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A $222 Billion Manager Shifts to Cash on Worries Trade War Will Spread

A $222 Billion Manager Shifts to Cash on Worries Trade War Will Spread

(Bloomberg) -- A $222 billion wealth manager that piled up cash to the highest level in years before last month’s global equity rout is now worried Europe might be next on President Donald Trump’s tariff radar.

Pictet Wealth Management boosted cash to about 15% of holdings from around 9% at the start of this year, and turned tactically underweight on global equities in May, said David Gaud, the chief investment officer for Asia. He said that the cash is almost three times the level that a fund should have over a decade. Money managers with $528 billion between them have an average cash balance of 5.6%, according to a Bank of America Merrill Lynch survey.

The U.S.’s trade deficit with Europe is much larger than it is with Mexico, making the region potentially “the next big candidate” for tariffs, Gaud said in an interview in Singapore on Tuesday. Such a protective measure would be “very destructive” amid Brexit and economic weakness in Italy, he added.

A $222 Billion Manager Shifts to Cash on Worries Trade War Will Spread

The U.S. Federal Reserve on Wednesday signaled it was ready to lower interest rates for the first time since 2008, as Trump’s trade battles and their potentially corrosive impact on the U.S. and other economies was a major factor behind the shift.

Gaud has turned more pessimistic since June of last year, when he said that turbulence from the threat of a trade war wasn’t something to lose sleep over. He now worries that rising trade tensions are delaying the economic recovery that had been anticipated in the second half as tariffs pressure consumption.

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Trump on Tuesday accused the euro area and China of weakening their currencies to gain an economic advantage. The president has already imposed tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods and has planned to target an additional $325 billion in mainland products. He has also threatened to do the same against Mexico and carmakers in Europe and Japan.

Europe becoming the next potential target for tariffs is only one of several risks facing the market, according to Pictet. The firm’s decision to underweight equities was made due to factors including the view that this year’s strong performance in stocks provided a chance to lock in returns. The MSCI World Index slid 6.2% in May, paring its gain for this year to 14%.

The equity gauge has rallied about 6% this month amid speculation that trade tensions could ease at the G-20 summit in Japan next week. The U.S. and China on Tuesday said that their presidents will meet there to relaunch trade talks.

Although cautious about trade-related shares, Gaud remains bullish on prospects for domestic-oriented stocks in China, India and Indonesia. The outlook is also good for Singapore’s property trusts and Macau casinos focusing on the mass market, he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Abhishek Vishnoi in Singapore at avishnoi4@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Divya Balji at dbalji1@bloomberg.net, Naoto Hosoda, Kurt Schussler

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