There will be a levelling out of some of the current market extremes in 2011 with China likely to experience a hard landing at some stage, while the US can only improve, according to Schroders Investment Management.
Inflation is picking up in China and the risk there should not be underestimated, according to Schroders head of fixed income and multi assets Simon Doyle.
While it has been dangerous to bet against China and probably will be in the near term, strength of growth there should not be taken for granted because the risk is real, he said.
"If China were to roll over, it would be a very different economic and investment climate and investors need to start thinking now [about] how they factor that into investment portfolios," he said.
Investors have the opportunity to put some protection into their portfolios now rather than waiting for something to happen, he said.
Schroders is looking to find ideas that are inversely correlated with the broader climate thematic, such as owning foreign currency assets on an unhedged basis. Bond options are also worth looking at because in times of volatility there is a flight to quality, Australia sees interest rate cuts and bond markets rally, Doyle added.
Schroders head of Australian equities Martin Conlon said Chinese demand had driven commodity prices to unsustainable levels and at some stage we could see a large correction.
Most economies that go through the aggressive fixed investment type approach that China has had have a hard landing, Conlon said. The Chinese are generally proactive in solving issues in their economy and are acting early. They are clearly trying to slow down their economy and it is surprising how little people are reacting to that, he said.
"They don't do what most of the developed world does, which is wait for the train smash then pick up the pieces afterwards."
On the other hand, the US has already had a massive adjustment in its property market and seen its banks decimated, which has set them at a base where the scope for massive further deterioration is not high, Conlon said.
Their housing stock has been repriced and rather than building new houses, they are eating into the oversupply and doing the things that in any correction need to happen to form the base for new growth, he said.
"That's why in our opinion people are too pessimistic on the US and too optimistic on a lot of other things, namely China. That move back to equilibrium is something we believe will happen over time and the current extremes will ameliorate," he said.
Schroders chief executive Greg Cooper said that while most of the world seems to think the worst of the crisis is behind us, there are still plenty of imbalances.
"More than likely there will be some other hits in the next 12 months that comes through - there is a greater chance of increasing volatility than increasing stability," he concluded.
Deloitte Access Economics has raised concerns about the government’s recent changes to the Future Fund’s investment mandate, questioning the necessity and implications of the reforms.
An industry body has praised the strong backing from institutional investors for Australia’s transition to renewable energy.
The proposed reforms have been described as a key step towards delivering better products and retirement experiences for members, with many noting financial advice remains the “urgent missing piece” of the puzzle.
Jim Chalmers has defended changes to the Future Fund’s mandate, referring to himself as a “big supporter” of the sovereign wealth fund, amid fierce opposition from the Coalition, which has pledged to reverse any changes if it wins next year’s election.