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Asset Management
Geopolitical uncertainty top global investor worry
Diversification, liquidity offer risk mitigation while data centres, energy offer opportunity
The Asset 11 Sep 2024

Amid trade tensions between the US, Europe and China, major elections in over 70 countries this year, military conflicts, and structural changes in the global economy, more than half of top institutional investors (56%) say the threat level to their investments from geopolitical risk is their top concern, according to a recent survey.

Even so, one-third of these investors plan a shift to higher-risk investments in 2025, finds the survey which is part of PGIM’s 2024 Global Risk Report: Resilient Investing Amid Geopolitical Uncertainty. For the report, PGIM, the US$1.33 trillion global asset management business of American life insurance company Prudential Financial, surveyed 400 institutional investors across eight countries, representing US$9 trillion in assets under management.

Tense global environment

Among possible geopolitical flashpoints, investors say they are monitoring the Taiwan Strait and South China Sea, with nearly half (48%) of investors identifying it as the risk most likely to impact global markets in the next 24 months, given its ties to asset prices. Just over a quarter (27%) said military conflict in the Middle East is the greatest risk.

However, despite a heightened sense of geopolitical risk, investors say they are ready to take on risk in their portfolios, a sign that institutions are taking a long-term view and looking at volatility as an opportunity.

One-third of institutional investors in the survey say they plan to have an aggressive portfolio strategy (that is, taking on more risk) by the end of 2025, compared with about one-quarter who are currently aggressive in their risk tolerance.

Caution around elections

More than half of investors globally (56%) say that the outcome of this year’s elections are a factor in their portfolio decisions.

While 29% of investors globally have held more cash in response to geopolitical uncertainty, this “flight to safety” was most pronounced in the US, where 41% of investors say they have moved into cash to manage risk. A majority of investors globally (55%) say they plan to increase cash allocations heading into elections.

About three-quarters of institutional investors also say their portfolios are moderately or well prepared for any repercussions stemming from major elections in 2024, reflecting confidence that policy outcomes in the US and elsewhere will not come as a surprise.

At least two-thirds of investors say the same when polled about the investment impacts of trade subsidies and disputes, global debt levels, regulatory policies and supply-chain disruptions.

Strategies for unpredictable world

Nearly half of the survey’s respondents (48%) feel there are now too many geopolitical risks to effectively mitigate their potential impact to portfolios. However, investors are using several approaches to manage geopolitical risk and identify investment opportunities, such as data centres and alternative energy.

A comprehensive approach to diversification and liquidity, the report adds, can mitigate risk by helping investors avoid becoming a forced seller during unexpected events. Quantitative models can make it possible to keep investors ahead of the curve as trends begin to change.

Some solutions, such as buffered exchange-traded funds, can help mitigate downside risk while maintaining some exposure to the upside. Other recommendations, the report states, include increasing allocations to real assets, stress-testing portfolios with scenario analysis, and using active strategies.