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Investment

Outlook 2020

Resilience after all.


Investment ­Outlook 2020

Resilience
after all.

credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 3
Letter from the CEO

From my perspective
Tidjane Thiam
CEO Credit Suisse Group AG

It is my pleasure to present our Investment Outlook 2020.


The past year has turned out better for most investors than
might have been expected, considering the geopolitical
uncertainty that prevailed during the period and weakening
economic momentum.

So what is in store for 2020? It is unlikely that all the The main results of our analysis and our key views for the
issues that have accompanied us since early 2018 will be economy and markets are presented in the pages that
resolved, be it the US-China trade conflict or political follow. I trust you will find our analysis both interesting and
uncertainties in Europe. Investors will also continue to have relevant as you plan for the year ahead.
to contend with extremely low (or negative) interest rates in
bond markets. These are among the key themes that In this vein, I wish you a prosperous – and resilient – 2020.
figure in my discussions with clients and other stakeholders.
Tidjane Thiam
Putting all of these issues into a broader context and differ-
entiating between what is of greater or lesser relevance
for businesses and investors alike is the paramount and
arduous task of our bank’s economists, financial
analysts and strategists. The sum of these efforts is a
central element of our holistic House View.

4
Overview

Contents 04 Letter from the CEO


08 Editorial
10 Review of 2019
12 Core views 2020
60 Disclaimer
64 Imprint

14 26 44 54
Global Main asset Alternative Investment
economy classes investments strategy 2020
16 Overview 28 Overview 46 Real estate 56 Overview
18 Regions 30 Fixed income 48 Private equity 58 Forecasts
34 Equities 50 Hedge funds
42 ­Currencies 52 Commodities

6 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 7
Editorial

Resilience after all


Michael Strobaek Global Chief Investment Officer
Nannette Hechler-Fayd’herbe Global Head of Economics & Research and RCIO IWM

Unforeseen and surprising events have shaped 2019,


and we have little doubt that they will impact the world in 2020
as well. In light of such uncertainty, it is of utmost
importance for investors to build resilient portfolios.

Even if the US-China trade war eases and Brexit uncer­tainty The following pages lay out the key elements of the
diminishes, the year 2020 is unlikely to be entirely smooth Credit Suisse House View for 2020. We have strived
sailing: a polarized US presidential campaign, margin pres- to provide a consistent and well-structured guide
sure, high corporate debt, and fewer interest rate cuts across the most important asset classes, markets and
by the major central banks – not to mention unexpected sub-segments. It suggests that investors who hold
political developments – are likely to sporadi­cally test well-diversified portfolios, tilted toward areas of extra return,
investor nerves. should continue to garner healthy returns. Furthermore,
sustainability is increasingly relevant for investors, as it has
Overall, however, we believe that the global economy and already become a matter of great importance for voters
risk assets will continue to show considerable resilience and consumers around the world.
in the face of these challenges. This is the message that
the title of this year’s publication, Resilience after all, is We hope you will find this publication helpful and wish you
intended to capture. a successful year ahead.

While we expect rather subdued economic growth in 2020


and returns that are generally lower than in 2019, a serious
market downturn or even financial crisis seems unlikely to
us. We observe a number of imbalances in various econo-
mies and sectors, but none of them seems serious
enough to trigger such a crisis. Conversely, technological
progress remains in full force and, importantly, policy
makers will continue to provide support.

8 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 9
Review of 2019

Markets defy
weakening growth

Fed turns as global manufacturing weakens Rates follow manufacturing Equities: Testing highs Emerging markets lag behind developed markets
Global growth and manufacturing sentiment have been At the start of 2019, the major equity markets rebounded Total return indexes (01/01/2018=100)
weakening since the USA first imposed tariffs on China + Hikes Global manu- strongly after their setback in late 2018, fueled by the
54 facturing PMI
and other countries. Problems in the German auto +3
Fed’s shift to policy easing. The rally stalled temporarily 110 Developed
Number of markets
sector only exacerbated the weakness. But because the rate changes mid-year on mounting worries over the global economy. (MSCI World)
US economy held up, in large part thanks to the 2018 52 expected by Emerging market (EM) equities rebounded as well. But Emerging
market (RHS) markets (MSCI
tax cuts, the US Federal Reserve (Fed) projected continued 0 whether the underperformance vs. developed markets 100 Emerging
Markets)
rate hikes going into 2019. After equities corrected 50 Last data point that began with the start of the US-China trade war
September 2019 Last data point
sharply in late 2018, the Fed changed course, moving Source Bloomberg,
in early 2018 has been broken remains to be seen. 25/10/19
-3
to policy easing. 2016 2017 2018 2019 - Cuts
Datastream,
2018 2019
Source Datastream,
Credit Suisse
Credit Suisse

Bonds rally across the board Bond yields plummet to new lows Equity sectors: Gains across the board IT still tops
US Treasury yields declined sharply, though not quite to Yield on 10-year government bonds (in %) All of the major equity sectors participated in the early 2019 Total return indexes for MSCI global equity sectors
post-financial crisis lows as fears of a global downturn rebound, but only IT managed to build decisively on its (Index, 01/01/2019 = 100)
took hold. In Germany and Switzerland, yields reached 4 USA gains. In contrast, demand concerns and lower oil prices
Germany 130 IT
historic lows, with all now below Japanese levels. 3 Switzerland held back energy, while the drug pricing debate in the Industrials
Despite far higher debt, the rally also took hold in Italy Italy USA weighed on the healthcare sector’s performance. Financials
2 120 Healthcare
as the government moved away from its anti-euro In view of weakening manufacturing demand, it is Energy
and anti-Brussels stance. Emerging market bond yields 1 surprising that the industrials sector held up so well.
Last data point 110 Last data point
also fell, though not quite as much. 0 25/10/19 Financials slightly underperformed the MSCI World, 25/10/19

2015 2017 2019


Source Bloomberg,
Credit Suisse
as flat or inverted yield curves dented earnings. 01/2019 07/2019
Source Datastream,
Credit Suisse

Commodities: Diverging paths Gold outperforms cyclicals USD still strong Trade war drags down EUR, CNY
US tariffs on China and the slowdown in global Index, 01/01/2018 = 100 After 2018 gains, the USD continued to appreciate Currencies versus USD (Index, 01/01/2018 = 100)
manufacturing weighed on industrial metals such as against almost all major currencies, supported by better
copper. As for oil, early 2019 saw prices recover 120 Gold US growth and the (remaining) interest rate advantage. 108 JPY
Oil (WTI) CHF
as the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries 110 Copper Only the JPY gained once again, as the Bank of Japan EUR
104
sought to restrain supply. But prices softened again did not lower rates. China allowed the CNY to devalue CNY
100
as demand slowed. Meanwhile, gold prices rallied on to offset some of the tariff-related pressure. This weighed 100
the back of lower interest rates. 90 on other EM currencies, in addition to local rate cuts;
96 Last data point
80
Last data point
25/10/19
only the MXN held up as the country reached a new trade 25/10/19
Source Datastream, agreement with the USA and Canada. 2018 2019
Source Bloomberg,
2018 2019 Credit Suisse Credit Suisse

10 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 11
Core views 2020

Credit Suisse A recession is unlikely in light


of ongoing monetary policy support,
House View in short ample credit, some fiscal easing
and low oil prices.

Geopolitics Economic growth Real estate


Our base case is a de-escalation in the Global economic growth is set to remain Most real estate investments should continue to
US-China conflict, but uncertainty remains sluggish with only a minor recovery in industrial deliver moderately positive returns. We prefer
high. The US presidential election campaign production, capital expenditure (capex) and direct real estate where lower interest rates do
is likely to be highly polarized and may affect trade. However, a recession is unlikely in light not yet appear to be fully reflected in the price.
investor sentiment. European political of ongoing monetary policy support, ample
risks should abate as uncertainty over Brexit credit, some fiscal easing and low oil prices.
subsides.

Inflation Interest rates Commodities


Inflation looks to remain well below central We expect the US Federal Reserve (Fed) to remain Barring a major escalation involving Iran and
banks’ 2% target in Europe and Japan, on hold after the third rate cut in October 2019. Saudi Arabia, oil prices are likely to continue
while it should decline in China and other The European Central Bank (ECB) will also stand to stay subdued. Gold looks set to remain
emerging markets (EM). However, pat on rates while pursuing quantitative easing supported on the back of extremely low interest
inflation is likely to exceed 2% in the USA, (QE). The Swiss National Bank (SNB) should be rates.
at least temporarily. able to avoid rate cuts, but may need to continue
intervening in the foreign exchange market.
Rate cuts should continue in a number of EM.

Fixed income Equities Forex


Returns on most core government bonds are Against the backdrop of limited earnings growth The USD should hold up initially, but the EUR
likely to be negative, except in the USA. Tight and flat to higher bond yields, returns in key should gain in H2 as a Eurozone recovery takes
spreads imply anemic returns for investment grade equity markets are likely to be in the single-digit hold. The CNY could depreciate slightly more
bonds in developed markets (DM). Expect solid range. EM equities can recover if the trade war vs. the USD on domestic weakness. The GBP
returns on most EM hard currency debt, with abates, and financial stocks should benefit if yield would gain strongly on the back of a Brexit
strong – albeit volatile – returns in some EM local curves continue to steepen. In a low yield resolution. Our base case is for the CHF and
currency debt, as well as frontier markets. Sub­ environment, stable-dividend stocks would do well. JPY to trade sideways.
ordinated financial debt in DM remains attractive.

