

1.2

1.0

0.1

Italy

0.6

0.6

0.4

0.1

0.0

0.9

Non-EMU

2.4

2.0

1.3

0.1

0.8

2.7

UK

2.3

1.7

1.0

0.0

0.8

3.1

USD/EUR

1.12

1.09

1.08

Japan

0.6

0.6

0.8

0.8

- 0.1

0.4

JPY/USD

101

102

103

103

Asia ex Japan

6.1

6.0

5.8

2.4

2.8

2.9

GBP/EUR

0.86

0.88

0.86

0.85

China

6.9

6.5

6.1

1.4

2.1

2.0

0.1

1.4

2.5

9.3

5.3

4.9

- 0.5

- 1.1

1.1

6.2

6.4

4.7

3.2

2.9

3.2

2.3

2.4

2.7

CEE Latin America

World

Table 1; annual changes, in %

Equities

Current*

3M

6M

12M

S&P500

2163

2110

2100

2090

MSCI EMU

106.7

105.5

104.5

104.0

Table 2; *current as of September 26, 3-day average

European yields to stay low amid elevated risk of equity setbacks Against this background and following the marked recovery rally seen over the summer months, we deem the risks of setbacks on equity markets as high. This holds in particular for US stocks, whose valuations are stretched. What is more, they are likely to face headwinds from a looming next rate hike by the Fed and a continued margin squeeze from rising unit labor costs in the United States. US equities are particularly exposed to the risk of setbacks, while European yields will stay low for longer

By contrast, we anticipate European bond markets to remain underpinned by the large ECB asset purchases, which are likely to be prolonged amid the persistently weak inflation outlook. While the upcoming Italian referendum bears some risks for Italian bonds, the continued search for yield and the demand by the ECB are likely to prevent a more generalized increase in the risk premium on Southern European sovereign debt more generally. As a result, yields on European bonds are unlikely to pick up visibly any time soon. In the current global market backdrop we overall prefer a prudent allocation stance. In particular, we favor a reduced exposure to US equities and a moderate overexposure in European government bonds and investment grade corporate bonds. Thomas Hempell +49 (0)221 / 4203-5023

6 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

Macroeconomic Outlook   

Key sentiment indicators proved surprisingly resilient in the wake of the Brexit decision, both in the UK as well as in the euro area. Therefore, we have lifted our growth expectations slightly. That said, over the months to come we expect the Brexit fallout together with various political euro area uncertainties to induce a slowdown of activity. In the US, growth is expected to accelerate in the final part of the year, when the uncertainty related to the election will fade. Residual slack in the labor market will lead the Fed to a very measured monetary tightening. Regarding China, we expect structural weaknesses to come to the fore again in the second half of the year.

UK weathered Brexit decision better than expected

In the month after the Brexit decision (June 23), UK sentiment indicators dropped strongly, reflecting the massive shock and pointing to the possiblility of the UK to slide into recession in H2. The BoE responded in early August by a large monetary package; including a cut in Bank Rate to 0.25% and an extension of the QE program by £ 60 bn to £ 435 bn among other measures. Moreover, it almost pre-announced another key rate cut later this year. However, in August survey indicators, especially PMIs, rebounded markedly, even outpacing their pre-Brexit levels. Subcomponents like new orders and new export orders also came in on the strong side, suggesting the rebound to be more than just a flash in the pan. Furthermore, retail sales not only proved astonishingly resilient but even accelerated, pushing the retail growth rate to a very high reading of about 6% yoy over the last two months. In contrast to consumption indicators, the outlook for investment is still much more blurred. Generally, we still expect the uncertainty impact of leaving the EU trade bloc to be more lasting than the private consumption impact. Nevertheless, a recession in H2 has become less likely and all in, the UK seems to have weathered the Brexit better than initiallly expected. We revised our GDP forecast for 2016 up to 1.7%, and 1.0% for 2017. In September, the BoE confirmed its intention of a rate cut, although a discusssion whether monetary policay had been too generous already started. On top, we expect the inflation risks to become more prominent again as PPI input prices soared already to 7.6% yoy amid the depreciation of the pound, suggesting some inflation pressures in the pipeline.

Moderate Brexit fallout on the euro area, but more to come

Euro area surprisingly resilient to Brexit shock so far …

… but we still expect activity to moderate

Following the Brexit decision, the fallout on the euro area remained surprisingly contained. While a marked weakening of sentiment right after the referendum had been expected, the actual data flow was even more benign than expected in our so called ‘moderate scenario’. Clearly, forward-looking indicators took a hit: business expectations, for instance, lost some ground and consumer confidence also weakened. In contrast, comprehensive indicators for current activity like the composite PMI almost remained stable. With a reading of 52.9 in August the composite PMI is only 0.2 index points below the pre-referendum level. Hence, the reaction pales if compared to the one to the previous major shock, the Lehman default. The data suggest that output in the euro area will continue to grow unabatedly with a rate of 0.3% qoq in Q3. Looking ahead, however, we think that more negative Brexit fallout will materialize. The effect of the depreciation of the British pound against the euro has not run its course yet and will impact activity with a lag of six to nine months. Moreover, we expect the Brexit negotiations to be tough and detrimental to business sentiment. On top, there are various idiosyncratic factors which will, in our view, also drag on sentiment: The Italian referendum outcome (Dec 4) is uncertain, there is a significant risk that there will be another round of elections in Spain and, on the European level, tensions on how to deal with the refugee crisis and about the future of the EU are not conducive to growth either. These factors unfold in an environment of weak global activity. However, employment expansion continues (+0.4% qoq in Q2) and will – to-

