ROADSHOWS: CFROI vs Economic ROI: A Clearer Picture of Company Performance? - Bryant Matthews /Omaha Insights   •   Geneva 08 Sept • Zurich 09 Sept • London 18 Sept   08 - 18 Sep 25       Fundamental Research on Greek Stocks - Dimitris Giannoulis /ResearchGreece   •   Paris   09 - 12 Sep 25       US & European Global Defense - Byron Callan /Capital Alpha Partners   •   London   09 - 11 Sep 25       Behavioural Finance, Portfolio Strategy & Quant - Jim Rocchio /Kailash Capital Research   •   Boston   09 - 11 Sep 25       US, EU & Asia Short Equity Ideas - Robert Prather /Vision Research   •   LDN 15 - 16 Sept • Dublin 19 Sept • Sydney 23 Sept • Hong Kong 24 Sept • SG 25 Sept • Tokyo 26 Sept • AUH 30 Sept • DXB 1 Oct • NYC 6-8 Oct   15 Sep - 08 Oct 25      

US Election, China Stimulus & War – Assessing The Least Worst Option into 2025?

Andrew Hunt Economics

Global Forecaster

Thu 17 Oct 2024 - 15:00 BST / 10:00 EDT

Summary

Andrew Hunt projected that the U.S. could face $2 to $3.5 trillion in new debt issuance, complicating the balance between government borrowing and household savings. He warned that ongoing QE could lead to higher real interest rates, which may crowd out private investment. Additionally, he highlighted geopolitical concerns, such as rising defense spending in Europe and the potential implications of a Trump presidency, which could exacerbate budget deficits. He forecasted a short-term deflationary period followed by inflation fueled by monetized deficits, while also pointing out China's economic vulnerabilities to external pressures.

David Murrin reiterated that the invasion of Ukraine marked the beginning of World War III, a conclusion drawn from historical cycles of conflict. Murrin warned that America's economic decline, driven by excessive money printing and debt, would exacerbate social tensions and lead to increased socialism. He outlined potential scenarios, including rising energy prices and market volatility due to geopolitical tensions, stressing the need for investors to be adaptive and informed about the intersection of finance and military dynamics.

Topics

Ahead of the US election result on November 5, and after a huge sentiment switch on China stimulus, the path to 2025 is becoming yet more complicated. Geopolitical tensions continue to simmer across the Middle East, markets are testing new highs and currency volatility is rising. Join Andrew Hunt and David Murrin to untangle: • What the US Presidential election result may mean for markets and China / Sanctions • What are the next phases of the Middle East war 12 months in? • Commodity prices, private credit markets and liquidity are all key inputs for sector and market positioning for next year - and the stakes have rarely been higher.