12 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 13
Global
economy
Global economy Overview

Moderate growth, Main macro risks


The key risk remains that the damage done by the
trade war carries into 2020. Other geopolitical From Quantitative

but no recession
risks, especially the potential for a flare-up in the Easing (QE) to
Middle East, remain in place but are less likely Modern Monetary
to materialize. In particular, we do not expect the Theory (MMT)
global economy to be hit by an oil-price shock
but rather expect oil prices to stay under pressure Find out more:
due to excess supply. credit-suisse.com/mmt

Even in the event of a trade deal, it seems likely


that China’s economy will continue to slow
somewhat, at least in H1 2020. High mortgage Meanwhile, the USA is likely to face an unusually
We expect only sluggish global growth in 2020 of 2.5%, debt combined with greater job uncertainty are polarized election, which could negatively affect
almost unchanged from 2019, but a recession likely to hold back consumer spending, while policy
makers will remain cautious regarding stimulus
business and consumer sentiment. A further risk
is that higher-than-expected inflation would raise
continues to look unlikely given supportive macro policies. measures. Slowing growth in China will continue fears of stagflation. In such a case, the Fed
De-escalation on the trade war front will be key. to limit the recovery potential of its main trading
partners in the region. An escalation of tensions in
would be constrained in its actions. Bond yields
might then rise substantially, triggering a general
Hong Kong would pose downside risks. tightening of financial conditions.

On the following pages, we look at the outlook


for 2020 on a country-by-country and regional
basis, focusing on the base case as well as risks.

Over the past year, we have witnessed a signifi- Path to recovery in 2020 Downturn in global manufacturing and trade US imports from China sharply lower
cant slump in global manufacturing and trade, We expect the slump in manufacturing to bottom YoY changes (in %, 12-month moving average) YoY change (in %, 12-month moving average)
with global export volumes dropping by about 2% out in the first half of 2020, not least because
from the high of 2018, the biggest decline in of a natural inventory cycle. As the slowdown in
recent decades except for periods of recession. manufacturing abates, the risk of it “infecting” 15 35
the services sector should also diminish. The
More than trade easing of policy by the US Federal Reserve (Fed)
The USA’s imposition of tariffs on China and over the course of 2019 has helped boost credit, 10
China’s retaliation undoubtedly contributed to this especially to US households. This support should 25
slump, but the domestic slowdown in China – remain in place in 2020 – although we do not
due to more cautious households and restrained expect further rate cuts – and should for instance
5
credit growth – played a key role as well. Weak- bolster home purchases as well as other
ness in German auto sales exacerbated the consumer spending. 15
manufacturing slump. As a result of heightened
uncertainty, global corporate capital expenditure Interest rate cuts by the Fed have also eased 0
(capex) slowed significantly as well. constraints on emerging markets dependent on
USD funding. Central banks in a number of 5
Meanwhile, the services sector lost some steam countries should be able to lower interest rates -5
but continued to grow in most countries. With further, not least because inflation is declining.
the services sector being the largest employer in In Europe, we expect fiscal policy to ease
developed countries as well as many emerging gradually, which should support the growth rate -5
-10
markets, demand for labor continued to grow in the region. However, a key to recovery will be
and wages have been rising, albeit gradually. at least a partial resolution to the trade war.
As a result, consumer sentiment and spending A reduction in tariffs would improve profitability
remained relatively robust. and sentiment in both the USA and China, 2002 2006 2010 2014 2018 2002 2006 2010 2014 2018
which should help reignite capital spending.

Trade volume Last data point August 2019 Last data point August 2019
Industrial production Source Datastream, Credit Suisse Source Datastream, Credit Suisse

16 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 17
Global economy Regions

USA Eurozone

Dodging recession Further fiscal support


Growth: We expect sluggish gross tariffs. However, their full elimina- likely than a hike in 2020, and the Growth: We expect GDP growth should also support the ongoing impetus. More concretely, 2020
domestic product (GDP) growth for tion appears unlikely and the trade Federal Reserve could increase of 1%. A de-escalation of the US- economic expansion. Monetary might well mark the first year of
the US economy in 2020 (1.8%), war could potentially escalate asset purchases. While a potential China trade dispute would reduce policy is unlikely to ease further Eurozone fiscal expansion in over
accompanied by elevated recession in other areas. If the USA, for ex- rebound in manufacturing, as well the drag on the Eurozone, and within the Eurozone, but the a decade. Furthermore, we could
risks (20%–30% probability in the ample, implemented tariffs on as labor shortages that boost in- Germany in particular, helping to European Central Bank (ECB) well see a more generous interpre-
next 12 months), and rising core European automobiles and Europe flation would, in principle, argue for end the contraction of exports decisions taken in September tation of the Stability and Growth
inflation – at least at the beginning retaliated, European producers rate hikes, any rate move close and industrial production. Given 2019 (rate cut and renewed asset Pact by the European Commis-
of the year. While job growth will and US consumers would be hurt. to the election seems very unlikely. the resilience of domestic demand purchases) have already crea- sion, which would allow Italy and
moderate, rising labor costs will con- and the Eurozone labor market ted a slight tailwind. other countries to further ease
tinue to weigh on corporate profits. What to watch: After cutting rates throughout 2019, the removal of fiscal policy. A continued trade war
Good news could come from a three times in 2019, our base case that headwind should allow Euro- What to watch: New leadership and its potential expansion to
recovery in manufacturing activity is for the Fed to remain on hold. zone GDP growth to gradually of the European Union (EU) and Europe poses the greatest risk,
if the USA and China reduced Nevertheless, another cut is more improve. Resilient credit growth ECB could bring new political as well as a no-deal Brexit.

China Japan

Cautious consumers Olympic boost


Growth: The government is likely However, assuming a de-escalation US trade policy. Unless the trade Growth: The Japanese economy Meanwhile, the 2020 Summer tax hike will be offset to some
to pare its growth target to 5.9%, of the trade dispute with the USA war escalates, the Chinese is likely to slow somewhat in 2020 Olympics will provide a tailwind by extent by added government spend-
and actual numbers could drop and moderate stimulus measures, authorities are likely to limit any (GDP growth of 0.4%), but the boosting inbound tourism. Public ing. Given its sensitivity to global
somewhat below that objective. the decline in economic growth will depreciation of the CNY. expected turn in global manufactur- investment is also likely to remain trade and the Chinese economy,
Apart from the lingering impact of be limited. ing should limit the slowdown. The strong in the first half of the year. the outcome of the trade war and
US tariffs, the burden of real consumption tax hike of October the evolution of demand in China
estate debt, job insecurity, as well What to watch: At the end of the 2019 may also continue to exert What to watch: Monetary policy are important as well. New trade
as weakness in local financial first quarter, the Chinese govern- a drag. However, assuming there is will remain loose in 2020 and agreements with the EU and
markets will likely restrain domestic ment could announce added fiscal no global recession, the Japanese beyond. In fact, the Bank of Japan the USA provide some long-term
consumer spending. The limited spending for 2020. With more economy will be able to overcome (BoJ) could potentially raise its upside.
efficiency of credit allocation fiscal room, authorities are likely to domestic headwinds. inflation target. The consumption
remains a key concern, and the rely less on special purpose bonds
manufacturing sector will remain and more on direct spending to
under pressure due to continued support growth, at least until there
overcapacity and competitive is greater visibility with regard to
disadvantages in some sectors. the 2020 US election and future

18 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 19
Global economy Regions
Many losers…

Untangling the trade war Tariffs hurt consumers,


either directly…
…or indirectly via higher
input prices
… It’s less business
going on. It’s less
investment. It’s
more uncertainty.
Increase in prices for
steel mill products
Increase in prices for within six months after US
tariffs imposed
It weighs like a big,
washing machines
dark cloud on the
From trade peace to trade war after US tariffs
imposed in global economy.
February 2018

Christine Lagarde
Have 90 years of trade liberalization ended?
Effective US tariff rate (in %) Trade wars +9% +15% Incoming European
Central Bank President,

are good
1941 1964 – 1967 1994 1997 – 1999
Atlantic General North WTO agreements 23 September 2019 on CNBC
Charter Agreement on American on IT, telecom,
(US-UK) Tariffs and Free Trade financial services

and easy
30 Trade (GATT) – Agreement
Kennedy Round (NAFTA) Tariff rate
created Forecast

to win.
1947 for 2020
20 GATT 1973 1995 9%
founded Abandon- World Trade Tariffs weigh on business plans… ...without solving structural issues
ment Organization Last data point Survey of capex intentions of US companies US general government structural balance and trade balance (in % of GDP)
of fixed (WTO) October 2019
exchange created
(Empire State and Philly Fed), indexed
(2020 estimate)
10 rates Source Donald Trump 0 Fiscal deficit
U.S. International Trade
1930
Trade Commission
US President, 40
Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act -2 balance (excl.
(March 2019) 2 March 2018 on Twitter petroleum)
30
-4
20
-6
10
-8
Non-tariff barriers have been on the rise The USA has ratcheted up the trade war… 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 Last data point
since the financial crisis Average tariff rate on US imports from China (in %) 2018 (2019 estimate)
Last data point October 2019 Source Datastream, Credit Suisse 2003 2007 2011 2015 2019 Source IMF, Bloomberg
Number of trade distortions reported at year-end (absolute number)
30 26
1300 19
20 15
900
6
10 …and a few lucky winners
500 10 4
3

