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An introduction to Deep Water Waves: Long-term drivers that face investors

Deep Water Waves represent the powerful long-term drivers that face investors; fundamentally altering the economic, political and public policy foundations for asset prices. Accelerated by COVID-19 and intensified by socioeconomic pressures, climate change and geopolitics, these forces will exert themselves on every facet of investment portfolios for years to come. The Franklin Templeton Investment Institute serves as a catalyst both inside and outside of our investment organization to provide a forum for investment insights and their practical application. This paper, Deep Water Waves, reflects that mission of our strategists to drive the conversations with our clients and our specialist investment teams. We expect the conversation we will have in the coming months will build on these waves and continue to expand our understanding.
 

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  • THE DEMOGRAPHIC WAVE - Global growth is set to slow to below its long-term trend over the next generation. The countries that have driven global economic growth over the past two decades are growing older. National borders will continue to harden as anti-immigration sentiment persists or grows in many countries, leading to significant negative implications for lower-income countries that depend on remittances.
  • THE TECHNOLOGY WAVE - The next decade will see an urgent and widespread boom in investment in innovation across all economic sectors. It will be in both private and public sectors, with much of it driven by geopolitical imperative, not just economic value.
  • THE DEBT WAVE - The tension between inflation and deflation will continue, but the calculus has changed. Longer term, control of inflation trumps economic growth, but the resolution will vary by country or region. COVID-19 has exacerbated socioeconomic inequality in many countries; progressive and redistributive taxation will be prioritised globally, unorthodox economic experiments will be attempted, and Big Government is back.
  • THE GEOPOLITICAL WAVE - Geopolitics is set to increase its influence on investment outcomes over the next decade, as the confrontation between the US and China plays out, with asymmetric cyberwarfare the most likely scenario. Economic polarisation between nations and regions will likely increase. After the pandemic, wealthy countries may feel compelled to renew their commitments to multilateral organization like the World Bank and the International Finance Corporation as mechanisms to help low-income countries. But the development gap remains and is growing, so migration pressures continue.
  • THE CLIMATE CHANGE WAVE - Climate change will increasingly exacerbate border tensions, threaten agricultural production and heighten social stresses in many regions. This process also heightens the existing divide within countries: e.g., rural/urban; coal region vs. solar region.

Deep Waves in Practice

Learn how some of our managers are thinking about specific long-term drivers



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