7 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

gether with the highly accommodative ECB policy stance, still low oil prices and a slightly supportive fiscal policy stance, back domestic activity. In sum, we continue to expect ongoing growth but look for a moderation of the growth rate towards year-end. Given the benign Brexit fallout, we lifted our growth expectation for 2016 to 1.5% (from 1.3%) but continue to see a deceleration in 2017 to 1.1% (from 0.9% before). Given muted growth in the year to come and the ongoing spillover of the past oil price decline into core inflation, we expect underlying inflation to remain low and to hardly rise from the current level of 0.8% yoy. Also, inflation expectations remain stubbornly low. Therefore, we think that the ECB will have to extend its QE program beyond March 2017. In our view, this announcement will come in December, when the update of the macro projections (growth 2016/17 of 1.7%/1.6%) will likely be revised down and the extension of the forecast horizon to 2019 sees inflation still considerably below target at that time. In order to be able to do so, the ECB needs to overcome the problem that under the current design Bunds will become scarce towards year-end. Following hints from the September meeting, we expect the ECB to announce adjustments in October and deem an increase in the issuer limit for non-CAC (Collective Action Clause) bonds most likely. As we foresee the ECB to expand its asset purchases by six months to September 2017, more program adjustment will be needed. Here, purchases below the deposit rate yield floor seem to be likely to us. UK: GDP GROWTH AND WEIGHTED PMI INDICES

EURO AREA: MODERATE FALLOUT ON SENTIMENT 2.0

70 65

1.0

60 55

0.0

50 45

-1.0

40 35

-2.0

30 1998

2000

2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

2012

2014

2016

GDP (qoq, rhs) PMI (weighted average of manufacturing, service and construction PMI)

Graph1; in %, index points

Graph 2; change in z-scores of forward looking indicators 08/2016, inverted scale, compared to change in the Great Financial Crisis (GFC)

US: strengthening growth, inflation picks up Growth to pick up in the final part of the year

In the US, the disappointing growth performance in H1 was, to a large extent, due to abnormal destocking, and therefore, we expect a rebound starting from Q3. Net trade has started to improve and this will add to solid consumption in propping up GDP. Concerning investment, the first indications for Q3 are consistent with a mild rebound after two quarters of contraction. Yet, no sizeable contribution to growth will materialize before Q4, once (and to the extent that) the large uncertainty related to the election dissipates. Fiscal policy will remain mildly supportive all along 2017, but the plans proposed by the presidential candidates to reform taxation and expand expenditure in key areas (especially infrastructures), will not be translated into policies before 2018. We expect GDP to grow by 1.5% in 2016, before accelerating to 2.1% next year. Employment has continued to grow at a sustained pace, and between June and August 232K jobs per month were created on average. The steady increase in the number of persons who restart looking for a job and the evidence from business surveys (which show that the lack of skilled labor is becoming an increasingly important issue) signals that employment is rapidly reaching its equilibrium value. This is going to put further

8 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

Fed to continue its very cautious monetary stance

US: CONTRIBUTIONS TO GDP GROWTH

pressure on wages. The resulting acceleration in unit labor costs, which is already harming profitability, will eventually show up in core inflation. The drag of low energy prices on headline inflation will slowly fade and we expect inflation to average 1.2% this year before picking up to 2.2% in 2017. The outlook of solid, but moderate, growth, limited inflationary pressures, and a still difficult external environment characterized by loose monetary policy will limit the scope of monetary normalization. The Fed will remain extremely cautious, raising rates at most once in the final part of this year and twice in 2017.

CHINA: URBAN INVESTMENT AND COMPONENTS

40 30 20 10 0 -10 2007

Graph 3; qoq % chg annualized

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

Urban Investment

SOEs

Real Estate Investment

Privately Owned

2016

Graph 4; yoy as % (ytd cumulated figures)

China’s structural weaknesses to come to the fore again

China’s investment growth started to plateau

Since late last year, China’s government had pushed aggregate demand in order to compensate the weak external outlook, limit the impact of structural problems and to stabilize growth. This influence has become most visible in infrastructure and SoE investment (see graph 4). While the government infrastructure investment is off balance and thus no data is available, we estimate the additional investment outlays in this sector together with SoEs amounted to more than 2% of GDP during this year. In addition, the real estate market also witnessed a rebound. Due to the reduction in necessary down payments and other restriction on the local levels, property sales jumped up in early summer by rates of more than 50% yoy, also driving real estate investments up. Against this background and the stabilization of producer prices, manufacturing PMIs rose slightly above the 50 index point threshold. IP growth moved basically sideways in a small band between 6.0% yoy and 6.3% yoy. However, given this stabilization, we expect that the structural issues of overcapacities especially in mining and steel, high local government and SoE debt, and the needed structural shift from investment to more consumption to come more and more to the fore again. The latest investment figures show this component to have plateaued and the government is likely in our view to cautiously withdraw some of its support. Therefore, we see China’s structural issues to gain prominence again and growth to slow in a controlled fashion over the winter half year again. Christoph Siepmann/ Martin Wolburg/ Paolo Zanghieri +49-(0)221-4203 5061

9 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

Fixed Income   

Government bond markets digested the Brexit vote quickly and core yields on both sides of the Atlantic trended slightly upwards in the course of Q3. Markets were influenced by central banks, but, all in, developments were rather muted. Going forward, the transatlantic yield spread is expected to widen driven by a diverging monetary policy stance. While another key rate hike is forecast to trigger moderately higher US yields, the continuation of the ECB’s QE program is likely to keep euro area core yields on an extremely low level. Despite the Brexit vote, peripheral bonds performed well and, on balance, spreads tightened in the course of Q3. However, in light of the looming economic and political risks, a cautious stance appears appropriate going forward.

International government bond markets in calm waters given the quiet market environment in Q3

The good sentiment on government bond markets prevailed at the beginning of the third quarter and in many cases, new historical yield troughs were marked. However, the on balance benign post-Brexit news flow and the lacking of a severe economic impact of the Brexit vote triggered a swing in sentiment. 10-year Bund yields moved slightly upwards from -0.13% to -0.09%. The movement in the US was a little bit more distinct. The expectation of a forthcoming key rate hike by the Fed led the complete US curve higher. While 10-year Treasury yields rose by 14 bps to 1.61%, 2-year US yields increased from 0.58% to 0.75%. It is noteworthy that this slight upward trend was not triggered by real yields. In fact, real US yields remained around current levels and real euro area core yields even fell slightly. Therewith, the expansive monetary policy stance by most central banks continues to ensure a negative real yield in almost all major countries. All in all, yield developments in the third quarter remained rather muted and the volatility (particularly on euro area bond markets) fell further to very low levels.