2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 Baseline 01/18 06/18 09/18 05/19 08/19 10/19
03/18
World total Last data point end of 2018 Last data point October 2019
World total excluding USA Source Global Trade Alert Source Peterson Institute for International Economics (2019)
Countries gained from the trade war … … as did Brazilian soybean farmers
US import shares and changes, 2015 to 2019 Soybean imports by China since the start of the trade war
from …

Vietnam
Taiwan
+48.5% -15.3% Brazil 78%*
United States 5%*
...but China has retaliated against the USA while favoring others I don’t believe Mexico
+16.7% +9.8%

-83%
China
Trade-weighted average tariffs on China’s imports (in %)
any country
in the world is going
United States
Last data point
25 from the USA
August 2019

to retaliate
from other countries Source

+30%
20 US Census Bureau
Increase in tariffs
15 Reduction in tariffs [against us]. Brazil

10
* Share of soybean imports to China
02/04

23/08
06/07

24/09

01/06
01/05

01/09
01/07
01/01

01/01

15/12
01/11

Last data point Peter Navarro from October 2018 to February 2019
15 December 2019 (estimate)
Source Bown, Chad P. (2019)
White House trade adviser, Last data point February 2019
2018 2019 US-China Trade War, PIIE 2 March 2018 on Fox News Source US Dept. of Agriculture, IHS

20 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 21
Global economy Regions

UK Asian EM (ex-China)

Still all about Brexit Prospects hinge on trade war


Growth: Assuming a smooth Brexit parliament could produce deadlock What to watch: The BoE’s wait- Growth: The outlook for the more prominently Vietnam, stand to What to watch: A de-escalation
process, our central expectation is and more uncertainty. While a no- and-watch approach is likely to advanced countries of North Asia, benefit as production continues to of the US-China trade war would
that the UK grows somewhat more deal Brexit is unlikely, in our view, continue while Brexit uncertainty i.e. South Korea and Taiwan, shift in their direction. Singapore significantly benefit the countries
strongly in 2020 than in 2019. such a scenario would cause a remains high. If the UK leaves remains subdued due to weakness suffered a significant setback in closely tied into China-based
A Conservative majority would allow significant recession, with a decline the EU with a deal or if Brexit is in Chinese trade, with growth of 2019 in part due to the slowdown supply chains. Even more import-
the UK to leave the European in real GDP of 1% to 2% even if canceled, there would be consider- just over 2%. The outlook for in global and China-oriented trade; ant is the evolution of domestic
Union (EU) with a deal, while a the Bank of England (BoE) eases able upside to corporate invest- Hong Kong will depend strongly a slight rebound to around 1.7% demand in China and its impact on
Labour government (in a majority monetary policy and the government ment and overall growth. The BoE on local political developments. seems likely in 2020 if trade imports from the region. In India,
or coalition) would open the door loosens fiscal policy in response. might then begin hiking interest Meanwhile, economic growth tensions abate. Growth in India is which is much less dependent on
to a second referendum. A hung rates in the course of 2020. remains far stronger in much of likely to remain high in absolute global trade, domestic financial
Southeast Asia, which has more terms at around 6%, but well below and monetary stability are key to
catch-up potential and is less potential due to the ongoing a successful recovery.
integrated into China-based supply weakness in the banking and real
chains. Some countries, most estate sectors.

Switzerland Australia

Trade holds key to recovery Eye on household debt


Growth: We expect moderate The mechanical and electrical en- case, it could come to pass if the Growth: While low growth in What to watch: Although house The Reserve Bank of Australia
GDP growth in 2020 (of 1.4%) gineering (MEM) sector will likely global economy remains weaker household income, weaker prices have already corrected to (RBA) lowered its interest rate in
in light of the still subdued global remain under pressure due to still than expected and other central housing market conditions and some extent, housing affordability several increments in 2019 to
backdrop. Domestic demand weak demand from key export banks cut rates. US tariffs on elevated household debt weighed is still low. Real estate thus support the economy and could
should remain supported by contin- markets, including Germany and pharma exports or the classification on consumption in 2019, an remains high on the political continue to do so in 2020. At
ued immigration, robust employ- China. of Switzerland as a currency increase in public spending agenda and further housing the same time, financial supervision
ment and slightly higher wages. manipulator pose some risk. supported economic growth. supply reforms are very likely. will remain in focus given the
Pharmaceuticals exports are likely What to watch: The Swiss Increased geopolitical tensions Infrastructure investment should stability risks related to real estate.
to remain on a clear upward trend. National Bank (SNB) will do what would increase the risk of continue to provide support in
it can to prevent CHF appreciation. renewed safe haven flows into 2020. After a relatively subdued
While a rate cut is not our base the CHF. 2019, we expect Australia’s
economy to pick up with an
estimated growth rate of 2.8%.

22 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 23
Global economy Regions

EMEA Regions

Coping with setbacks In summary


Growth: Turkey appears to have have suffered setbacks due to also complicate the outlook, in our Our regional views amount to a view, given continued accommo- by the slowdown in global trade,
emerged from recession in Q2 their close ties with the German view. In Russia, low inflation (for mixed global growth picture. US as dative monetary policy, ample bank for instance – which suggests
2019 and is likely to achieve growth auto industry, but growth is likely the previously mentioned reasons) well as Chinese growth is likely to credit in most regions, as well as that even limited shocks, whether
of 2%–3% in 2020. The headline to remain reasonably robust given should pave the way for lower be somewhat lower than in 2019. moderate oil prices. Apart from the geopolitical or economic in
inflation rate, projected at 12% for strong domestic demand and interest rates. A pick-up in Germany At the same time, the expected global trade tensions, we see no nature, could turn a downturn into
end-2019, could slow further these countries’ strong competitive would benefit Eastern Europe. recovery in the Eurozone and select obvious shocks that would trigger something more serious.
after Q1 2020. Growth in Russia position in other areas of trade. There are significant downside in- EM should offset some of the a recession. However, the global
is likely to remain anemic at only flation risks building in South softness. A major setback to global economy did come close to
around 1%–2% due to unfavorable What to watch: In Turkey, policy Africa. If they come to pass, South growth seems unlikely, in our recession in 2019 – measured
demographics, bureaucratic bur- mismanagement remains the Africa will probably be one of a
dens and low efficiency of public key risk against the backdrop of very few countries with large poten-
investment. Weak metals prices President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s tial for policy easing in 2020. In-
as well as structural issues such as target for single-digit interest vestors will also be closely watching
labor market rigidities and a lack rates and real GDP growth of 5% to see if Moody’s downgrades
of public investment will continue to next year. The changing domestic its rating for South Africa after the
hold back South Africa. A number political landscape and ongoing 2020 budget.
of Eastern European economies (albeit muted) geopolitical risks

Employment high and still growing Consumer confidence close to peak


Total employment in the USA, Eurozone and Japan Consumer confidence in the USA, Eurozone and Japan
Latin America (in millions) (GDP-weighted average, standardized)

Bottoming out 380 1.5

Growth: Brazil and Mexico, the We expect GDP growth of 2.7% What to watch: In Mexico, other
region’s two largest economies, in 2020. In Mexico, growth should reforms such as tax reform look 370 0.5
showed only marginally positive also improve somewhat (1.6% in more likely despite political ten-
growth in 2019. This was in part 2020), partly in response to mone- sions. In addition, US congressional
due to the global manufacturing tary policy easing. Meanwhile, approval of the new free trade
slowdown, but domestic policy some domestic risks have abated, agreement known as the United
uncertainty played an even bigger including uncertainty over the States-Mexico-Canada Agreement 360 -0.5
role. The outlook for Brazil has 2020 budget and financing pres- (USMCA) would boost confidence,
improved, however, with the sures on state-owned oil company but this is not a given. Inflation in
approval of pension reform, which Pemex. That said, it is question- Mexico has declined to the central
will strengthen long-term fiscal able whether added government bank’s 3% target, and should
stability and should be positive for investment in the oil sector will remain fairly stable at below 4% 350 -1.5
privatizations and a continuation produce adequate returns given in Brazil.
of the fiscal consolidation process. declining global oil prices.

2006 2010 2014 2018 2007 2011 2015 2019

Last data point Q2 2019 Last data point September 2019


Source Datastream, Credit Suisse Source Datastream, Credit Suisse

24 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 25
Main asset
classes
Main asset classes Overview

More modest returns Margin pressure intensifying Corporate leverage a risk for low quality
US companies have achieved high profitability in credit
recent years: subdued wages boosted profits Leverage of non-financial corporations has in-
as sales increased. Cuts in US corporate taxes creased in recent years and, according to some
also added to profits. Yet this “fairy tale” is measures, surpassed the levels we saw before
coming to an end, and we expect margins to be the 2008 global financial crisis. However, debt
subject to downside pressure going forward. today is far easier to finance given very low
While interest costs should remain subdued, labor interest rates. Yet risks on lower quality credit
costs are likely to continue to rise. Another have increased, in our view. We therefore
Most asset classes showed a strong performance in 2019. factor likely to weigh on profitability is tariffs on favor intermediate credit risk, including various
Investors should not expect to see this feat repeated in imports from China, which have increased
input costs for many companies.
segments of emerging market debt.

2020, although financial assets will likely continue to benefit


from generally low yields. Valuations still favor equities
However, relative valuations still clearly favor
equities. Although the price-to-earnings ratio
(P/E) of global equities has moved up slightly
over the past year, the valuation of high-grade
bonds has increased more markedly as real
yields have declined. That said, given the various
headwinds, we expect absolute returns on
major equity markets to be lower than in 2019.

