
Achieving growth with fewer emissions
Can investing in energy efficiency opportunities supplement other low-carbon initiatives in providing attractive returns while helping to tackle climate change?
10 January 2020
4 minute read
With the fourth-quarter earnings season kicking in, investors will be paying close attention to next week’s macro data.
On Monday, the UK is expected to report relatively tepid gross domestic product (GDP) growth for November, after avoiding a “technical recession” in the third quarter (Q3) and seeing the weakest year-on-year growth rate since 2010.
In the eurozone, and the UK, the final December inflation reading is out on Tuesday. Both readings are likely to reflect the reversal of negative base effects for energy, the flash reading for the eurozone being up 0.3 percentage points to 1.3%.
Germany publishes the ZEW economic sentiment index. With market optimism over a “bottoming-out” of weak economic data, the index should provide some insight into whether this is surfacing.
In the US, investors will be able to better assess the resilience of the economy. December’s industrial production readings will signal whether there was a pick-up in manufacturing, as evidenced by survey data. Furthermore, the US Federal Reserve’s Beige Book, published on the 15th, should give more insight on economic conditions.
Turning to China, the country’s trade balance figure will be the first indicator published since the “phase one” US-China trade deal agreed in December. Industrial output and retail sales data should hint at the initial impact of trade tension de-escalation. China also reports its Q4 GDP data, with the market anticipating annual growth of 6.0%.
Tensions between the US and Iran have unexpectedly risen over the past week. This has led to fear of further sanctions being imposed on Iran and the lower oil output this would entail. The consequence has been a strong rise in the price of oil over the past few days.
Given oil’s heavy weighting in the consumer price index (CPI) basket, there is likely to be upward pressure on inflation.
The US inflation market has re-priced (to some extent) inflation expectations as a result of the shock. But it appears to remain of the view that inflation will stay lower for longer, with 10-year US break-evens (the difference between nominal and inflation-linked bond yields) at 1.75%.
Whilst such a view is plausible, it also means that the bar for upward surprises to inflation is low and two factors in particular could mean renewed and somewhat sustained inflationary pressures.
First is resilient US economic data. US non-farm payroll numbers have been notably strong, with 236,000 jobs created in November and housing data has also been encouraging. Demand-pull, upward, forces on inflation rates could surface off the back of this.
Secondly, in the first half of 2020 the US Federal Reserve is reviewing their inflation targeting framework, which could increase the prospect of a more relaxed inflation framework.
In light of both the low bar for inflation and the relative strength of upward surprises occurring, US inflation-linked bonds appear attractive.
Can investing in energy efficiency opportunities supplement other low-carbon initiatives in providing attractive returns while helping to tackle climate change?
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