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Many of the same issues that impact traditional investments also impact alternative investments. Some of the issues provide headwinds, while others provide tailwinds. Rising interest rates can favor private credit because of the floating-rate nature of most of their debt, can hurt commercial real estate as credit conditions tighten, and also negatively impact private equity because of the rising cost of capital to finance transactions.

The US stock market has soared throughout much of 2023, with the S&P Index 500 up 20%1 despite some challenging headwinds. The fixed income markets also started to anticipate the end of the US Federal Reserve’s (Fed) tightening cycle, with 10-year Treasury yields falling from a peak of over 5% in October to below 4%.2 The US and world economies have remained resilient despite monetary policy tightening and have continued to grow at a greater-than anticipated rate.

Geopolitical risks and tensions remain elevated with the ongoing wars in Ukraine and Gaza, and 40 national elections slated to occur in 2024. The United States has its own set of political challenges, with presidential and congressional elections in 2024, and ongoing threats of a government shutdown, political gridlock, a growing debt load and growing social unrest.

2024 economic outlook

We expect the economy will slow in 2024 but avoid a hard landing recession, and inflation will moderate but not reach the 2% Fed target. This will likely prompt the Fed (and other central banks) to cut interest rates over the next year.

US and global economic resilience to higher interest rates has occurred because so many had financed at the lower, prevailing interest rates and did not need to refinance as rates rose. At some point, higher borrowing costs, compounded by tighter lending, will lead to softening demand. A risk is that the Fed may be slow to recognize this and respond too late, leading to a harder landing than the markets are anticipating.

We are moving from an economic environment with rising inflation to one with weakening economic growth and falling inflation. As the chart above indicates, historically, this has been positive for value stocks, private equity, infrastructure and relative value investments. US monetary policy and credit conditions have become more restrictive during 2023 as interest rates have risen, with the implication that economy will weaken, unemployment will rise, and a growing number of households and businesses will experience credit duress in 2024.

Read the full paper to learn more. Topics covered include:

  • Private credit: Disruptions create opportunities
  • Private equity: Secondaries anyone?
  • Commercial real estate: Diversification matters
  • Hedge funds: Not all strategies are created equally


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