While the trade war intensified and the global More restrained central banks Economic policy uncertainty has surged… …but investors have remained fairly calm
economy worsened, most asset classes showed Our base global economic scenario suggests that Economic Policy Uncertainty Index Credit Suisse risk appetite index
a strong performance in 2019. This was largely monetary policy support will be less pronounced
due to the US Federal Reserve’s (Fed) sharp turn than in 2019. Our economists expect the Fed and
toward easing, which boosted investor confi- the European Central Bank (ECB) to keep 350 6
dence. Our forecast for 2020 is for most asset interest rates on hold, although the ECB’s quan-
classes to deliver lower returns than in 2019. titative easing (QE) program will continue.
Even though we expect manufacturing to stabilize Reduced monetary accommodation is likely to
300 4
and trade tensions to abate, a number of factors limit returns on most assets.
will likely weigh on performance.
(Geo)political wild cards
The drivers that played a key role in financial Forecasts regarding geopolitics are highly un- 250 2
markets in 2019 – geopolitics, economic momen- certain, but our base case is that the US admin-
tum and central bank policy – will undoubtedly istration will try to achieve some kind of trade
remain influential in 2020, but we are likely deal with China. If successful, such an outcome
200 0
to see some of them change direction. Other would favor risk assets, especially Asian equities.
factors, including corporate fundamentals However, the USA may face an unusually pola-
and investor sentiment, will also be important. rized presidential election campaign in 2020,
which could harm investor sentiment. Converse- 150 -2
Economic momentum set to stabilize ly, a resolution of the Brexit uncertainty would
While we expect overall gross domestic product support European risk assets and the GBP.
(GDP) growth to be somewhat softer relative to Further flare-ups in the Middle East cannot be
100 -4
2019, we forecast a slight acceleration of indus- excluded, though a major military conflict
trial production (IP). As our research has shown, remains unlikely.
there is a close link between IP momentum and
financial markets. Better IP momentum tends 2007 2011 2015 2019 2007 2011 2015 2019
to support risk assets while pressuring high-grade
bonds. Last data point September 2019 Last data point 15/10/19
Source Datastream, Credit Suisse Source Datastream, Credit Suisse

28 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 29
Main asset classes Fixed income

Sweet spots in credit With the global economy cooling amid ongoing Positive returns are only likely in the case of a
US-China trade tensions, bond yields trended severe recession or geopolitical crisis. Then
downward during much of 2019, generating sub- yields for the high-grade segment would further
stantial capital gains. At the time of writing, govern- decline and the resulting capital gains could
ment and investment grade (IG) bonds were on even outweigh negative starting yields.
track for a significantly stronger performance than
in 2018 – this despite the fact that 35% of Tighter times for credit
European IG corporate bonds were already trading Spreads (the yield difference between riskier
at negative yields at the start of 2019. bonds and government bonds) in most credit
While returns on many of the highest quality bonds segments also narrowed in 2019. Absolute
will likely be negative in 2020, there are still opportunities, Yields headed back up
According to our base case, the global economy
yields thus dropped to very low levels in most
segments. In some areas, yields now appear
including in the BB segment for high yield bonds. should improve slightly in the coming year and inadequate to compensate for the risk of
IG and government bond yields are thus likely to worsening fundamentals and rising defaults.
rise. This would generate capital losses. As
yield curves are still rather flat, the setback would This applies in particular to those debtors with a
be more severe for bonds with long maturities. very low rating (e.g. single B) that are strongly
Many high-quality bonds will therefore likely pro- exposed if the global economy further weakens.
duce negative returns in 2020. If starting Moreover, leverage has increased in cyclically
yields are very low or even negative, avoiding vulnerable areas such as steel and energy.
negative returns will be close to impossible.
However, yields in some credit segments, both
We expect returns to be positive in only a few within IG and high yield (HY), look sufficient to
high-grade markets, such as US Treasuries or compensate for such risks even if they are low.
Australian government bonds. In contrast, The following pages provide more detail on the
returns are likely to be negative in much of the opportunities and risks in 2020 for fixed income.
Eurozone and in Switzerland.

Emerging market bonds offer good risk/return trade-off


Spreads over core government bonds in basis points
1641

800

700

600 555

500
402

400

300

200
129

100

Investment grade corporates EM (hard currency) High yield

IG Corporates: Bloomberg Barclays Global Agg Credit Average 2001– 2007 Global financial crisis (Nov – Dec 2008)
EM: JPMorgan EMBI Average 2009–2018 Current
High yield: Bloomberg Barclays Global High Yield Average since 2001
Last data point 25/10/19
Source Bloomberg, Credit Suisse

30 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 31
Main asset classes Fixed income

Narrow focus in Emerging market bonds:


investment grade Good risk/return
Backdrop: Although yields in IG Opportunities: We see interesting remain sound. Some European Backdrop: Spreads have declined Opportunities: The US Federal
are very low in absolute terms, we opportunities in emerging market hybrids in non-cyclical sectors such less in the main EM bond indexes Reserve’s more accommodative
continue to see attractive opportu- (EM) investment-grade dollar cor- as utilities and communication since the 2008 financial crisis than stance should continue to benefit
nities. Most of these bonds are porate bonds, not least in some also offer interesting risk-adjusted in a number of higher risk credit EM that are reliant on USD funding.
unlikely to face downgrades even Asian markets, where worries over returns. segments in developed markets, Economic fundamentals in some
in an environment of subdued the impact of the US-China trade where leverage is often higher. The of the large borrowing countries
economic growth. war have triggered a rise in spreads latter may have benefited more such as Brazil, Mexico and Turkey
even though corporate fundamentals strongly, albeit indirectly, from should continue to improve in Frontier markets:
central banks’ asset purchase pro- 2020. Declining inflation rates The new high yield
grams, which focused on advanced should help bring down domestic
economy bonds. Conversely, EM interest rates in a number of Find out more:
bonds now offer a higher risk countries, which would, in particu- credit-suisse.com/
premium from which investors can lar, support EM local currency frontiermarkets
benefit. bonds. However, as some curren-
cies may come under pressure, a
selective approach is required.

High yield: Focus on Be conservative with


subordinated financials asset-backed securities
Backdrop: HY spreads could con- Opportunities: This includes conform to environmental, social Backdrop: Structured credit Opportunities: European covered yields. In contrast, more than half
tinue to widen as long as recession subordinated financial bonds. and governance (ESG) standards instruments, more generally known bonds still offer moderate returns of the US ABS issuers are from
fears have not been overcome, Ongoing regulatory pressure to are of increasing interest and as asset-backed securities (ABS), and a high credit rating. Collater­ the automobile industry, which is
with B rated bonds most vulnerable strengthen bank balance sheets relevance as well. are considered a primary catalyst alized loan obligations (CLO), undergoing structural change.
to a sharper rise in yields. How­ and the trend decline in non-­ for the 2008 financial crisis and especially senior and mezzanine
ever, we continue to see opportu- performing loans, not least in the have often been regarded with tranches, also offer a good risk-
nities in the slightly better BB European periphery, should skepticism since then. However, return tradeoff. They are typically
segment. be supportive. HY bonds that we see various interesting opportu- much less affected by rising
nities in this area. But caution is defaults than HY bonds or
advised in some areas including leveraged loans. Moreover, their
some of the traditional US and floating rate nature provides a
European ABS markets. buffer against rising longer-term

32 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 33
Main asset classes Equities

Focus on growth In 2019, the negative impact that diminishing


growth momentum had on equities was more than
offset by the significant boost that lower interest
Watch the margins
Since the financial crisis, corporate profits have
generally been boosted by subdued costs. While

sectors and dividends


rates provided. In 2020, we expect economic some cost drivers will remain at bay, others
growth to stabilize. We expect central banks will will not. Interest costs will remain very low for the
only provide limited additional support, though foreseeable future and may even decline as
liquidity conditions should remain accommodative. maturing debt is refinanced at lower rates.
The US Federal Reserve (Fed) in particular will Wages, however, have been growing faster in
not lower interest rates, in our view, or at most developed countries, particularly the USA.
by very little, in contrast to what the market
currently expects. In addition, margin pressures The increase in the share of wages is a typical
are likely to increase as labor costs rise. This late-cycle phenomenon that should last for some
suggests that equity returns will likely be more years even if the economy entered into reces-
Despite numerous headwinds, the MSCI World Index provided in line with an average year. sion. Moreover, while productivity growth has in-
investors with a total return of just above 20% in the Positive base case for equities
creased, it is unlikely to fully offset these
additional costs. Rising labor costs could lead to
first ten months of 2019, well above an average year’s return. Nevertheless, our base case for equities is posi- reduced cash flows. When combined with
We expect a more muted performance in 2020 tive. As geopolitical tensions moderate and
the trade war subsides, at least to some extent,
already extended financial leverage, this could
limit stock buybacks, which have been an
as global central banks dial back interest rate cuts. business sentiment should improve and con- important driver in recent years.
tribute to a recovery in industrial production (IP).
Additional fiscal spending, especially in Europe, The X Factor: US presidential election
and the after-effects of monetary easing in 2019 The run-up to the 2020 US presidential and
should also support economic and sales growth. congressional elections in November 2020
Finally, relative valuations still clearly favor equities. could also have a meaningful impact on equity
Growth-oriented sectors and stocks that benefit markets, though there is no hard and fast
from sustained long-term societal changes statistical evidence that equity performance in
should continue to outperform. Stocks that pro- an election year differs from other years.
vide stable dividends are also favored.
What may be different this time around is that the
election year could be more turbulent than usual
given the deep split in the US electorate. More­-
over, if polls shifted clearly in favor of one of the
left-leaning Democratic candidates, some sectors
exposed to potential future intervention (e.g.
healthcare, energy or financials) could come under
pressure.

