Corporate Bonds
The combination of faster global growth and accommodative monetary policies laid out in the BCA Outlook 2020 report will delay the peak of the global credit cycle. This means investors should expect another year of corporate bond outperformance versus…
Appropriate valuation measures show that high-yield corporate spreads are very attractive in the current environment, while investment grade corporate spreads are tight compared to our fair value estimates. From our analysis of the three phases of the…
Highlights We expect tensions from the Sino-US trade war to marginally ease in 2020, in the run-up to the US presidential election. The “Phase One” trade deal will likely be signed with a good possibility of some tariff rollbacks. Chinese policymakers will roll out more stimulus to secure an economic recovery in 2020, and external demand will improve. But we expect growth in both the domestic economy and exports to only modestly accelerate. During the next 6 to 12 months, investors should remain bullish on both Chinese A shares and investable stocks, while keeping in mind that relative outperformance, particularly for A-shares, could be frontloaded in the first half of the year. Despite sharply rising amount of defaults, Chinese onshore bonds are priced at a much higher premium than warranted by their default risk. We continue to favor Chinese onshore corporate bonds in both absolute terms and in relative to duration-matched government bonds. Feature BCA Research recently published its special year end Outlook report for 2020, which described the macro themes that are likely to drive global financial markets over the coming year. In this week’s China Investment Strategy report we elaborate on the Outlook, by reviewing our four key themes for China in the year ahead. Key Theme #1: Tension From The Trade War With The US Will Ease In 2020 Despite the harsh rhetoric and threats of retaliation from both the US and China, we expect that the real risks to the global economy from the Sino-US trade war will decline in 2020. In trade negotiations next year, both President Trump and President Xi will need to adjust to their respective constraints. Both President Trump and President Xi will need to adjust to their respective constraints next year. Trump must sustain a strong domestic economy to increase his re-election odds. He will cater to the US economy and financial markets, by trying to de-escalate trade tensions and keeping negotiations going with China. This means he is likely to hold off on tariffs on China, and quite possibly even agree to roll back tariffs to August 2019 or April 2019 levels (Chart 1). Chart 1Some Tariff Rollback Is Possible
Some Tariff Rollback Is Possible
Some Tariff Rollback Is Possible
President Xi also faces economic constraints as the Chinese economy is on an unsure footing. The buildup in leverage in the non-financial sector over the past decade has prevented Chinese policymakers from aggressively stimulating the economy by relying on the old debt-oriented policies. Chinese policymakers are concerned about employment stability.1 The private sector, which accounts for 80% of all job creation in China, has been disproportionally hit by the trade war and tariffs compared to the more domestically oriented state-owned enterprises. These economic constraints suggest that it is in China’s best interest to avoid any further friction with the US. Therefore, the “Phase One” trade deal will likely be signed, with a good possibility of some tariff rollbacks. Trade talks will continue in the run-up to the US presidential election, and any escalation will probably occur in non-trade, non-tariff areas. This means that policy uncertainty surrounding the Sino-US trade war will decline in 2020. Bottom Line: We expect tensions from the Sino-US trade war to marginally ease in 2020. However, the risk to this base case view is high and geopolitical uncertainty remains elevated, as suggested by our Geopolitical Strategy team.2 Trade war tensions could re-emerge, which potentially could end the global business cycle and equity bull market. Key Theme #2: Stimulus Versus Shock: Approaching An Inflection Point We presented some simple “arithmetic” in May showing that in order for investors to be bullish on Chinese stocks, the impact of China’s reflationary efforts needed to more than offset the negative shock to the economy from tariffs.3 In other words, a bullish Chinese equity scenario required Stimulus – Shock > 0. In terms of China’s real economy, 2019 essentially panned out to be a Stimulus – Shock =0 scenario, with a “half strength” reflationary response (measured by its credit impulse) barely offsetting the trade shock to the economy (Chart 2). So far on an aggregate level, the shock from tariffs on China’s economy has had a limited direct impact. This is because exports to the US account for only 3.6% of China’s aggregate economy, whereas domestic capex accounts for more than 40% (Chart 3). Our calculation suggests a 10% annualized decline in export growth to the US would shave off 0.4 percentage points from China’s nominal GDP growth. Chart 2This Year, Measured Stimulus Has Just Offset Shocks To The Economy
This Year, Measured Stimulus Has Just Offset Shocks To The Economy
This Year, Measured Stimulus Has Just Offset Shocks To The Economy
Chart 3Domestic Demand Much More Important Than Exports To The US
Domestic Demand Much More Important Than Exports To The US
Domestic Demand Much More Important Than Exports To The US
Additionally, evidence suggests that a large portion of China’s exports to the US has been rerouted through peripheral countries, such as Taiwan and Vietnam (Chart 4). This fact explains why China’s exports have been in-line with the trend of global trade this year (Chart 5). Chart 4Chinese Exports Finding Alternative Routes To The US...
Chinese Exports Finding Alternative Routes To The US...
Chinese Exports Finding Alternative Routes To The US...
Chart 5...And Total Exports Have Been Holding Up
...And Total Exports Have Been Holding Up
...And Total Exports Have Been Holding Up
Chart 6China's Economic Slowdown Predates The Trade War
China's Economic Slowdown Predates The Trade War
China's Economic Slowdown Predates The Trade War
It is important for investors to remember that China’s current economic slowdown predates the trade war and is due to its domestic financial deleveraging campaign that began in early 2017. The trade war exacerbated an existing downward trend in the economy, but was not the cause of it (Chart 6). In 2020, while we expect a ceasefire in the trade war and a potential rollback of tariffs would ease the shock to China’s economy, we also believe that more pro-growth policy support is underway.4 From an investment perspective, this means both China’s economic conditions and corporate earnings will improve, supporting a bullish cyclical outlook for China-related assets. Still, several reasons point to the overall scale of stimulus being less than that of 2015-16, and the upside to China’s export growth will likely be limited given elevated geopolitical uncertainties. Therefore, it is unrealistic to expect a material acceleration in Chinese economic growth in 2020: China is still falling short of its target to double urban income by 2020. Chart 7A 6% Growth Next Year May Just Make The Cut
A 6% Growth Next Year May Just Make The Cut
A 6% Growth Next Year May Just Make The Cut
Next year will mark the final year for Chinese policymakers to accomplish the goal of “Doubling GDP by 2020”. Without the recent upward revision to the level of its 2018 nominal GDP by 2.1%, China's economy would have to expand by at least 6.1% in 2020 to achieve the goal. The upward revision allows a lower economic growth rate in 2020 to reach the goal (Chart 7). China is still falling short of its target to double urban income by 2020 (Chart 8). While keeping economic growth and employment stable remains a top priority, the recent slight improvement in employment should provide some relief to Chinese policymakers (Chart 9). Chart 8China Is Falling Short Of Urban Income Target...
China Is Falling Short Of Urban Income Target...
China Is Falling Short Of Urban Income Target...
Chart 9...But There Is Some Relief In The Labor Market
...But There Is Some Relief In The Labor Market
...But There Is Some Relief In The Labor Market
Monetary policy will remain accommodative, with room for further cuts to interest rates and the reserve requirement ratio (RRR). Nonetheless, we think Chinese policymakers will only allow monetary policy to loosen incrementally and modestly, while keeping a lid on corporate leverage. According to a recent article published by Yi Gang, the governor of China’s central bank, the PBoC will be keen to avoid another boom-bust cycle.5 Fiscal stimulus will continue to take the center stage in supporting growth in 2020, as noted in our November 20th China Investment Strategy Weekly.6 We expect that the National People’s Congress in March 2020 will approve higher quotas on issuing local government bonds, and loosened capital requirements will likely further boost local governments’ infrastructure project funding and expenditures. Transportation and urban development infrastructure projects will likely to continue receiving the most policy support in 2020. Other areas such as environmental protection, education, and social security will continue to be the Chinese government’s focus. These areas are unlikely to translate into immediate economic growth, but will improve China’s long-term economic and social structures. In contrast, compared to the 2015-2016 cycle, housing construction will receive less fiscal support (Chart 10). Overall, we expect the Chinese government to set next year’s real GDP growth target between 5.5 - 6.0%, a half of a percentage point lower than the growth target for 2019. Despite slower real output growth, nominal GDP and economic conditions will bottom in the first quarter of 2020, subsequently pushing up core inflation and reversing an ongoing deflation in the industrial sector (Chart 11). Chart 10Transportation And Urban Development Projects Are Again In Favor
2020 Key Views: Four Themes For China In The Coming Year
2020 Key Views: Four Themes For China In The Coming Year
Chart 11Nominal Output Will Tick Up Soon
Nominal Output Will Tick Up Soon
Nominal Output Will Tick Up Soon
Bottom Line: Chinese policymakers will roll out more stimulus to secure an economic recovery in 2020, and external demand will improve. But we expect growth in both the economy and export to only modestly accelerate. Key Theme #3: Improved Earnings Outlook Supports A Cyclically Bullish View On Chinese Stocks A combination of further policy support, improved earnings and decreased trade tensions should provide tailwinds to Chinese stocks in 2020. Chinese stocks will outperform the global benchmark over a cyclical time horizon (6- to 12-months), for the following reasons: Valuations are depressed relative to global averages: the forward P/E ratios of both China’s onshore A-shares and offshore investable stocks are well below the global benchmark (Chart 12). While the forward P/E ratio of the A-share index is hovering around 12 times, the investable market has particularly suffered a setback from uncertainties surrounding the trade war. Even taking into account that structural weakness in the Chinese corporate earnings growth justifies for a lower multiple than the global average, both Chinese onshore and offshore stocks are offering even deeper discounts than their peaks in 2018, compared to global benchmarks. Chart 12Valuations Of Chinese Stocks Are Depressed
Valuations Of Chinese Stocks Are Depressed
Valuations Of Chinese Stocks Are Depressed
Chart 13Chinese Corporate Earnings Closely Track Economic Conditions
Chinese Corporate Earnings Closely Track Economic Conditions
Chinese Corporate Earnings Closely Track Economic Conditions
Both the economy and earnings growth will improve: We expect the Chinese economy to bottom in the first quarter of 2020. Given the close correlation between the coincident economic activity and earnings cycle, we expect earnings to also improve in 2020 (Chart 13). Improved corporate earnings next year will be the catalyst for the currently cheap multiples in Chinese stocks to re-rate, and re-approach their early 2018 high. Our Earnings Recession Probability Model shows that the probability of an upcoming earnings recession has dropped to 35% from its peak of 85% in early 2019 (Chart 14). Additionally, Chart 15 highlights that the 12-month forward EPS momentum has turned modestly positive. Chart 14Probability Of An Upcoming Earnings Recession Has Significantly Dropped
Probability Of An Upcoming Earnings Recession Has Significantly Dropped
Probability Of An Upcoming Earnings Recession Has Significantly Dropped
Chart 1512-Month Forward EPS Momentum Has Turned Modestly Positive
12-Month Forward EPS Momentum Has Turned Modestly Positive
12-Month Forward EPS Momentum Has Turned Modestly Positive
There are, however, a few caveats to our bullish cyclical view on Chinese stocks. First, while it is not our base case view, geopolitical risks, particularly the Sino-US trade war, could end the global business cycle and equity bull market in 2020. Within the context of falling global stocks, we think Chinese domestic A shares would passively outperform global benchmarks, as A shares are mostly driven by China’s domestic credit and economic growth, and are less sensitive to trade frictions. But investable stocks would clearly underperform in this scenario. The odds are decent that all of the outperformance of Chinese stocks in 2020 will be frontloaded in the first half of the year. Secondly, the odds are decent that all of the outperformance of Chinese stocks in 2020 will be frontloaded in the first half of the year. We expect credit growth, infrastructure spending and the economy to improve in the first quarter. If the “Phase One” trade deal is also signed during that period, onshore A shares and investable stocks will significantly outperform their global counterparts in the first and possibly the early part of the second quarter. However, in the second half of next year, if the Chinese economy stabilizes but stimulus does not ramp up further, then the upside potential in both bourses may be capped as investors will question whether Chinese stocks will continue to gain ground in relative terms. We will closely monitor Chinese credit growth and trade negotiations throughout 2020 to determine if there is more eventual upside potential to economic growth, and thus Chinese earnings prospects, than we currently believe. While we recommend a cyclically bullish stance towards Chinese stocks for next year, our tactical (i.e. 0-3 month) stance remains neutral. We expect to align our tactical and cyclical stances soon, and are awaiting confirmation of a hard data improvement alongside a breakout of key technical conditions to do so.7 Bottom Line: During the next 6 to 12 months, investors should remain bullish on both Chinese A shares and investable stocks within a global equity portfolio. However, investors should also keep in mind that the relative outperformance, particularly for the A-share market, could be frontloaded in the first half of 2020. Key Theme #4: We Continue To Favor Chinese Onshore Bonds, Despite Default Concerns Chart 16Global Investors Are Piling Into The Chinese Bond Market
Global Investors Are Piling Into The Chinese Bond Market
Global Investors Are Piling Into The Chinese Bond Market
Despite sharply rising defaults, Chinese onshore bonds are still priced at a much higher premium than warranted by their default risk. This view is increasingly shared by global investors, as evident in the capital flows into China’s onshore bond market (Chart 16). While the total amount of bond defaults in the first eleven months of 2019 was an astonishing 120.4 billion yuan, they account for only half percent of China’s total onshore bonds issued. A 0.5 percent default rate is in line with global ex-US, and 160 bps below the default rate in the US (Chart 17). Yet, Chinese corporate bond spreads are about 150-175 bps higher than their US counterparts, an overpriced risk premium in our view (Chart 18). Recently, despite mounting defaults, China’s corporate bond spreads have continued to narrow. This suggests that investors do not expect the record-high level of defaults in the past two years to damage China’s corporate sector in the near future. Moreover, China’s monetary policy remains ultra-loose, liquidity conditions have been largely stable, RMB devaluation and capital outflows have both been under control, and the Chinese economy is expected to bottom in the next quarter. Chart 17Chinese Default Rate Well Below Global Average
Chinese Default Rate Well Below Global Average
Chinese Default Rate Well Below Global Average
Chart 18The Risk Premium Assigned To Chinese Corporate Bonds Seems Overdone
The Risk Premium Assigned To Chinese Corporate Bonds Seems Overdone
The Risk Premium Assigned To Chinese Corporate Bonds Seems Overdone
