Welcome to this month’s iShares Insights. I’m Katie Brookes, iShares ETF Specialist, and this month we’ll explore healthcare and global infrastructure.
Whilst equity markets are priced for an optimistic outcome; investors may want to consider pivoting towards a defensive stance as economic risks to the downside remain. In the near term we anticipate continued equity market volatility driven by sticky inflation, geopolitical uncertainty and a potential slow down in growth.
Healthcare and global infrastructure are among the top picks as we look for sectors that are compelling in the current macro climate but will also benefit from persistent growth drivers for decades to come.
Let’s consider healthcare.
Investing in the healthcare industry presents a unique, complex and everchanging investment opportunity set that couples defensive characteristics with innovation-driven growth. As an example, investors can gain access to pharma companies which are pivoting from the pandemic and are exploring other applications of mRNA technologies to treat diseases ranging from Alzheimer’s to Parkinson’s.
Importantly, in the long-term, the growth drivers supporting healthcare demand remain. The number of persons aged 80 years or over is projected to reach 426 million globally by 2050. These changing demographics provide long-term demand and growth for healthcare products and services well into the future.
Our second sector pick is infrastructure. Infrastructure is another sector we like as part of a robust multi-asset portfolio in the current inflationary environment. By selecting a global infrastructure ETF, investors are accessing exposure to a wide range of sectors including energy, transport, communication networks, water and waste services as well as social infrastructure. Characteristics that make this investment appealing include stable cash flows, inflation linked contracts and capital stability.
In short, we anticipate continued macro and market volatility and believe investors should consider pivoting to new opportunities in sectors that can weather near-term risks whilst participate in socio-economic trends beyond the current economic cycle.