34 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 35
Main asset classes Equities

Profit share likely to drop further as labor catches up

A bird’s-eye view
Shares of profits after tax and labor compensation in US national income (in%, 4-quarter moving average)

on major markets
70 13

65 10

USA: Expect outperformance UK: Look beyond Brexit China/EM equities: Trade war
despite hurdles The UK market underperformed global de-escalation is key
Since the start of the bull market in equities quite significantly in 2019. Emerging market (EM) equities have
March 2009, the S&P 500 has However, this was not primarily due to underperformed developed markets
outperformed other markets by large Brexit uncertainty but rather a result of substantially since early 2018. Initially,
60 7 margins (around 210% vs. MSCI EMU weakness in the materials sector, tightening Fed policy weakened a
and around 245% vs. MSCI Japan). which makes up a large share of the number of markets that are reliant on
Our base case presumes continued UK equity market. Looking into 2020, cheap USD funding. Matters wors-
strong performance of the US market we believe the market will be among ened with the start of the US-China
due to superior economic growth and the weaker ones as continued trade war – note that China and other
the strong weighting of the IT sector. sluggish growth in China continues to northern Asian markets make up more
But its potential is limited by growing weigh on materials. A smooth Brexit than 55% of the MSCI EM index. A
1965 1975 1985 1995 2005 2015 margin pressure as a result of rising would paradoxically add to pressure on de-escalation of the trade war would
wages, the waning effects of the export-oriented sectors as the GBP thus likely support EM equities, even if
Last data point Q2 2019
2018 corporate tax cuts, a less would likely appreciate significantly. other factors such as weaker growth
Labor compensation Profits after tax (RHS) Source Datastream, Credit Suisse supportive Fed and, possibly, uncer- However, it would support domestical- in China may dampen the recovery.
tainty surrounding the presidential ly oriented smaller companies. In the Lower inflation and easier monetary
election. unlikely event of a hard Brexit, we policy should continue to support EM
would expect decisive easing by the such as Brazil.
Eurozone: ECB support versus Bank of England and a much weaker
Finding returns in a low-yield sea Growth-getters trade war GBP. Japan: Hoping for an improvement
Despite our expectation of mid-single-digit equity More growth-oriented investors may consider Considering the political worries and in the IP cycle
returns in the year ahead, returns are likely to high-conviction sectors or themes that are likely weakness in manufacturing, Eurozone Switzerland: Steady as she goes The past year was disappointing for
be significantly higher than for investment grade to experience strong earnings growth. One such equities held up surprisingly well in Swiss equities continued to show a investors in Japanese equities as the
bonds. Stocks of companies that offer sustain- area is education technology, which is on the 2019. The move back to monetary very strong performance in 2019, domestic as well as the global
able dividend payouts should be well supported. cusp of high growth as education is becoming easing and the associated weakening driven in part by the market’s consum- economy slowed amid the US-China
increasingly digital and therefore more cost-­ of the EUR no doubt provided support. er staples giant. Our outlook for 2020 trade dispute. For 2020, we think this
Based on today’s equity prices, we expect a effective and impactful. However, measured in USD, the suggests a steady but not spectacular market’s fortunes should improve, as
dividend yield for the MSCI World aggregate of market underperformed the S&P 500 performance, as the defensive Swiss a pick-up in the global IP cycle and a
roughly 2.5%. Some sectors such as financials, Separately, sustainability is becoming more by 4.3%. Looking into 2020, we market would underperform more recovery of capex spending in parti-
energy or utilities should continue to pay important not only for consumers and companies, believe the market should be support- cyclical markets if global manufactur- cular will benefit the cyclical Japanese
above-average dividends. but also for investors. We believe that we are ed, among other factors, by the ing improves. If successful, efforts by market more than most others.
at the start of a transition to a more sustainable European Central Bank’s accommo- the Swiss National Bank to prevent Moreover, the market is attractively
economy. While some companies and sectors dative monetary policy, a likely CHF appreciation would be supportive. valued, with a forward P/E of just
may come under pressure, significant new resolution of Brexit, and its unde- A weaker CHF in combination with a above 13 times. The Bank of Japan’s
opportunities should arise. Our five high-conviction manding valuation. The biggest risks steeper yield curve would in particular commitment to maintaining an
Supertrends touch upon these and other highly are a potential escalation of the US support financials. A shift in US accommodative stance and limiting
relevant topics – please refer to page 40 for trade war with China and potential US healthcare policy following the 2020 JPY appreciation is also a positive.
details about them. tariffs on European autos. US presidential elections poses a
certain risk to Swiss pharmaceuticals.

36 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 37
Main asset classes Equity sectors Tailwinds Headwinds

ȹȹ Aging population ȹȹ Elevated political risks during 2020

Sector views
ȹȹ Better healthcare coverage and US elections, healthcare costs and
Directional indicators represent tactical views as of
affordability in emerging markets coverage a target of candidates
October 2019; 3 – 6 month horizon
ȹȹ Litigation risk related to opioid
epidemic
Healthcare
Tailwinds Headwinds

ȹȹ Innovation – e.g. 5G, Internet ȹȹ Saturation with smartphones limits ȹȹ Even a partial resolution of the trade ȹȹ Economic uncertainty reducing
of Things, artificial intelligence (AI), hardware sales dispute would lift economic corporate investments, industrial
digitalization – drives growth ȹȹ Slowing corporate investments uncertainty production
ȹȹ Software is key enabler of due to uncertainty ȹȹ Potential increase of infrastructure ȹȹ Earnings growth could disappoint
productivity enhancements spending in various countries
IT Industrials

ȹȹ Central bank “tiering” should boost ȹȹ Flat yield curve reducing net interest ȹȹ Solid dividend yield ȹȹ Valuations elevated
profitability of European banks margins ȹȹ Defensive sector, in favor if economic ȹȹ Appeal of this bond proxy sector likely
ȹȹ Valuations attractive, fundamentals ȹȹ Margin pressures in retail and wealth uncertainty persists to fade as interest rates expected to
improving (e.g. return on equity) management back up

Financials Consumer staples

ȹȹ Significant growth rates of mobile ȹȹ Regulatory pressure, e.g. antitrust, ȹȹ Solid labor markets, wage growth ȹȹ If US-China trade dispute continues,
entertainment (video gaming, video privacy investigations, is challenging and household balance sheets slowdown in manufacturing could
streaming) business models support consumer demand and spread to labor markets and consumer
ȹȹ Shift of advertising from traditional ȹȹ Content creation and compliance spending demand
to online offers meaningful revenue pressures require significant spending Low interest rates support spending Traditional retailing faces structural
Communication Consumer
ȹȹ ȹȹ

potential on home-related durables challenge from e-commerce


services discretionary

ȹȹ Attractive dividend yields ȹȹ Elevated valuations ȹȹ Geopolitical tensions with potential ȹȹ Manufacturing weakness, a slower Chinese
to disrupt supply may boost risk economy reduces demand growth, while US
ȹȹ Defensive sector, economic ȹȹ Somewhat higher bond yields would shale oil producers add to abundant supply
uncertainty or trade disputes have reduce appeal of this bond proxy premium in oil prices
ȹȹ Pressure to address environmental
limited influence ȹȹ Attractive dividend yield
issues could accelerate move
to sustainable energy solutions
Utilities Energy

ȹȹ Attractive dividend yields ȹȹ Somewhat higher bond yields would ȹȹ Low interest rates could lift ȹȹ Low global economic growth and
ȹȹ Outside retail, commercial real reduce appeal of this bond proxy construction-related demand strong dollar are a drag
estate prices are expected to remain ȹȹ E-commerce reducing appeal of retail ȹȹ Valuation attractive ȹȹ Slowing growth in China a risk
stable real estate

Real estate Materials

38 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 39
Main asset classes Equities

Supertrends Pushing
for change 10%
What do rising pet ownership, global climate school strikes, Millennial consumers in particular
and the launch of next-generation 5G mobile networks have in denounce inefficiencies in the
common? They all are testimony to the sweeping societal consumer goods industry.
changes that we picked up on when we first launched our five
Supertrends in 2017.
of global greenhouse
gas emissions can be
traced back to the
apparel industry.


2,700 liters
of water ⅕ 80 billion
new pieces of clothing
a year.

