Gov Sovereigns/Treasurys
Highlights Despite recent softness in the data, Swedish growth will remain robust over the next 6-12 months, supported by loose monetary conditions and solid export demand. Inflation has climbed back to the Riksbank 2% target, and additional increases are likely over the next 6-12 months. Though debt levels are high, households are relatively healthy given strong wealth, solid disposable income and elevated saving rates. Swedish politics will not substantively impact the markets. If the Moderate Party comes to power, it is unlikely to make significant policy departures from the Social Democrats. Swedish banks' capital levels are elevated, particularly compared to their EU peers. Still, the massive exposure to domestic real estate suggests that banks could not withstand a meaningful decline in house prices. The uninterrupted, long-term surge in Swedish house prices suggests that a bubble has formed. A strong supply-side response has softened prices as of late, but a massive correction is not imminent given robust economic growth and very accommodative monetary policy. Negative interest rates are inconsistent with the robust growth Sweden is experiencing. Going forward, strong growth momentum, rising inflation and a tight labor market will force policymakers to raise rates earlier, and by more, than markets expect. Sweden government debt will underperform global developed market peers over the next 6-12 months. Feature Chart 1Watch What They Do,##BR##Not What They Say
Watch What They Do, Not What They Say
Watch What They Do, Not What They Say
Sweden is a country that has been very frustrating to figure out for investors and analysts alike over the past few years. The economy has been performing very well, with real GDP growth averaging around 3% since 2013, well above the OECD's estimate of potential GDP growth of 2.2%. Over that same period, the unemployment rate has fallen from 8% to 6.5% while inflation has risen from 0% to 2%. These are the types of developments that would normally lead an inflation targeting central bank like the Riksbank to contemplate a tightening of monetary policy. Yet while the Riksbank has been projecting significant increases in policy rates and bond yields every year for the past few years, it has actually delivered additional interest rate cuts, bringing the benchmark repo rate down into negative territory in 2014 and keeping it there to this day (Chart 1). In this Special Report, we examine Sweden's economic backdrop, upcoming elections and the health of the financial system to determine the likely future path of Swedish interest rates. We conclude that investors should not fear an imminent collapse of the Swedish housing bubble or a shock outcome in the September general election. A shift in direction for monetary policy, however, is likely later this year, with the Riksbank set to become more hawkish in response to an economy that no longer requires ultra-loose monetary conditions. This has bearish strategic implications for Swedish fixed income, and could finally place a floor under the beleaguered krona. Economy: Sustained Growth Outweighs Potential Risks After experiencing slowing growth momentum in 2016, Sweden's economy made a solid recovery in 2017. Real GDP growth came in at 3.3% on a year-over-year basis in Q4/2017, following on the strong prints earlier in the year. The Riksbank believes that GDP growth will slow slightly in 2018 due to some softening in consumer spending and business investment. However, real consumption has remained resilient and should be supported by the continued recovery in wages. Capital spending has also been robust and industrial confidence remains in an uptrend. While both the OECD leading economic indicator and manufacturing PMI have pulled back in recent months, both are coming off elevated levels. The PMI remains well above the 50 line, suggesting that strong growth momentum remains intact (Chart 2). The National Institute of Economic Research's economic tendency survey bounced back in April on the back of manufacturing and construction strength, with readings for the survey having been above 100 (signifying growth stronger than normal) every month since April 2015. One important factor helping support above-trend growth is fiscal policy, which has become modestly stimulative after two years of major fiscal drag in 2015 and 2016. As an export-oriented country, Sweden is highly levered to the state of the global economy. Export growth remains supported by continued strong global activity, low unit labor costs and recent krona weakness. Real exports expanded at a 4.7% rate (year-over-year) at the end of 2017 and the outlook is bright given firming growth in Sweden's largest export partners and the considerable depreciation of the krona. This is confirmed by our export model, which is signaling a pickup in export growth through the rest of the year before moderating slightly in 2019 (Chart 3). Chart 2Swedish Growth Cooling Off A Bit,##BR##But Remains Strong
Swedish Growth Cooling Off A Bit, But Remains Strong
Swedish Growth Cooling Off A Bit, But Remains Strong
Chart 3Export Growth##BR##Will Remain Solid
Export Growth Will Remain Solid
Export Growth Will Remain Solid
Healthy employment growth has driven Sweden's unemployment rate to 6.5%, more than one full percentage point below the OECD's estimate of the full-employment NAIRU1 rate (Chart 4). The spread between the two (the unemployment gap) has not been this low in nearly two decades. During the last period when unemployment was below NAIRU in 2007-08, wage growth surged to over 4%. However, Swedish wage growth has been subdued following the 2008 financial crisis, has been the case in most developed countries, even as unemployment continues to fall. Currently, annual growth in average hourly earnings is now displaying positive upward momentum, both in nominal terms (+2.5%) and, even more importantly for consumer spending, in real terms (+0.9%). A tightening labor market will support additional wage increases in the coming months. Importantly, Swedish wages are also influenced by wages in countries that are export competitors. For example, they have closely tracked German wages in recent years. The strong wage increases coming out of the latest round of German labor union negotiations is therefore a positive sign for Swedish wage growth.2 In addition, there is scope for more improvement as the unemployment rate is still above its pre-crisis level. Sweden has experienced a large inflow of immigration over the last decade and the unemployment rate for non-EU-born residents is approximately four times higher than the national figure. The government is stressing education and skill-building programs to address this issue and speed up the integration process. To the extent that these programs are successful, there is scope for a decline in the immigrant unemployment rate that can pull the overall national unemployment rate even lower - as long as the economy continues to expand and the demand for labor remains robust. A rising trend in domestic price pressures from the labor market can extend the recent uptrend in Swedish inflation. Inflation has been steadily rising since the deflation scare at the end of 2013, driven by consistent above-trend economic growth which has soaked up all spare capacity in the Swedish economy (Chart 5). The latest print on headline CPI inflation was 1.9%, while CPIF inflation (the Riksbank's preferred measure that is measured with fixed interest rates) sits right at the central bank's 2% target. Market-based inflation expectations have eased a bit on the year, though most survey-based measures have remained firm. Chart 4Wage Pressures Intensifying
Wage Pressures Intensifying
Wage Pressures Intensifying
Chart 5Inflation Back To Target, May Not Stop There
Inflation Back To Target, May Not Stop There
Inflation Back To Target, May Not Stop There
Rising oil prices have lifted inflation and BCA's commodity strategists believe that there is some additional upside given high demand and declining inventories, suggesting additional inflationary pressure ahead. In addition, even though core prices have historically been weak in the summer months, our Swedish core CPI model suggests that inflationary pressures will continue to build over the next six months, primarily due to booming resource utilization (bottom panel). Additionally, inflation should remain supported by a weaker krona, which has declined 8.5% year-to-date despite robust domestic fundamentals. The real trade-weighted index (TWI) peaked in 2017 and is now at a post-crisis low. These depressed levels suggest the currency can rise without derailing export growth. Going forward, the Riksbank expects the krona to gradually appreciate, based on projections from the April 2018 Monetary Policy Report (MPR).3 However, the currency has closely tracked the real policy rate (Chart 6) and thus could continue to fall below the Riksbank's projected path if our base case scenario of inflation rising further before the Riksbank starts hiking rates plays out - providing an additional boost to inflation from an even weaker krona. While the cyclical economic story in Sweden still looks solid, there remains a significant potential structural headwind in the form of high household debt. Mortgage borrowing has propelled the debt-to-income ratio to over 180% and the debt-to-GDP ratio to over 80%, making Swedish households some of the most indebted in the developed world (Chart 7). The Riksbank projects that debt-to-income will reach 190% by 2021 and its financial vulnerability indicator is at a post-crisis high. While we are certainly not understating the risks associated with such a massive debt load, we do not view this as an imminent threat to the economy. Chart 6VERY Loose Monetary Conditions##BR##In Sweden
VERY Loose Monetary Conditions In Sweden
VERY Loose Monetary Conditions In Sweden
Chart 7Swedish Households Can##BR##Manage High Debt
Swedish Households Can Manage High Debt
Swedish Households Can Manage High Debt
