Europe
Reduce portfolio duration to neutral, while also cutting exposure to European bonds (both in the core and Periphery) and Canadian government bonds.
It has been the perfect storm for a sharp appreciation in the Japanese yen. The immediate catalyst for the strengthening yen was the sell-off in global risk assets. However, the fundamental case for a stronger yen had been building for some time.
A rebalancing of oil supply and demand will lead to higher crude prices later this year. The Canadian dollar and Norwegian krone will benefit, but it is still too soon to buy these currencies versus the U.S. dollar. For now, we prefer to play the long side in the CAD and NOK <i>via</i> cross trades.
Central bankers fail to grasp that in a non-linear world, it can be futile and dangerous to set an over-precise target for inflation. Today, European banks are the victims of such misguided linear-thinking.
Rebalancing in the oil market later this year will arrest the negative feed-back loop driving markets' inflation, interest-rate and FX expectations, particularly for non-OPEC oil-exporting countries.
Global trade is plummeting as commodity prices remain depressed and emerging markets unravel. Even if oil were not plumbing new lows, we would remain bearish on EM economies, where poor governance and low efficiency suggest that more crises will rear their heads. Above all, we are watching China for policy clarity. After seizing 14% of global exports in recent years, it is now exporting surplus goods into an already deflationary world. Protectionism - not a coordinated response among leading countries - is the likely result. In essence, we reiterate our theme that globalization has peaked. Along the way, we call attention to five geopolitical "Black Swans" that <i>no one</i> is talking about.
With global bond yields converging toward the lower levels of the NIRP countries, it still makes sense to favor markets with higher nominal and real yields and steeper curves, like U.S. Treasuries (especially U.S. TIPS) and U.K. Gilts.
The BoJ's latest rate cut will not have much impact on the Japanese economy or currency. The BoJ and ECB are closer to the end rather than the beginning of their unconventional policies. The biggest policy event of the year will be a 180-degree reversal from the Fed. The divergence in monetary policies that drove the euro and yen lower is largely over.
An improvement in the euro area credit impulse is encouraging, but we explain why it is not enough to sustainably boost risk-assets.
Maintain an above-benchmark portfolio duration since, favoring markets with the highest real yields that stand out in a world where 65% of Developed Market government bonds trade with a negative yield.