30
T-shirt equal
to

+400%
blend of cotton bathtubs
Our Supertrends cover a broad variety of timely In addition, environmental, social and governance of industrial water
and synthetics to make a pollution stems
topics: our increasingly multipolar world; infra- (ESG) criteria remain a key topic and investment 1995
single from textile dyeing
structure; population aging; the influence of the focus particularly for the Millennials, whose T-shirt. and treatment. 2015
next generation; and fast-paced technological voices as responsible consumers are increasingly
innovation. They are focused on structural driving being heard.
forces and aim to improve a portfolio’s overall
risk/return profile, outperforming the broader Long-term themes across sectors
market in the long run. Our conviction in these Thanks to the Supertrends’ modular concept,
trends remains strong. investors can invest in single stocks, more niche
themes, or the broader Supertrends themes.
A new addition: Education technology Together the five Supertrends provide broad
In June 2019, we introduced new angles to our diversification in terms of Credit Suisse’s single
Supertrends framework. In relation to the Silver stock selection, with every sector in the MSCI

1,000+
Economy Supertrend, for example, there is a World part of a portfolio. The largest exposures Extending the life of all
growing number of seniors living with pets. in a Supertrends portfolio context are in IT, European smartphones by

1 year =
Animals have their own dietary and veterinary healthcare and industrials. In terms of regions,
needs, which should fuel growth in the pet care the USA makes up almost 50% of our Super-
market to over USD 200 billion globally by 2025. trends stock selection – less than its weight in

different
removing

70%
In terms of our Millennials’ Values Supertrend, the MSCI World. Conversely, we have a higher Smartphone
being online and using social media comes exposure to emerging markets, which reflects
naturally to Generation Z. They drive demand
for education technology, which is in the early
long-term growth opportunities in many of these
countries, as well as worldwide societal and materials 2 million
stages of what we believe will be a major demographic trends. used to produce a of all hazardous waste
transformation. Marketers Media expects the single smartphone. cars from traffic. in landfills is e-waste.
digital education market in North America to
grow to more than USD 400 billion by 2023.
In our Technology Supertrend, we broaden our Supertrends microsite Sources
“digitalization” subtheme to focus on 5G and credit-suisse.com/ see page 65
how it impacts big data. supertrends
40 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 41
Main asset classes Currencies

USD set to crest Stabilizing growth CNY: The currency underperformed most Asian
Most emerging market (EM) currencies fared peers in 2019. Any de-escalation in the trade
better in 2019 than the year before. With the war would alleviate pressure, in particular now
US Federal Reserve easing policy, their carry that the currency is closer to fair value. However,
provided support. Beyond this general factor, with China’s growth likely to continue to slow
performance differed considerably between and its current account surplus much reduced,
regions and countries. In Asia, China allowed the we do not see any longer-lasting upside.
CNY to weaken in order to offset some of the
US tariff burden, which put pressure on other KRW: The KRW lost ground in the first months
The USD should hold up initially, but the EUR is likely to gain currencies in the region. Low-yielding currencies of 2019 due to the economy’s close integration
in the second half as a Eurozone recovery takes hold. in the Europe, Middle East and Africa region
were the largest underperformers.
into Chinese-based supply chains but it recov-
ered thereafter. It should continue to recover if
The CNY may depreciate slightly more vs. the USD on domestic the trade war abates and sentiment on the tech
weakness. The GBP should gain strongly on the back Looking ahead, EM currencies enter the year
with a lower carry advantage; real interest rates
sector continues to improve, not least because
it is now clearly undervalued.
of a Brexit resolution. dropped considerably in 2019 on the back of
monetary policy easing. Conversely, valuations INR: Possible reforms in the areas of tax, labor
have generally become more attractive. More- and investment laws are likely to attract foreign
over, growth should pick up in many EM in investment inflows over time, supporting the
response to looser financial conditions. currency. Valuation is fair but carry is eroding.

MXN: The MXN is a “trade war winner” with


Mexico’s exports gaining on the back of China’s
setbacks. Meanwhile, political pressure lifted
after the USA, Canada and Mexico signed a new
trade treaty. With growth expected to pick up
moderately and the central bank taking a
cautious stance, the MXN’s carry should erode
only gradually. Valuation is supportive.
Major currencies: USD carry to lose its clout JPY: Although global risk aversion should abate Interest rate support for USD waning
In 2019, the USD continued to gain against and limit the upside potential of the JPY, we Spread in percentage points and dollar index (RHS) BRL: Valuation has improved and growth seems
most developed market (DM) currencies. If global think the JPY’s undervaluation against the USD to be stabilizing, with economic surprise indices at
growth and trade stabilize, as we expect, the should support the currency. The fact that the the highest levels in over a year. With pension
cyclically sensitive EUR should gain ground. Yet Bank of Japan is constrained regarding interest 4 120 reform complete, attention is likely to shift to tax
if the geopolitical situation worsens or global rate cuts is also supportive. reform. We do not expect the central bank to cut
growth disappoints, the USD would stay support- the benchmark Selic rate more than the market
ed while the JPY and CHF would likely be the GBP: In 2019, the GBP suffered bouts of weak- 3 110 currently anticipates. The currency should hold up.
biggest winners. ness amid continued Brexit uncertainty. In 2020,
we think the GBP has the greatest appreciation RUB: A strong current account surplus and low
USD: Going into 2020, the USD should remain potential given its significant undervaluation and 2 100 debt levels are still supportive. However, after
supported as it retains a growth as well as inter- the increasing likelihood of a Brexit deal being appreciating strongly in 2019, the RUB is no
est rate advantage, or “carry,” over most other voted through and implemented over the coming longer attractive from a valuation perspective.
G10 currencies. But these advantages are likely months. In that event, the Bank of England 1 90
to weaken in the course of the year. Moreover, would also be more likely to tighten policy and TRY: Fundamental valuation, a still high carry and
the focus of market participants may begin to further support the GBP. an improving economy should offset political
shift to the overvaluation of the USD, encourag- 0 80 uncertainty. However, volatility is likely to remain
ing outflows from USD assets. CHF: The CHF is overvalued against the EUR. high.
If the Eurozone economy picks up, the CHF
EUR: After disappointing in 2019, the Eurozone could well lose some ground against the EUR. If -1 70 ZAR: South Africa continues to lag as economic
is expected to show moderate growth in 2020, the global political and economic outlook were imbalances keep building and the outlook for
in part supported by added fiscal stimulus and to worsen, the Swiss National Bank would likely structural reforms remains bleak. The currency is
diminishing Brexit uncertainty. This should continue to intervene to limit CHF appreciation. 2002 2006 2010 2014 2018 likely to remain under pressure.
support the EUR. Longer-term factors, especially
the region’s growing current account surplus, are
2-year swap spread (US minus weighted G6 currencies)
also supportive. Renewed worries over Italy’s
Dollar Index (DXY); 3-month moving average (RHS)
political and fiscal stability pose a (low probability)
risk. Last data point 24/10/19
Source Datastream, Credit Suisse

42 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 43
Alternative
investments
Alternative Investments Real estate

Yields remain compelling In terms of investment strategy, we look for high


quality assets where the fall in yields is not
yet fully reflected in valuations (e.g. core assets
focusing on properties in good locations with
Seek regions with high dividends
From a regional point of view, we focus on rela-
tively high dividends rather than growth. As such,
we favor the Eurozone with a yield spread over
long-term leases). So-called value-add strategies, government bond yields of approximately 500 bps
which have a low correlation to the overall as of the editorial deadline, which is above the
market, may also generate excess returns. Here, long-term average. In case of an orderly Brexit,
value is added by actively reconfiguring and we also believe that UK listed real estate offers
refurbishing properties, for instance. potential given undemanding valuations, the con-
Alternative investments have become increasingly established servative debt structure of real estate companies,
as a building block of portfolios, particularly in today’s world In contrast, global real estate equities already
reflect lower rates with historically high valuations.
and a potential rebound in underlying markets,
especially London office space. Upside for US
of low-for-longer interest rates and yields. They are appreciated Moreover, earnings upside is limited as growth listed real estate, however, seems limited as
not only for their diversification benefits, but also for providing slows in underlying markets. While multiple expan-
sion and lower yields drove most of the strong
lower interest rates and improving earnings expec-
tations are already reflected in the pricing.
stability to portfolios. We start by looking at real estate, which we 2019 performance, we expect this to be less the
expect to see a still positive environment in 2020. case in 2020.

Real estate investors have witnessed a number flexible office space providers. That said, the Real estate yield advantage persists
of structural shifts in recent years. As a result, long-term impact on rental values is debatable Yields on bonds, global equities and real estate equities (in %)
they have had to adjust their strategy to capture and there is a risk that large amounts of
the most promising opportunities. office space are released into the market when
short-term leases expire. 12
E-commerce benefits industrial assets
In terms of real estate sectors, we believe that Focus on income generation and
the structural trend away from bricks-and-mortar uncorrelated investments 10
retail outlets to e-commerce will continue to The projected environment of moderate economic
put pressure on traditional retail locations expansion and accommodative monetary policy
(e.g. non-prime shopping centers and non-prime is in general supportive for both listed and direct 8
high-street stores). In contrast, industrial assets real estate worldwide. Against this backdrop,
should benefit from this shift as the e-commerce we prefer direct real estate where lower interest
supply chain requires considerably more ware- rates do not yet appear fully reflected in the
6
house and logistics space. price. While property yields in most real estate
markets are at the lower end of their historical
Another much-discussed structural change is range, recent rate cuts are likely to attract further
4
the growth of flexible office space, which investor capital. Returns in direct real estate
now accounts for a sizable percentage of total tend to be rather stable due to the rental income
take-up: around 10% in major US markets, component, which is favorable in a potentially
15% in the UK, and 12% in the rest of Europe, volatile late-cycle environment. 2
according to Property Market Analysis. Investors
may be able to increase occupancy levels
and widen their tenant base by collaborating with 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 2019

Bond yield (Yield on Bloomberg Barclays Euro-Aggregate 7–10 year index)


Equity dividend yield (Forward dividend yield on MSCI EMU Index) Last data point 25/10/19
Real estate yield (Forward dividend yield on MSCI EMU Real Estate Industry Group (Euro) Index) Source Datastream, Bloomberg, Credit Suisse

46 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 47
Alternative Investments Private equity

Due diligence is key Focus on top providers and defensive


strategies
We believe that PE can also generate excess
returns over liquid markets in an increasingly
What is private
equity?
challenging environment. But given lingering
uncertainty and historically low interest rates, Find out more:
we favor strategies that offer PE-like upside with credit-suisse.com/
some downside protection, for instance real privateequity
assets and growth capital. Key risks include
Private markets have become increasingly more mainstream as illiquidity, long-term investment horizons, leverage
smaller asset managers and family offices began to look for and the complexity of transactions. These risks
can be mitigated through diversified investing
exposure and minimum investments declined. Given the illiquid over the cycle and by selecting skillful and
nature of private markets, however, due diligence, fund and experienced managers. Due diligence, fund and
manager selection are paramount given the
manager selection are paramount. illiquid nature of private markets.