Central banks to set the tone in Q4 2016

Financial markets too complacent about future Fed key rate hikes – leeway for US yields to rise

In light of the lackluster growth environment, international bond markets are likely to get their direction from central banks’ behavior in Q4. To start with, in the US the way is paved for a further key rate hike in Q4, most likely in December. Although the Fed signaled once again its data dependency and a key rate hike is only priced with a probability of less than 60%, we stick to our view of a further step in December. As this is not completely priced and further hikes in 2017 are hardly priced either, corresponding signals by the Fed will impact US yields across the curve. The current complacency is not justified and financial markets are likely to adjust their expectations about the future course of the Fed. In addition, headline inflation will rise in the months to come from the current level of 1.1%. Not only due to higher energy prices but also due to upward pressure on wages, we see the average inflation rate in 2017 at 2.2%. This is forecast to leave its marks in higher inflation expectations (10-year inflation swaps currently below 1.9%) and, ultimately, in higher US yields. Nevertheless, as US growth will remain low by historical standards (and the Fed recently lowered its long-term growth rate to 1.8%) and taking into account that US yields are already high in international comparison, a significant increase in yields is not on the cards. On a 3-month horizon, 10-year yields are likely to rise by around 10 bps and on a 12-month horizon, an additional increase of 15 bps appears likely. At the shorter end of the curve, the upward movement can be slightly more pronounced. In the euro area, the ECB takes the opposite position. Although some market participants were disappointed recently as the central bank did not announce any change to its running QE program, we do not regard this as a signal that the ECB has already reached the end of the line. The scarcity of German Bunds is still looming and given the current yield level around half of outstanding Bunds are not eligible for the QE

10 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

program. Without adjustment, the ECB will have reached the issuer limit by the end of the year. Hence, an easing of criteria (increase in issuer limit from 33% to 50% as the most likely step) is seen to take place already in October. Despite expected adjustment of eligibility criteria for QE program in Q4, scarcity of Bunds unlikely to vanish for good

While this helps to continue the program as scheduled until March 2017, it is not sufficient for an extension of the program. However, given that inflation and inflation expectations are well below the ECB’s medium-term target, an extension of the program beyond March 2017 is likely. Hence, the scarcity issue will not vanish and German Bunds will remain well supported by the ECB purchases. Moreover, looming event risks in Q4 in combination with a deteriorating liquidity is forecast to increase the currently very low volatility. This can induce safe haven flows and is generally considered an additional factor to keep euro area core yields on a low level. However, the continued moderate economic rebound and higher inflation rates stand in the way of significantly lower yields. In the short term, a slight decrease appears likely, but on a 12-month horizon – assuming the end of QE approaching then – even slightly higher yields are possible.

US: SHORT- AND LONG-DATED GOVERNMENT BOND YIELDS 180

EURO AREA: SHORT- AND LONG-DATED GOVERNMENT BOND YIELDS 2.5

160 2.0

140

120

1.5

100

1.0

80

120

0.5

1.5

100

60

80

0.0

1.0 40

60 40

0.5

-0.5

20

20 0 01/15

0.0 07/15

01/16

07/16

0 01/15

01/16

07/16

Difference (in bps) 10-year euro area benchmark yield in % (rhs) 2-year euro area benchmark yield in % (rhs)

Difference (in bps) 10-year US benchmark yield in % (rhs) 2-year US benchmark yield in % (rhs)

Graph1

-1.0 07/15

Graph 2

Event risk to burden peripheral bonds in Q4 Peripheral bonds digested the Brexit vote well and spreads tightened in Q3. However, the performance was not even. While Spanish bonds outperformed, although a government has not been formed successfully yet, Italian and in particular Portuguese bonds came under pressure towards the end of the period under review.

Spread tightening of peripheral bonds unlikely to continue in Q4 given the looming event risks

Going forward, the positive and negative factors will likely nearly cancel each other out. On the one hand, the ongoing ECB purchases and the forecast program extension as well as the attractive carry will be welcomed by markets. On the other hand, there are non-negligible event risks in the months to come. To mention a few, DBRS will announce its rating decision about Portugal in October, the US Presidential elections will take place in November, and the constitutional referendum in Italy will be held in December. All in, we expect spreads to widen moderately in this environment. The outperformance of Spain versus Italy is likely to continue at least until the referendum. The forecast decrease in core yields, however, will support investors so that they should earn around the carry in Q3. Florian Späte +49 (0)221 / 4203-5052

11 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

Corporate Bonds   

Corporate bonds digested the Brexit vote well. Supported by the ECB’s Corporate Sector Purchase Program (CSPP), spreads continued to tighten and the corporate yield level marked a new historical low in the course of Q3. High supply and slowly deteriorating balance sheet ratios of non-financials are concealed by the CSPP for the time being. Non-financial spreads are likely to tighten on a 3-month horizon, but the trend is forecast to peter out thereafter. Also Financials proved resilient, with Subordinated bonds outperforming. Looking forward, while Senior Financials will keep proving defensive, the Subordinated segment will be exposed to high regulation-driven supply needs.

Since the start of the third quarter, euro area Investment Grade (IG) corporate bonds have performed well again. The duration adjusted corporate bond spread narrowed by 27 bps to 138 bps. Therewith, corporates have weathered the surprising Brexit vote well. Supported by a positive market sentiment and the good post Brexit news flow, the corporate yield level fell on balance from 1.16% to 0.86%. Temporarily, even a new historical low at 0.79% was marked. This contributed to a total return of 2.0% in Q3. It is noteworthy that it is the first time since Q4 2015 that financial corporates yielded a higher total return than non-financial corporates (2.1% versus 1.9%).

Ongoing strong performance of IG corporates in Q3; financials outperforming non-financials for the first time since Q4 2015

US IG corporates marched in lockstep with their European peers. Although the leverage of US corporates has reached high levels and the Fed is about to hike, the attractive carry and the forecasted moderate acceleration of growth in the coming months were sufficient to lead US spreads to the lowest level for more than one year. IBOXX EURO AREA CORPORATES

ECB: CSPP HOLDINGS

2.0

220

60

1.8

200

50

180

40

160

30

140

20

120

10

1.6

theoretically EUR 55bn by end of 2016

1.4 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.6 12/14

100

03/15

06/15

09/15

12/15

02/16

05/16

08/16

Yields in %, all maturities Duration adj. spread versus German sovereigns (in bps, rhs)

Graph1

0 06/16

Actual buying

08/16

10/16

12/16

Simulation (assuming constant purchases)

Graph 2; in bn EUR, weekly data

Given the strong tightening since the start of the year, the leeway for future tightening appears more limited. Moreover, the very low yield level limits future total returns for euro area IG corporates. However, on top of the CSPP, there are further factors which will support corporate bonds in the months to come. After a period of fund outflows between Q2 2015 and Q1 2016, flows have turned positive again in recent months. Demand is expected to remain strong given the uncertain market environment. Compared to other euro denominated fixed income assets, corporates still offer an attractive pick-up. While the yield level is extremely low, the spread level is still in line with the historical average. Hence, given the accommodative stance of the ECB and the growth environment, the valuation of euro area IG corporates is still broadly fair.