Bottom Line: We continue to favor Chinese onshore corporate bonds in both absolute terms, and in relative to duration-matched government bonds. Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 “China to take multi-pronged measures to keep employment stable,” State Council Executive Meeting, December 4, 2019. 2 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report "2020 Key Views: The Anarchic Society," dated December 6, 2019, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Simple Arithmetic," dated May 15, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 4, 6, 7 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Questions From The Road: Timing The Turn," dated November 20, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 5 https://www.chainnews.com/articles/745634370915.htm Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights Global growth will rebound in 2020, led by the US and China, putting upward pressure on global bond yields. Maintain below-benchmark overall duration exposure. Central banks will stay dovish until policy reflation has clearly turned into inflation, limiting how high bond yields can climb in 2020 but sowing the seeds for a far more bond-bearish backdrop in 2021. Expect mild bear-steepening pressure on global yield curves, led by rising inflation expectations. Accommodative monetary policy and faster growth will delay the peak in the aging global credit cycle. Stay overweight global corporate debt versus sovereign bonds. Returns on global fixed income will be far lower in 2020 than in 2019, given rich valuation starting points. Country and sector selection will be more important in driving fixed income outperformance. For sovereign bonds, favor countries where yields are less sensitive to change in overall global yields; for credit, favor sectors with lower interest rate durations and lower spread volatility. Feature BCA Research’s Outlook 2020 report, outlining the main investment themes for next year from the collective mind of our strategists, was sent to all clients in late November.1 In this report, we discuss the broad implications of those themes for the direction of global fixed income markets in 2020. In a follow-up report to be published in the first week of the new year, we will translate those themes into specific recommended allocations and weightings within our model bond portfolio framework. A Summary Of The 2020 Outlook Chart 1Expect A Cyclical Rise In Global Yields In 2020
Expect A Cyclical Rise In Global Yields In 2020
Expect A Cyclical Rise In Global Yields In 2020
The main conclusions from the Outlook 2020 report were cyclically bullish looking out over the next twelve months, but more cautious beyond that. The downturn in global growth seen in 2019 is projected to end in response to several headwinds that have become tailwinds: a small wave of Chinese stimulus and reflation; more stimulative global monetary policies; the substantial easing of global financial conditions as risk assets have rallied worldwide; a fading drag on global manufacturing from inventory destocking; both China (weak growth) and the US (the 2020 US election) have good reasons to de-escalate the trade war in 2020. This backdrop should push global bond yields moderately higher in 2020, while maintaining a backdrop that is once again favorable for risk assets on a relative basis versus government debt (Chart 1). A critical element to this story is the supportive monetary policy backdrop. Central banks worldwide, led by interest rate cuts from the US Federal Reserve and a resumption of asset purchases from the European Central Bank (ECB), are now running more stimulative policies in response to this year’s global manufacturing slump and elevated level of political uncertainty. Policymakers will maintain accommodative monetary policy through 2020 to try and bring depressed inflation expectations back up to central bank targets. This will create a “sweet spot” for global risk assets, with improving economic growth and accommodative monetary policy. A repeat of the spectacular total return numbers seen across the majority of asset classes in 2019 is unlikely, but global equity and credit markets should solidly outperform government bonds. Yet all that monetary stimulus does not come without a price. Policymakers will maintain accommodative monetary policy through 2020 to try and bring depressed inflation expectations back up to central bank targets. This will create a “sweet spot” for global risk assets, with improving economic growth and accommodative monetary policy. A revival of inflationary pressures in 2021 will force central banks to raise rates much more aggressively. Combined with a China that remains wary of promoting excess leverage, this will drive the current prolonged global business cycle expansion to its recessionary endgame, taking equity and credit markets down with it. This will eventually trigger a new decline in global bond yields as policymakers shift back to easing mode, but from much higher levels than today. Our Four Main Key Views For Global Fixed Income Markets In 2020 The following are the main implications for global fixed income investment strategy based off the conclusions from the 2020 BCA Outlook: Key View #1: Maintain below-benchmark overall duration exposure. The pickup in global growth that we expect in 2020 has its roots in two locations: China and the US. For China, policymakers are keenly aware that the current growth slowdown cannot continue, as it has already pushed nominal GDP growth below 8% (Chart 2). For an economy as highly leveraged as China, slowing nominal growth is lethal and must be avoided to prevent a surge in private sector defaults and rising unemployment. Already, China has delivered significant policy stimulus in 2019: the reserve requirement ratio has been cut by 400bps; taxes have been cut by 2.8% of GDP; capital spending at state-owned enterprises has increased; the currency has depreciated; and, more recently, monetary policy has been eased via traditional interest rate cuts. These measures have eased our index of Chinese monetary conditions and triggered a surge in the China credit impulse, which leads Chinese import growth (i.e. China’s most direct impact on the global economy) by nine months. There are signs that Chinese growth is already bottoming out, as evidenced by the recent pickup in the China manufacturing PMI. Expect more signs of improvement in the first half of 2020. The BCA global leading economic indicator (LEI) has been rising since January of this year, and the global LEI diffusion index is signaling that the upturn will continue in 2020 (Chart 3). With global financial conditions at highly stimulative levels thanks to the robust performance of risk assets in 2019, the backdrop is already conducive to faster global growth. BCA’s geopolitical strategists are of the view that a “détente” in the US-China trade war is still the most likely base case scenario, which would go a long way in reducing the growth-inhibiting effects of elevated uncertainty (bottom panel). Chart 2A Boost To Global Growth From China In 2020
A Boost To Global Growth From China In 2020
A Boost To Global Growth From China In 2020
Chart 3Lower Uncertainty + Easy Financial Conditions = Faster Growth
Lower Uncertainty + Easy Financial Conditions = Faster Growth
Lower Uncertainty + Easy Financial Conditions = Faster Growth
As for the US, the lagged impact of the Fed’s 75bps of rate cuts this year has boosted domestic liquidity conditions in a pro-growth fashion. The BCA US Financial Liquidity Indicator, which leads not only US growth but also leads the BCA global LEI and commodity prices by 18 months, is already signaling that US economic momentum is set to bottom out in early 2020 (Chart 4). This signal is in addition to the leading properties of US financial conditions (middle panel), which suggests a reacceleration of real GDP growth back above trend is about to unfold. Chinese policy reflation has typically been a good leading indicator for US capex and is heralding a rebound in investment spending (bottom panel). The pickup in global growth would also help revive the dormant euro zone economy, which has been hit hard though plunging export demand and overall weakness in the manufacturing sector. The entire slump in euro area real GDP growth since the start of 2018 can be attributed to plunging net exports, while domestic demand has held steady (Chart 5). The increase in the China credit impulse and our global LEI diffusion index – both leading indicators of euro area export growth – are signaling that euro area export demand is already in the process of bottoming out (bottom two panels) and should gain momentum in the first half of 2020. Chart 4US Growth Is Poised To Accelerate
US Growth Is Poised To Accelerate
US Growth Is Poised To Accelerate
Chart 5The Drag On European Growth From Trade Will Soon End
The Drag On European Growth From Trade Will Soon End
The Drag On European Growth From Trade Will Soon End
This better growth backdrop will put moderate upward pressure on global bond yields in 2020. This better growth backdrop will put moderate upward pressure on global bond yields in 2020. Key View #2: Expect mild bear-steepening pressure on global yield curves, led by rising inflation expectations. While we expect bond yields to drift higher in the next 6-12 months, the upside will be capped with central banks likely to stay dovish until policy reflation has clearly turned into higher inflation. Interest rate markets will not begin to price in expectations of tighter monetary policy without evidence of actual inflation picking up. The Fed, ECB, Bank of Japan and other central banks have all stated publicly that they will maintain current accommodative policy settings until realized inflation has sustainably returned to target levels, typically around 2%. This would be a major change in the modus operandi of these policymakers, who have typically signaled rate hikes based simply on forecasts of higher inflation. The implication is that interest rate markets will not begin to price in expectations of tighter monetary policy without evidence of actual inflation picking up (Chart 6). Chart 6Central Banks Will Stay Dovish Until Inflation Sustainably Accelerates
Central Banks Will Stay Dovish Until Inflation Sustainably Accelerates
Central Banks Will Stay Dovish Until Inflation Sustainably Accelerates
A critical ingredient for global inflation to begin moving higher again is a softer US dollar (USD). The year-over-year growth rate of the trade-weighted USD is correlated to global export price inflation and commodity price inflation, more generally (Chart 7). The typical drivers of the USD are all pointing in a more bearish direction: Chart 7The USD Is Critical For Global Reflation
The USD Is Critical For Global Reflation
The USD Is Critical For Global Reflation
Chart 8Global Real Yields & Inflation Expectations Will Drift Higher In 2020
Global Real Yields & Inflation Expectations Will Drift Higher In 2020
Global Real Yields & Inflation Expectations Will Drift Higher In 2020
the Fed has cut interest rates multiple times since the summer and is expanding its balance sheet via repo operations and treasury bill purchases; global (non-US) growth is bottoming out, and capital tends to flow out of the USD into more cyclical currencies in Europe and EM when global growth is accelerating; elevated policy uncertainty, which tends to attract inflows into the safety of the USD, is starting to diminish. The combination of improving global growth and a softer USD would normally be enough to generate a significant increase in global bond yields. Yet we do not expect the sort of move higher in the real component of bond yields signaled by our global LEI diffusion index in 2020 (Chart 8, top panel). While real yields should move higher alongside faster growth, if there is no expected tightening of monetary policy as well, the move in real yields will be more limited. The grind higher in global bond yields that we expect in 2020 will come first through faster inflation expectations and, much later in the year, higher real bond yields when central bankers (starting with the Fed) begin to signal a need to turn more hawkish. The grind higher in global bond yields that we expect in 2020 will come first through faster inflation expectations and, much later in the year, higher real bond yields when central bankers (starting with the Fed) begin to signal a need to turn more hawkish. This suggests that inflation-linked bonds should perform reasonably well in countries where inflation is likely to accelerate the fastest, like the US. Faster inflation expectations will also result in some bear-steepening of global government bond yield curves in the first half of 2020 (Chart 9). There is very little curve steepening discounted in bond forward rates in the developed markets – a consequence of the general flatness of yield curves – which suggests that yield curve steepening trades could prove to be profitable in 2020. Chart 9Expect A Mild Bear-Steepening Of Global Yield Curves
Expect A Mild Bear-Steepening Of Global Yield Curves
Expect A Mild Bear-Steepening Of Global Yield Curves
Chart 10The Fed Has Dis-Inverted The Treasury Curve
The Fed Has Dis-Inverted The Treasury Curve
The Fed Has Dis-Inverted The Treasury Curve
In the case of the US, the Fed’s recent easing actions have pushed short-term interest rates below longer-term Treasury yields, removing the yield curve inversion that sparked recession fears among investors during the summer of 2019 (Chart 10). With the Fed likely to sit on its hands for most of next year, even as US growth and inflation are likely to improve, this will put additional bear-steepening pressure on the US Treasury curve. In Europe, bond markets have already discounted a very significant impact from the ECB restarting its Asset Purchase Program, which only began last month. Investment grade corporate bond spreads, as well as Italy-Germany government bond spreads, have narrowed substantially despite a weak euro area economy (Chart 11, bottom panel). Meanwhile, the term premium on 10-year German bunds is back to the deeply negative levels middle panel) seen when the ECB was expanding its balance sheet at a 30-40% pace, rather than the 5% pace implied by the current announced pace of purchases of 20 billion euros per month (top panel). This potentially leaves longer-term European yields exposed to the same bear-steepening pressures seen in other bond markets, even within the context of a renewed ECB bond-buying program. Chart 11European Bonds Already Discount A Very Dovish ECB
European Bonds Already Discount A Very Dovish ECB
European Bonds Already Discount A Very Dovish ECB
Chart 12The Wild Card For Bonds Markets In 2020: Fiscal Policy
The Wild Card For Bonds Markets In 2020: Fiscal Policy
The Wild Card For Bonds Markets In 2020: Fiscal Policy
A potentially big wild card for global bond markets next year will be fiscal policy, which can also exacerbate yield curve steepening pressures. Any sign of a push toward more government spending, particularly in Europe where there has been such reluctance to open the fiscal taps, would result in a sharper upward move in global bond yields than we are expecting. This is not because of a supply effect related to more government bond issuance that would require higher yields to attract buyers. It is because fiscal stimulus (Chart 12) would push growth to an even faster pace that would bring forward the date when inflation returns to policymaker targets and tighter monetary policy could commence. This would follow a similar path to the curve steepening dynamics described earlier, with a fiscal boost to growth pushing up longer-term inflation expectations before starting to push up short-term interest rate expectations. Key View #3: Stay overweight global corporate debt versus sovereign bonds. Investors should expect another year of corporate bond outperformance versus sovereign debt in the developed economies. The combination of faster global growth, somewhat higher inflation and accommodative monetary policies laid out in the BCA Outlook 2020 report will delay the peak in the aging global credit cycle. This means investors should expect another year of corporate bond outperformance versus sovereign debt in the developed economies. Low borrowing rates are already helping to extend the credit cycle by making it easier for highly indebted borrowers to service their debts. This can be seen in the US, where interest coverage ratios (using top-down data for the non-financial corporate sector) remain above the levels that have preceded previous recessions (Chart 13). Low borrowing rates are also helping indebted borrowers in Europe, particularly in Italy and Spain where the banking system is now far less exposed to non-performing loans than during the peak years of the 2011-12 European Debt Crisis (Chart 14). Chart 13Low Rates Helping Extend The US Credit Cycle
Low Rates Helping Extend The US Credit Cycle
Low Rates Helping Extend The US Credit Cycle
Chart 14Low Rates Helping Ease Stress In European Banks Declining Non-Performing Loans Are A Positive For The European Periphery
Low Rates Helping Ease Stress In European Banks Declining Non-Performing Loans Are A Positive For The European Periphery
Low Rates Helping Ease Stress In European Banks Declining Non-Performing Loans Are A Positive For The European Periphery
Chart 15A Cyclically Positive Backdrop For Global Corporates
A Cyclically Positive Backdrop For Global Corporates
A Cyclically Positive Backdrop For Global Corporates
According to our checklist of indicators to watch for an end of the corporate credit cycle in the US – tight monetary policy, deteriorating corporate sector financial health, and tightening bank lending standards – only corporate financial health is flashing a warning signal according to our Corporate Health Monitor as we discussed in a recent report.2 In fact, our global Corporate Health Monitor is rolling over – a trend that should continue as growth improves in 2020 – which should support global corporate bond outperformance versus government debt next year (Chart 15). Key View #4: Returns on global fixed income will be far lower in 2020 than in 2019. Country and sector selection will be more important in driving fixed income outperformance in 2020. The start of 2020 looks far different in terms of fixed income valuations compared to the beginning of 2019. For example, the 10yr US Treasury yield started the year at 2.72% and is now 1.83%, while the 10yr German bund yield started this year at 0.24% and is now MINUS-0.31%. These lower yields reflect the slower pace of global economic growth and monetary policy easing delivered by the Fed and ECB. Yet at the same time, corporate credit spreads have narrowed in both the US (the high-yield index OAS is down from 526bps to 360bps) and the euro area (the investment grade index OAS is down from 152bps to 100bps). These massive rallies in global bond markets this year resulted in both lower government bond yields and tighter credit spreads - even with slower global growth that would normally be a trigger for wider spreads/higher risk premiums. Looking at the current valuation of government bond yields in the major developed markets from a long-run perspective, it is difficult to make the case that it is attractive. Medium-term real bond yields remain well below potential GDP growth rates, a consequence of central banks keeping policy rates well below neutral levels suggested by measures like the Taylor Rule (Chart 16). Chart 16Global Government Bonds Are Expensive