Private equity has become more and more popular Access to better pricing and longer-term Significant investment volumes targeting private equity
in recent years, but this development has come potential Private equity assets under management (in USD trn) and in % (RHS)
at a cost. Asset valuations and competition for in- PE funds can help improve portfolios’ risk-
vestments remain the key industry concerns, adjusted returns as they target companies ex-
covenant-lite debt has returned and new entrants posed to fundamental long-term growth in 9 18
continue to challenge the industry’s profits. otherwise inaccessible private markets. PE entry
deal prices depend on the state of capital 8 16
Expanding private markets markets, while exits normally reflect the significant
That said, private markets are almost twice as evolution of a business which is less correlated 7 14
large as a decade ago, the rise of secondary to capital markets developments. Therefore, PE
funds offers depth and differentiated exposure, offers some diversification for investors. However, 6 12
while the average deal is typically less levered. the higher than historical investment volumes
For investors, a larger universe brings with it better and the lower risk profile of investments imply that
5 10
diversification potential. In 2020, we expect expected returns are likely to diminish over time.
private equity (PE) to deliver a total return of ap-
4 8
proximately 8% per annum, somewhat below Against this backdrop, we favor seasoned PE
the historical average of 9.2%. Less supportive managers sourcing proactively outside the core
3 6
conditions for credit, high levels of undeployed markets. Such investments should benefit
capital but also lower overall risk limit expected from lower valuations compared with the stronger
returns. That said, PE still offers a fair illiquidity growth potential of businesses. Moreover, 2 4
premium over public equities. historical return analysis shows that the funds of
the managers in the top quartile tend to stay in 1 2
the same quartile about 30% of the time (sample
period from 1980 to 2015 based on Preqin 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 March
data). Thus, in the current environment of low 2019
growth and perceived late-cycle risks, some
exposure to seasoned managers invested in Invested Dry powder* % of MSCI AC World (RHS)
otherwise inaccessible markets should help Last data point 31/03/19
mitigate some of those late-cycle risks. *Dry Powder – committed, but uninvested capital Source Bloomberg, Credit Suisse

48 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 49
Alternative Investments Hedge funds

Portfolio stabilizers An allocation to


hedge funds acts
as a stabilizer in
In a world of extremely low bond yields and cyclical uncertainty
ahead, holding a diversified portfolio of hedge funds (HF) portfolios.
continues to make a lot of sense. Performance of seasoned
HF managers is likely to remain moderate, but still above
investment grade bonds.

To the end of August 2019, the performance of Barometer favors low beta funds Barometer suggests above-average risk
the broad hedge fund index (HFRI index) was The Credit Suisse Hedge Fund Barometer, which Credit Suisse Hedge Fund Barometer
in the mid-single digits in USD terms. That was measures market volatility, liquidity, systemic risk
significantly better than in 2018 (-4.7%), but and business cycle indicators, provides a guide to August 1998 February – March 2007 Nov 2011 – Jan 2012
close to the ten-year average of 4.28%. More- clients as to which types of HF exposures are Russian financial crisis Beginning of the Italian 10-year yields hit highest level as a
over, the dispersion of returns among the appropriate given any particular market regime. global financial crisis consequence of the Eurozone crisis

different HF managers was high, with a number The latest reading of the Barometer is in the
10/03/2000 09/03/2009 Summer 2015
of them generating negative returns. negative range, which suggests that exposure to Nasdaq peaks, bursting S& P 500 Index China slowdown
equity market risk (beta) within the HF universe the dot-com bubble hits a closing low
as a consequence
Specialized manager selection is paramount should be avoided. This speaks in favor of of the subprime 2014 – early 2016
Oil price collapse
While hedge funds have increased leverage over diversified macro and opportunistic long/short crisis

the past decade, we believe a more institution­ equity strategies, as well as uncorrelated
1
alized approach to risk management as well as strategies that seek exposure to alternative risk
+
more prudent liquidity measures mitigate several premiums such as momentum or carry. This 2
of the risks. Thus, unlike the years preceding the allows the HF allocation to act as a stabilizer 3
2008 global financial crisis, the industry rewards in portfolios. Beyond specific strategies, it
investors with lower risk, but also more modest remains key to rely on experts who perform 4

returns. extensive and highly informed due diligence 5



on the various HF managers.
1999 2003 2007 2011 2015 2019
That said, the industry’s returns as a whole also
remain somewhat exposed to traditional assets.
11/09/2001 23/04/2010 March 2018
In the environment we project, we believe that Terrorist attacks Greek government requests US President Donald
seasoned HF managers with a demonstrated in the USA a bailout package from Trump announces trade
the International Monetary tariffs on steel and
ability to create value throughout the cycle can 22/09/1998 Fund and European Union aluminum, and tariffs on
perform well. Thus, going into 2020, specialized Bailout of the January 2014 Chinese goods
Long-Term Fed starts to taper
fund manager selection is paramount in our Capital Management 15/09/2008 its monthly bond
investment process. hedge fund Collapse of Lehman Brothers purchases

Last data point 11/10/19


+ Favorable conditions for growth-sensitive strategies – Adverse conditions for growth-sensitive strategies Source Credit Suisse

50 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 51
Alternative Investments Commodities

Waiting for the upswing Oil prices may


face a period of
weakness to force
Commodities have been on diverging paths this past year,
with cyclical segments trailing precious metals amid supply adjustments
slowing industrial production. Going forward, we expect this
divergence to diminish. before recovering
at some point.

In 2019, gold rallied, while industrial metals were surpluses, OPEC+ (including Russia) will have Low real yields support gold
subdued. If our base case of stabilizing global to extend or even deepen existing supply cuts and Real Treasury yields (in %) and gold price (in USD/ounce)
growth and flat to somewhat higher bond yields US shale production must slow. Our base case
materializes, industrial metals have modest upside foresees temporary price weakness to force supply
potential, while gold prices are likely to consoli- adjustments, which then paves the way for a -1.0 2,000
date. Oil prices may face a period of weakness to recovery. Military conflict in the Gulf region would
force supply adjustments before recovering at be an upside risk to prices. However, regional -0.5 1,800
some point. powers and the USA are seeking to de-escalate
the situation for now. 0 1,600
Cyclical commodities await improved
industrial production Gold: Still supported by low yields
0.5 1,400
The prospects for cyclical commodities are Gold prices and other precious metals are likely
muted as long as the slump in industrial produc- to remain supported as long as (real) yields remain
tion (IP) continues. An easing of trade disputes low or even negative and economic uncertainty 1.0 1,200
and improved confidence would be needed for persists. While speculative long positions in gold
a recovery. However, it remains to be seen are high, we see no clear catalyst to trigger a 1.5 1,000
whether this happens as early as H1. Industrial major unwind of these positions.
metals prices additionally discount a negative 2.0 800
growth scenario in China. Should growth stabilize, Two risk scenarios
we see potential for upside surprises. These A stronger or earlier IP recovery would favor indus-
2.5 600
are more likely in copper, while other metals look trial metals the most, and hurt precious metals.
more subdued unless IP recovers strongly. Energy would also be supported, but less so given
strong supply. In case of a full-fledged recession, 3.0 400
Oil: Oversupply vs. Middle East tensions precious metals would make further gains while
Modest demand growth coupled with robust supply energy prices would be particularly vulnerable. 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018
from countries that are not members of the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC), particularly US shale producers, points Real yields derived from US 10-year Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS, inverted scale)
Last data point 25/10/19
to oversupplied oil markets in 2020. To prevent Gold price per ounce (in USD, RHS) Source Bloomberg, Credit Suisse

52 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 53
Investment
strategy
2020
Investment strategy 2020 Overview

Opportunities in a Adding EM bonds


We also believe that investors should add
emerging market (EM) hard currency bonds, which
Alternative opportunities
Within alternative investments, real estate enables
further portfolio diversification and enhances

low-rate world
offer a similar expected return outlook as more return potential. In multi-asset portfolios, we gener-
traditional high yield bonds, but at a better rating ally add exposure to hedge funds for diversi­
level. EM local currency bonds could also be an fication purposes. For investors who are willing
option, though currency risk will require additional to commit money over a longer period of time
attention for calibrating portfolio shares. In to gain a liquidity premium, private equity offers an
general, we think that integrating EM, including opportunity to enhance returns over the long term.
frontier markets, into the fixed income part
of portfolios also helps enhance diversification
within a multi-asset framework.

Now that interest rates around the world have reached record Equities offer return potential
lows or slipped into negative territory, even risk-averse Equities and alternative investments offer more
potential to drive returns. In our opinion, equities Capital Market
investors will need to buy higher-risk assets to generate offer an attractive expected return advantage Assumptions (CMA)
positive returns. We see a number of opportunities to over low-yielding bonds. Investors who are more
income oriented should favor companies with Find out more:
generate additional returns without taking on too much risk. stable dividends. On a sector level, we prefer IT as credit-suisse.com/cma
one of the few high-growth sectors. We also like
financials, as we expect that some improvement in
the cyclical outlook will likely trigger further
rotation into that sector in the first half of 2020.