12 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

CSPP conceals deteriorating fundamentals of non-financials Worsening fundamentals of non-financials balanced by ECB QE – nevertheless, bulk of spread tightening over

After the summer break, the ECB has sped up its purchases of corporates. According to recent data, the ECB will buy at least € 8bn/month on average. This will continue to support non-financials strongly. But, this demand meets a high supply. In September alone, gross issuance of non-financials has been more than € 30bn so far. As redemptions sum up to only € 9bn, the net issuance is already above € 20bn. Moreover, the fundamentals have deteriorated in recent years. The leverage of non-financials is on the highest level since 2010 and the interest charge coverage has fallen, too – although not to worrisome levels yet. All in, until the end of 2016, non-financial spreads have leeway to tighten, but the bulk of the tightening has already gone.

IBOXX EURO AREA IG FINANCIALS

EU BANKS: LOSS ABSORBING FINANCING NEEDS

170

450 EBA stress test results

160 150

400

500

470

400

350 290

300

140

260

300 130

200

ECB expands APP, announces PSPP

120 110 100 09/15

11/15

01/16

03/16

Senior Financials

250 Brexit referendum

05/16

07/16

09/16

Subordinated Financials (rhs)

Graph1; Spread vs German Bund (duration adj), in bps

130

200

100

150

0 MREL

MREL ex deposits

Loss absorbing buffer

MREL

MREL ex deposits

8% buffer (most conservative scenario)

Graph 2; Source: EBA, data in EUR bn

Regulation-driven supply to weigh on Subordinated Financials Financial corporate bonds proved resilient in the third quarter, defying the concerns over a more significant impact following the Brexit vote. Both iBoxx IG Senior Financials and Subordinated duration-adjusted spreads tightened considerably, respectively by 24 bps to 112 bps and 52 bps to 308 bps. This has contributed to the positive total return performance, with the most risky segment (+3.7%) outperforming Senior Financials (+1.6%).

Poor banks’ profitability and regulation-driven supply needs will weigh on Subordinated bonds in particular

The more dovish stance of central banks, the reduced appeal for negative interest rate policies, the overall reassuring results of the European Banking Authority (EBA) stress test and better macro surprises all contributed to the positive performance. However, we do not anticipate this trend to continue as several headwinds remain in place. Indeed, banks’ profitability remains weak due to the low yield environment, with conduct risk losses (e.g. Deutsche Bank) posing further downward pressure. Moreover, banks will have to increase their loss absorbing buffers in order to comply with Basel III regulation. According to the EBA, EU banks would face financing needs between €130 bn and € 470 bn to meet the Minimum Requirement for own funds and Eligible Liabilities (MREL) targets. The issuance of subordinated instruments will play an important role in this process. Therefore, the spreads of Subordinated bonds are likely to come back under pressure over the medium term, while Senior Financials’ ones should remain broadly flat (target: 115 bps). Luca Colussa +39 040 / 671-250 Florian Späte +49 (0)221 / 4204-5052

13 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

Currencies 

Following the British ‘Leave’ vote in the EU referendum, the British pound has moderately extended its large losses incurred over the first days after the vote. The yen has soared on concerns about future bond purchases by the BoJ, while the EUR/USD has proven quite stable in a tight trading range. Looking ahead, we anticipate some US dollar strength on a correction of currently underpriced US rate hike expectations. This should also be visible in the EUR/USD, which is likely to inch lower over the coming months. We see continued depreciation pressures on the British pound, while the Swiss National Bank will continue to cap the underlying strength in the Swiss franc via intervention on forex markets. The Chinese yuan is likely to resume its trend weakening against the US dollar, while markets are right to not price any sharper devaluation of the Chinese currency.

  

Following the slump after the Brexit vote on June 23, the British pound has moderately extended its losses against the US dollar and the euro alike. At the same time, the Japanese yen rose sharply despite global risk sentiment recovering swiftly after the initial sell-off in late June. A key reason was mounting concerns that the Bank of Japan may proceed more cautiously with its bond purchase program. Despite already very low valuations on fundamental grounds, the Mexican peso came under renewed selling pressures on concerns about the potential fallout of a victory of Donald Trump in the US presidential elections. Meanwhile, the EUR/USD was barely changed and remained in a relatively tight trading range. FX PERFORMANCE AFTER BREXIT REFERENDUM

USD/EUR SPOT AND MOVING AVERAGES 1.50

8.0

1.45

6.0

1.40

4.0

1.35

2.0

1.30

0.0

1.25

-2.0

1.20

-4.0

1.15

-6.0

1.10

-8.0

1.05

-10.0

1.00 06/11 12/11 06/12 12/12 06/13 12/13 06/14 12/14 06/15 12/15 06/16

-12.0

USD/EUR

Data as of 26/9/2016

Graph 1; vs. euro since June 23, in %

3m mov. avg.

