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BlackRock Gets Bullish On European Stocks, Bearish On EM Bonds

From BlackRock: Richard Turnill explains why we are upgrading European equities to overweight and downgrading emerging market debt to neutral over the short term.

This week’s chart helps explain why we are upgrading our view of European equities to overweight from neutral. We see European stocks as big beneficiaries of the broadening global reflationary environment and believe investors are too skeptical of the region’s prospects.

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Analysts repeatedly slashed their European earnings growth forecasts in recent years as early optimism faded. Yet 2017 appears different, with upgrades following a late 2016 upward trend, as evident in the chart above. Projected earnings growth is now mostly coming from cyclical sectors that benefit from improving global growth and a weaker euro.

A brighter outlook

The outlook is brighter. Our BlackRock GPS gauges show the U.S.-led bout of inflation leading to stronger growth outlooks globally. Recent upside surprises in European growth and inflation confirm the positive GPS signals. We believe European equities should benefit in such a reflation scenario, absent any other shocks. European earnings have historically been more sensitive to global economy pickups than U.S. counterparts, given European firms’ lower margins and large revenue exposure to global and emerging markets (EMs), our analysis shows.

Yet economic and political shocks have kept investors overly cautious toward European equities in our view. We believe the political risk priced into European markets around upcoming French and German elections is overstated. A likely Italian election may prove to be a populist flashpoint, but the major risk to our view is that a global slump cuts short the reflation trend. Our GPS data imply this is an unlikely scenario in the near term.

Meanwhile, we have cut our views of EM debt and Asian fixed income to neutral from overweight. We see long-term opportunities in EM bonds, but higher valuations make us more balanced in the shorter term. We remain positive on EM equities, where valuations are not a constraint, and favor European stocks exposed to global cyclicality and EMs. Read more market insights in my Weekly Commentary.

The iShares MSCI EMU Index ETF (BATS:EZU) was trading at $34.99 per share on Tuesday afternoon, down $0.19 (-0.54%). Year-to-date, EZU has gained 1.13%, versus a 2.33% rise in the benchmark S&P 500 index during the same period.

EZU currently has an ETF Daily News SMART Grade of A (Strong Buy), and is ranked #4 of 91 ETFs in the European Equities ETFs category.


This article is brought to you courtesy of BlackRock.

You are viewing an abbreviated republication of ETF Daily News content. You can find full ETF Daily News articles on (www.etfdailynews.com)

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