Several macroeconomic developments will drive One result of the recent annual update to our Lackluster returns for high-quality bonds
the investment landscape in 2020. We expect five-year return outlook for our asset universe is
monetary policy to remain accommodative, with that investors are likely to face very meager
the US Federal Reserve (Fed) expected to hold returns in low-risk assets going forward. In fact,
Equities Fixed income Alternative investments
interest rates steady after frontloading several cuts even traditional fixed income investors risk
in 2019. This should help sustain economic suffering losses in real wealth due to inflation. 50
growth around current moderate levels. Lingering 40
recession worries are likely to recede, as a Measured diversification
manufacturing recovery will likely kick in during In our view, investors should take risks in a 30
the first half of 2020, leading to some steep­ening measured and diversified way by applying a multi-­ 20
of the yield curve. asset framework. Such a framework can take
advantage of remaining pockets of value in low- 10
Do not neglect future inflation risks risk markets, while increasing expected returns 0
The rather moderate growth outlook in itself might by investing in equities and seeking out less con-
not speak for taking much cyclical investment ventional investments in fixed income. -10
exposure. However, we think otherwise given the -20
very weak or even negative return outlook when While high-grade bonds still have an important
investing in cash and low-risk government and role to play in terms of diversifying risk, investors

Emerging Markets Eq.

Eurobloc Eq.

Asia Eq.

Japan Eq.

US Eq.

Swiss Eq.

US Conv. Bond

US HY

EM Govt. HC, USD

US Investment Grade Corp.

US Inf. Linkd.

US Govt., Long-Term

UK Govt.

Europe Investment Grade Corp.

Europe Govt.

AUS Govt.

Private Equity

Singapore RE Eq.

Eurozone RE Eq.

US Real Estate Eq.

US Direct Properties

Commodities

Swiss Real Estate Funds

Swiss Real Estate Direct

Gold

Hedge Funds (HFRX)


investment grade bonds. need to look for a broader set of return drivers
to achieve positive returns. Within asset-backed
credit, we favor the European covered bond
segment, which has a high credit rating. For in-
vestors who seek a buffer against the negative
impact of rising bond yields (duration risk), senior
and mezzanine tranches of collateralized loan
obligations should be an attractive portfolio addition
to partly replace lower yielding short-term bonds.

5-year expected returns 5-year expected return + / – 1 standard deviation Source Credit Suisse Capital Market Assumptions

56 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 57
Investment strategy 2020 Forecasts

Forecasts We believe that the global


economy and markets will
continue to show considerable
resilience in the face of
We expect only sluggish global growth in 2020 of 2.5%, almost these challenges.
unchanged from 2019. Against the backdrop of limited
earnings growth and flat to higher bond yields, returns in key
equity markets are likely to be in the single-digit range in
2020, while returns on most core government bonds are likely
to be negative.

Forecasts for growth and inflation Financial market performance / forecasts

Real GDP (y/y %) Inflation (annual avg. y/y %)


2019 YTD 2019 YTD
2018 2019E* 2020F** 2018 2019E* 2020F** performance as of 2020 expected performance as of 2020 expected
Equities* 5 November 2019 total returns Credit 5 November 2019 total returns
Global 3.2 2.6 2.5 Global 2.7 2.6 2.5
US equities 24.7% 6.50% Global investment grade bonds** 11.30% 2.60%
United States 2.9 2.3 1.8 United States 2.4 1.8 2.0 EMU equities 24.4% 5.80% Global high yield bonds** 12.02% 3.10%
Canada 1.9 1.3 0.9 Canada 2.3 1.9 1.8 Swiss equities 27.0% 4.10% Emerging market HC bonds*** 13.06% 3.60%

Eurozone 1.9 1.1 1.0 Eurozone 1.8 1.2 1.1 UK equities 13.6% 5.70%
Japanese equities 17.1% 5.60% Currencies Close on End-2020
Germany 1.5 0.5 0.4 Germany 1.9 1.3 1.3
Emerging market equities 14.1% 5.40% & commodities 5 November 2019 forecast
Italy 0.7 0.1 0.7 Italy 1.2 0.6 0.7 EUR/USD 1.11 1.15
France 1.7 1.2 1.1 France 2.1 1.3 1.3 USD/CHF 0.99 1.00
Close on End-2020
Bond yields 5 November 2019 forecast EUR/CHF 1.10 1.15
Spain 2.6 2.2 1.8 Spain 1.7 0.8 1.0
10-year US Treasury yield 1.80% 2.20% USD/JPY 109.00 103.00
United Kingdom 1.4 1.2 1.3 United Kingdom 2.5 1.9 2.1
10-year German Bund yield -0.31% -0.10% GBP/USD 1.29 1.40
Switzerland 2.8 1.1 1.4 Switzerland 0.9 0.5 0.5
10-year Swiss Eidgenossen yield -0.45% -0.30% USD/CNY 7.02 7.20
Japan 0.8 0.8 0.4 Japan 0.9 0.5 0.1
Gold (USD/oz) 1505.00 1500.00
Australia 2.7 2.0 2.8 Australia 2.0 1.8 1.9 WTI (USD/bbl) 57.00 55.00

China 6.6 6.1 5.9 China 1.9 2.6 2.2

India (fiscal year) 7.2 6.8 6.0 India (fiscal year) 4.0 3.4 3.4

Brazil 1.1 1.2 2.7 Brazil 3.7 3.7 3.7

Russia 2.3 1.4 1.6 Russia 2.9 4.5 3.2


* Performance and expected returns are total return including dividends. Markets refer to MSCI country / regional indices in local currency. Performance of the periods
06/11/2014 – 05/11/2019 for those indices in chronological order are: MSCI USA: 5.5%, 1.3%, 26.6%, 7.2%, 14.9%; MSCI EMU: 17.8%, -8.7%, 29.5%, -8.1%,
13.4%; MSCI Switzerland: 4.8%, -10.5%, 30.0%, 0.0%, 18.2%; MSCI UK: 0.0%, 9.5%, 17.3%, -2.2%, 7.1%; MSCI Japan: 15.3%, -13.3%, 34.8%, -4.9%, 4.2%;
* E: estimate MSCI EM: -0.1%, 4.6%, 30.1%, -6.9%, 11.3%
** F: forecast ** Barclays Global Investment Grade Corporate and Global High Yield index
*** JP Morgan EMBIG Div. (sovereign index)
Last data point 05/11/19
Source Datastream, Haver Analytics, Credit Suisse
Last data point 05/11/19

Source Bloomberg, Datastream, Credit Suisse

Note: Historical and/or projected performance indications and financial market scenarios are not reliable indicators Note: Historical and/or projected performance indications and financial market scenarios are not reliable indicators of
of current or future performance. current or future performance.
58 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 59
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manner taking into account the risk and return preferences of the persons. Whereas, the comments and advices included herein are of general nature.
Therefore recommendations may not be suitable for your financial status or risk and yield preferences. For this reason, making an investment decision
only by relying on the information given herein may not give rise to results that fit your expectations. This report is distributed by Credit Suisse Istanbul
Menkul Degerler Anonim Sirketi, regulated by the Capital Markets Board of Turkey, with its registered address at Levazim Mahallesi, Koru Sokak No. 2
Zorlu Center Terasevler No. 61 34340 Besiktas/ Istanbul-Turkey. United Kingdom: This material is distributed by Credit Suisse (UK) Limited. Credit
Suisse (UK) Limited, is authorized by the Prudential Regulation Authority and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority and the Prudential Regulation
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2000 (Financial Promotion) Order 2005 the following will apply: To the extent communicated in the United Kingdom (“UK”) or capable of having an effect

62 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 63
Imprint

Authors / Contributors Imprint

Walter Edelmann Jessie Gisiger Publisher Editorial deadline


Chief Global Strategist Head of Credit Strategy Nannette Hechler-Fayd’herbe 08 November 2019
Global Head of Economics & Research and RCIO IWM
James Sweeney Maxime Botteron Design
Global Chief Economist and Swiss Macro Economist & Strategist Editor-in-chief LINE Communications AG
Regional Chief Investment Officer Americas Oliver Adler
Luca Bindelli Chief Economist Switzerland Translations
John Woods Head of Global FI, FX and Commodity Strategy LanguageWire
Regional Chief Investment Officer, Asia Pacific Editorial support
Stefan Graber Christa Jenni More information
Daniel Rupli Head of Commodity Strategy Catherine McLean Trachsler credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook
Head of Single Security Research, Equity Credit Christine Mumenthaler
Jelena Kucenko Katharina Schlatter
Philipp Lisibach Head of Alternative Investments Strategy Photo sources
Rarado/EyeEM (cover, p. 2); Credit Suisse (p. 5, p. 8, p. 9);
Head of Equity Strategy Product management Lazar Ioan Ovidiu/EyeEM (p. 6, p. 14);
Tiziana Hunziker Camilla Damm Leuzinger Somewhere Down The Road/EyeEM (p. 6, p. 26);
Swiss Macro Economist Sebastian Zeuner César Martínez/EyeEM (p. 30); Luke Mattson/Stocksy (p. 34);
Claudia Biri Omar Jabri/EyeEM (p. 7, p. 44); Muhammad Rinandar/EyeEM (p. 7, p. 54).
Karsten Linowsky Sources Value Chain page 41
Head Currencies & G10 Interest Rates World Wildlife Fund (2014)
How your t-shirt can make a difference.
Sarah Leissner WRAP (2017)
Valuing our Clothes:
Real Estate Strategist The Cost of UK Fashion.
Zion Market Research (2018)
Global Consumer Electronics Market.

64 credit-suisse.com/investmentoutlook 65
Notes

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