Swedish households' financial situation is better than it appears, with wealth three times larger than liabilities. Additionally, disposable income, which suffers under Sweden's high tax rates, should receive a boost this year from the increase in child allowance and lower taxes on pensioners. Importantly, the Swedish personal saving rate has been trending upward since the financial crisis and currently is one of the highest in the developed world at 9.6%. In addition, while about 70% of Swedish mortgages are variable rate, consumers are prepared for higher interest rates. Survey data shows household expectations on rates are in line with the National Institute of Economic Research's forecast. Outside of a negative growth shock or a substantial and rapid rise in interest rates, which is not our base case, Swedish high household debt levels should not pose a risk to the current economic expansion. Bottom Line: Despite recent softness in the data, Swedish growth will remain robust over the next 6-12 months, supported by loose monetary conditions and solid export demand. Inflation has climbed back to the Riksbank 2% target, and additional increases are likely over the next 6-12 months. Though debt levels are high, households are relatively healthy given strong wealth and elevated saving rates. Politics: Moderating On All Fronts Sweden has become something of a poster child for a country where immigration policy has become unhinged. In the U.S., Sweden's struggle to integrate recent arrivals, particularly its large asylum population, is a frequent feature on right-wing news channels and websites. The narrative is that Sweden is overrun with migrants and that, as a result, anti-establishment and populist parties will be successful in the upcoming elections on September 9th. This view is based on some objective truths. First, Sweden genuinely does struggle to integrate migrants. As BCA's Chief Global Strategist, Peter Berezin, has showed, Sweden is one of the worst performers when it comes to integrating immigrants into its labor force (Chart 8) and in educational attainment (Chart 9).4 Peter posits that the likely culprit is the country's generous welfare state, which discourages migrants from participating in the labor force and perhaps creates a self-selection process where migrants and asylum seekers looking to enter Sweden are those most likely to abuse its generous public support system.5 Chart 8Immigrants Have Trouble##BR##Integrating Into The Labor Force
Sweden: The Riksbank Cannot Kick The Can Down The Road Anymore
Sweden: The Riksbank Cannot Kick The Can Down The Road Anymore
Chart 9Immigrants Have Trouble##BR##In Swedish Education
Sweden: The Riksbank Cannot Kick The Can Down The Road Anymore
Sweden: The Riksbank Cannot Kick The Can Down The Road Anymore
Second, the country's premier populist party - the Sweden Democrats - is relatively successful in the European context. Its ardently anti-immigrant policy has helped the party go from just 2.9% of the vote in 2006, to 12.9% in 2014. For much of 2017, Sweden Democrats have polled as the second most popular party in the country, behind the ruling Social Democrats (Chart 10). Chart 10Anti-Establishment Party Polling Well
Anti-Establishment Party Polling Well
Anti-Establishment Party Polling Well
At the same time, the pessimistic narrative is old news and misses the big picture. In Europe, the anti-establishment parties are moving to the center on investment-relevant matters - such as EU integration - while the establishment parties are adopting the populist narratives on immigration. BCA's Geopolitical Strategy described this process in a recent Special Report that outlined how political pluralism - as opposed to the party duopoly present in the U.S. - encourages such a political migration to the center.6 Sweden is a dramatic case of increasing political pluralism. As such, its political evolution is relevant to the thesis that investors should not fear pluralism because the anti-establishment will migrate to the center while the establishment adopts anti-immigrant rhetoric. This is precisely what has been happening in Sweden for the past six months. First, the ruling Social Democrats - traditionally proponents of migration in the country - have called for tougher rules on labor migration, a major departure from party orthodoxy. Second, Sweden Democrats have seen an exodus of right-wing members, including the former leader, as the party moves to the middle ground on all non-immigration-related issues. This opens up the possibility for Sweden Democrats to join the pro-business Moderate Party in a coalition deal after the election. Should investors fear the upcoming election? Our high conviction view is no. There are three general conclusions we would make regarding the election: Anti-asylum policies will accelerate. All parties are becoming more anti-immigrant in Sweden as the public turns against the country's liberal asylum policies. This is somewhat irrelevant, however, as the influx of asylum seekers into Europe has already dramatically slowed due to better border enforcement policies by the EU (Chart 11). Meanwhile, the pace of migration to Sweden from other EU countries will not moderate, given that the country is part of the continental Labor Market. This is important as EU migrants make up 32% of total migrants into Sweden and tend to be more highly educated and much better at participating in the labor market. Euroskepticism is irrelevant: There is absolutely no support for exiting the EU, with Swedes among the most ardent supporters of remaining in the bloc. Less than a third of Swedes are optimistic about a life outside the EU, for example (Chart 12). As such, the pace of migration will only moderate in so far as the country accepts less refugees going forward. There will be no break with the EU Labor Market and no "Swexit" referendum on the investable time horizon. Chart 11Asylum Flows Are Slowing
Asylum Flows Are Slowing
Asylum Flows Are Slowing
Chart 12Swedes Are Europhiles
Swedes Are Europhiles
Swedes Are Europhiles
The Moderate Party is not a panacea: The pro-business, center-right, Moderate Party is often seen as a panacea for investors. It is true that the party's rise to power, in 1991, coincided with a severe financial crisis and that it was under its leadership that reform efforts began in earnest. However, the Social Democrats already initiated reforms ahead of their 1991 loss and accelerated structural changes well past Moderate Party rule, which ended in 1994. Some of the deepest cuts to the country's social welfare programs were in fact undertaken under Prime Minister Göran Persson, who was either the finance or prime minister between 1994 and 2006. Bottom Line: Swedish politics will not substantively impact the markets. Sweden Democrats are shifting to the center on non-immigration issues. Meanwhile, moderate parties are becoming more anti-immigrant. While there are no risks, we would also not expect major tailwinds. If the Moderate Party comes to power, it is unlikely to make significant policy departures from the Social Democrats. Banks: In Good Shape... For Now Chart 13Sweden's Banks Are In Excellent Shape
Sweden's Banks Are In Excellent Shape
Sweden's Banks Are In Excellent Shape
Swedish banks have been generating solid earnings growth, far outpacing their EU peers, as net interest margins are at multi-year highs and funding costs are low (Chart 13). Solid domestic economic growth has helped boost lending volumes. Non-performing loans have been in a downtrend since 2010 and have stabilized at very low levels. While we expect lending volumes to stay strong and defaults to remain low over the medium term given robust economic growth, we are more cautious on the earnings front. Our base case is that the Riksbank will finally embark on the beginning of a monetary tightening cycle at the end of 2018, and banks will likely struggle to maintain the current solid pace of earnings growth with a policy-driven flattening of the Swedish yield curve. Sweden has stricter capital requirements than their EU peers and, as such, the banks are far better capitalized. Both the aggregate Liquidity Coverage Ratio, a measure of short-term liquidity resilience, and the Net Stable Funding ratio are above Basel Committee requirements and have steadily increased over the past few quarters. The ratio of bank equity to risk-weighted assets paints an overly sanguine picture given that banks use internal models to calculate risk weights and are likely underestimating the risk associated with their massive mortgage exposure. Still, our preferred metric, the ratio of tangible equity to tangible assets, has remained firmly at elevated levels. Sweden's banking system has long been dominated by four major banks (Nordea, SEB, Svenska Handelsbanken and Swedbank). However, Nordea, Sweden's only global systemically important bank, is planning to move its headquarters to Finland later this year. The move will drastically reduce the size of Sweden's national bank assets from 400% of GDP to just under 300%. Nordea has clashed with Sweden's government over higher taxes and increased regulation and the relocation is projected to save €1.1 billion over the long run. Importantly, Nordea will be overseen by the European Banking Union. Overall, we believe this lowers the risk to the Swedish banking system given the reduction in banking assets. More importantly, Swedish authorities will no longer be financially responsible for future problems that could develop at Nordea. Bottom Line: Swedish bank earnings growth has been solid, but will come under pressure once the Riksbank begins to raise rates this year. Capital levels are elevated, particularly compared to their EU peers. Still, the massive exposure to domestic real estate suggests that banks could not withstand a sharp or prolonged decline in house prices. Housing: The Beginning Of The End? House prices in Sweden have been in an uninterrupted, secular uptrend due to low interest rates, robust demand, a structural supply shortage and considerable tax incentives for home ownership. While many of its EU counterparts had significant housing corrections over the last decade, the Swedish market escaped relatively unscathed. In fact, the last meaningful decline was during the 1990s crisis, when house prices fell close to -20%. Chart 14The Overheated Housing Market##BR##Has Cooled Off