6mma

12mma

Graph 2

EUR/USD to edge down to lower end of trading range

Divergent monetary policies by the Fed and the ECB to become more visible in the EUR/USD exchange rate

The EUR/USD has been trading in a tight trading range between 1.09-1.15 USD/EUR for most of this year, with the Brexit vote in the UK only temporarily weakening the euro. Looking ahead, we do not anticipate triggers that would move the EUR/USD out of this trading range over the remainder of the year. That said, the outlook for central banks and rising hedging costs are likely to drive the EUR/USD towards the lower end of the trading range over the coming months. This should be in the first place the result of the divergent monetary policies pursued by the Fed and the ECB. Discounting less than two US rate hikes by end of 2018, markets are still underestimating the willingness by the Fed to normalize rates amid a solid labor market and recovering core inflation in our view. By contrast, we anticipate the ECB to extend its QE program to beyond the currently targeted March 2017. The widening transatlantic

14 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

Depreciation pressures on the British pound to continue to prevail

yield gap will be supportive for the US dollar. At the same time, the costs of hedging US dollar exposure – which is largely determined by short-term rates – will rise further from the 1.70% currently paid for 1-year contracts. As a result, the huge net outflows in long-term debt portfolio investment from the euro area (€ 425 bn over the twelve months to July) could exert a stronger effect on the exchange rate if euro area investors prefer to leave a larger part of their foreign debt unhedged. At the same time, however, an anticipated moderate increase in the oil price will partially offset the appreciation pressures on the US dollar.

BROAD BALANCE OF PAYMENTS AND TRADE WEIGHTED EURO 5.0

CHINESE YUAN AND DEVALUATION UNCERTAINTIES 10

4.0 3.0

5

2.0

6.90 6.80

10.0

6.70

0

1.0 0.0

-5

-1.0

-10

-2.0 -3.0

-15

-4.0

-20

-5.0

-25

-6.0 -7.0 05/00 11/01 05/03 11/04 05/06 11/07 05/09 11/10 05/12 11/13 05/15

BBoP*

12.0

Net portfolio flows* - debt instr.

-30

EUR TWI in %yoy (rhs)

6.50

6.0

6.40 6.30

4.0

6.20

2.0 0.0 07/10

6.10 6.00 04/11

01/12

10/12

07/13

CNY 1y forward volatility in %

*BBoP = net FDI + net portfolio flows + C/A; meth. break in 10/2012

Graph 3; BBoP data as 12m rolling sum, in % of GDP

6.60

8.0

04/14

01/15

10/15

07/16

CNY/USD spot (rhs)

Graph 4

In the meanwhile, we anticipate depreciation pressures on the British pound (GBP) to continue to prevail, with the formal Brexit decision yet to be triggered, the Bank of England leaning towards further monetary policy accommodations and the UK’s current account deficit still very wide. As far as the Swiss franc (CHF) is concerned, the Swiss National Bank will continue to intervene decisively in the FX markets to prevent a CHF strengthening amid the continued monetary policy accommodation by the ECB. Following the rally over recent months, the Japanese yen (JPY) is likely to trend slightly weaker, with the Bank of Japan still committed to further monetary policy accommodation and US yields likely to rise moderately.

Higher US rate expectations to weigh on EM currencies A guardedly more hawkish shift in US rate expectations should limit the upside to emerging markets currencies more generally. We also anticipate downside risks to EM currencies – and the Mexican peso (MXN) in particular – from the upcoming US presidential elections. In case of a victory of Donald Trump, worries about a protectionist shift in US trade policy could weigh on sentiment towards EMs particularly exposed to trade with the US.

Gradual weakness in the CNY/USD amid greater market trust that a sharp yuan devaluation is not on the cards

We also anticipate a continued, albeit controlled depreciation of the Chinese yuan (CNY) against a broadly stronger US dollar on rising US rate expectations. A further CNY depreciation bears much less risks of sudden capital outflows out of China than earlier this year. The contained forward volatility in the CNY/USD reflects regained market trust that Chinese authorities will not aim for a sharp devaluation of the CNY (see Graph 5). This gives the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) greater leeway to proceed with guiding the yuan moderately weaker towards 6.85 CNY/USD without unsettling global financial markets. Thomas Hempell +49 (0)221 / 4203-5023

15 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

Equities 

While recent good market momentum could last for a while, we forecast a slight negative return for the next three months and a marginally positive one in a year. We favor the euro area (EA) vs. the S&P 500. Given neutral valuations, a setback in the EA could be used to increase positions as higher capacity utilization, low input costs and supportive monetary conditions should help earnings to bottom out in yoy terms. We overweight the FTSE 100 and stay neutral on Japan and EMs. US is expensive and margins’ perspectives are poor. EM: Tactically prudent. Still constructive on a mid-term view, favoring India, Korea and the smaller CEE countries.

  

The economic resiliency after the Brexit surprised investors. Dovish monetary policies, plunging yields and spreads, stabilizing USD and commodity prices were then coupled with better global manufacturing and exporter’s momentum. As a result, equities trended higher, in particular where the currency weakened: Emerging Markets (EM) and the UK. Over the last three months, the latter outperformed (+14%) the MSCI EMU (+11%), the US (+8%) and the Topix (+10%, reluctant BoJ and a strong yen). Flows favored Ems, too. While declining YTD, cumulated flows into European equities, since 2015, remain positive (negative in the US). We favor the EA over the expensive US in an equity portfolio.

Macro resiliency and partial recovery from deflationary trends are translating into bottoming earnings growth

PRICE AND EARNINGS PERFORMANCE

MSCI EMU: EARNINGS REVISIONS AND MACRO SURPRISES

130

130

120

120

110

110

100

100

90

90

80 01/15

80

10

80 60

0

40 20

-10

0 -20

04/15

07/15

10/15

01/16

04/16

07/16

MSCI EMU: 1 year earnings expectations

10/16

-20

-40 -60

-30 12/14

-80 03/15

06/15

09/15

12/15

03/16

06/16

09/16

MSCI EMU price index

US earnings revisions ((up-down)/total, in %)

S&P500: 1 year earnings expectations

MSCI EMU earnings revisions ((up-down)/total, in %)

S&P 500 price index

Euro area macro surprises (rhs)

Graph 1; (01/01/2015 = 100)

Graph 2

Market complacency at risk in 3-6 months Earnings revisions have approached a cyclical high and the Q2 reporting season showed a better tone vs. Q1, even if signaling a persistent low growth for the median sector (zero for the US and -2.7% for the EA). While the good momentum could extend for a while, political risks and some softening of the macro momentum lead us to forecast mildly negative returns in 3 months. Additionally, we expect higher volatility of bond yields, which together with the next Fed’s hike and stretched US valuations, could generate temporary woes. As we forecast a slightly positive total return for EA equities on a 12-month horizon, we would profit from future setbacks. Low input and financial costs, stabilizing yields and yield curve trends, a dovish ECB plus higher capacity utilization and profit growth (+6% in 2017 vs. current -5%) should produce a slight overperformance of the EA vs. the US. The Topix performance will remain a function of a depreciating yen (BoJ induced). EA models are positive (negative for the US) even with lower-than-consensus earnings projections. Additionally, the Fed's hikes usually do not penalize the EA vs. the US. On the contrary, stabilizing or even