2020 Key Views: Delay Of Reckoning
2020 Key Views: Delay Of Reckoning
Without the initial starting point of cheap valuations, fixed income return expectations for 2020 should be tempered. This means that rather than loading up on maximum duration risk and/or credit risk to capture big yield and spread moves, bond investors should be more selective in country, maturity and credit exposure to generate outperformance in 2020. Chart 17Favor Lower-Beta Government Bond Markets In 2020
Favor Lower-Beta Government Bond Markets In 2020
Favor Lower-Beta Government Bond Markets In 2020
For government bonds, that means focusing country exposures on lower-beta markets where yields are less correlated to moves in the overall level of global bond yields. Our preferred way to measure this is to look at the beta of monthly yield changes for the benchmark 10-year government yields of the major developed market countries to the overall Bloomberg Barclays Global Treasury index yield for the 7-10 year maturity bucket, over a rolling three-year window. We define a “high-beta” bond market as having a yield beta of 1.25 or higher, and a “low-beta” bond market as having a yield beta of 0.75 or lower. Under that definition, global bond investors should underweight higher-beta Canada, the US and Italy, and overweight low-beta Japan and Spain (Chart 17). Bond markets with betas between 1.25 and 0.75 (Germany, Australia, Sweden, the UK) can also be considered on their own fundamental merits. Of that list, we see Germany and Australia having a better chance of outperforming the UK and Sweden, given the greater odds that the Bank of England or Riksbank could signal a need to hike rates in 2020 compared to the ECB or Reserve Bank of Australia. Chart 18Stay Overweight Global Spread Product In 2020, But Be Selective
2020 Key Views: Delay Of Reckoning
2020 Key Views: Delay Of Reckoning
For spread product, that means focusing exposure on sectors that are less risky, either defined by interest rate duration or spread volatility (i.e. spread duration). With credit spreads remaining near the low end of long-run historical ranges for nearly all major markets (Chart 18), it is hard to find examples of spread product being cheap in absolute terms. On a risk-adjusted basis, however, negatively-convex spread product like US and euro area high-yield debt and US agency MBS actually look more interesting in the rising yield environment we expect in 2020, since the interest rate durations of those fixed income sectors fell as bond yields declined in 2019. Thus, we recommend owning high-yield corporates over higher-duration investment grade corporates in the US and euro area, while also favoring US agency MBS over higher-quality credit tiers of US investment grade corporate credit. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst, “Outlook 2020: Heading Into The End Game”, dated November 22, 2019, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, “The Lowdown On Low-Rated High-Yield”, dated November 27, 2019, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
2020 Key Views: Delay Of Reckoning
2020 Key Views: Delay Of Reckoning
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Below-Benchmark Duration In 2020 H1. Improving global growth and the de-escalation of US/China trade tensions will put upward pressure on bond yields in the first half of 2020, making below-benchmark portfolio duration appropriate. US political risks could re-assert themselves as we head into 2020 H2, leading to a risk-off environment that causes bond yields to fall. We will likely recommend increasing portfolio duration in mid-2020 if the political situation plays out as we expect, or if the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield and 12-month Fed Funds Discounter reach our targets. Barbell Your Treasury Portfolio. The 2/10 Treasury slope will steepen modestly in the coming months, but will remain in a range between 0 bps and 50 bps in 2020. Any steepening will be concentrated in the real yield curve. The TIPS breakeven inflation curve is likely to flatten. Our valuation models suggest that a barbelled Treasury portfolio is the best way to position for this environment. Specifically, we recommend shorting the 5-year bullet and buying a duration-matched barbell consisting of the 2-year note and 30-year bond. Overweight Spread Product. Low inflation expectations will keep the Fed on hold in 2020. This accommodative monetary environment will keep defaults low and credit spreads tight. Spread product will outperform Treasuries in duration-matched terms. Favor High-Yield Versus Investment Grade. Appropriate valuation measures show that high-yield corporate spreads are very attractive in the current environment, while investment grade corporate spreads are tight compared to our fair value estimates. Overweight Mortgage-Backed Securities. Agency MBS look attractive compared to investment grade corporate bonds, especially in risk-adjusted terms. The risk of a refinancing surge in 2020 is minimal and mortgage lending standards are more likely to ease than tighten. MBS spreads have room to tighten in 2020. Overweight TIPS Versus Nominal Treasuries. TIPS breakeven inflation rates are well below our target range of 2.3%-2.5%. It will take some time, and likely an overshoot of the Fed’s 2% inflation target, for them to reach that range as expectations adapt only slowly to rising core inflation. But even if they don’t make it back to target, breakevens should still grind higher as the economy recovers in 2020. Feature BCA published its 2020 Outlook on November 22. That report lays out the main macroeconomic themes that our strategists see driving markets next year. This Special Report explains how investors can profit from those themes in US fixed income markets. Specifically, we offer six key US fixed income views for 2020. This report is limited to the six key investment views listed on page 1, and only discusses Fed policy in the context of how it influences those views. Next week we will publish a more comprehensive “Fed In 2020” report that will delve into our outlook for the Fed next year. Outlook Summary First, a brief summary of the main economic views presented in BCA’s 2020 outlook:1 The global manufacturing downturn that persisted throughout 2019 is quickly coming to an end. The following factors will cause global growth to rebound in early 2020: China eased economic policy significantly in 2019. Policymakers cut the reserve requirement ratio by 400 basis points, cut taxes by 2.8% of GDP, increased issuance of local government bonds to finance public infrastructure projects, and boosted capex at state-owned enterprises. The Fed cut rates by 75 bps, and other central banks also eased monetary policy in 2019. The global inventory purge that magnified the industrial sector’s pain in 2019 is exhausted. Both the US and China have incentives to de-escalate the trade war in the first half of 2020. Investors should remain invested in risk assets to take advantage of this favorable global macro environment. But 2020 is likely to be the last year of risk asset outperformance. Today’s accommodative monetary policy will revive inflationary pressures in 2021, and central banks will then be forced to lift rates much more aggressively. China will also continue to resist excess leverage. Neither the business cycle nor the equity bull market will withstand those final assaults in 2021. Key View #1: Below-Benchmark Duration In 2020 H1 Improving global growth and the de-escalation of US/China trade tensions will put upward pressure on bond yields in the first half of 2020, making below-benchmark portfolio duration appropriate. US political risks could re-assert themselves as we head into 2020 H2, leading to a risk-off environment that causes bond yields to fall. We will likely recommend increasing portfolio duration in mid-2020 if the political situation plays out as we expect, or if the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield and 12-month Fed Funds Discounter reach our targets. In prior research we identified the five macroeconomic factors that determine trends in US bond yields.2 They are: (i) global growth, (ii) the output gap, (iii) the US dollar, (iv) policy uncertainty and (v) sentiment. On global growth, the three measures that correlate most strongly with the 10-year Treasury yield are the Global Manufacturing PMI, the US ISM Manufacturing PMI and the CRB Raw Industrials index. As mentioned above, we expect all three of these indicators to move higher in the first half of 2020, but so far we have seen only tentative signs of a rebound. The Global PMI is back above 50 after bottoming at 49.3 in July, but the US ISM remains in contractionary territory and the CRB Raw Industrials index is in a downtrend (Chart 1). All three of these indicators will have to increase for our call to play out. The global manufacturing downturn that persisted throughout 2019 is quickly coming to an end. The same amount of economic growth is more inflationary when the output gap is small than when it is wide. For this reason, we also need some sense of the output gap to make a call on Treasury yields. We have found wage growth to be a useful indicator of the output gap, as evidenced by its strong correlation with the fed funds rate (Chart 2). As long as recession is avoided, strong wage growth will make it difficult for the Fed to aggressively cut rates. The upshot is that Treasury yields will not re-visit their mid-2016 lows until the next recession hits and wage pressures wane. For now, all leading wage growth indicators continue to point up (Chart 2, bottom 2 panels). Chart 1Factor 1: Global Growth
Factor 1: Global Growth
Factor 1: Global Growth
Chart 2Factor 2: The Output Gap
Factor 2: The Output Gap
Factor 2: The Output Gap
The US dollar is the third important macro factor we consider. A strengthening dollar signals that US yields are de-coupling too far from yields in the rest of the world, making them more likely to fall back down. Conversely, an uptrend in US bond yields is likely to last longer in an environment of dollar weakness. The trade-weighted dollar has been rangebound during the past few months and bullish sentiment toward the dollar has declined significantly (Chart 3). This suggests that US yields have room to move higher. However, we will watch the dollar closely as bond yields rise in 2020 H1. A rapidly appreciating dollar would make us more inclined to fade any increase in US bond yields. The fourth factor we consider is policy uncertainty. It’s no secret that US Treasury securities benefit from flight to safety flows in times of heightened political stress. The tight correlation between the 10-year Treasury yield and the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty index demonstrates this nicely (Chart 4). In fact, it is now clear that uncertainty about the US/China trade war caused US yields to reach lower levels this year than was implied by the economic fundamentals alone. Chart 3Factor 3: The US Dollar
Factor 3: The US Dollar
Factor 3: The US Dollar
Chart 4Factor 4: Policy Uncertainty
Factor 4: Policy Uncertainty
Factor 4: Policy Uncertainty
We see trade tensions continuing to die down as we head into the New Year. President Trump faces an election in November 2020, and he no doubt realizes that an incumbent President with a strong economy has a good chance of winning re-election. He therefore has a strong incentive to support economic growth. However, by the second half of next year, we see two potential political risks that could flare, causing bond yields to fall. First, if Trump finds himself behind in the polls by mid-summer, then he may change his strategy and re-escalate tensions with China or some other foreign policy target. Second, if one of the progressive candidates – Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders – secures the Democratic nomination, stocks will likely sell off, precipitating a flight-to-quality into US bonds. All in all, we see the ebbing of policy uncertainty in the first half of 2020 helping to push bond yields higher. But risks could flare again in the 2020 H2, sending yields back down. Chart 5Factor 5: Sentiment
Factor 5: Sentiment
Factor 5: Sentiment
The final factor we consider when forecasting bond yields is sentiment, and we find the Economic Surprise Index to be the most useful sentiment measure. Chart 5 shows that positive data surprises tend to coincide with rising Treasury yields and vice-versa. We also know that long periods of positive data surprises are more likely to be followed by disappointments, and vice-versa. Though the Surprise Index’s message can change quickly, it is currently close to neutral, sending no strong signal for bond yields. Considering our five macro factors together, we conclude that a rebound in global growth and waning political uncertainty will send bond yields higher in the first half of 2020. Investors should keep portfolio duration low in this environment. We may recommend increasing portfolio duration as we approach mid-year if political uncertainty looks set to rise, or if the dollar is appreciating strongly, or if yields reach the targets outlined below. Yield Target #1: The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing Our Golden Rule of Bond Investing asserts that you should keep portfolio duration low if you expect the Fed to be more hawkish than market expectations, and high if you expect the Fed to be more dovish.3 At present, the overnight index swap (OIS) curve is priced for 22 basis points of rate cuts over the next 12 months. While economic growth is poised to improve in 2020, the Fed is in no rush to tighten monetary policy with inflation expectations still low. We therefore expect the fed funds rate to stay flat next year. With the market still priced for cuts, this forecast implies that we should maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration, at least until our 12-month Fed Funds Discounter – the change in the fed funds rate priced into the OIS curve for the next 12 months – rises to zero or above. A rebound in global growth and waning political uncertainty will send bond yields higher in the first half of 2020. Investors should keep portfolio duration low in this environment. Table 1 uses our Golden Rule framework to forecast Treasury index returns in different monetary policy scenarios. Our base case of a flat fed funds rate is consistent with Treasury index total returns of +0.67% to +0.88% in 2020, and excess returns versus cash of between -0.91% and -0.70%. The Appendix at the end of this report discusses how our Golden Rule framework performed in 2019 and in years past. Table 1Treasury Return Projections
2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income
2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income
Yield Target #2: Long-Run Fed Funds Rate Expectations Chart 6Target 2.25% To 2.5%
Target 2.25% To 2.5%
Target 2.25% To 2.5%
A second catalyst for increasing portfolio duration would be if the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield converged with estimates of the longer-run neutral fed funds rate. Once recessionary risks move to the backburner, it would be logical for long-dated forward rates to converge to levels that are consistent with market expectations for the long-run neutral fed funds rate. Indeed, this is precisely what happened in 2014 and 2017/18, the last two periods of strong global growth (Chart 6). At present, the Fed’s median long-run neutral rate estimate is 2.5%. The New York Fed’s Survey of Market Participants estimates a range of 2.19% to 2.50% and its Survey of Primary Dealers estimates a range of 2.25% to 2.56%. A 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield in the range of 2.25% to 2.5% would be a second catalyst for us to increase recommended portfolio duration. For Treasury yields to move sustainably above 2.5% in this cycle, it will be necessary for investors to revise their long-run neutral rate estimates higher. This could very well occur, but probably not within the next six months. Nonetheless, investors should pay close attention to the price of gold and the US housing market for signals that neutral rate estimates might undergo upward revisions. The gold price tends to rise when investors view monetary policy as becoming increasingly accommodative. This can occur because the Fed is cutting rates while neutral rate estimates are unchanged, or because neutral rate estimates are rising and the fed funds rate is unchanged. Chart 7 shows that a drop in the gold price foreshadowed downward revisions to the neutral rate in 2013. A further breakout in gold in 2020 could signal that the neutral rate needs to be revised higher again. The housing market will also provide important clues about the neutral fed funds rate. Last year, housing activity slowed considerably once the 30-year mortgage rate rose about 4% (Chart 8). Activity bounced back this year after rates fell, but it will be important to see what happens to housing once the mortgage rate rises back to 4% and above. If an above-4% mortgage rate leads to another downdraft in housing, it would send a strong signal that current neutral rate estimates are roughly correct. However, if housing activity continues to improve with a mortgage rate above 4%, it would suggest that upward neutral rate revisions are required. Chart 7Gold Leads The Neutral Rate...