The Overheated Housing Market Has Cooled Off
The Overheated Housing Market Has Cooled Off
Swedish authorities believe that the bubbling housing market poses the greatest risk to the Swedish economy, given the sheer magnitude of the uptrend and the Swedish banking sector's massive exposure (Chart 14). Valuation metrics indicate that housing is overvalued and, as such, the current five-month decline has prompted concerns that a meaningful correction may be underway. However, the recent pullback was a result of a strong supply-side response that began in 2013, specifically the construction of tenant-owned apartments. Last year had the most housing starts since 1990. That new supply is still insufficient to meet expected demand, however, and Swedish policymakers are implementing a 22-point plan to both increase and speed up residential construction. Swedish regulators have introduced multiple macroprudential measures over the past few years in order to both cool demand and boost household resilience. These include placing a cap on the size of mortgages (85% of the value of a home), raising banks' risk weight floors7 and multiple adjustments to amortization requirements. Data suggests that these policies have affected consumer behavior by both decreasing the amount of borrowing and causing buyers to purchase less expensive homes. Additionally, the government has recently approved legislation that will boost the ability of the financial regulator (Finansinspektionen) to act in the event of a potential downtown. The policy measures to cool the housing market have been fairly effective, with house prices now down -4.4% on a year-over-year basis (middle panel). However, economic history teaches us that asset bubbles never deflate peacefully. We are concerned over a structural horizon, but we believe that a massive correction is unlikely over the next year. Economic growth will like remain robust and monetary policy is very accommodative. It will take multiple rate hikes before monetary conditions are restrictive, thereby drastically weakening demand and prompting a sustained reversal in the house price uptrend. Bottom Line: The uninterrupted, long-term surge in Swedish house prices suggests that a bubble has formed. A strong supply side response has softened prices as of late, but a massive correction is not imminent given robust economic growth and very accommodative monetary policy. Monetary Policy: Riksbank On Hold, But Not For Long At the most recent monetary policy meeting in late-April, the Riksbank decided to keep the benchmark repo rate at -0.5%, further exercising caution after prematurely raising rates in 2010-2011. The Riksbank acknowledged that economic growth was "strong", but also maintained that inflation was "subdued" and monetary conditions needed to remain stimulative to ensure that inflation would sustainably stay at the 2% target. They revised their projected path for the repo rate downward, with the first hike now only coming at the end of this year. Even after that liftoff, however, the Riksbank plans to continue reinvesting redemptions and coupon payments from its government bond portfolio, accumulated during its quantitative easing program that ended last December, for "some time". Chart 15Our New Riksbank Monitor##BR##Is Calling For Rate Hikes
Our New Riksbank Monitor Is Calling For Rate Hikes
Our New Riksbank Monitor Is Calling For Rate Hikes
In recent years, the Riksbank has moved the repo rate alongside the ECB's policy rate, in order to protect export competitiveness by preventing an unwanted appreciation of the krona. However, the fundamentals do not justify this. Inflation is in a clear uptrend and has recovered to the Riksbank's target, while euro area inflation is still well below the ECB's target. Additionally, Swedish growth has been outpacing that of the euro area, and relative leading indicators suggest this will continue. While the ECB continues to emphasize that it has no plans to raise interest rates anytime soon, it is now far more difficult for the Riksbank to justify keeping its policy rates below zero as the ECB is doing. It is one thing to have negative interest rates and a cheap currency when there is plenty of economic slack and inflation is well below target. It is quite another to have those same loose policy settings when the output gap is closed, labor markets are at full employment and inflation is at target. This can be seen by the reading from our new Riksbank Central Bank Monitor (Chart 15). The BCA Central Bank Monitors are composite indicators designed to measure cyclical growth and inflation pressures that can influence future monetary policy decisions. A reading above zero indicates that policymakers are facing pressures to raise interest rates. We have Monitors for most developed markets, but we had not yet built the indicator for Sweden. Currently, the Riksbank Monitor is in "tight money required" territory, as it has been since late-2015. Though the Monitor has been primarily being driven upward by the growth component, the inflation component is also above the zero line. Forward interest rate pricing in the Swedish Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve indicates that markets are not expecting the Riksbank to begin hiking rates until July 2019. Only 95bps of hikes are priced by March 2020, suggesting that the market expects a very moderate start to the tightening cycle once it begins. Given the still-positive growth and inflation backdrop, we expect that the Riksbank will begin to hike earlier - likely by year-end as currently projected by the central bank - and by more than currently discounted by markets. Bottom Line: Negative interest rates are inconsistent with a robust Swedish economy that is operating with no spare capacity. Going forward, strong growth momentum, rising inflation and a tight labor market will force policymakers to raise rates earlier, and by more, than markets expect. Investment Implications With the market not priced for the move in Riksbank monetary policy that we expect, investors can position for that shift through the following recommended positions (Chart 16): Chart 16How To Position For##BR##Higher Swedish Interest Rates
How To Position For Higher Swedish Interest Rates
How To Position For Higher Swedish Interest Rates
Underweight Swedish bonds within a global hedged fixed income portfolio. Swedish government debt has been a star performer since the beginning of 2017, outperforming the Barclays Global Treasury Index by 101bps (currency-hedged into U.S. dollars). Global yields have risen over that period while Swedish yields have remained fairly flat. This trend is unlikely to continue, moving forward. The Riksbank ended the net new bond purchases in its quantitative easing program last December, removing a powerful tailwind for Swedish debt performance. If the Riksbank begins to hike rates by year-end, as it is projecting and we expect, then interest rate convergence will begin to undermine the ability for Sweden to continue its impressive run of fixed income outperformance. Enter a Sweden 2-year/10-year government bond yield curve flattener. As the Riksbank begins to shift to a more hawkish tone over the coming months, markets will begin to reprice not only the level of Swedish interest rates but the shape of the Swedish yield curve. That means not only higher bond yields but a flatter curve, as too few rate hikes are currently priced at the short-end. Growth is robust, inflation is at target and the unemployment rate is well below NAIRU. With their mandates met, the Riksbank will be forced to act more aggressively. Importantly, there is no flattening currently priced into the Swedish bond forward curve, thus there is no negative carry associated with putting on a flattener now. Short 2-year Sweden government bonds vs. 2-year German government bonds. The yield spread between the Swedish and German 2-year yield is only 5bps, well below its long-run average of 27bps. Relative fundamentals suggest that the Riksbank will no longer be able to shadow the actions of the ECB (negative policy rates) as it has over the past few years. Growth in Sweden is likely to outpace that of the euro area once again in 2018. Swedish inflation is already at the Riksbank target while euro area inflation continues to undershoot the ECB benchmark. Also, the currencies have moved in opposite directions since 2017, with the Euro Area trade-weighted index (TWI) rising by 7% and Sweden TWI falling by 6%, suggesting that Sweden can better handle tighter monetary policy. With the ECB signaling that it is in no hurry to begin raising interest rates (even after it ends its asset purchase program at the end of the year, as we expect), policy rate differentials will drive the 2-year Sweden-Germany spread wider over the next 12-18 months, with no spread move currently priced into the forwards. Patrick Trinh, Associate Editor patrick@bcaresearch.com Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com 1 Non-Accelerating Inflation Rate Of Unemployment 2 https://www.reuters.com/article/us-germany-wages/german-pay-deal-heralds-end-of-wage-restraint-in-europes-largest-economy-idUSKBN1FP0PD 3 https://www.riksbank.se/globalassets/media/rapporter/ppr/engelska/2018/180426/monetary-policy-report-april-2018 4 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "The Future Of Western Democracy: Back To Blood," dated November 18, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "The End Of Europe's Welfare State," dated June 26, 2015, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Should Investors Fear Political Plurality," dated November 29, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 7 25% of the value of a mortgage loan must be included when banks calculate their required regulatory risk-weighted capital levels.