16 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

higher US 10-year rates or steeper yield curves tend to favor the EA which is more cyclical in nature. Wild cards are represented by investors’ outflows from Europe, political impasse and declining 2017 profit estimates in the next months (currently at 13% yoy vs. ours of 6%). The US should show a lower earnings growth and this, coupled with a more hawkish Fed and high PEs (16.9X vs. 13.5X of EA), should result in a negative US total return in 12 months. Mid-term, higher unit labor costs (ULC) and low GDP growth should maintain US earnings’ growth subdued notwithstanding the recent profit bounce of NIPA (GDP-based) as well S&P trailing profits. Exporters’ sales, in particular, rebounded due to a “less negative” momentum of global trade, commodities, manufacturing sector and a stable dollar. But we think NIPA profits remain at risk and with them in perspectives also the S&P trailing earnings and capex growth. Indeed, while being below the cyclical peak of Q4 2015, ULC growth stays above their historical average due to higher growth in wages and low productivity. The mild rebound in growth from H2 2016 will only marginally offset the drag on margins coming from high ULC. While our estimate for 2016 S&P trailing earnings (118$ p.s.) is close to the consensus of 117$, we have a much lower forecast for 2017 (121$ versus the consensus of 132$), which results in a 2017 earnings growth of merely 2.5%. This picture represents a risky one for the index given the high valuations.

Normalizing macro conditions, dovish monetary policy and stabilizing margins should induce an outperformance of the cheaper EA vs the US

MACRO SURPRISES AND MARKET PERFORMANCE

EA: LABOR MARKET AND CORPORATE PROFITS

200

20

100

10

200

60

150

40

100 20

0

0

-10

-100

50

0

0 -50

-20

-100 -20

-200

-300 09/10

-30 09/11

09/12

09/13

09/14

09/15

-40 -60 2000

-150 -200 2003

2006

2009

2012

2015

1Y % change of MSCI EMU trailing earnings

09/16

EA vs US: Macro surprises differential (abs. ch., yoy)

1 Y % change of employment (rhs)

EA vs US: Relative TR performance (yoy, rhs)

1 Y % change of gross operating surplus (rhs)

Graph 3; Euro area versus US (total return)

Graph 4

Regional markets: EA and Japan to overperform US We favor the EA over the US in an equity portfolio. We overweight the UK (with less emphasis after the rally) and keep EM neutral. The “cyclical” EA index gets support from a resilient economy, stabilizing yields and profits, a weaker euro, low cost of debt and a dovish ECB. We are neutral on Japan due to weak profits and the strong yen. Among the positives, we cite the relatively affordable valuations, stabilizing consumptions, industrial production and fiscal policy (in H2). The timing of the BoJ action is uncertain but it will try to maintain expectations high in the next months, stabilizing the yen from here. Within European sectors, a less negative macro assessment is worth a neutral stance on Financials. Risks to banks' business model add to the highest beta vs. both the GDP and the Stoxx 600 (1.3). Banks remain also impaired due to low growth, low rates, regulation, high NPLs and new competition. But some variables are getting “less negative” and the sector is underowned together with insurances and commodity-related stocks. NIRP (negative interest rate policy) looks indeed less in fashion recently and credit spreads have tighened. Futhermore, valuations are polarized in Europe as ever. The “value” stocks could slowly gain more interest by investors given a resilient macro momentum and stabilizing yields. Financials together with Oils and Telecoms are the highest in rank among the “value” stocks and banks' price-

17 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

to-book values are low if compared to the relative ROE trend and the one of credit loans. Finally, their earnings estimates have lost 50% since mid-2011. We favor a balanced portfolio with small overweight on IT, transportation and TLC. We retain a temporary underweight on pharma and are neutral on commodities.

EM: still constructive but tactically more prudent short term We are of the view that the impact on EM from the Fed hike expected in December is of limited extent

Over the last three months, Emerging markets have rallied, outperforming the MSCI World by 7.6 pp. The positive sentiment was driven by rising oil and commodity prices and a stabilizing US dollar. Short term, we are less bullish as the price performance reached so far has clearly decoupled from the earnings performance and market multiples are now aligned to history. That said, we remain constructive on a mid-term view. The international monetary backdrop remains supportive with DM central bankers signaling chances for further easing (ECB, BoE and BoJ) and this in turn provides EM central banks with a leeway to cut rates. While the Fed hike expected later in December could have some impact, we reckon its extent to be rather limited as the situation with credit, oil, current accounts, and growth is in much better shape now compared to 2013.

EQUITY MARKETS VALUATION DASHBOARD Markets USA JAPAN UK SWITZERLAND EMU FRANCE GERMANY GREECE ITALY PORTUGAL SPAIN EURO STOXX 50 STOXX SMALL EM, $ BRAZIL RUSSIA INDIA CHINA

PE 12m f

16.9 13.6 15.5 16.4 13.5 13.6 12.7 12.8 11.4 15.1 12.6 13.1 15.4 12.6 12.6 5.7 17.7 12.4

PB

Discount

11.4 -52.8 12.3 7.4 -4.3 -4.9 -16.4 0.1 -26.3 21.8 -2.9 -0.9 10.0 -13.9 45.1 -20.2 24.7 -4.6

12m f

Discount

2.6 1.1 1.8 2.2 1.4 1.3 1.5 1.3 0.8 1.7 1.1 1.3 1.7 1.4 1.4 0.6 2.7 1.4

EMERGING MARKETS: PROFITS AND PRICE

PCF 14.2 -13.1 -2.9 0.1 -8.9 -10.1 1.8 -16.1 -33.1 -2.9 -33.8 -11.4 3.8 -10.6 -18.1 -37.4 3.0 -18.0

12m f

DY

Discount

11.3 6.9 9.1 12.8 7.1 7.6 7.6 6.4 4.0 6.0 4.6 6.7 6.7 7.5 7.1 3.6 11.9 7.6

17.0 -0.6 16.8 15.8 13.2 14.5 18.5 9.1 -11.6 3.6 -9.8 13.5 -16.5 -2.9 -51.9 -22.0 4.2 2.1

12m f

Avg.