Gold Leads The Neutral Rate...
Gold Leads The Neutral Rate...
Chart 8...And So Does Housing
...And So Does Housing
...And So Does Housing
There is at least one good reason to think that housing activity might not slow once the mortgage rate rises above 4%. There is currently an excess of supply at the upper-end of the housing market, and a lack of supply at the low-end. This has resulted in price deceleration for new homes, as homebuilders shift construction to the lower-end of the market where demand is stronger (Chart 8, bottom panel). This supply side re-adjustment could make the housing market more resilient to higher mortgage rates in 2020. Key View #2: Barbell Your Treasury Portfolio The 2/10 Treasury slope will steepen modestly in the coming months, but will remain in a range between 0 bps and 50 bps in 2020. Any steepening will be concentrated in the real yield curve. The TIPS breakeven inflation curve is likely to flatten. Our valuation models suggest that a barbelled Treasury portfolio is the best way to position for this environment. Specifically, we recommend shorting the 5-year bullet and buying a duration-matched barbell consisting of the 2-year note and 30-year bond. In thinking about how the slope of the Treasury curve will respond as global growth improves in 2020, it’s useful to look at what happened in two recent episodes of strengthening global growth – 2012/13 and 2016/17. Charts 9A, 9B and 9C illustrate how the 2/10 slope responded in those periods, and show the breakdown between changes in the real and inflation components of yields. The actual slope changes are provided in Table 2. In 2012/13, the 2/10 slope steepened dramatically as global growth rebounded, with almost all of the steepening coming from the real yield curve. It’s not difficult to understand why. The economic outlook was improving, but the Fed was still two years away from lifting interest rates. As such, the Fed’s dovish forward guidance kept a firm lid on short-maturity yields even as long-dated yields rose. In contrast, we can look at the 2016/17 episode. The 2/10 slope steepened somewhat early in the 2016/17 global growth recovery, but ended up 45 bps flatter by the time that the Global PMI peaked. This time, both the real and inflation components contributed to curve flattening. The key difference in this episode was that the Fed was quick to turn more hawkish as growth improved. It lifted the funds rate four times, and short-dated yields rose more quickly than those at the long-end. If housing activity continues to improve with a mortgage rate above 4%, it would suggest that upward neutral rate revisions are required. What can be applied from these two episodes to today? One thing that’s clear is that the Fed will not be as quick to tighten policy as it was in 2016/17. As will be discussed in more detail in next week’s report, the Fed wants to keep policy accommodative until inflation expectations are firmly re-anchored around its target. We think the 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate needs to rise from its current 1.8% to above 2.3% before that goal is met. However, it’s also conceivable that inflationary pressures will emerge as soon as late-2020, necessitating rate hikes in 2021. If that’s the case, then short-dated yields will sniff that out in advance, imparting some flattening pressure to the curve. All in all, we’re looking for modest curve steepening in the first half of 2020. But with the Fed not completely out of the picture – as was the case in 2012/13 – the 2/10 slope will not rise above 50 bps. We would also recommend positioning for curve steepening via real yields. The cost of 2-year inflation protection is currently below the cost of 10-year inflation protection (Chart 9C), but will probably lead the 10-year higher as inflation expectations slowly adapt to the incoming data. We recommend TIPS breakeven curve flatteners. Chart 9ANominal 2/10 Slope
Nominal 2/10 Slope
Nominal 2/10 Slope
Chart 9BReal 2/10 Slope
Real 2/10 Slope
Real 2/10 Slope
Chart 9CInflation Compensation: 2/10 Slope
Inflation Compensation: 2/10 Slope
Inflation Compensation: 2/10 Slope
Table 22/10 Slope Changes During Two Recent Global Growth Upturns
2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income
2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income
Interestingly, we also do not recommend the typical 2/10 steepening trade of going long the 5-year bullet against a duration-matched 2/10 barbell. This is because the 2/5/10 butterfly already discounts a huge amount of 2/10 steepening. The 5-year bullet appears 6 bps expensive on our model, meaning that the 2/10 slope needs to steepen by 26 bps during the next six months for a long 5-year, short 2/10 trade to profit (Chart 10).4 Chart 102/5/10 Butterfly Valuation Model
2/5/10 Butterfly Valuation Model
2/5/10 Butterfly Valuation Model
Against this valuation backdrop, we recommend owning a duration-matched barbell consisting of the 2-year note and the 30-year bond, while shorting the 5-year note. This heavily barbelled Treasury allocation adds positive carry to a bond portfolio, and will earn positive returns as long as the 5/30 slope steepens by less than 61 bps during the next six months.5 Further, recent correlations suggest that the 5-year yield will rise by more than either the 2-year or 30-year yields if the market starts to price-in fewer Fed rate cuts, as we expect. Table 3 shows that there has been a positive correlation between changes in the 2/5 Treasury slope and our 12-month discounter during the past six months, and a negative correlation between our discounter and the 5/30 slope. Table 3Correlation Of Monthly Changes In 12-Month Discounter With Monthly Changes In Treasury Curve Slopes
2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income
2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income
Key View #3: Overweight Spread Product Low inflation expectations will keep the Fed on hold in 2020. This accommodative monetary environment will keep defaults low and credit spreads tight. Spread product will outperform Treasuries in duration-matched terms. In last year’s Key Views report, we presented a method for splitting the economic cycle into three phases based on the slope of the yield curve.6 We observed that spread product excess returns versus Treasuries tend to be highest in Phase 1 of the cycle, when the 3-year/10-year Treasury slope is above 50 bps. Spread product excess returns tend to be low, but still positive, in Phase 2 of the cycle when the slope is between 0 bps and 50 bps, and only turn negative in Phase 3 after the 3-year/10-year slope inverts. By our criteria, we remained in Phase 2 of the cycle throughout all of 2019 and spread product did in fact deliver small, but positive, excess returns relative to Treasuries. We expect to remain in Phase 2 throughout most (if not all) of 2020, and therefore advise investors to maintain overweight allocations to spread product versus duration-matched Treasuries. We are looking for modest curve steepening in the first half of 2020. The principal rationale for our call is that accommodative Fed policy will keep the yield curve positively sloped in 2020. It will also give banks the confidence to continue extending credit. And as long as lending standards are sufficiently easy, defaults will remain low and spreads will stay tight. Yes, there are some early indications that we might be transitioning into a Phase 3 environment, an environment that would merit a more defensive stance. For one thing, some parts of the Treasury curve inverted in August, though the specific measure we use in our credit cycle analysis – the monthly average of daily closes of the 3-year/10-year Treasury slope – remained above zero (Chart 11). Also, commercial & industrial (C&I) lending standards tightened in the third quarter. Chart 11Still In Phase 2
Still In Phase 2
Still In Phase 2
However, we expect both of these warning signs to dissipate in the near future. The yield curve has already re-steepened, and while loan officers indicated that they had tightened overall standards on C&I loans in Q3, they continued to loosen the terms on those loans (Chart 11, panel 3). But most importantly, we continue to observe inflation expectations that are far below the Fed’s comfort zone (Chart 11, bottom panel). As long as this is the case, the Fed will do its best to keep interest rates low and monetary conditions accommodative. In that environment, the yield curve should stay upward sloping and banks will keep the credit taps open. Phase 2 will stay in place and spread product will outperform Treasuries. The poor health of nonfinancial corporate balance sheets is another risk to our positive spread product view. We track corporate balance sheet health using both aggregate top-down data from the US Financial Accounts (Chart 12A) and by looking at the median firm in our own bottom-up sample of high-yield issuers (Chart 12B). In both cases, we see that debt-to-profit and debt-to-asset ratios are elevated, indicating that firms are carrying a lot of debt on their balance sheets relative to history. However, both samples also show that interest coverage ratios are strong. Solid interest coverage is the result of low interest rates and the Fed’s accommodative monetary policy. It tells us that defaults won’t occur until inflation expectations rise and the Fed turns more restrictive. That may not happen until 2021. Chart 12ACorporate Health: Top-Down
Corporate Health: Top-Down
Corporate Health: Top-Down
Chart 12BCorporate Health: Bottom-Up
Corporate Health: Bottom-Up
Corporate Health: Bottom-Up
The downside is that an extended period of accommodative monetary policy and few defaults means that firms will continue to build up debt and whittle away the equity cushion in corporate capital structures. The end result will be greater losses during the next default cycle. Our Preferred Spread Sectors Within US spread product, we recommend an overweight allocation to high-yield corporate bonds to take advantage of the favorable macro environment. Within investment grade sectors, we advise only a neutral allocation to corporate bonds (see Key View #4), but recommend overweighting Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities (see Key View #5), Agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities, Local Authority and Foreign Agency debt. Chart 13 shows a snapshot of the risk/reward trade-off between investment grade spread products. The vertical axis displays the option-adjusted spread as a simple proxy for 12-month expected excess returns. The horizontal axis displays our own risk measure called the Risk Of Losing 100 bps.7 This measure calculates the spread widening required for each sector to lose 100 bps or more versus duration-matched Treasuries, then adjusts for each sector’s historical spread volatility. Chart 13Excess Return Bond Map: Main Investment Grade Sectors
2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income
2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income
Chart 13 imposes no macro view, but it does reveal that Foreign Agency debt offers an attractive expected return for its level of risk. Agency CMBS and Agency MBS also offer attractive expected returns for their respective risk levels. USD-denominated Sovereign bonds offer high expected returns, but are also the riskiest of the sectors in Chart 13. We recommend an underweight allocation to USD-denominated Sovereigns with the exception of Mexican and Saudi Arabian bonds, which look attractive on a risk/reward basis. Chart 14 replicates Chart 13 but with the USD-denominated Sovereign bonds of different countries. Only Mexico and Saudi Arabia stand out as being attractively priced. Chart 14Excess Return Bond Map: USD-Denominated EM Sovereigns
2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income
2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income
Chart 15Favor Long-Maturity Munis
Favor Long-Maturity Munis
Favor Long-Maturity Munis
We also maintain a positive outlook on Municipal bonds, particularly at the long-end of the Aaa-rated curve. Municipal / Treasury yield ratios look attractive compared to history, especially at long maturities (Chart 15). While many state and local governments face long-run problems related to underfunded pensions, these issues won’t be exposed until revenue growth falters in the next downturn. For now, state & local government balance sheets are healthy enough to keep muni upgrades outpacing downgrades (Chart 15, bottom 2 panels). Key View #4: Favor High-Yield Over Investment Grade Appropriate valuation measures show that high-yield corporate spreads are very attractive in the current environment, while investment grade corporate spreads are tight compared to our fair value estimates. We noted above that, despite the favorable macro environment for spread product, we recommend an overweight allocation to high-yield corporate bonds but only a neutral allocation to investment grade corporates. The reason for the disparity is valuation. Our preferred valuation measure is the 12-month breakeven spread. This is the spread widening required for the sector to lose money versus Treasuries on a 12-month horizon. This measure is superior to the simple index option-adjusted spread because it controls for time-varying index duration. We also re-calculate the investment grade and high-yield bond indexes so that they have constant distribution between the different credit tiers over time. Charts 16A and 16Bshow 12-month breakeven spreads for our re-constituted investment grade and high-yield indexes as percentile ranks versus history. The investment grade spread has been tighter only 11% of the time since 1995, while the high-yield spread has been tighter 67% of the time. Chart 16AIG Valuation
IG Valuation
IG Valuation
Chart 16BHY Valuation
HY Valuation
HY Valuation
From our analysis of the three phases of the cycle, we also know that spreads tend to tighter in Phase 2 of the cycle than in Phases 1 or 3. Since we are currently in Phase 2, we would expect spreads to be near the bottom of their historical distributions. With this knowledge, we derive spread targets for each corporate credit tier based on the median breakeven spreads witnessed in prior Phase 2 periods. We then use current index duration to calculate option-adjusted spread targets for each credit tier and the overall investment grade and high-yield indexes (Charts 17A and 17B). Notice that all investment grade spreads are below their Phase 2 targets, while high-yield spreads are well above. Chart 17AIG Spread Targets
IG Spread Targets
IG Spread Targets
Chart 17BHY Spread Targets
HY Spread Targets
HY Spread Targets
We also observe that Caa-rated spreads are extremely cheap relative to target, and have been widening rapidly. We are more inclined to view this as an opportunity to buy Caa-rated bonds than as a warning sign for overall corporate bond performance, as we discussed in a recent report.8 Key View #5: Overweight Mortgage-Backed Securities Agency MBS look attractive compared to investment grade corporate bonds, especially in risk-adjusted terms. The risk of a refinancing surge in 2020 is minimal and mortgage lending standards are more likely to ease than tighten. MBS spreads have room to tighten in 2020. We noted above that Agency MBS offer an attractive trade-off between risk and expected return. Specifically, Chart 13 shows that MBS offer expected returns that are similar to Aa and Aaa corporates, but with less risk of losing 100 bps versus Treasuries. For further evidence of the attractiveness of MBS spreads, we note that while the zero-volatility spread for conventional 30-year Agency MBS is not all that elevated compared to history, it is being held down by very low expected prepayment losses (aka option costs) (Chart 18). The OAS, the best proxy for MBS expected return, stands at 48 bps. This is reasonably elevated compared to history and very close to the spread offered by Aa-rated corporate bonds. Past periods when the MBS OAS was close to the Aa-rated corporate bond spread were followed by MBS outperformance (Chart 18, bottom panel). We recommend an overweight allocation to high-yield corporate bonds but only a neutral allocation to investment grade corporates. The reason for the disparity is valuation. We noted that expected prepayment losses are low, and this is for good reason. Mortgage refinancing activity will remain depressed throughout 2020. First, with the Fed likely to go on hold for 2020 and then lift rates in 2021, the mortgage rate is more likely to rise than fall. Higher mortgage rates will keep refis down. Second, most homeowners have already had multiple opportunities to refinance their mortgages during the past few years, as evidenced by the fact that the MBA Refinance Index didn’t rise that much in 2019, even as the mortgage rate declined 106 bps (Chart 19). Chart 18MBS Spreads
MBS Spreads
MBS Spreads
Chart 19Refi Risk Is Minimal
Refi Risk Is Minimal
Refi Risk Is Minimal
