Found this in the Pragmatic Capitalism website. These are Goldman's 10 themes for 2014:
“1. Showtime for the US/DM Recovery
Our 2013 outlook was dominated by the notion that underlying private-
sector healing in the US was being masked by significant fiscal drag.
As we move into 2014 and that drag eases, we expect the long-awaited
shift towards above-trend growth in the US finally to occur, spurred by
an acceleration in private consumption and business investment.
2. Forward guidance harder in an above-trend world
Despite the improvement in growth, we expect G4 central banks to
continue to signal that rates are set to remain on hold near the zero
bound for a prolonged period, faced with low inflation and high
unemployment. In the US, our forecast is still for no hikes until 2016
and we expect the commitment to low rates to be reinforced in the next
few months.
3. Earn the DM equity risk premium, hedge the risk
Over the past few years, we have seen very large risk premium
compression across a wide range of areas. While not at 2007 levels,
credit spreads have narrowed to below long-term averages and asset
market volatility has fallen. Even in a friendly growth and policy
environment such as the one we anticipate, this is likely to make for
lower return prospects (although more appealing in a volatility-adjusted
sense). In equities, in particular, the key question we confront is
whether a rally can continue given above-average multiples. We think it
can.
4. Good carry, bad carry
Our 2014 forecast of improving but still slightly below-trend global
growth and anchored inflation describes an environment in which overall
volatility may justifiably be lower. Markets have already moved a long
way in this direction, but equity volatility has certainly been lower in
prior cycles and forward pricing of volatility is still firmly higher
than spot levels. In an environment of subdued macro volatility, the
desire to earn carry is likely to remain strong, particularly if it
remains hard to envisage significant upside to the growth picture.
5. The race to the exit kicks off
2013 has already seen some EM central banks move to policy
tightening. As the US growth picture improves – and the pressure on
global rates builds – the focus on who may tighten monetary policy is
likely to increase. As we described recently (Global Economics
Weekly 13/33), the market is pricing a relatively synchronised exit
among the major developed markets, even though their recovery profiles
look different. Given that the timing of the first hike has commonly
been judged to be some way off, this lack of differentiation is not
particularly unusual. But the separation of those who are likely to move
early and those who may move later is likely to begin in earnest in
2014.
6. Decision time for the ‘high-flyers’
A number of smaller open economies have imported easy monetary policy
from the US and Europe in recent years, in part to offset currency
strength and in part to compensate for a weaker external environment. In
a number of these places (Norway, Switzerland, Israel, Canada and, to a
lesser extent, New Zealand and Sweden), house prices have appreciated
and/or credit growth has picked up. Central banks have generally
tolerated those signs of emerging pressure given the external growth
risks and the desire to avoid currency strength through a tighter policy
stance. As the developed market growth picture improves, some of these
‘high flyers’ may reassess the balance of risks on this front.
7. Still not your older brother’s EM…
2013 has proved to be a tough year for EM assets. 2014 is unlikely to
see the same level of broad-based pressure. The combination of a sharp
downgrade to expectations of China growth and risk alongside the worries
about a hawkish Fed during the summer ‘taper tantrum’ are unlikely to
be repeated with the same level of intensity.
8. …but EM differentiation to continue
2013 saw countries with high current account deficits, high
inflation, weak institutions and limited DM exposure punished much more
heavily than the ‘DMs of EMs’, which had stronger current accounts and
institutions, underheated economies and greater DM exposure. This is
still likely to be the primary axis of differentiation in coming months,
but in 2014 we would also expect to see greater differentiation within
both these categories.
9. Commodity downside risks grow
Last year we pointed to the ongoing shift in our commodity views,
ultimately towards downside price risk. The impact of supply responses
to the period of extraordinary price pressure continues to flow through
the system. And we are forecasting significant declines (15%+) through
2014 in gold, copper, iron ore and soybeans. Energy prices clearly
matter most for the global outlook. Here our views are more stable,
although downside risk is growing over time and production losses out of
Libya/Iran and other geopolitical risk is now playing a large role in
keeping prices high.
10. Stable China may be good enough
Expectations of Chinese growth have reset meaningfully lower as some
of the medium-term problems around credit growth, shadow financing and
local governance have been widely recognized over the past year. Some of
these issues continue to linger: the risks from the credit overhang
remain and policymakers are unlikely to be comfortable allowing growth
to accelerate much. But the deep deceleration of mid-2013 has reversed
and even our forecast of essentially flat growth (of about 7.5%) may be
enough to comfort investors relative to their worst fears. ”
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