Highlights Chart 1Interest Rate Expectations
Interest Rate Expectations
Interest Rate Expectations
Last week the Federal Reserve made some necessary tweaks to the language in its statement. Namely, with the year-over-year core PCE deflator now up to 1.88%, the Fed was forced to upgrade its assessment of inflation and note that it has "moved close" to the 2 percent target. To assuage concern that such a change might lead to a quicker pace of rate hikes, the statement also emphasized that the inflation target is "symmetric" and noted that its policy of "gradual increases in the federal funds rate" will continue. While the recent increase in inflation is not sufficient to nudge the Fed away from "gradualism", the more important observation is that yields are still not high enough to discount the Fed's gradual approach (Chart 1). The Fed has tightened policy once per quarter since December 2016, tapering asset purchases in place of a rate hike in September 2017. It should be obvious that, absent an economic shock, one rate hike per quarter is the Fed's definition of "gradual". And yet, the market is still priced for barely more than two hikes for the balance of 2018, and not even two rate hikes for all of 2019! Maintain a below-benchmark duration stance until the market comes to grips with the Fed's gradualism. Feature Investment Grade: Overweight Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview
Investment Grade Market Overview
Investment Grade Market Overview
Investment grade corporate bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 4 basis points in April, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to -77 bps. The Corporate index option-adjusted spread tightened somewhat in the first half of April, but widened anew during the past couple of weeks and recently made a new high for the year. Despite this sell-off, valuation remains expensive for investment grade corporates. The 12-month breakeven spread for an A-rated bond has only been tighter 27% of the time since 1989 (Chart 2). The same measure for a Baa-rated bond has only been tighter 28% of the time. We are preparing to cyclically scale back our corporate bond exposure, and will start the process once TIPS breakeven inflation rates reach our target range, signaling that monetary conditions are sufficiently restrictive. Our target range is 2.3% to 2.5% for both the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates. Those rates currently sit at 2.16% and 2.23%, respectively. In a recent report we noted that corporate bond excess returns fall sharply once the 2/10 Treasury yield curve flattens to below 50 bps, though they typically remain positive until the curve actually inverts.1 The 2/10 Treasury slope currently sits at 45 bps. That same report also notes that while the outlook for corporate revenue growth is strong, rising employee compensation costs will likely soon put a dent in profit margins and cause gross leverage to resume its uptrend (panel 4). This will apply further widening pressure to spreads later in the year. Table 3ACorporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation*
Coming To Grips With Gradualism
Coming To Grips With Gradualism
Table 3BCorporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward*
Coming To Grips With Gradualism
Coming To Grips With Gradualism
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 121 basis points in April, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to 102 bps. The average index option-adjusted spread tightened 16 bps on the month, and currently sits at 343 bps. The 12-month trailing speculative grade default rate moved higher for the second consecutive month, hitting 3.92% in March. Moody's baseline forecast still calls for it to fall to 1.7% by March of next year. Based on Moody's default rate projection and our estimate of the recovery rate, we forecast High-Yield default losses of 0.85% for the next 12 months. This translates to a 12-month excess return of 257 bps for the High-Yield index versus Treasuries, assuming an unchanged junk spread (Chart 3). One hundred basis points of spread widening would lead to an excess return of -140 bps during this time horizon, and 100 bps of spread tightening would lead to an excess return of +654 bps. However, such a large spread tightening is almost certainly over-optimistic. As inflation continues to rise and the Fed applies the brakes, a floor will likely remain under the VIX index of implied equity volatility and this will prevent junk spreads from recovering their cyclical lows (top panel). This would be consistent with behavior typically seen late in the cycle, once the 2/10 Treasury slope flattens to below 50 bps.2 MBS: Neutral Chart 4MBS Market Overview
MBS Market Overview
MBS Market Overview
Mortgage-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 18 basis points in April, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to -22 bps. The conventional 30-year zero-volatility MBS spread tightened 4 bps on the month, split between a 1 bp tightening of the option-adjusted spread (OAS) and a 3 bps decline in the compensation for prepayment risk (option cost). While mortgages are no longer excessively cheap compared to corporate credit (Chart 4), we still see limited potential for spread widening during the next 6-12 months. Rising interest rates should serve to limit mortgage refinancing, and muted refis are closely linked to tight MBS spreads (bottom panel). We also view extension risk as relatively limited for conventional 30-year MBS. Using a model of excess MBS returns that we introduced in February, we estimate that despite the 25 bps increase in duration-matched Treasury yields that occurred in April, extension risk trimmed only 2 bps off monthly excess returns.3 Our excess return Bond Map also shows that conventional 30-year MBS require far fewer days of average spread tightening to earn 100 bps of excess return than most other Aaa-rated structured products (Non-Agency Aaa-rated CMBS being the exception), although they are also more likely to deliver losses. But given the benign refinancing back-drop, we remain reasonably positive on the sector.4 Government-Related: Underweight Chart 5Government-Related Market Overview
Government-Related Market Overview
Government-Related Market Overview
The Government-Related index underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 9 basis points in April, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -7 bps. Sovereign debt underperformed the Treasury benchmark by 37 bps on the month, while Foreign Agencies underperformed by 15 bps and Domestic Agencies underperformed by 14 bps. Local Authorities delivered 14 bps of outperformance and Supranationals bested duration-equivalent Treasuries by 5 bps. Dollar strength hurt the performance of Sovereign debt last month, and relative valuation continues to show that Sovereigns are expensive relative to similarly-rated U.S. corporate bonds (Chart 5). We remain underweight USD-denominated Sovereign debt. Conversely, Foreign Agencies and Local Authorities continue to offer very attractive spreads, especially considering the duration and spread volatility characteristics of those sectors. Our excess return Bond Map shows that both sectors offer a superior risk/reward trade-off than the Barclays Aggregate and almost all of its components.5 The large presence of state-owned energy companies in the Foreign Agency sector means it should also benefit from higher oil prices in the coming months. Municipal Bonds: Underweight Chart 6Municipal Market Overview
Municipal Market Overview
Municipal Market Overview
Municipal bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 65 basis points in April, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to 94 bps (before adjusting for the tax advantage). The average Aaa-rated Municipal/Treasury yield ratio declined 2% in April as fund inflows returned to the sector (Chart 6). Persistently low visible supply is also contributing to the strong technical environment for yield ratios. The tax-adjusted yield for a 10-year municipal bond is now about 46 bps below the yield offered by an equivalent-duration corporate bond. As we have shown in prior research, investors typically get an opportunity to shift out of corporates and into munis at a positive spread differential before the end of the cycle.6 We will await this more attractive entry point before aggressively shifting our allocation in favor of munis. In a recent report we noted that state and local governments are still working to repair their budgets.7 More states enacted tax increases than decreases in fiscal year 2018 and the projected nominal budget increase across all states is a paltry 2.3%. Fortunately, our Municipal Health Monitor indicates that the hard work is paying off, and suggests that ratings upgrades should continue to outpace downgrades for the time being (bottom panel). Treasury Curve: Favor 5-Year Bullet Over 2/10 Barbell Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview
Treasury Yield Curve Overview
Treasury Yield Curve Overview
The Treasury curve rose considerably in April, steepening a touch out to the 5-year maturity point and flattening thereafter. The 2/10 Treasury slope flattened 1 basis point in April, and currently sits at 45 bps. The 5/30 slope flattened 9 bps on the month and currently sits at 34 bps. The trade-off between the pace of Fed rate hikes on the one hand, and the re-anchoring of long-dated TIPS breakeven inflation rates on the other will dictate the slope of the yield curve during the next six months. With the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate at 2.16%, it remains slightly below the range of 2.3% to 2.5% that is consistent with well-anchored inflation expectations. It will be difficult for the yield curve to flatten aggressively until that target is met. After that, curve flattening becomes much more likely. We continue to recommend a position in the 5-year bullet versus the duration-matched 2/10 barbell, primarily due to extremely attractive starting valuation. Our model suggests that the 2/5/10 butterfly spread is priced for 17 bps of 2/10 curve flattening during the next six months (Chart 7). With long-maturity TIPS breakevens still below target, we think that is too high a bar. TIPS: Overweight Chart 8TIPS Market Overview
TIPS Market Overview
TIPS Market Overview
TIPS outperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 93 basis points in April, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to 161 bps. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate rose 12 bps on the month and currently sits at 2.16%. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate increased 6 bps and currently sits at 2.23%. As we explained in a recent report, we view the first stage of the bond bear market as being driven by the re-anchoring of inflation expectations.8 We will consider inflation expectations well anchored when both the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates are in a range between 2.3% and 2.5%, where they were the last time that inflation was well anchored around the Fed's target. If the recent trend in inflation continues, then this re-anchoring will occur relatively soon. The annualized 6-month rate of change in the trimmed mean PCE deflator has already returned to the Fed's target, and the annual rate of change jumped from 1.71% to 1.77% in March (Chart 8). Pipeline measures of inflation pressure also continue to strengthen. Our Pipeline Inflation Indicator is in a strong uptrend and the prices paid component of the ISM manufacturing survey is closing in on 80, a level last seen in 2011 (panel 4). ABS: Neutral Chart 9ABS Market Overview