Discount Discount

2.2 2.3 4.0 3.7 3.8 3.8 3.3 3.6 5.3 4.8 4.9 4.2 3.1 2.7 3.5 5.1 1.6 2.3

1.5 23.6 1.9 14.3 -4.3 -0.4 -3.6 -9.3 14.0 4.9 -5.5 -1.9 -4.5 -24.4 -20.4 51.2 -2.7 -27.8

10.3 -22.5 6.1 2.2 1.1 0.0 1.9 0.6 -21.2 4.4 -10.3 0.8 0.4 -0.7 -1.1 -32.7 8.7 1.8

Note: Discount in % to long-run norm; blue and negative numbers = undervaluation. Red and pos. numbers = overvaluation; PEs are since 1987, the rest is since 2003. In case of DY, a discount means the market had a higher DY,

250

250

200

200

150

150

100

100

50 2005

2009

MSCI EM (USD)

meaning the market is at premium for this multiple. 12m f = expected in 12 months Source: Thomson Reuters Datastream, IBES estimates.

Table 1

50 2007

2011

2013

2015

2017

MSCI EM - 12m fwd earnings

Graph 5

Judging by several market multiples, the Chinese market has, after the rally, become slightly more expensive versus the EM index. It has now a valuation premium of around 2% versus its own history, whereas the EMs, on the same measures, are fair. Chinese industrial profits surged further to 20% in August, but it remains to be seen if other sectors’ earnings follow. While the market can get support short term from the recent better macro data, concerns over Chinese growth and credit (near 200% of GDP for the private non-financials) still remain in place for the medium term. Moreover, our macro-based models still indicate a negative potential of nearly 8% over the next three months. In relative terms we favor India and Korea, which are characterized by positive earnings revisions and a good value momentum, as well as smaller CEE countries (showing resilient/increasing earnings). Michele Morganti +39 040 / 671-599 Vladimir Oleinikov +49 (0)221 / 4203-5036

18 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

Asset Allocation    

The economic impact from the Brexit vote has been largely confined to the UK so far, with sentiment indicators in the rest of Europe affected only mildly. Risky assets have recovered quickly from the Brexit decision shock at the end of June, while bond yields remained at lower levels than before the vote. After the recent recovery, setbacks on stock markets become likely in the short term. European government bonds and IG non-financial corporates will remain backed by ECB purchases. This argues for maintaining a defensive allocation stance, characterized by a moderate underweight in equities mostly in favor of non-financial corporate bonds.

Fallout from Brexit less severe than widely feared

Financial markets to stay in risk-off mode

Overall, the economic fallout from the Brexit vote has turned out less negative than anticipated so far. Despite a recently somewhat weaker macroeconomic data flow, the impact on the global economy appears to be limited. Hence, moderate, but positive growth rates are expected. While in the euro area and in China growth is seen to decelerate moderately, an easing drag from inventories and a mild investment recovery will likely lift US growth in H2. Looking ahead, after the recent recovery amid continued political (US presidential elections, Italian referendum, …) and economic (Brexit fallout, ...) risks as well as stretched valuations, particularly in th US, setbacks on stock markets appear likely in the short term. European government bonds and IG non-financial corporate bonds should continue to benefit from the ongoing support by the ECB.

MODELPORTFOLIO: TAA – RADAR SCREEN

Graph1; active positions in percentage points

Underweight in equities to be maintained

Thus, particularly in the short term, we recommend to underweight equities, especially US stocks. In return, a slight overall overweight in European bonds seems appropriate. Apart from non-financial coporate bonds, we do not see significant differences in the return figures to be expected for the individual fixed income market segments. On a six to twelve months view, a moderate overexposure in European credit seems advisable. Thorsten Runde +49 (0)221 / 4203-5044

19 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

Forecasts GROWTH US Euro area Germany France Italy Non-EMU UK Switzerland Japan Asia ex Japan China CEE Latin America World

INFLATION

2014

2015

2016f

2017f

2.4

2.6

1.5

2.1

1.1

1.9

1.5

1.1

1.6

1.5

1.7

1.2

0.7

1.2

1.2

1.0

- 0.3

0.6

0.6

0.4

2.9

2.4

2.0

1.3

3.1

2.3

1.7

1.0

2.0

0.8

1.0

1.3

- 0.1

0.6

0.6

0.8

6.4

6.1

6.0

5.8

7.3

6.9

6.5

6.1

1.8

0.1

1.4

2.5

0.6

- 0.5

- 1.1

1.1

3.4

3.2

2.9

3.2

US Euro area Germany France Italy Non-EMU UK Switzerland Japan Asia ex Japan China CEE Latin America World

2014

2015

1.6

0.1

2016f 1.2

2.2

0.4

0.0

0.3

1.3

0.8

0.1

0.4

1.4

0.6

0.1

0.3

1.2

0.2

0.1

0.0

0.9

1.2

0.1

0.8

2.7

1.5

0.0

0.8

3.1

- 0.0

- 1.1

- 0.4

0.2

2.7

0.8

- 0.1

0.4

3.3

2.4

2.8

2.9

2.0

1.4

2.1

2.0

5.8

9.3

5.3

4.9

5.1

6.2

6.4

4.7

2.8

2.3

2.4

2.7

Regional and world aggregates revised to 2015 IMF PPP weights; Latin America Inflation excluding Argentina and Venezuela