Tightening bank lending standards for residential mortgages can also lead to wider MBS spreads, but lending standards are more likely to ease than tighten in 2020. FICO scores for approved mortgages have not come down at all since the financial crisis (Chart 19, panel 3), and loan officers consistently claim that lending standards are tighter than the average since 2005 (Chart 19, bottom panel). With standards already so tight, modest easing is more likely than rapid tightening. Key View #6: Overweight TIPS Versus Nominal Treasuries TIPS breakeven inflation rates are well below our target range of 2.3%-2.5%. It will take some time, and likely an overshoot of the Fed’s 2% inflation target, for them to reach that range as expectations adapt only slowly to rising core inflation. But even if they don’t make it back to target, breakevens should still grind higher as the economy recovers in 2020. Our target range for both the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates remains 2.3%-2.5%. But it could take quite some time for that target to be met. The reason is that inflation expectations adapt only slowly to changes in the actual inflation data. We explained this dynamic in a report from last year, and also created a fair value model for the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate based on long-run trends in the actual inflation data.9 At present, our Adaptive Expectations Model pegs fair value for the 10-year breakeven rate at 1.9%, 20 bps above the current level of 1.7%, but well short of our end-of-cycle 2.3%-2.5% target (Chart 20). We could see the 10-year breakeven reaching 1.9% in the coming months as global growth recovers, but it will take a more sustained uptrend in the actual inflation data to move higher than that. A more sustained uptrend in actual inflation could take some time to develop. This year’s increase in core CPI inflation has been concentrated in the core goods component (Chart 21). This component of core inflation tracks import prices with a lag, and it is very likely to fall back down in 2020. Any sustained breakout in core inflation will require more strength from the core services (ex. Shelter and medical care) component (Chart 21, panel 3), something that hasn’t happened yet this cycle. Chart 20Adaptive Expectations Model
Adaptive Expectations Model
Adaptive Expectations Model
Chart 21The Components Of Core CPI
The Components Of Core CPI
The Components Of Core CPI
Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Appendix: The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing Our Golden Rule of Bond Investing says that we should determine what change in the fed funds rate is priced into the overnight index swap curve for the next 12 months, and then decide whether the Fed will deliver a hawkish or dovish surprise relative to that expectation. We contend that if the Fed delivers a hawkish surprise, then a below-benchmark portfolio duration positioning will pay off. Conversely, if the Fed delivers a dovish surprise, then an above-benchmark portfolio duration positioning will profit. Chart A1 shows how the Golden Rule has performed in every calendar year going back to 1990. We include year-to-date performance for 2019. In 30 years of historical data, our Golden Rule performed well in 22. It provided the wrong recommendation in 8 years, though 3 of those years were during the zero-lower-bound period between 2009 and 2015 when 12-month rate expectations were essentially pinned at zero.10 At the beginning of this year, the market was priced for 7 bps of rate cuts in 2019. The funds rate actually fell by 84 bps, leading to a dovish surprise of 77 bps. Based on a historical regression, we would expect a dovish surprise of 77 bps to coincide with a Treasury index yield that falls by 52 bps. In actuality, the index yield fell by 81 bps, more than our Golden Rule predicted. Chart A2 shows how close changes in the Treasury index yield have been to our Golden Rule’s prediction in each of the past 30 years. This regression between the change in Treasury index yield and the monetary policy surprise is the main source of error in our Treasury return forecasts. Based on our expected -52 bps index yield change, we would have expected the Treasury index to deliver 5.9% of total return in 2019 and to outperform cash by 3.4%. In actuality, the index earned 7.9% of total return and outperformed cash by 5.6%. Charts A3 and A4 show how index total and excess returns have performed relative to our Golden Rule’s expectations in each of the past 30 years. Chart A1The Golden Rule’s Track Record
The Golden Rule's Track Record
The Golden Rule's Track Record
Chart A2Treasury Index Yield Changes Versus Fed Funds Surprises
2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income
2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income
Chart A3Treasury Index Total Returns Versus The Golden Rule’s Predictions
2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income
2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income
Chart A4Treasury Index Excess Returns Versus The Golden Rule’s Predictions
2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income
2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income
Footnotes 1 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst, “Outlook 2020: Heading Into The End Game”, dated November 22, 2019, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Bond Kitchen”, dated April 9, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see US Bond Strategy Special Report, “The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing”, dated July 24, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 For more details on our butterfly spread valuation models please see US Bond Strategy Special Report, “Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated July 25, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 The 2/5/30 valuation model is not shown in this report. Please see US Bond Strategy Portfolio Allocation Summary, “Mixed Messages”, dated December 3, 2019, for a recent update of all our yield curve models. 6 Please see US Bond Strategy Special Report, “2019 Key Views: Implications For US Fixed Income”, dated December 11, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 For further details on how this measure is calculated please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “A Perspective On Risk And Reward”, dated October 15, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 8 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Caa-Rated Bonds: Warning Sign Or Buying Opportunity?”, dated November 26, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 9 For further details on our Adaptive Expectations Model please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Adaptive Expectations In The TIPS Market”, dated November 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 10 We say the Golden Rule “worked” if a dovish surprise coincided with positive Treasury index excess returns versus cash, or if a hawkish surprise coincided with negative Treasury excess returns versus cash.
Highlights China’s PMIs continue to flash a positive signal, but the hard data trend remains negative. There has been a notable improvement in China’s cyclical sectors (versus defensives) over the past month, but broad equity market performance has been flat-to-down. China’s lackluster equity index performance in the face of rising PMIs suggests that investors can afford to wait for an improvement in the hard economic data before tactically upgrading to overweight. Cyclically, we continue to recommend an overweight stance towards both the investable and A-share markets versus the global benchmark, favoring the former over the latter. Feature Tables 1 and 2 on pages 2 and 3 highlight key developments in China’s economy and its financial markets over the past month. On the growth front, China’s November PMIs were clearly positive, and the rise in the official manufacturing PMI above the 50 mark is notable. However, the odds continue to favor a bottoming in the economy in Q1 rather than Q4, in large part because China’s “hard” economic data has continued to deteriorate during the time that the Caixin PMI has been signaling an expansion in manufacturing activity. In this vein, China’s November update for producer prices and total imports have high potential to be market-moving, and should be closely monitored. Table 1China Macro Data Summary
China Macro And Market Review
China Macro And Market Review
Table 2China Financial Market Performance Summary
China Macro And Market Review
China Macro And Market Review
Within financial markets, China’s cyclical sectors have outperformed defensives, which is consistent with the positive message from China’s PMIs. But China’s broad equity markets have been flat-to-down versus the global index over the past month, suggesting that investors can afford to wait for confirmation of a hard data improvement before upgrading their tactical stance to overweight (from neutral). Cyclically, we continue to recommend an overweight stance towards both the investable and A-share markets, but favor the former over the latter in a trade truce scenario. In reference to Tables 1 and 2, we provide below several detailed observations concerning developments in China’s macro and financial market data: Both measures of the Li Keqiang index (LKI) that we track indicated no obvious improvement in Chinese economy activity in October. The BCA China Activity indicator, a broader coincident measure of China’s economy, also moved sideways in October and (for now) remains in a downtrend. Thus, based on the “hard data”, Chinese economic activity has not yet bottomed. Chart 1A Moderate Strength Economic Recovery Will Begin In Q1
A Moderate Strength Economic Recovery Will Begin In Q1
A Moderate Strength Economic Recovery Will Begin In Q1
The components of our LKI leading indicator continue to tell a story of easy monetary conditions and sluggish money & credit growth (Chart 1). The indicator itself remains in an uptrend, but it is a shallow one that does not match the intensity of previous credit cycles. While the uptrend in the indicator suggests that China’s economy will soon bottom, the shallow pace suggests that the coming rebound in growth will be less forceful than during previous economic recoveries. The uptrend in headline CPI is a notable macro development, with prices having risen 3.8% year-over-year in Oct (the fastest pace in almost eight years). This rise has been driven almost entirely by a surge in pork prices, which have risen over 60% relative to last year (panel 1 of Chart 2). While some investors have questioned whether the rise in headline inflation will cause the PBoC to tighten its stance at the margin, we argued with high conviction in our November 20 Weekly Report that this will not occur.1 Panel 2 of Chart 2 shows that periods of easy monetary policy line up strongly with periods of deflating producer prices, arguing that the PBoC will see through transient shocks to headline inflation. China’s October housing market data highlighted three points: housing sales are modestly improving, the pace of housing construction has again deviated from the trend in sales, and housing price appreciation is slowing in Tier 2 and Tier 3 markets. For now, we are inclined to discount the surge in floor space started, given previous divergences that proved to be unsustainable. The bigger question is whether investors should be concerned about slowing housing prices. Chart 3 shows that floor space sold and property prices have been negatively correlated over the past three years, in contrast to a previously positive relationship. Deteriorating affordability and tight housing regulations have contributed to this shift in correlation, which helps explain why the PBoC’s Pledged Supplementary Lending (PSL) program has been so closely related to housing sales over the past few years. While the growth in PSL injections is becoming less negative, it has not risen to the point that it would be associated with a strong trend in sales. As such, we continue to see poor affordability as a threat to further housing price appreciation, absent stronger funding assistance. Poor affordability will continue to be a headwind for China’s housing market. Chart 2The PBoC Will See Through Transient Shocks To Headline Inflation
The PBoC Will See Through Transient Shocks To Headline Inflation
The PBoC Will See Through Transient Shocks To Headline Inflation
Chart 3Poor Affordability Will Continue To Weigh On Housing Demand
Poor Affordability Will Continue To Weigh On Housing Demand
Poor Affordability Will Continue To Weigh On Housing Demand
Chart 4Investors Need To See Concrete Signs Of A Hard Data Improvement
Investors Need To See Concrete Signs Of A Hard Data Improvement
Investors Need To See Concrete Signs Of A Hard Data Improvement
China’s November PMIs were quite positive, which legitimately increases the odds that China’s economy is beginning the process of recovery. However, we see two reasons to believe that the odds continue to favor a bottoming in the economy in Q1 rather than Q4. First, while they improved in November, several important elements of the official PMI remain in contractionary territory, particularly the new export orders subcomponent. Second, while the Caixin PMI has now been above the 50 mark for 4 consecutive months, China’s hard data has continued to deteriorate since the summer (Chart 4). Given the historical volatility of the Caixin PMI, we advise investors to wait for concrete signs of a hard data improvement before firmly concluding that China’s economy is recovering. Over the last month, China’s investable stock market has rallied roughly 1% in absolute terms, while domestic stocks have fallen about 3%. In relative terms, A-shares underperformed the global benchmark, while the investable market moved sideways. In our view, the underperformance of China’s domestic market reflects increased sensitivity to monetary conditions and credit growth compared with the investable market,2 and a weaker credit impulse in October appears to have been the catalyst for A-share underperformance. Over the cyclical horizon, earnings will improve in both the onshore and offshore markets in response to a modest improvement in economic activity, suggesting that an overweight stance is justified for both markets. But we think the investable market has more upside potential in a trade truce scenario. The outperformance of cyclical versus defensive sectors is sending a positive signal, but investors can afford to wait for better economic data before tactically upgrading. Chart 5A Positive Sign From Cyclicals Versus Defensives
A Positive Sign From Cyclicals Versus Defensives
A Positive Sign From Cyclicals Versus Defensives
Within China’s investable stock market, it is quite notable that cyclicals have outperformed defensives over the past month on an equally-weighted basis (Chart 5). Interestingly, key defensive sectors such as investable health care and utilities have sold off significantly, and equally-weighted cyclicals have also outperformed defensives in the domestic market. The outperformance of cyclicals and underperformance of defensives is consistent with the positive message from China’s PMIs, but the fact that this improvement is occurring against the backdrop of flat-to-down relative performance for China’s equity market suggests that investors can afford to wait for confirmation of a hard data improvement before upgrading their tactical stance to overweight. In this vein, China’s November update for producer prices and total imports have high potential to be market-moving, and should be closely monitored. China’s government bond yields fell slightly in November, potentially reflecting expectations of further modest easing. Our view that monetary policy will likely remain easy over the coming year even in a modest recovery scenario suggests that Chinese interbank rates and government bond yields are likely to range-trade over the coming 6-12 months. We expect onshore corporate bonds to continue to outperform duration-matched government bonds in 2020. Chinese onshore corporate bond spreads eased modestly over the past month. Despite continued concerns about onshore corporate defaults, the yield advantage offered by onshore corporate bonds have helped the asset class generate a 5.4% year-to-date return in local currency terms. Barring a substantial intensification of the pace of defaults, we expect onshore corporate bonds to continue to outperform duration-matched government bonds in 2020. The RMB has moved sideways versus the US dollar over the last month. USD-CNY had fallen below 7 in October following the announcement of the intention to sign a “phase one” trade deal, but the move ultimately proved temporary given the deferral of an agreement. We would expect the RMB to appreciate following a deal of any kind (a truce or something more), and it is also likely to be supported next year by improving economic activity. Still, it would not be in the PBoC’s best interests to let the RMB appreciate too rapidly, because an appreciating Chinese currency would act as a deflationary force on China’s export and manufacturing sectors. As such, we expect a modest downtrend in USD-CNY over the coming year. Qingyun Xu, CFA Senior Analyst qingyunx@bcaresearch.com Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Questions From The Road: Timing The Turn," dated November 20, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report "A Guide To Chinese Investable Equity Sector Performance," dated November 27, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights Chart 1Manufacturing PMIs Track Bond Yields