ABS Market Overview
ABS Market Overview
Asset-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 13 basis points in April, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to -6 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated ABS narrowed 4 bps on the month and now stands at 40 bps, 7 bps above its pre-crisis low. Our recently introduced excess return Bond Map shows that both Aaa-rated credit card and Aaa-rated auto loan ABS exhibit lower risk and less potential for gains than the Barclays Aggregate index.9 It also confirms that credit card ABS are somewhat more attractive than auto loan ABS, offering approximately the same potential for excess return with less risk. Compared to other fixed income sectors, Aaa-rated ABS offer greater potential return and higher risk than Agency CMBS, Domestic Agencies and Supranationals. But the ABS sector also has a less attractive risk/reward profile than the Foreign Agency, Local Authority and Investment grade corporate sectors. Fundamentally, while consumer delinquencies remain low, they are heading higher alongside a rising household debt service coverage ratio (Chart 9). The persistent (though mild) deterioration in credit quality causes us to maintain a neutral allocation to the sector, despite reasonably attractive valuations. Non-Agency CMBS: Underweight Chart 10CMBS Market Overview
CMBS Market Overview
CMBS Market Overview
Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 60 basis points in April, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to 71 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS tightened 4 bps on the month and currently sits at 69 bps, close to one standard deviation below its pre-crisis mean. Our excess return Bond Map shows that Aaa-rated non-Agency CMBS offer greater potential reward, but also greater risk, than the majority of other high-rated spread products. The exception is conventional 30-year Agency MBS, which offer a less attractive risk/reward trade-off.10 That being said, the fundamental picture for commercial real estate is less appealing than on the residential side. CMBS spreads continue to diverge from commercial property prices (Chart 10). Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 26 basis points in April, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to 12 bps. The index option-adjusted spread was flat on the month and currently sits at 47 bps. According to our Bond Map, Agency CMBS offer greater potential excess return and less risk than both the Supranational and Domestic Agency sectors. We continue to view the Agency CMBS space as an attractive low-risk spread sector. Treasury Valuation Chart 11Treasury Fair Value Models
Treasury Fair Value Models
Treasury Fair Value Models
The current reading from our 2-factor Treasury model (based on Global PMI and dollar sentiment) pegs fair value for the 10-year Treasury yield at 2.70%. The drop in the model's fair value stems from a decline in the global PMI to 53.5 from a recent peak of 54.5. While global growth has undoubtedly lost momentum in recent months, we also suspect that our 2-factor model is finally breaking down. The 2-factor model does not contain a variable to capture the degree of resource utilization in the economy. Logically, as slack dissipates in the economy and inflationary pressures mount, then the same level of global growth should be associated with a higher Treasury yield, all else equal. This means that at some point, as we approach the end of the cycle, the model will break down and consistently produce fair value readings that are too low. We suspect that we may be reaching this point. When we augment our model with an additional variable to measure the degree of resource utilization, in this case the employment-to-population ratio, we find that the new model projects a fair value of 3.28% for the 10-year Treasury yield (Chart 11). This 3-factor model would not have worked as well as our 2-factor model during the zero-lower bound period, as can be seen by looking at how rolling regression betas from each of the three variables moved sharply following the recession (bottom three panels). However, as we move further away from the zero-lower bound we expect the regression coefficients to return to pre-crisis levels, meaning that it will be important to monitor both trends in global growth and the amount of resource slack in the economy. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com Jeremie Peloso, Research Analyst jeremiep@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "As Good As It Gets For Corporate Debt", dated April 24, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "As Good As It Gets For Corporate Debt", dated April 24, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "On The MOVE", dated February 13, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 For details on the Bond Map please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "As Good As It Gets For Corporate Debt", dated April 24, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "As Good As It Gets For Corporate Debt", dated April 24, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Monetary Restraints", dated February 27, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Profiting From A Higher LIBOR", dated March 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 8 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "A Signal From Gold?", dated May 1, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 9 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "As Good As It Gets For Corporate Debt", dated April 24, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 10 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "As Good As It Gets For Corporate Debt", dated April 24, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification Corporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation Total Return Comparison: 7-Year Bullet Versus 2-20 Barbell (6-Month Investment Horizon)
Highlights Duration: The global bond bear market is still intact, although the "leadership" has passed over to the U.S. where growth is the firmest and inflation expectations are rising the fastest. Maintain an overall below-benchmark portfolio duration stance, focusing underweights in countries that can actually tighten monetary policy this year (U.S., Canada, the euro area). ECB: The ECB has started to take notice of the latest batch of softening euro area economic data. Yet it will take a much more prolonged slowdown for the ECB's medium-term economic forecasts to be proven incorrect, which would alter the likely timetable for a tapering of asset purchases by year-end. Canada: The Bank of Canada has adapted a more cautious tone of late, which seems overly pessimistic given the underlying trends in Canadian growth and inflation. Stay underweight Canadian government bonds. Feature We're Sticking With Our Country Allocations One of our key investment themes for 2018 has been that economic growth, monetary policies and bond yields would be far less correlated between countries than was seen in 2017. This would create cross-country fixed income trading and investment opportunities that were much harder to come by last year. With the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield finally reaching the 3% level last week, that story looks to be playing out. Yields are going up elsewhere, but nothing like what is happening in the U.S., where growth remains firm compared to the string of negative data surprises seen in other countries (Chart of the Week). This theme of divergence can also be seen in the recent actions and comments from central bankers. Officials at the U.S. Federal Reserve have continued to signal, with increasing conviction, that additional rate hikes will be needed later this year (although not at this week's FOMC meeting). This is to be expected given that not only is U.S. growth holding up well (Q1 real GDP growth "only" slowed to an above-potential pace of 2.3%), but both core PCE inflation and the Wages & Salaries component of the Employment Cost Index are accelerating at a marginal pace not seen since the 2008 crisis (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekU.S. Economy Outperforming,##BR##USTs Underperforming
U.S. Economy Outperforming, USTs Underperforming
U.S. Economy Outperforming, USTs Underperforming
Chart 2No Reason For The Fed##BR##To Turn Less Hawkish
No Reason For The Fed To Turn Less Hawkish
No Reason For The Fed To Turn Less Hawkish
At the same time, policymakers in other major developed countries have turned somewhat more cautious: The Bank of Japan (BoJ) announced that it will no longer provide a specific date when it expects inflation to reach its target The European Central Bank (ECB) took the highly unusual step of holding a monetary policy meeting last week without actually discussing the monetary policy outlook, according to ECB President Mario Draghi Bank of England (BoE) Governor Mark Carney dampened expectations of a rate hike in May that was nearly fully discounted by markets The Bank of Canada (BoC), which had already delivered several rate hikes when inflation was below its 2% target, chose to keep rates on hold despite inflation finally breaching 2% Sweden's Riksbank pushed out the expected timing of its next rate hike (yet again) to the end of 2018, even with inflation now at target With global growth losing some momentum, it is no surprise that policymakers are trying to not sound too hawkish, which could trigger an unwelcome decline in inflation expectations. Here again, divergences between countries have opened up. Rising oil prices are translating into higher market-based inflation expectations in countries like the U.S. and Canada where growth is still above-potential and leading economic indicators are rising (Chart 3). This is not the case in places like the U.K., Australia and Japan where growth is sluggish, leading indicators are slowing, but with markets still pricing in interest rate increases over the next year (Chart 4). This divergence is a critical underpinning of our current recommended country allocation within government bond markets - overweighting the U.K., Australia and Japan where tighter monetary policy will be difficult to achieve; while underweighting the U.S. and Canada, where rate hikes are still in the cards. Chart 3Shifting Oil/Inflation Correlation...
