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PRESENTED BY GEORGE TSETSEKOS Dean Emeritus and Francis Professor of Finance March 26, 2014 DREXEL UNIVERSIY LeBow College of Business The Global Economy.

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Presentation on theme: "PRESENTED BY GEORGE TSETSEKOS Dean Emeritus and Francis Professor of Finance March 26, 2014 DREXEL UNIVERSIY LeBow College of Business The Global Economy."— Presentation transcript:

1 PRESENTED BY GEORGE TSETSEKOS Dean Emeritus and Francis Professor of Finance March 26, 2014 DREXEL UNIVERSIY LeBow College of Business The Global Economy and the US Markets

2 “Linked” Markets…Amplify Crisis

3 Global and U.S. GDP Growth 2000-16 Annual %

4 Transition: From Crisis to Stability Policy Responses Transition Stability Crisis in US  Global Amplification

5 Challenges during the transition Normalize monetary conditions Handle risk/volatility

6 Transition in USA: From Crisis to Stability Policy Responses Monetary Easing Transition Stability Crisis in US  Financial Crisis  Low Growth and Unemployment

7 Home Prices Rise, Helped by Low Inventory

8 Auto Sales on the Rise

9 Core Inflation Remains Contained

10 Net Worth Climbs as Debt Burden Plummets

11 S&P Index Performance 2013

12 Overall Market Performance

13 Unemployment is Declining

14 Slow Recovery in USA Spending Levels still Low

15 Stalled Velocity of Money Supports Low Inflation Outlook

16 US Monetary transition and global impact Possible Risks with the reduction of the Fed’s buying program in the near term:  Long-term rates could overshoot  Sharp increases in Bond yields  Volatility  Higher rates may impact investment vehicles

17 Transition: From Crisis to Stability Policy Responses Transition Stability Crisis in US  Banking Crisis in EU  Sovereign Crisis  Austerity EU response

18 Common Currency EuroZone 17 Countries

19 Transitional Issues in the EZ 1.Core Countries vs. Periphery 2.Excessive Corporate Debt 3.Developing Institutions/Architecture of EU

20 EU: High Unemployment is problematic

21 Unemployment and domestic demand in the periphery Unemployment Rate (%)Domestic Demand (volume)

22 Key Concerns for the Corporate Sector Capital flight to safer Euro-zone countries Private capital has been replaced by public sector flows Liquidity in the core is not recycled in the periphery Funding asymmetries (corporate costs are very high) Current account imbalances

23 Flows in Euro Zone Area Cumulative from 2009Q4 in % of GDP

24 Challenges for the Corporate Sector in the Eurozone High Corporate Leverage Credit Tightening Revenue and profits contraction Global Competitiveness

25 Corporate Debt Debt - 2002Q1=100 Debt as % of GDP

26 Corporate Fundamentals

27 Real Long-term Rates are still high in the EZ

28 » Tail risk of break-up/FRAGEMTATION appears very low » Euro zone recovery VERY SLOW in light of persistently high unemployment and structural imbalances » Greece is moving into recovery, encouraging market optimism and foreign investment Real Progress in the Euro Zone? GREECE’S ANNUAL GDP GROWTH 28 Source: GK Research, “Ideas,” September 20, 2013, World Bank and European Commission (Greece GDP) CONSOLIDATED PRIVATE DEBT, % OF GDP EUROSTAT MACROECONOMICS IMBALANCE PROCEDURE SCOREBOARD FORECAST

29 Euro Area Increases in interest rates in US Credit is hindered by financial fragmentation Corporate debt is owned by firms with weak debt servicing capacity; debt overhang Banking system will experience loan losses Need for Bank Re-Capitalization Weak corporate and bank balance sheets Asymmetric impact

30 Emerging Markets and China

31 Interest Rates and Capital Flows to EM

32 Volatility and EM Capital Flows Low Volatility High Volatility

33 EM Growth has decelerated

34 Growth Forecast for China Average 7% in next 5 years

35 China Exports Have NOT Recovered

36 China’s Consumption is lower than BRICs/EM

37 Leverage is Concentrated in a Few Sectors in China

38 Emerging Markets Potential Risks Bond outflows will place at risk corporate borrowing Financial stability concerns Economic growth is slowing Market liquidity is at risk

39 The Japanese experiment (Abenomics) Japan has enacted its stimulus/QE Fiscal and structural reforms The risk of deflation is persistent

40 JAPAN: Money Supply and GDP

41 Global Outlook: Cautiously Optimistic US: Economic Recovery Poised to Continue at Moderate Pace » A number of important metrics beat expectations last week Strength in job growth, GDP, auto sales, manufacturing while unemployment fell below 7.0% » FOMC has decided to begin tapering » Grand rotation may have begun; money flowing out of bonds and into equities – RISK ON! » A resilient consumer is well positioned to support recovery Euro zone: GDP Growth Improving, More Work Ahead » Promising strides for EU, structural imbalances remain » Valuations in Europe compelling; pointing toward economic improvement EMs: Still a Source of Global Growth » Near-term growth has slowed, but secular stories remain intact » Growth of EM middle class important long-term theme Global: Dominant Theme of Synchronized Global Expansion » Global manufacturing numbers improved significantly » Recent positive data for Eurozone, Spain, UK, Japan, Indonesia, India, Canada, Australia, Malaysia and Taiwan » Global economic growth; good for the U.S.! 41

42 US Equity Market Performance

43 Rising rates Led to Sideways Market

44 Sector Allocation Considerations for Rising Interest Rate Environments Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Source: Wells Capital “Confidence Runs Through Stock Market. Sectors shown have material differences and represent segments of the S&P 500. Daily fluctuations in specific market sectors are often more extreme than fluctuations in the overall market. During Periods of Rising Interest Rates… Cyclical sectors historically outperform defensive sectors 44

45 Cointegrated Global Markets

46 THANK YOU LEARN HERE, LEAD ANYWHERE ® COPYRIGHT 2011 DREXEL UNIVERSITY’S LEBOW COLLEGE OF BUSINESS


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