Manufacturing PMIs Track Bond Yields
Manufacturing PMIs Track Bond Yields
November’s manufacturing PMI data were released yesterday, giving us an update for two of our preferred global growth indicators: the Global Manufacturing PMI and the US ISM Manufacturing PMI (Chart 1). Unfortunately, the two indicators sent conflicting signals, providing us with very little clarity on the global growth outlook. On the positive side, the Global Manufacturing PMI jumped back above 50 for the first time since April. China is the largest weighting in the global index, and its PMI rose for the fifth consecutive month. Conversely, the US ISM Manufacturing PMI dipped further into contractionary territory in November – from 48.3 to 48.1. Optimistically, the index’s inventory component contracted by more than the new orders component, meaning that the difference between new orders and inventories rose to its highest level since May. The difference between new orders and inventories often leads the overall ISM index by several months. All in all, we continue to see tentative signs of stabilization in our preferred global growth indicators. But a more significant rebound will be necessary to push bond yields higher in the first half of next year, as we expect. Stay tuned. Investment Grade: Neutral Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview
Investment Grade Market Overview
Investment Grade Market Overview
Investment grade corporate bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 63 basis points in November, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +494 bps. We consider three main factors in our credit cycle analysis: (i) corporate balance sheet health, (ii) monetary conditions and (iii) valuation.1 On balance sheets, our top-down measure of gross leverage is high and rising (Chart 2). In contrast, interest coverage ratios remain solid, propped up by the Fed’s accommodative stance. With inflation expectations still depressed, the Fed can maintain its “easy money” policy for some time yet. The third quarter’s tightening of C&I lending standards is a concern, because it suggests that monetary conditions may not be sufficiently stimulative for banks to keep the credit taps running (bottom panel). But the yield curve, another indicator of monetary conditions, has steepened significantly since Q3, suggesting that lending standards will soon move back into “net easing” territory. For now, we see valuation as the main headwind for investment grade credit spreads. Spreads for all credit tiers are below our targets, with the Baa tier looking less expensive than the others (panels 2 & 3).2 As a result, we advise only a neutral allocation to investment grade corporate bonds, with a preference for the Baa credit tier. We also recommend increasing exposure to Agency MBS in place of corporate bonds rated A or higher (see page 7). Table 3ACorporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation*
Mixed Messages
Mixed Messages
Table 3BCorporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward*
Mixed Messages
Mixed Messages
High-Yield Overweight Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview
High-Yield Market Overview
High-Yield Market Overview
High-Yield outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 47 basis points in November, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +671 bps. The index option-adjusted spread tightened 22 bps on the month and currently sits at 370 bps, 131 bps above our target (Chart 3). Ba and B rated junk bonds outperformed the Treasury benchmark by 79 bps and 76 bps, respectively, in November. But Caa-rated credit underperformed Treasuries by 89 bps. This continues the trend of Caa underperformance that has been in place since late last year (panel 3). We analyzed the divergence between Caa and the rest of the junk bond universe in last week’s report and came to two conclusions.3 First, the historical data show that 12-month periods of overall junk bond outperformance are more likely to be followed by underperformance if Caa is the worst performing credit tier. Second, we can identify several reasons for this year’s Caa underperformance that make us inclined to downplay any potential negative signal. Specifically, we note that the Caa credit tier’s exposure to the shale oil sector is responsible for the bulk of this year’s underperformance (bottom panel). With elevated spreads, accommodative monetary conditions and a looming recovery in global economic growth, we expect junk spreads to tighten during the next 6-12 months. MBS: Overweight Chart 4MBS Market Overview
MBS Market Overview
MBS Market Overview
Mortgage-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 19 basis points in November, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +22 bps. The conventional 30-year zero-volatility spread tightened 3 bps on the month, as a 5 bps tightening of the option-adjusted spread (OAS) was offset by a 2 bps increase in expected prepayment losses (aka option cost). We recommend an overweight allocation to Agency MBS, particularly relative to corporate bonds rated A or higher, for three reasons.4 First, expected compensation is competitive. The conventional 30-year MBS OAS is now 50 bps (Chart 4). This is very close to its pre-crisis average and only 3 bps below the spread offered by Aa-rated corporate bonds (panel 4). Also, spreads for all investment grade corporate bond credit tiers trade below our targets. Second, risk-adjusted compensation heavily favors MBS. The Excess Return Bond Map in Appendix C shows that Agency MBS plot well to the right of investment grade corporates. This means that the sector is less likely to see losses versus Treasuries on a 12-month horizon. Finally, the macro environment for MBS remains supportive. Mortgage lending standards have barely eased since the financial crisis (bottom panel), and most homeowners have already had at least one opportunity to refinance their mortgages. This burnout will keep refi activity low, and MBS spreads tight (panel 2). Government-Related: Underweight Chart 5Government-Related Market Overview
Government-Related Market Overview
Government-Related Market Overview
The Government-Related index outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 14 basis points in November, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +197 bps. Sovereign debt outperformed duration-equivalent Treasuries by 36 bps on the month, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +513 bps. Local Authorities outperformed the Treasury benchmark by 24 bps, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +245 bps. Meanwhile, Foreign Agencies outperformed by 4 bps, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +266 bps. Domestic Agencies outperformed by 11 bps in November, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +51 bps. Supranationals outperformed by 5 bps on the month, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +36 bps. We continue to recommend an underweight allocation to USD-denominated sovereign bonds, given that spreads remain expensive compared to US corporate credit (Chart 5). However, we noted in a recent report that Mexican and Saudi Arabian sovereigns look attractive on a risk/reward basis.5 This is also true for Foreign Agencies and Local Authorities, as shown in the Bond Map in Appendix C. Our Emerging Markets Strategy service also thinks that worries about Mexico’s fiscal position are overblown, and that bond yields embed too high of a risk premium (bottom panel).6 Municipal Bonds: Overweight Chart 6Municipal Market Overview
Municipal Market Overview
Municipal Market Overview
Municipal bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 70 basis points in November, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +6bps (before adjusting for the tax advantage). The average Aaa-rated Municipal / Treasury (M/T) yield ratio fell 4% in November, and currently sits at 83% (Chart 6). We upgraded municipal bonds in early October, as yield ratios had become significantly more attractive, especially at the long-end of the Aaa curve (panel 2).7 Specifically, 2-year and 5-year M/T yield ratios are somewhat below average pre-crisis levels at 68% and 72%, respectively. However, M/T yield ratios for longer maturities (10 years and higher) are all above average pre-crisis levels. M/T yield ratios for 10-year, 20-year and 30-year maturities are 84%, 93% and 97%, respectively. Fundamentally, state & local government balance sheets remain solid. Our Municipal Health Monitor remains in “improving health” territory and state & local government interest coverage has improved considerably in recent quarters (bottom panel). Both of these trends are consistent with muni ratings upgrades continuing to outnumber downgrades going forward. Treasury Curve: Maintain A Barbell Curve Positioning Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview
Treasury Yield Curve Overview
Treasury Yield Curve Overview
The Treasury curve shifted higher in November, steepening out to the 7-year maturity and flattening beyond that. The 2/10 Treasury slope was unchanged on the month. It currently sits at 17 bps. The 5/30 slope flattened 7 bps to end the month at 59 bps (Chart 7). In a recent report we discussed the 6-12 month outlook for the 2/10 Treasury slope.8 We considered the main macro factors that influence the slope of the yield curve: Fed policy, wage growth, inflation expectations and the neutral fed funds rate. We concluded that the 2/10 slope has room to steepen during the next few months, as the Fed holds down the front-end of the curve in an effort to re-anchor inflation expectations. However, we see the 2/10 slope remaining in a range between 0 bps and 50 bps, owing to strong wage growth and downbeat neutral rate expectations. Despite the outlook for modest curve steepening, we continue to recommend holding a barbelled Treasury portfolio. Specifically, we favor holding a 2/30 barbell versus the 5-year bullet, in duration-matched terms. This position offers strong positive carry (bottom panel), due to the extreme overvaluation of the 5-year note, and looks attractive on our yield curve models (see Appendix B). TIPS: Overweight Chart 8TIPS Market Overview
Inflation Compensation
Inflation Compensation
TIPS outperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 47 basis points in November, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to -70 bps.The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate rose 8 bps on the month and currently sits at 1.62%. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate rose 9 bps on the month and currently sits at 1.73%. Both rates remain well below the 2.3%-2.5% range consistent with the Fed’s target. The divergence between the actual inflation data and inflation expectations remains stark. Trimmed mean PCE inflation has been fluctuating around the Fed’s target for most of the year (Chart 8). However, long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates remain stubbornly low. As we have pointed out in prior research, it can take time for expectations to adapt to a changing macro environment.9 That being said, the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is currently 29 bps too low according to our Adaptive Expectations Model, a model whose primary input is 10-year trailing core inflation (panel 4). It is highly likely that the Fed will have to tolerate some overshoot of its 2% inflation target in order to re-anchor inflation expectations near desired levels. We anticipate that the committee will do so, and maintain our view that long-dated TIPS breakevens will move above 2.3% before the end of the cycle. ABS: Underweight Asset-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 7 basis points in November, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +74 bps. Chart 9ABS Market Overview
ABS Market Overview
ABS Market Overview
The index option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated ABS widened 2 bps on the month. It currently sits at 34 bps; its minimum pre-crisis level (Chart 9). Our Excess Return Bond Map (see Appendix C) shows that Aaa-rated consumer ABS rank among the most defensive US spread products and also offer more expected return than other low-risk sectors such as Domestic Agency bonds and Supranationals. However, we remain wary of allocating too much to consumer ABS because credit trends continue to shift in the wrong direction. The consumer credit delinquency rate is still low, but has put in a clear bottom. The is true for the household interest expense ratio (panel 3). Senior Loan Officers also continue to tighten lending standards for both credit cards and auto loans. Tighter lending standards usually coincide with rising delinquencies (bottom panel). All in all, our favorable outlook for global growth causes us to shy away from defensive spread products, and deteriorating ABS credit metrics are also a cause for concern. Stay underweight. Non-Agency CMBS: Neutral Chart 10CMBS Market Overview
CMBS Market Overview
CMBS Market Overview
Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 12 basis points in November, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +221 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS widened 1 bp on the month. It currently sits at 72 bps, below its average pre-crisis level but somewhat above levels seen in 2018 (Chart 10). The macro outlook for commercial real estate (CRE) is somewhat unfavorable, with lenders tightening loan standards (panel 4) in an environment of tepid demand. The Fed’s Senior Loan Officer Survey shows that banks saw slightly stronger demand for nonfarm nonresidential CRE loans in Q3, after four consecutive quarters of falling demand (bottom panel). CRE prices are still not keeping pace with CMBS spreads (panel 3). Despite the poor fundamental picture, our Excess Return Bond Map shows that CMBS offer a reasonably attractive risk/reward trade-off compared to other bond sectors (see Appendix C). Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 7 basis points in November, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +107 bps. The index option-adjusted spread tightened 2 bps on the month, and currently sits at 54 bps. The Excess Return Bond Map in Appendix C shows that Agency CMBS offer a compelling risk/reward trade-off. An overweight allocation to this high-rated sector remains appropriate. Appendix A: The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing We follow a two-step process to formulate recommendations for bond portfolio duration. First, we determine the change in the federal funds rate that is priced into the yield curve for the next 12 months. Second, we decide – based on our assessments of the economy and Fed policy – whether the change in the fed funds rate will exceed or fall short of what is priced into the curve. Most of the time, a correct answer to this question leads to the appropriate duration call. We call this framework the Golden Rule Of Bond Investing, and we demonstrated its effectiveness in the US Bond Strategy Special Report, “The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing”, dated July 24, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. Chart 11 illustrates the Golden Rule’s track record by showing that the Bloomberg Barclays Treasury Master Index tends to outperform cash when rate hikes fall short of 12-month expectations, and vice-versa. Chart 11The Golden Rule's Track Record
The Golden Rule's Track Record
The Golden Rule's Track Record
At present, the market is priced for 26 basis points of cuts during the next 12 months. We anticipate a flat fed funds rate over that time horizon, and therefore anticipate that below-benchmark portfolio duration positions will profit. We can also use our Golden Rule framework to make 12-month total return and excess return forecasts for the Bloomberg Barclays Treasury index under different scenarios for the fed funds rate. Excess returns are relative to the Bloomberg Barclays Cash index. To forecast total returns we first calculate the 12-month fed funds rate surprise in each scenario by comparing the assumed change in the fed funds rate to the current value of our 12-month discounter. This rate hike surprise is then mapped to an expected change in the Treasury index yield using a regression based on the historical relationship between those two variables. Finally, we apply the expected change in index yield to the current characteristics (yield, duration and convexity) of the Treasury index to estimate total returns on a 12-month horizon. The below tables present those results, along with 95% confidence intervals. Excess returns are calculated by subtracting assumed cash returns in each scenario from our total return projections.