Shifting Oil/Inflation Correlation...
Shifting Oil/Inflation Correlation...
Chart 4...In Countries Where Growth Is Slowing
...In Countries Where Growth Is Slowing
...In Countries Where Growth Is Slowing
The European Duration Call Gets A Bit Trickier The evidence on the euro area is a bit less conclusive on this front, however. The OECD's leading economic indicator has only dipped modestly from its recent peak, and the correlation between oil prices and inflation expectations has not broken down. Draghi stated in his press conference following last week's policy meeting that the ECB Governing Council was focused on "very important" current euro area economic data that had clearly lost momentum in the first quarter of this year. He noted that there were many one-off factors that could have caused the softer growth (weather, labor strikes, the timing of holidays), but that the slump was very broad-based and hit almost all euro area countries. This makes the next few months of data critical to determine the ECB's next policy move, which could be an announcement of a tapering of its asset purchases when the current program ends in September. From our perspective, the sluggish Q1 euro area economic performance looks to be driven by a major slowing of export growth. Industrial confidence remains at a high level and growth in retail sales volumes has remained stable since the middle of 2017 (Chart 5). Yet the annual growth rate of total euro area exports has slumped to less than 3%, with exports to Asia now contracting on a year-over-year basis (bottom two panels). If the export slump continues in the coming months, this could begin to impact hiring activity across the euro area. A rise in unemployment would definitely change the ECB's calculus in altering its policy stance. At the moment, the Governing Council can look at a steadily declining overall euro area unemployment rate - which is approaching the OECD's estimate of the full employment NAIRU - combined with moderate increases in core HICP inflation, wage growth and inflation expectations, as confirmation that trends are still broadly following the path laid out in its latest economic projections (Chart 6). Chart 5An Export-Led Cooling##BR##Of Euro Area Growth
An Export-Led Cooling Of Euro Area Growth
An Export-Led Cooling Of Euro Area Growth
Chart 6ECB Will Not Lift Rates Until##BR##Inflation Expectations Move Back To 2%
ECB Will Not Lift Rates Until Inflation Expectations Move Back To 2%
ECB Will Not Lift Rates Until Inflation Expectations Move Back To 2%
The ECB has made it clear that it views a tapering of its asset purchases and any subsequent interest rate hikes as separate policy decisions. The hurdle to end the bond purchases is much lower than it is for raising interest rates. On the former, as long as unemployment and inflation continue to evolve along the lines of the ECB's projections, then a full tapering of bond purchases will occur by year-end (with an announcement occurring at either of the June or July ECB meetings). On the latter, it will take inflation expectations (as measured by the 5-year EUR CPI swap, 5-years forward) rising back above 2% for the ECB to feel confident that rate increases will be necessary, as was the case during the mid-2000s tightening cycle and the 2011 mini-cycle (bottom panel). For now, we are maintaining our moderate underweight stance on euro area government debt. Looking ahead, we will be watching the correlation between oil prices denominated in euros and inflation expectations, as well as the development of leading economic indicators in the euro area. If the Q1 growth slump widens into a broader downturn, then the ECB could be forced to revise its economic projections lower and continue with the asset purchases into 2019. While that is not our base case scenario, such a development would force us to reconsider our stance on euro area debt. Bottom Line: The global bond bear market is still intact, although the "leadership" has passed over to the U.S. where growth is the firmest and inflation expectations are rising the fastest. Maintain an overall below-benchmark portfolio duration stance, focusing underweights in countries that can actually tighten monetary policy this year (U.S., Canada, the euro area). In Europe, it will take a much more prolonged slowdown for the ECB's medium-term economic forecasts to be proven incorrect, which would alter the likely timetable for a tapering of asset purchases later this year. Canada: Still On Track For More Hikes This Year The BoC has been sending more cautious signals of late regarding its next policy moves, after delivering 75bps of rate hikes since last summer. Some of this simply reflects a more measured tone taken by other central banks in response to signs of global growth losing some momentum, as discussed earlier. Yet in the case of Canada, it is difficult to make a credible case that the central bank should not continue its rate hiking cycle, particularly with inflation now above the midpoint of the BoC's 1-3% target band. Upside Risks To Canadian Growth Versus BoC Projections Yes, the Canadian economy has lost some of the rapid upward momentum seen in 2016 and 2017, led mostly by weakness in exports which are now contracting on a year-over-year basis (Chart 7). This was focused in aircraft, transportation equipment, and energy products. The latter is due to poor weather conditions and transportation bottlenecks involved in getting oil out of Alberta rather than a sign of weakening demand for Canadian oil. The BoC did take a more cautious view on exports in the latest set of economic projections presented in the April Monetary Policy Report (MPR). The central bank now expects real exports to be stagnant in 2018, downgrading the expected contribution to real GDP growth to zero from the +0.6 percentage points presented in the January MPR. This was, by far, the biggest downgrade to any of the GDP growth components in the BoC's forecast, and was main reason why the BoC downgraded its overall 2018 real GDP growth projection to 2.0% from 2.2%. Yet at the same time, the BoC actually upgraded its global growth projection to 3.8% from the 3.6% figure in the January MPR. We suspect that the downgrade to the export contribution to expected 2018 growth was the BoC trying to inject some room for error in its growth forecasts for any negative outcome in the current round of NAFTA trade negotiations with the U.S. and Mexico. Otherwise, it makes no sense to have such a large downgrade without becoming more pessimistic on global growth. Our Geopolitical strategists are now much more optimistic that a NAFTA deal will be reached, rather than having the U.S. exit the agreement as President Trump has threatened. If that happens, the BoC's growth projections may end up being too low. We can see a similar level of "excessive cautiousness" with regards to the BoC's assessment of the Canadian labor market and the outlook for consumption. Consumer spending has also cooled off a bit from very robust levels, although an unusually long and harsh winter likely played a large role there, as evidenced by the suspiciously large plunge in retail sales growth (Chart 8). The fundamental underpinnings for Canadian consumption still look solid, though. Chart 7Canadian Economy Holding Up Well,##BR##Despite Weak Exports
Canadian Economy Holding Up Well, Despite Weak Exports
Canadian Economy Holding Up Well, Despite Weak Exports
Chart 8Solid Income Fundamentals##BR##For The Canadian Consumer
Solid Income Fundamentals For The Canadian Consumer
Solid Income Fundamentals For The Canadian Consumer
