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Economy

Monetary policy is about to become a powerful tailwind to the already bullish brew that includes Trump’s repeated step-downs from a global trade war, irrelevant geopolitical risks in the Middle East, and a fiscal policy that is no longer as alarming to the bond markets as the raft of campaign promises appears to be. Investors should hesitate to get overly bearish either bonds or stocks. However, we remain uber USD bears. 

The US economy is not in recession, but is suffering from a post-pandemic stimulus hangover. The cure: lower interest rates. We expect the Fed to start lowering rates, which will benefit both equities and bonds. We upgrade stocks to neutral and downgrade cash to underweight. We also upgrade duration to overweight. The US dollar will continue to weaken, so favour Europe and China within equities.

Pay Attention To Swap Spreads Pay…
Tech-led momentum is driving the S&P 500 to new highs despite weak growth and rising cyclical risks. The rally has accelerated following a de-escalation in geopolitical tensions and ongoing hopes for positive trade developments. Momentum signals confirm…
Regional Fed surveys confirm sluggish US manufacturing and tame inflation, supporting long duration positioning outside the US. The June Dallas Fed Manufacturing survey missed expectations, rising to -12.7 from -15.3, still deep in contraction. New orders…
Weak consumption data and deteriorating labor market signals reinforce our defensive stance. The May US Personal Income & Outlays report showed real personal spending declining 0.3% m/m, missing expectations, while core PCE inflation came in slightly…
Foreign investors are selling US assets. Our Chart Of The Week comes from Juan Correa, Chief Global Asset Allocation Strategist. Splitting cumulative year-to-date EUR/USD returns by trading session reveals a clear pattern: The dollar weakens during…

The Treasury/OIS spread has exerted notable upward pressure on Treasury yields during the past year, but the factors driving the spread are now turning more favorable.

Investors should modestly underweight equities in their portfolios and look to turn more aggressively defensive once the whites of the recession’s eyes are visible. We think that will happen within the next few months.

In Section I, Doug underscores that the full weight of tariffs has yet to be felt on the US and global economies, against the dangerous backdrop of a softening labor market. In Section II, Jonathan presents the bullish case for the US dollar over the coming year.