Mixed Messages
Mixed Messages
Mixed Messages
Mixed Messages
Appendix B: Butterfly Strategy Valuations The following tables present the current read-outs from our butterfly spread models. We use these models to identify opportunities to take duration-neutral positions across the Treasury curve. The following two Special Reports explain the models in more detail: US Bond Strategy Special Report, “Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated July 25, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com US Bond Strategy Special Report, “More Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated May 15, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Table 4 shows the raw residuals from each model. A positive value indicates that the bullet is cheap relative to the duration-matched barbell. A negative value indicates that the barbell is cheap relative to the bullet. Table 4Butterfly Strategy Valuation: Raw Residuals In Basis Points (As Of November 29 2019)
Mixed Messages
Mixed Messages
Table 5 scales the raw residuals in Table 4 by their historical means and standard deviations. This facilitates comparison between the different butterfly spreads. Table 5Butterfly Strategy Valuation: Standardized Residuals (As Of November 29, 2019)
Mixed Messages
Mixed Messages
Table 6 flips the models on their heads. It shows the change in the slope between the two barbell maturities that must be realized during the next six months to make returns between the bullet and barbell equal. For example, a reading of 45 bps in the 5 over 2/10 cell means that we would only expect the 5-year to outperform the 2/10 if the 2/10 slope steepens by more than 45 bps during the next six months. Otherwise, we would expect the 2/10 barbell to outperform the 5-year bullet. Table 6Discounted Slope Change During Next 6 Months (BPs)
Mixed Messages
Mixed Messages
Appendix C: Excess Return Bond Map The Excess Return Bond Map is used to assess the relative risk/reward trade-off between different sectors of the US bond market. It is a purely computational exercise and does not impose any macroeconomic view. The Map’s vertical axis shows 12-month expected excess returns. These are proxied by each sector’s option-adjusted spread. Sectors plotting further toward the top of the Map have higher expected returns and vice-versa. Our novel risk measure called the “Risk Of Losing 100 bps” is shown on the Map’s horizontal axis. To calculate it, we first compute the spread widening required on a 12-month horizon for each sector to lose 100 bps or more relative to a duration-matched position in Treasury securities. Then, we divide that amount of spread widening by each sector’s historical spread volatility. The end result is the number of standard deviations of 12-month spread widening required for each sector to lose 100 bps or more versus a position in Treasuries. Lower risk sectors plot further to the right of the Map, and higher risk sectors plot further to the left. Chart 12Excess Return Bond Map (As Of November 29, 2019)
Mixed Messages
Mixed Messages
Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Corporate Bond Investors Should Not Fight The Fed”, dated September 17, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 For details on how we arrive at our spread targets please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Value In Corporate Bonds”, dated February 19, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Caa-Rated Bonds: Warning Sign Or Buying Opportunity?”, dated November 26, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Two Themes And Two Trades”, dated October 1, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “A Perspective On Risk And Reward”, dated October 15, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, “Country Insights: Malaysia, Mexico & Central Europe”, dated October 31, 2019, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Two Themes And Two Trades”, dated October 1, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 8 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Position For Modest Curve Steepening”, dated October 29, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 9 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Adaptive Expectations In The TIPS Market”, dated November 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification Corporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation
Feature Recommended Allocation
Monthly Portfolio Update: How To Position For The End Game
Monthly Portfolio Update: How To Position For The End Game
In late November, BCA Research published its 2020 Outlook titled Heading Into The End Game, an annual discussion between BCA’s managing editors and the firm’s longstanding clients Mr. and Ms X.1 We recommend GAA clients read that document for a full analysis of the macro and investment environment we expect in 2020. In this Monthly Portfolio Outlook, we focus on portfolio construction: how we would recommend positioning a global multi-asset portfolio for the 12-month investment horizon in light of that analysis. First, a brief summary of the BCA macro outlook. We believe the global manufacturing cycle is starting to bottom out, partly because of its usual periodicity of 18 months from peak to trough, and also because of easier financial conditions, and some moderate fiscal and credit stimulus from China (Chart 1). Central banks will remain dovish next year despite accelerating growth. The Fed, in particular, worries that inflation expectations have become unanchored (Chart 2) and, moreover, will be reluctant to raise rates ahead of the US presidential election. This environment implies a moderate rise in long-term interest rates, with the US 10-year Treasury yield rising to 2.2-2.5%. Chart 1Reasons To Expect A Rebound
Reasons To Expect A Rebound
Reasons To Expect A Rebound
Chart 2Unanchored Inflation Expectations Worry The Fed
Unanchored Inflation Expectations Worry The Fed
Unanchored Inflation Expectations Worry The Fed
For an asset allocator, this combination of an improving manufacturing cycle and easy monetary policy looks like a very positive environment for risk assets (Chart 3). We, therefore, remain overweight equities and underweight fixed income. We have discussed over the past few months the timing to turn more risk-on and pro-cyclical in our recommendations.2 Since we are increasingly confident about the probability of the manufacturing cycle turning up, this is the time to make that change. Consequently, the shifts we are recommending in our global portfolio, shown in the Recommended Allocation table and discussed in detail below, add to its beta (Chart 4). Chart 3A Positive Environment For Risk Assets
A Positive Environment For Risk Assets
A Positive Environment For Risk Assets
Chart 4Raising The Beta Of Our Portfolio
Raising The Beta Of Our Portfolio
Raising The Beta Of Our Portfolio
Chart 5Some Signs Of Risk-On Still Missing
Some Signs Of Risk-On Still Missing
Some Signs Of Risk-On Still Missing
Nonetheless, we still have some concerns. China’s stimulus (particularly credit growth) remains half-hearted compared to previous cyclical rebounds in 2012 and 2016. We expect a “phase one” ceasefire in the trade war. But even that is not certain, and it would not anyway solve the long-term structural disputes. To turn fully risk-on, we would want to see signs of a clear rebound in commodity prices and a depreciation of the US dollar, which have not yet happened (Chart 5). The 2020 Outlook proposed some milestones to monitor whether our scenario is playing out and whether we should turn more or less risk-on. We summarize these milestones in Table 1. Given these uncertainties, to hedge our pro-cyclical positioning we continue to recommend an overweight in cash, and we are instituting an overweight position in gold. Table 1Milestones For 2020
Monthly Portfolio Update: How To Position For The End Game
Monthly Portfolio Update: How To Position For The End Game
Chart 6Recessions Are Caused By Inflation Or Debt
Recessions Are Caused By Inflation Or Debt
Recessions Are Caused By Inflation Or Debt
How will this cycle end? All recessions in modern history have been caused either by a sharp rise in inflation, or by a debt-fueled asset bubble (Chart 6). The Fed will likely fall behind the curve at some point as, after further tightening in the labor market, inflation starts to pick up. How the Fed reacts to that will determine what triggers the recession. If – as is most likely – it lets inflation run, that could blow up an asset bubble (and it was the bursting of such bubbles which caused the 2000 and 2007 recessions); if it decides to tighten monetary policy to kill inflation, the recession would look more like those of the 1970s and 1980s. But it is hard to see either happening over the next 12-18 months. Equities: As part of our shift to a more pro-risk, pro-cyclical stance, we are cutting US equities to underweight, and raising the euro zone to overweight, and Emerging Markets and the UK to neutral. US equities have outperformed fairly consistently since the Global Financial Crisis (Chart 7) – except during the two periods of accelerating global growth, in 2012-13 (when Europe did better) and 2016-17 (when EM particularly outperformed). The US today is expensive, particularly in terms of price/sales, which looks more expensive than the P/E ratio because the profit margin is at a record high level (Chart 8). The upside for US stocks in 2020 is likely to be limited. In 2019 so far, US equities have risen by 29% despite earnings growth close to zero. Multiples expanded because the Fed turned dovish, but investors should not assume further multiple expansion in 2020. Our rough model for US EPS growth points to around 8% next year (sales in line with nominal GDP growth of 4%, margins expanding by a couple of points, plus 2% in share buybacks). Add a dividend yield of 2%, and US stocks might give a total return of 10% or so. Chart 7US Doesn't Always Outperform
US Doesn't Always Outperform
US Doesn't Always Outperform
Chart 8US Equities Are Expensive
US Equities Are Expensive
US Equities Are Expensive
To play the cyclical rebound, we prefer euro zone stocks over those in EM or Japan. Euro zone stocks have a higher weighting in sectors we like such as Financials and Industrials (Table 2). European banks, in particular, look attractively valued (Chart 9) and offer a dividend yield of 6%, something investors should find appealing in this low-yield world. EM is more closely linked to China and commodities prices, which are not yet sending strong positive signals. We worry about the excess of debt in EM (Chart 10), which remains a structural headwind: the IMF and World Bank put total external EM debt at $6.8 trillion (Chart 11). Table 2Equity Sector Composition
Monthly Portfolio Update: How To Position For The End Game
Monthly Portfolio Update: How To Position For The End Game
Chart 9Euro Zone Banks Are Especially Cheap
Euro Zone Banks Are Especially Cheap
Euro Zone Banks Are Especially Cheap
Chart 10EM Debt Remains A Headwind
EM Debt Remains A Headwind
EM Debt Remains A Headwind
Japan is another likely beneficiary of a cyclical recovery. But, before we turn positive, we want to see (1) signs of a stabilization of consumption after the recent tax rise (retail sales fell by 7% year-on-year in October), and (2) clarification of a worrying new investment law (which will require any investor which intends to “influence management” to get prior government approval before buying as little as a 1% stake in many sectors). For an asset allocator this combination of an improving manufacturing cycle and easy monetary policy looks very positive for risk assets. We raise the UK to neutral. The market has been a serial underperformer over the past few years, but this has been due to the weak pound and derating, rather than poor earnings growth (Chart 12). It now looks very cheap and, with the risk of a no-deal Brexit off the table, sterling should rebound further. The UK is notably overweight the sectors we like (Table 2). However, political risk makes us limit our recommendation to neutral. Although the Conservatives look likely to win a majority in this month’s general election, which will allow them to push through the negotiated Brexit deal, subsequent arguments over the future trade relationship with the EU will be divisive. Chart 116.8 Trillion In EM External Debt
$6.8 Trillion In EM External Debt
$6.8 Trillion In EM External Debt
Chart 12The UK Has Been Derated Since 2016
The UK Has Been Derated Since 2016
The UK Has Been Derated Since 2016
Fixed Income: We remain underweight government bonds. Stronger economic growth is likely to push up long-term rates (Chart 13). Nonetheless, the rise in yields should be limited. The Fed looks to be on hold for the next 12 months, but the futures market is not far away from that view: it has priced in only a 60% probability of one rate cut over that time. The gap between market expectations and what the Fed actually does is what our bond strategists call the “golden rule of bond investing”. US inflation is also likely to soften over the next few months due to the lagged effect of this year’s weaker growth and appreciating dollar. We do not expect the 10-year US Treasury to rise above 2.5% – the current FOMC estimate of the long-run equilibrium level of short-term rates (Chart 14). Chart 13Growth Will Push Up Rates...
Growth Will Push Up Rates...
Growth Will Push Up Rates...
Chart 14...But Only As Far As 2.5%
...But Only As Far As 2.5%
...But Only As Far As 2.5%
Within the fixed-income universe, we remain positive on corporate credit. But US investment-grade bond spreads are no longer attractive and so we downgrade them to neutral (Chart 15). Investors looking for high-quality bond exposure should prefer Agency MBS, which trade on an attractive spread relative to Aa- and A-rated corporate bonds. European IG should do better since spreads are not so close to historical lows, risk-free rates should rise less than in the US, and because the ECB is increasing its purchases of corporate bonds. Chart 15US IG Spreads Are Close To Historical Lows
Monthly Portfolio Update: How To Position For The End Game
Monthly Portfolio Update: How To Position For The End Game
Chart 16US Caa Bonds Have Some Catching Up To Do
The Puzzling Case Of Caa-Rated Junk Bonds US Caa Bonds Have Some Catching Up To Do
The Puzzling Case Of Caa-Rated Junk Bonds US Caa Bonds Have Some Catching Up To Do
We continue to like high-yield bonds, both in the US and Europe. But we would suggest moving down the credit curve and increasing the weight in Caa-rated bonds. These have underperformed this year (Chart 16), mainly because of technical factors such as their overweight in the energy sector and relatively smaller decline in duration.3 With a stronger economy and rising oil prices, they should catch up to their higher-rated HY peers in 2020. To play the cyclical rebound, we prefer euro zone stocks over those in EM or Japan. Currencies: Since the US dollar is a counter-cyclical currency (Chart 17), we would expect it to weaken against more cyclical currencies such as the euro, and commodity currencies such as the Australian dollar and Canadian dollar. But it should appreciate relative to the yen and Swiss franc, which are the most defensive major currencies. We expect EM currencies to continue to depreciate. Most emerging markets are experiencing disinflation (Chart 18), which will push central banks to cut rates and inject liquidity into the banking system. This will tend to weaken their currencies. Overall, we are neutral on the US dollar. Chart 17The Dollar Is A Counter-Cyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Counter-Cyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Counter-Cyclical Currency
Chart 18Disinflation Will Push EM Currencies Down Further
Disinflation Will Push EM Currencies Down Further
Disinflation Will Push EM Currencies Down Further
Commodities: Industrials metals prices are closely linked to Chinese stimulus (Chart 19). A moderate recovery in Chinese growth should be a positive, and so we raise our recommendation to neutral. But with question-marks still lingering over the strength of the rebound in the Chinese economy, we would not be more positive than that. Oil prices should see moderate upside over the next 12 months, with supply tight and demand growth recovering in line with the global economy. Our energy strategists forecast Brent crude to average $67 a barrel in 2020 (compared to a little over $60 today). Chart 19Metals Prices Depend On China
Metals Prices Depend On China
Metals Prices Depend On China
Chart 20Gold: Short-Term Negatives, But Remains A Good Hedge
Gold: Short-Term Negatives, But Remains A Good Hedge
Gold: Short-Term Negatives, But Remains A Good Hedge
Gold looks a little overbought in the short term, and less monetary stimulus and a rise in rates next year would be negative factors (Chart 20). Nonetheless, we see it as a good hedge against our positive economic view going awry, and against geopolitical risks. If central banks do decide to let economies run hot next year and ignore rising inflation, gold could do particularly well. We, therefore, raise our recommendation to overweight on a 12-month horizon. Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Chief Global Asset Allocation Strategist garry@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see "Outlook 2020," dated November 22 2019, available at bcaresearch.com 2 Please see, for example, last month’s GAA Monthly Portfolio Update, “Looking For The Turning-Point,” dated November 1, 2019, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com 3 For a more detailed explanation, please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Caa-Rated Bonds: Warning Signs Or Buying Opportunity,” dated 26 November 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com GAA Asset Allocation