Consumer confidence remains near cyclical highs. Wage growth currently sits at 3.2% in nominal terms and 1.5% in real terms. The BoC noted in its Spring Business Outlook Survey that wage pressures are increasing due to greater competition in the labor market (3rd panel) and, to a lesser extent, recent minimum wage increases. The BoC noted in the April MPR that wages were growing "somewhat below what would be expected were the economy operating with no excess labor." Yet that argument appears overly pessimistic - the unemployment rate is currently 0.7 percentage points below the OECD's NAIRU estimate, at a time when nominal wages are growing in excess of 3%. Again, there is a greater chance that the BoC will end up surprised by how strong Canadian wage growth will turn out over the next 6-12 months. Even the persistent structural problems of very high Canadian household debt levels and overheated house prices appear less of an issue at the moment. The household debt/GDP ratio has stabilized as growth in mortgage debt has decelerated since mid-2017 - an outcome that can be attributed to rising mortgage rates, tighter lending standards on mortgage lending and poor housing affordability in the major cities (Chart 9). Meanwhile, the supply side of the housing market is finally improving with housing starts now back to pre-recession levels. National house price inflation has cooled from the overheated 15% growth rates to a more "normal" pace around 5%, according to data from Terranet. There will be a long-term day of reckoning for the highly-indebted Canadian homeowner during the next recession. In the near term, however, the combination of rising supply, lower demand and softer house prices suggest that the Canadian housing market is trending in a direction of becoming less imbalanced. The BoC took note of these developments in the April MPR, using much less cautious language in describing the risk to the inflation outlook from household debt and overheated housing markets. The outlook for Canadian business investment also has the potential to give an upside surprise to the BoC. The Spring Business Outlook Survey showed that firms' capital spending intentions remain very strong (Chart 10), a fact confirmed by the robust growth in import volumes of machinery & equipment (middle panel). Finally, the overall financial condition for Canadian companies is in good shape, according to our new Canadian Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) that was introduced last week.1 The CHM correlates strongly with the overall Business Outlook Survey Indicator (bottom panel), which suggests that the cyclical improvement in the financial health of Canadian companies will support capital spending in the coming quarters - especially if the uncertainty over the NAFTA negotiations fades away. Chart 9A Better Supply/Demand Balance##BR##In Canadian Housing?
A Better Supply/Demand Balance In Canadian Housing?
A Better Supply/Demand Balance In Canadian Housing?
Chart 10Canadian Capex##BR##Is In Good Shape
Canadian Capex Is In Good Shape
Canadian Capex Is In Good Shape
The BoC Will Be Surprised By Canadian Inflation, Too Chart 11Inflation Now Above The BoC's 2% Target
Inflation Now Above The BoC's 2% Target
Inflation Now Above The BoC's 2% Target
With the economy likely to continue expanding at an above-potential pace in the next 6-12 months, the current uptrend in inflation is should continue. Headline CPI inflation is already above the 2% target and core inflation is right at target (Chart 11). The BoC is forecasting that CPI inflation will only remain modestly above 2% until the end of 2018, and will return back to 2% in 2019. Yet there is essentially no spare capacity left in the Canadian economy, based on output gap estimates of both the BoC and International Monetary Fund (IMF). The BoC has slightly revised its projection for the Q1 2018 output gap, leaving it somewhat wider than the previous forecasts due to positive revisions of potential GDP growth (now 1.8% from 1.6% in the January MPR, based on a faster pace of trend labor productivity). These are small changes, however, and real GDP growth is likely to be faster than the BoC is projecting in 2018. Market-based inflation expectations have been steadily rising along with the increase in global energy prices (bottom panel), and we continue to expect inflation breakevens to widen over the balance of 2018. BoC Will Not Disappoint Market Expectations On Rate Hikes The markets are currently discounting a similar pace of rate hikes in Canada and the U.S. over the next year, according to pricing in the Overnight Index Swap (OIS) markets (Chart 12). The BoC's estimate of the neutral policy rate is between 2.5% and 3.5%, which is well above the current policy rate of 1.25%. The OIS market is discounting 75bps of hikes over the twelve months, which would take the policy rate to 2% - still a below-neutral, accommodative level for an economy that is already at full employment and where inflation has risen back to the BoC's target. We expect the BoC to continue to follow its typical pattern of following moves by the Fed with a lag. This is a sensible strategy given how exposed Canadian growth is to U.S. growth through exports, and also given how responsive the Canadian dollar is to the expected rate differentials between the U.S. and Canada. Given our view that the Fed will deliver at least another 50bps of rate hikes over the course of 2018, with the potential for more if inflation continues to accelerate without any growth slowdown, the BoC will likely deliver on the rate hikes currently discounted by markets. This is the main reason why we are maintaining our underweight stance on Canadian Government bonds (bottom panel). The BoC has a much higher potential to actually hike rates by at least as much as the market is expecting, which is not the case in every other developed market country except the U.S., where we are also underweight. This week, however, we are stopping ourselves out of our recommended Tactical Overlay trade in the Canadian BAX interest rate futures curve (long the Dec/18 contract versus the June/18 contract). We introduced that trade back in January, positioning for more rapid BoC rate hikes in the latter half of 2018 that would flatten the BAX futures curve. The recent dovish turn by the BoC has resulted in a steepening of the BAX futures curve, however, and we are stopping ourselves out at a modest loss of -0.12% (Chart 13). Chart 12Stay Underweight##BR##Canadian Government Debt
Stay Underweight Canadian Government Debt
Stay Underweight Canadian Government Debt
Chart 13We Are Stopped Out Of##BR##Our BAX Futures Curve Trade
We Are Stopped Out Of Our BAX Futures Curve Trade
We Are Stopped Out Of Our BAX Futures Curve Trade
Bottom Line: The Bank of Canada has adapted a more cautious tone of late, which seems overly pessimistic given the underlying trends in Canadian growth and inflation. Stay underweight Canadian government bonds. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "BCA Corporate Health Monitor Chartbook: Growth Is Papering Over The Cracks", dated April 24, 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
From Convergence To Divergence
From Convergence To Divergence
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Does the 3% level on Treasuries matter to investors? The 2/10 yield curve is typically much steeper when global growth is strong and pro-growth policies are in place. The imperfect inter-relationship between labor market slack, wages and inflation. Feature In last week's report1 we noted that the risk of weakness in equity markets was elevated in the near term. Risks assets balked as the 10-year Treasury yield climbed above 3% early last week. However, easing tensions on the Korean peninsula and another stronger than expected batch of Q1 earnings reports boosted U.S. equity prices later in the week. We will provide a full update on the Q1 earnings season in next week's report. Investors are getting used to a seasonal dip in Q1 U.S. GDP data, and last Friday's release certainly fits the bill. A recent study by the staff at the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland2 suggests that the main culprits in this seasonal anomaly are in the private investment and government consumption components of GDP. Output in both categories slowed significantly in Q1 2018. Consumer spending growth exhibited the most significant slow-down, growing at only 1.1% compared to 4% in the prior quarter. But growth in investment spending on equipment also declined sharply, from 11.6% to 4.7%, as did growth in residential investment, from 12.8% to 0% (Chart 1). The latter is due to the sharply accelerating input costs (e.g. lumber prices) faced by homebuilders at the moment. Federal government spending slowed to a 1.7% rate in Q1 from 3.2% in Q4 2017. Chart 1GDP Growth Remains Below Average, But Above Fed's Long Run Target
The 3% Milestone
The 3% Milestone
