Investment Strategies
Rothschild Smiles On Stocks, Gold, Property Amid Concerns On Money Printing

Rothschild Wealth Management holds assets such as equities,
commodities,
gold and real estate to give some protection against inflation
while central
banks continue to print money, while it is cool on cash and
government debt,
the firm said in a recent investment update.
“Our main scenario is for more of the same: low interest
rates and subdued growth, as politicians in the west muddle
through the debt
crisis. While we expect inflation to stay in a 2 per cent to 3
per cent range
over the next few years, we believe much higher inflation is a
greater risk
than a deflationary slump,”
Dirk Wiedmann, head of investments, said in a note.
The firm has, meanwhile, been recently shortlisted for an
award under the WealthBriefing Awards 2013, to be announced on 2
May this year
in London.
Among its favourite asset areas are shares in leading global
businesses that Rothschild argues are “fairly valued and paying
good dividends”.
It likes companies with “dominant brands, healthy balance sheets
and robust
cash flows”; such firms can flourish, even in a world of low
growth, it said.
Among currencies, the firm likes the Norwegian krone, the
Canadian and Singapore
dollars, saying these currencies should remain firm in the next
few years as a
result of strong economies and robust government finances. It
added, that gold is
a global ‘hard’ currency.
Emerging
Rothschild Wealth Management also likes emerging market
assets, Wiedmann said, pointing to different ways of gaining
exposure, whether
via local bond markets or holding global businesses that earn a
large chunk of
revenues in such markets.
After being in the doldrums for years, the wealth manager is
positive on Japanese equities, saying they are cheap on various
valuations,
such as a price-to-book ratio. “In our view, a weaker yen and
negative real
interest rates could trigger an upward re-rating of Japanese
equities over the
next 12 to 18 months,” it said.
The firm added that the trend in economic data has been
relatively
reassuring in recent times, with signs of stronger industrial
output around the
world; in the US,
house prices are edging higher, while manufacturing and services
are expanding.
On the negative side, the $85 billion in departmental spending
cuts that took
effect in March are expected to cut up to 1.5 per cent from the
country’s gross
domestic product this year.
Turning to China,
Rothschild Wealth Management said the world’s second largest
economy is showing
more solid signs of recovery, bolstered by exports and resilient
equity and
real estate markets. It added that average inflation in the
region appears to
have bottomed at around 3 per cent.