Highlights Global High-Yield: The widening of US Caa-rated high-yield spreads is narrowly focused in Energy-related companies. The conditions for a spillover into the broader junk bond market (tight monetary policy, tightening lending standards & deteriorating corporate health) are not currently in place. Stay overweight high-yield in both the US and euro area, where Caa-rated spreads have also widened. Australia: A sluggish economy and soggy inflation, with little evidence of an imminent turnaround, imply that the Reserve Bank of Australia may not be done with its rate cutting cycle. Maintain an overweight stance on Australian sovereign debt relative to global benchmarks. Feature There’s Nothing To “Caa” Here The clouds of pessimism on global growth, and financial markets, continue to slowly dissipate. The global manufacturing PMI has clearly bottomed, our rising global leading economic indicator is signaling more upside for the first half of 2020, equity markets worldwide are grinding higher, volatility is subdued, while corporate credit spreads in the US and Europe remain generally tight. Yet within the corporate bond market, a peculiar dynamic has emerged. We do not see a reason to extrapolate the weakness in lower-rated US junk bonds into a broader macro issue for the corporate bond market, and the US economy. The option-adjusted spread (OAS) for the overall Bloomberg Barclays US high-yield (HY) index now sits at 376bps. While this spread is relatively narrow from a longer-term perspective, investors may have become more discerning about credit risk. Lower-rated HY has dramatically underperformed higher-rated HY debt of late, with the US Caa-rated OAS now sitting at 985bps compared to Ba-rated spreads of 196bps (Chart of the Week). The divergence across credit tiers is unprecedented, in that Caa spreads are widening while Ba spreads are narrowing – typically, spreads move in tandem directionally, both in bull and bear markets for US junk bonds. The widening of US Caa-rated junk bond spreads has started to raise concerns that this is a “canary in the coal mine” signaling future financial stress among US corporate borrowers. Yet the same dynamic is occurring in euro area HY, with Caa-rated and Ba-rated spreads tracking the US on an almost tick-for-tick basis. In a report published yesterday, our colleagues at BCA Research US Bond Strategy investigated the history of Caa spread widenings dating back to 1996.1 They noted that Caa spread widening has typically been a good predictor of one-year-ahead negative excess returns for the overall US junk bond index. However, there has never been a period like today where Caa spreads have widened while overall HY spreads have remained stable. Chart of the WeekSome Odd Divergences In Global Credit
Some Odd Divergences In Global Credit
Some Odd Divergences In Global Credit
We do not see a reason to extrapolate the weakness in lower-rated US junk bonds into a broader macro issue for the corporate bond market, and the US economy, for two main reasons: Chart 2Lower Energy Prices Hurt Lower Rated US HY
Lower Energy Prices Hurt Lower Rated US HY
Lower Energy Prices Hurt Lower Rated US HY
1) The widening is focused on Energy related debt The widening of US Caa-rated spreads in 2019 has occurred alongside a parallel increase in the spreads of Energy-related companies in the US junk bond universe (Chart 2). A similar trend played out during the 2014/15 HY bear phase, which was triggered by the collapse of world oil prices that ravaged the US shale oil industry which dominated the lower-rated tiers of the junk bond market. In 2019, oil prices have declined, although not as dramatically, and HY Energy spreads have widened but to nowhere near the levels seen five years ago. More importantly, non-Energy junk spreads remain very subdued and stable, unlike the case in 2014/15 (bottom panel). When looking at the 2019 year-to-date excess returns for the Bloomberg Barclays US HY index, it is clear that the overall negative returns for the Caa-rated bucket have been driven by the lagging performance of Energy names (Chart 3). The rest of the market has generally been delivering solid excess returns. Chart 3Contribution To 2019 YTD US HY Excess Returns*
The Lowdown On Low-Rated High-Yield
The Lowdown On Low-Rated High-Yield
2) The widening has not been confirmed by signals from other reliable credit cycle indicators We believe that, from a top-down macro perspective, corporate credit performance in the US is influenced by three main factors: the state of US corporate health, the stance of the Fed’s monetary policy and the trend in lending standards for US banks. We have dubbed this our “Credit Checklist”, and we present a version of that checklist for US high-yield in Chart 4. Chart 4Conditions Not In Place For A Broad US HY Selloff
Conditions Not In Place For A Broad US HY Selloff
Conditions Not In Place For A Broad US HY Selloff
Our “bottom-up” US HY Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) aggregates, for a sample set of US HY issuers, published financial ratios that are typically used to determine the creditworthiness of borrowers – measures like interest coverage, operating margins and leverage. The US HY CHM is currently at a “neutral” reading (2nd panel), unlike past periods where Caa-rated spreads widened sharply: during the early 2000s telecom bust, the 2008 Financial Crisis and the 2014/15 collapse in oil prices. The readings for the three components of our US HY Credit Checklist are all at neutral levels, suggesting that there is no fundamental underpinning at the moment for a sustained increase in US HY spreads. Yet another reason why the latest widening of Caa-rated spreads looks unusual. Turning to measures of the stance of US monetary policy, we look at both the slope of the US Treasury curve (2-year vs 10-year) and the gap between the real fed funds rate and the New York Fed’s estimate of the neutral “r-star” rate. Prior to the early 2000s and 2008 blowout in Caa spreads, the Fed had pushed the real funds rate into restrictive territory above r-star, and the Treasury curve subsequently inverted. That was not the case during the 2014/15 Caa widening, as the Fed was only beginning to transition away from its QE/zero-rate era at that time. Currently, the real funds rate is right at r-star, and the Treasury curve is very flat but not inverted, indicating a broadly neutral monetary policy stance. Finally, we look at data from the Fed’s Senior Loan Officer Survey to evaluate lending standards for US banks. On that front, the latest reading on standards for commercial and industrial loans showed a very modest tightening in the third quarter of 2019, but the overall level remains broadly neutral – unlike the sharp tightening of conditions seen in the early 2000s and 2008 (and the modest tightening in 2014/15). The readings for the three components of our US HY Credit Checklist are all at neutral levels, suggesting that there is no fundamental underpinning at the moment for a sustained increase in US HY spreads. Yet another reason why the latest widening of Caa-rated spreads looks unusual, rather than a sign of future stress in US credit markets. We even see a similar dynamic at work in the euro area. In Chart 5, we present a Credit Checklist for euro area HY, using the same indicators that go into our US HY Credit Checklist. The readings here are even more positive for corporate credit performance than in the US. Our euro area bottom-up HY CHM is showing no deterioration of euro area corporate health, the real ECB policy rate is well below the estimate of r-star, the German yield curve is not inverted and the ECB’s survey of euro area bank lending standards showed a modest easing in the third quarter. Just like in the US, the fundamental backdrop does not argue for a sustained period of euro area HY spread widening, making the latest move higher in euro area Caa spreads as unusual as the move in US Caa. We cannot even blame lower oil prices for the spread widening, as Energy represents only a tiny fraction of the euro area HY market, compared to the large weighting of Energy borrowers in the US junk bond universe. Chart 5Conditions Not In Place For A Broad European HY Selloff
Conditions Not In Place For A Broad European HY Selloff
Conditions Not In Place For A Broad European HY Selloff
We suspect that the correlation between US and euro area HY spreads, by credit tier, has more to do with the increased correlation of trading within global credit markets. Or perhaps it is a sign of investors staying cautious and staying up in quality, even within the riskier HY market. Whatever the reason, we see little fundamental reason to expect the widening of Caa-rated spreads to leak into the broader high-yield market. In fact, if oil prices begin to move higher again, as our commodity strategists are expecting for 2020, that might create a tactical buying opportunity in Caa-rated junk bonds in both the US and euro area. In the meantime, we see no reason to change our recommended overweight stance on US and euro area HY corporate bonds, even with the widening of lower-rated spreads. Bottom Line: The recent widening of US Caa-rated high-yield spreads is narrowly focused in Energy-related companies. The conditions for a spillover into the broader junk bond market (tight monetary policy, tightening lending standards & deteriorating corporate health) are not currently in place. Stay overweight high-yield in both the US and euro area, where Caa-rated spreads have also widened. Australia: The RBA May Not Be Done Yet The rally in Australian government bonds has been driven by the dovish policy response from the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) to weak economic growth and tepid inflation – a backdrop that is showing little sign of reversing quickly. We have maintained a recommended overweight investment stance on Australian government bonds since December 19, 2017. Since then, the yield on Bloomberg Barclays Australian Treasury index has declined by -140bps, sharply outperforming bonds in the other developed markets and ending Australia’s long-time status as a “high-yielding” developed economy bond market (Chart 6). The rally in Australian government bonds has been driven by the dovish policy response from the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) to weak economic growth and tepid inflation – a backdrop that is showing little sign of reversing quickly. The central bank has already cut interest rates by 75bps this year, taking the Cash Rate down to a record low of 0.75%. At the November 5th monetary policy meeting, the RBA held off on additional easing but still delivered what was perceived by the market to be a dovish surprise, emphasizing persistently below-target inflation and potential downside risks stemming from the housing market. The door was kept wide open for further rate cuts, if necessary. RBA Governor Philip Lowe has even discussed the possibility that the RBA may have to cut rates to the zero bound and start buying assets via quantitative easing to try and restore inflation back to the midpoint of the RBA’s 2-3% target band. Chart 6Australian Bonds Have Outperformed Sharply
Australian Bonds Have Outperformed Sharply
Australian Bonds Have Outperformed Sharply
The RBA’s dovishness is justified, given sluggish economic growth and tepid inflation. Real GDP growth slowed sharply in the first half of 2019 to a meager 1.4% on a year-over-year basis (Chart 7). Consumer sentiment and business confidence remain depressed, having both declined since the start of the year. The former is being hit by weak house prices and sub-par income growth, while the latter is suffering under the weight of weaker demand from Australia’s most important trade partner, China. In addition, persistent drought conditions in much of the country have pushed up food prices and brought down incomes related to the farming sector. Chart 7Sluggish Australian Domestic Demand
Sluggish Australian Domestic Demand
Sluggish Australian Domestic Demand
Chart 8From Boom To Bust In Australian Housing
From Boom To Bust In Australian Housing
From Boom To Bust In Australian Housing
A bellwether for the Australian economy, the housing market, has not fared much better (Chart 8). Building approvals for new dwelling units have fallen almost 20% since September of last year, while house prices in the major cities have been contracting since the fourth quarter of 2017. Responding to easy financial conditions in Australia and the rest of the world, the standard variable mortgage rate has now fallen to a 60-year low. It remains to be seen how quickly the housing market will turn around and when that, in turn, will lift dwelling investment, but the RBA cuts in 2019 should give a bit of a lift to Australian housing in 2020. As in other developed markets, trade uncertainty and fears of a recession have made Australian firms more hesitant to invest. Real private business investment is now falling in year-over-year terms, even with the boost to the terms of trade (and corporate profits) from the increase in prices for Australia’s most important commodities seen in 2019 (Chart 9). That impact may be starting to fade, however. The price for iron ore – a major Australian commodity export – has already fallen 28% from the 2019 peak. In addition, Chinese iron ore imports from Australia are contracting in year-over-terms, even with Chinese growth starting to show signs of stabilization in response to stimulus measures implemented earlier this year. Those is an ominous signal for Australian growth, given the massive swing in net exports seen this year. Chart 9Terms Of Trade Turning Negative For Australian Capex
Terms Of Trade Turning Negative For Australian Capex
Terms Of Trade Turning Negative For Australian Capex
Chart 10An Unsustainable Lift From Net Exports
An Unsustainable Lift From Net Exports
An Unsustainable Lift From Net Exports
Driven by the persistent depreciation of the Australian dollar, and supportive terms of trade, the Australian trade balance has reached its highest value as a percent of nominal GDP (3.7%) since 1959, when quarterly data began (Chart 10). The surge has come almost entirely from the export side, occurring alongside the boost to commodity prices that was concentrated in iron ore, and looks both unsustainable and unrepeatable on a rate-of-change basis. Slowing Australian economic momentum has also impacted the labor market. Employment growth is slowing and the unemployment rate has ticked up to 5.3% from a cyclical low of 5% in February 2019 (Chart 11). The so-called “underemployment rate”, is a much higher 8.5%, indicating that there is still ample slack in the Australian labor market as workers are working fewer hours than they wish (and are hence, “underemployed”). The underemployment rate is negatively correlated to wage growth, suggesting that the modest upturn in the latter seen since the end of 2016 is likely to cool off (bottom panel). Chart 11Some Softening In The Australian Labor Market
Some Softening In The Australian Labor Market
Some Softening In The Australian Labor Market
Chart 12Australian Inflation Remains Subdued
Australian Inflation Remains Subdued
Australian Inflation Remains Subdued
The RBA has already warned that wage growth expectations may have become anchored at a lower level given the anemic growth over the past several years. That mirrors the trend seen in overall price inflation. Headline CPI inflation was only 1.6% in the third quarter of 2019, as was the “trimmed mean” CPI inflation rate that is favored by the RBA. Both are below the bottom end of the RBA’s target range of 2-3%, as are survey-based expectations of short-term inflation (Chart 12). The previously mentioned drought conditions have put some upward pressure on overall inflation via grocery food prices, but that is expected to be transitory. With depressed house prices and ongoing issues with spare capacity in the labor market, longer-term market-based inflation expectations, captured by the 5-year/5-year forward CPI swap rate, have dipped below the 2% level. The combination of weakening growth and soggy inflation poses a problem for the RBA, as it tries to use monetary policy tools to reverse those trends at a time when Australian banks have seen an unprecedented level of scrutiny of their lending practices. Australian banks have been under the harsh political spotlight after the government’s Royal Commission on misconduct in the financial industry released its findings back in February of this year. Many banks were exposed for serious violations, including money laundering and “improperly” selling financial products to households. Several top bank executives lost their jobs as a result, with the overall industry duly chastised and humbled. Australian banks remain well capitalized, following the path of most developed market banks in response to the Basel III reforms, while non-performing loans remain modest. Yet the risk moving forward is that Australian banks become more prudent in their lending practices after the public “flogging” they received this year, which may impair the transmission mechanism from low RBA policy rates to increased loan growth - and, eventually, faster economic activity. Already, private credit growth has slowed sharply, with the sharpest declines coming for housing and business lending (Chart 13). Investment implications for Australian bonds In the case of Australia, however, the underlying economy and inflation trends still point to a possibility that the RBA will have to ease again sometime in the next few months – a move that is unlikely to be matched in the other major developed markets. This likely means that Australian government bonds can continue to outperform in 2020. Despite signs that the global economy is starting to bottom out after the 2019 downturn, the momentum in Australian economic growth and inflation remains tepid. This suggests that Australian sovereign debt is likely to continue outperforming global peers on a relative basis over the next 6-12 months. Our RBA Monitor continues to signal that more interest rate cuts from the RBA are needed. Yet the Australian Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve now discounts only 19bps of rate cuts over the next year (Chart 14). This mirrors the trend seen in other developed interest rate markets, as investors have shifted to pricing out the dovish policy expectations as global growth starts to improve. Chart 13Weakening Loan Demand, But No Credit Crunch
Weakening Loan Demand, But No Credit Crunch
Weakening Loan Demand, But No Credit Crunch
Chart 14Stay Overweight Australian Government Bonds
Stay Overweight Australian Government Bonds
Stay Overweight Australian Government Bonds
In the case of Australia, however, the underlying economy and inflation trends still point to a possibility that the RBA will have to ease again sometime in the next few months – a move that is unlikely to be matched in the other major developed markets. This likely means that Australian government bonds can continue to outperform in 2020. We advise staying strategically overweight Australian government bonds in global fixed income portfolios. Bottom Line: A sluggish economy and soggy inflation, with little evidence of an imminent turnaround, imply that the Reserve Bank of Australia may not be done with its rate cutting cycle. Maintain an overweight stance on Australian sovereign debt relative to global benchmarks. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Shakti Sharma Research Associate ShaktiS@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Research US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Caa-Rated Bonds: Warning Sign Or Buying Opportunity?”, dated November 26, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
The Lowdown On Low-Rated High-Yield
The Lowdown On Low-Rated High-Yield
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Overall high-yield returns have been solid in 2019, but oddly, the lowest-rated junk bonds have not participated in the rally. So far this year, Ba and B-rated junk bonds have bested duration-matched Treasuries by 786 bps and 717 bps, respectively. But…