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David Stuart
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The best opportunities to reap returns from undervalued global equities have passed, according to a new analysis released by Mercer.
The head of Mercer’s Dynamic Asset Allocation team in Australia, David Stuart, said the company had brought its global equity rating back to “fair value” from “undervalued” as the growth in global equity markets slowed over the past quarter.
“We remain optimistic that corporate earnings will continue to recover but the markets have now built in a reasonable amount of expectation around good news in future earnings, and this has squeezed out the potential for above average returns,” he said.
Stuart said that Mercer also believed equity markets were in for a bumpy ride with many risks still facing global economies meaning the case to be overweight global equities was no longer as strong.
Large superannuation accounts may need to find funds outside their accounts or take the extreme step of selling non-liquid assets under the proposed $3 million super tax legislation, according to new analysis from ANU.
Economists have been left scrambling to recalibrate after the Reserve Bank wrong-footed markets on Tuesday, holding the cash rate steady despite widespread expectations of a cut.
A new Roy Morgan report has found retail super funds had the largest increase in customer satisfaction in the last year, but its record-high rating still lags other super categories.
In a sharp rebuke to market expectations, the Reserve Bank held the cash rate steady at 3.85 per cent on Tuesday, defying near-unanimous forecasts of a cut and signalling a more cautious approach to further easing.