FINANCIAL MARKETS 3-month Money Market US Euro-Area Japan UK Switzerland

10Y Government Bonds

Current

3M

6M

12M

0.86 -0.32 -0.02 0.38 -0.75

1.00 -0.35 -0.05 0.30 -0.75

1.20 -0.35 -0.10 0.30 -0.75

1.40 -0.35 -0.10 0.30 -0.75

Current

3M

6M

12M

US Euro-Area France Italy Japan UK Switzerland

1.61 -0.09 0.14 1.20 -0.04 0.71 -0.50

1.70 -0.15 0.10 1.20 -0.02 0.80 -0.55

1.75 -0.05 0.20 1.25 0.00 0.85 -0.45

1.85 0.05 0.30 1.30 0.00 0.90 -0.35

10Y Spreads

Current

3M

6M

12M

58 129

55 135

55 130

55 125

Covered Bonds GIIPS

EM Gvt. Bonds Spreads

Current

3M

6M

12M

462 188 143

480 210 139

485 207 137

500 204 133

12M

Latin America Asia ex Japan CEE

Corporate Bond Spreads

Current

3M

6M

123 111

120 115

115 115

115 120

Current

3M

6M

12M

1.12 101 113 1.30 0.86 1.09

1.09 102 111 1.24 0.88 1.09

1.08 103 111 1.26 0.86 1.09

1.11 103 114 1.31 0.85 1.11

IBOXX Non-Financial IBOXX Sen-Financial

Forex USD/EUR JPY/USD JPY/EUR USD/GBP GBP/EUR CHF/EUR

Equities S&P500 MSCI EMU TOPIX FTSE SMI

Current

3M

6M

12M

2163 106.7 1346 6880 8249

2110 105.5 1325 6790 8090

2100 104.5 1310 6720 8015

2090 104.0 1325 6660 8010

As of 26.09.16 (3-Day-Average)

2017f

20 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

Spreads

Government Bonds (10Y)

FORECAST-INTERVAL* – 3-MONTHS HORIZON US

1.49

Germany

-0.16

UK

-0.49

113 47 413 179

EM Europe Spread

USD/EUR

S&P500

98

547 241 164

101

115

129

1.09

1.13

102

CHF/EUR

1,212

210

135

0.85

TOPIX

480

157 63

120

98

GBP/EUR

MSCI EMU

55

105 1.05

JPY/USD

135

139

114

Euro Corporate Spread (Sen-Fin)

Forex

0.90

-0.55

10Y-GIIPS Spread

Euro Corporate Spread (Non-Fin)

Equities

0.80

-0.61

EUR Covered Bond Spread

EM Asia Spread

1.91 -0.14

0.70

Switzerland

EM Latin America Spread

1.70 -0.15

0.88

106 0.91

1.06

1.09

1.12

2,001

2,110

2,219

106

113

1,325

FTSE 100

6,456

SMI

7,655

6,790

1,438 7,124

8,090

8,525

1.85

2.29

Government Bonds (10Y)

FORECAST-INTERVAL* – 12-MONTHS HORIZON US

1.41

Germany

0.02

UK Switzerland

0.71

Spreads

EM Latin America Spread EM Asia Spread

Forex

204

88

USD/EUR

1.04 0.80

S&P500 MSCI EMU

88

TOPIX

1,094

281 190

115

146

120

152

1.11

1.18

103

95

CHF/EUR

Equities

71 646

84

Euro Corporate Spread (Sen-Fin)

SMI

55 500 133

Euro Corporate Spread (Non-Fin)

FTSE 100

39 127

GBP/EUR

-0.20 170

354 76

JPY/USD

0.08 1.09

125

80

EUR Covered Bond Spread

EM Europe Spread

0.90 -0.35

-0.50

10Y-GIIPS Spread

0.05

0.85

111 0.90

1.04

1.11

1.18

1,872

2,090

2,308

104

120

1,325 5,969 7,048

6,660 8,010

1,556 7,351 8,972

* The forecast range for the assets is predetermined by their historical volatility. The volatility calculation is based on a 5 year history of percentage changes, equally weighted in the case of the 12-month forecast and exponentially weighted in the case of the 1 month forecast. The length of the bars within each asset group is proportional to the relative deviations from their mean forecasts.

21 | Generali Investments – Investment View Q4 2016

Imprint Head of Research (ad interim): Deputy Head of Research:

Santo Borsellino ([email protected]) Dr. Thomas Hempell, CFA ([email protected])

Team:

Luca Colussa, CFA ([email protected]) Radomír Jáč ([email protected]) Jakub Krátký ([email protected]) Michele Morganti ([email protected]) Vladimir Oleinikov, CFA ([email protected]) Dr. Martin Pohl ([email protected]) Dr. Thorsten Runde ([email protected]) Frank Ruppel ([email protected]) Dr. Christoph Siepmann ([email protected]) Dr. Florian Späte, CIIA ([email protected]) Dr. Martin Wolburg, CIIA ([email protected]) Paolo Zanghieri ([email protected])

Edited by:

Elisabeth Assmuth ([email protected]) Tamara Hardt ([email protected])

Issued by:

Generali Investments Europe Research Department Cologne, Germany · Trieste, Italy Tunisstraße 19-23, D-50667 Cologne Version completed on September 29

Sources for charts and tables:

Thomson Reuters Datastream, Bloomberg, own calculations

In Italy: Generali Investments Europe S.p.A Società di gestione del risparmio

In France: Generali Investments Europe S.p.A Società di gestione del risparmio

In Germany: Generali Investments Europe S.p.A. Società di gestione del risparmio

Corso Italia, 6 20122 Milano MI, Italy

2, Rue Pillet-Will 75009 Paris Cedex 09, France

Tunisstraße 19-23 50667 Cologne, Germany

www.generali-invest.com This document is based on information and opinions which Generali Investments Europe S.p.A. Società di gestione del risparmio considers as reliable. However, no representation or warranty, expressed or implied, is made that such information or opinions are accurate or complete. Opinions expressed in this document represent only the judgment of Generali Investments Europe S.p.A. Società di gestione del risparmio and may be subject to any change without notification. They do not constitute an evaluation of any strategy or any investment in financial instruments. This document does not constitute an offer, solicitation or recommendation to buy or to sell financial instruments. Generali Investments Europe S.p.A. Società di gestione del risparmio is not liable for any investment decision based on this document. Generali Investments Europe S.p.A. Società di gestione del risparmio may have taken, and may in the future take, investment decisions for the portfolios it manages which are contrary to the views expressed herein. Any reproduction, total or partial, of this document is prohibited without prior consent of Generali Investments Europe S.p.A. Società di gestione del risparmio. Generali Investments is part of the Generali Group which was established in 1831 in Trieste as Assicurazioni Generali Austro-Italiche. Generali Investments is a commercial brand of Generali Investments Europe S.p.A. Società di gestione del risparmio.

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