A rocky 2022 has left investors with plenty to worry about, so Bloomberg Markets asked some experts where they’d safeguard money over the next 10 years. Their responses have been edited for clarity and length.

Greg Kuhl
Portfolio manager of global property equities at Janus Henderson Investors

High-quality, well-located real estate has already acted as a store of value for just about all of modern history, and it is well-placed to continue to do so. Commercial real estate offers predictable and growing contractual lease income, protection against inflation as a real asset, lower correlations with other asset classes and durability against social, economic or technological change. While the specific geographies and property types offering the best risk-adjusted returns can and do evolve, the core purpose of real estate—to facilitate shelter, collaboration, entertainment or commerce—will always be relevant. One of the best ways to access real estate is via the public REIT [real estate investment trust] market, which at the moment happens to be quite dislocated relative to private real estate funds, who often own lower-quality assets and operate with much riskier capital structures. This makes now an opportune time, in our view, to establish an allocation to real estate via listed REITs for the next decade and beyond.

Geoffrey Yu
Senior Europe, Middle East and Africa strategist at BNY Mellon

On asset classes over the next decade, our anchoring assumption is that inflation will remain at more elevated levels due to structural shifts including de-globalization, falling productivity and supply constraints (labor, etc.). As such, real returns will be imperative, as they are the best stores of wealth. In asset allocation terms, the following spring to mind.

Equities of companies in sectors with sufficient pricing power, be it utilities or pharma. They will be best insulated from inflation, but there will be regulatory risk. I am all for growth/tech as well, but cost of capital will be higher, so we need to manage expectations. I don’t think we will see them dominate as much as they have over the past decade. Note: There are tech firms that behave like utilities as well, such as cloud providers, and they will do better than “pure growth” types.

FX: Countries willing to maintain positive real rates. Latin America is showing the way, and there may be some good prospects in Southeast Asia, such as Indonesia.

Credit: This is probably the toughest asset class over the next decade, as markets shun debt and positive real rates will also prove problematic. However, we can already see the uplift in bank earnings, which means the risk premium on financials established during the global financial crisis will be eroded. As a result, a lot of the subordinated debt and CoCos [contingent convertible bonds] like AT1s [additional Tier 1 bonds] will be re-rated. Hopefully tighter regulation will also prevent a repeat of 2008, and that is a part of the re-rating process.

Priya Misra
Global head of rates strategy at TD Securities

I think 10-year Treasuries will be the best store of value over the next decade. I emphasize “store of value” (Treasuries have no credit risk, and I believe that the U.S. government will pay its bills) and “next decade” (the Fed is moving real rates high, but at 1.75%, I think 10-year real rates are very restrictive and that will slow the economy over time). A 10-year risk-free real rate of 1.7% is attractive in my mind. It is a great offset to any risk asset in one’s portfolio. The 10-year Treasury should incorporate the views on fed funds over the next 10 years. While the Fed will be slow to start easing due to sticky and high inflation, we think that once they start to ease [monetary policy], they will cut very aggressively. I think the next downturn will be long, even though it may not be very deep. So, it will ensure low fed funds rates. Also, QT [quantitative tightening] has been a big part of the move higher in rates, and we expect that to end in Q4 2023 once the Fed starts to ease rates. I think every investor also needs some Treasuries as a store of liquidity, as high volatility and unprecedented hikes will pressure different asset classes and business models. Having Treasuries which are relatively easy to sell would be a benefit in case of any deleveraging pressures.

Cliff Noreen
Head of global investment strategy at MassMutual

We have had a significant move higher [in 2022] in both interest rates and corporate debt spreads. High-yield corporate bonds and loans will generate high single-digit annual returns over the next decade, which will turn out to be very competitive and possibly even exceed private equity returns. Corporate bonds and loans provide a higher certainty of return than equities with contractual interest income and a final maturity. I acknowledge that defaults are rising and that some companies may be challenged with higher interest payments and less free cash flow.

As a cash substitute today, short-term U.S. Treasury bills offer far superior returns to bank savings accounts and bank CDs [certificates of deposit] along with great liquidity. Not sure how long this opportunity will last.

First « 1 2 » Next