At 2.9% year-over-year in Q1 2018, real economic growth was above the Fed's view of potential GDP (1.8%) for the fifth consecutive quarter. Given the recent seasonal pattern and the substantial fiscal stimulus coming on stream, the Fed will likely see through the weaker Q1 growth data for the time being. Chart 2Watch The 2.3% To 2.5% Level On TIPS Breakevens
Watch The 2.3% To 2.5% Level On TIPS Breakevens
Watch The 2.3% To 2.5% Level On TIPS Breakevens
BCA's view is that the 3% level on the 10-Year Treasury yield is not an impediment to higher equity prices. The 10-year yield and U.S. equity prices climbed together in the 1950s. The rise in yields in the '50s primarily reflected better economic growth rather than fears of inflation. The run-up in yields since the lows last year reflect both factors (Chart 2). Nonetheless, investors are concerned that higher yields will flip the positive correlation between bond yields and stock prices. Charts 3 and 4 shows the link between the level of both nominal (Chart 3) and real bond yields and equity prices. The implication is that the relationship between stock prices and bond yields tends to stay positive when the nominal bond yield is below 5%. Furthermore, the correlation between real yields and stock prices remains positive (Chart 4). Moreover, since 1980, a move from 2% to 3% on the 10-year Treasury yield has been accompanied by an average gain of 1.2% in the S&P 500, with a median move of 1.8%.3 On average, the S&P 500 posted a modest decline (24 bps) as the 10-year Treasury elevated from 3% to 4%, but the median return (98 bps) was still positive. Our July 2015 Special Report4 explored the impact of rates and inflation on equity prices. Historically, even the move from 4% to 5% on the 10-year is not an impediment to higher stock prices. Chart 3Stock To Bond Correlations Remain Positive With Nominal Yields Below 5%
The 3% Milestone
The 3% Milestone
Chart 4Both Equities And Real Bond Yields Reflect Growth
Both Equities And Real Bond Yields Reflect Growth
Both Equities And Real Bond Yields Reflect Growth
Bottom Line: BCA's stance is that the stock-to-bond ratio will climb this year. Our U.S. Bond Strategy team pegs fair value on the 10-year at 2.78%, but notes that the yield may peak this cycle at between 3.25% and 3.50%.5 BCA's base case remains that U.S. equities will not be subject to an over-aggressive Fed until at least mid-2019 and that increasing bond yields are not a threat. Yield Curve Dynamics Does BCA's stance on the yield curve change our upbeat view on risk assets beyond the next few months of caution?6 In March,7 we discussed 5 episodes in the past 35 years when global growth surged and fiscal, monetary and regulatory policies were aligned to boost the U.S. economy. The current episode of synchronized policy commenced in January 2016. Risk assets perform well when these policy tailwinds are in place, but these assets tend to struggle for 12 months after the tailwinds abate. Although global growth has peaked,8 we expect the era of pro-growth policies to end next year as the Fed raises rates into restrictive territory. BCA expects the 2/10 curve to remain around 50bps until the inflation breakevens are re-anchored between 2.3% and 2.5% as upward pressure on the short end from Fed rate hikes is offset by the upward thrust of the breakevens on the long end.9 The curve should resume its flattening trend after that, but will not invert this year. The 2/10 curve stands at 45 bps as of April 27, 2018. Chart 5 shows that the curve has spent very little time in the 0-50 range in the past 35 years when fiscal, monetary and regulatory factors were aligned and global growth was positive. A steeper curve (50 to 100 bps) developed alongside a pro-growth policy and solid global growth only once in the past 35 years, over 1983 and 1984, and never when the 2/10 curve was between 0 and 100 bps (not shown). Chart 5The 2/10 Curve Is Usually This Steep When Pro-Growth Policies Are In Place
The 2/10 Curve Is Usually This Steep When Pro-Growth Policies Are In Place
The 2/10 Curve Is Usually This Steep When Pro-Growth Policies Are In Place
Bottom Line: The backdrop of accommodative fiscal and monetary policy, attended by easing regulatory policy and positive global growth, will continue to provide a tailwind for risk assets through next year. However, the 2/10 yield curve is typically much steeper when these policies are all aligned. Thus, investors should continue to favor equities over bonds and remain underweight duration over the cyclical horizon with a tactical cautious stance over the next few months. The Wage Puzzle Chart 6Economy At Full Employment, Theoretically
Economy At Full Employment, Theoretically
Economy At Full Employment, Theoretically
The move higher in the 10-year Treasury yield to 3% for the first time since 2013 (and the 2-year Treasury to 2.5% for the first time since 2008) has diverted attention to the Fed and inflation. Core CPI is now at the Fed's 2% target and the market is concerned that inflation will shoot past 2% and quickly escalate to 3%. BCA's view is that inflation will remain at the Fed's target this year, but drift above that goal in 2019, which would elicit a more aggressive response from the central bank. Tighter monetary policy will ultimately end the expansion in early 2020.10 Until then, the markets will focus on the drivers of inflation, including wages. Our work11 notes that inflation is slow to turn higher in long expansions. The U.S. economy reached full employment in late 2016 (Chart 6). In short- and medium-length expansions, it takes only a few months before inflation turns up. However, in long expansions (1960s, 1980s, and 1990s) prices did not turn meaningfully higher until 26 months after the economy reached full employment. This suggests that a more significant hike in inflation - led by a tighter labor market - is close and supports the recent rise in Treasury yields. There is mixed evidence that view is warranted. Wage inflation has moved higher in recent months, but the link between wages and prices has weakened. Chart 7 shows that before 1985, the correlation between wage growth and prices was above 90%. Since 1984, the relationship has waned. The post-1985 correlation is just under 30%. BCA expects this weaker relationship to persist. Chart 7Link Between Wage Inflation And Consumer Inflation Changed After 1985
Link Between Wage Inflation And Consumer Inflation Changed After 1985
Link Between Wage Inflation And Consumer Inflation Changed After 1985
The disconnect between labor market tightness and wages has recently widened. Chart 8 shows several measures of wage pressures and labor market slack. Historically, less slack translates into higher wages, but the relationship in this cycle has been muted. Moreover, pay gains for workers who switch jobs are running well ahead of those who stay in their current positions and are either promoted or given merit raises (Chart 9). The gap between compensation gains of job switchers and job stayers tends to broaden as the business cycle ages and slack in the labor market shrinks. Chart 8A Wide Disconnect Between Labor Market Slack And Wage Gains
A Wide Disconnect Between Labor Market Slack And Wage Gains
A Wide Disconnect Between Labor Market Slack And Wage Gains
Chart 9Job Switchers Seeing Better Raises
Job Switchers Seeing Better Raises
Job Switchers Seeing Better Raises
Demographics and wage rigidity dynamics are also at play. Chart 10 shows that the labor force participation rate is headed lower due to demographics, but recent trends suggest there may be improvements in the coming years. BCA's view is that the participation rate will be flat in the next 12 months and move lower in the coming decade. Chart 10Decline In Labor Force Participation Is Mostly Demographics
Decline In Labor Force Participation Is Mostly Demographics
Decline In Labor Force Participation Is Mostly Demographics
Wage inflation is an early career phenomenon. Recent research from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York12 shows that across all education cohorts, rapid real wage growth occurs early in a worker's career, with positive real wage growth ending in his/her forties. This is followed by a period of flat to declining real wages. By age 55, all education categories experience negative real wage growth, on average (Chart 11). Chart 11Wage Inflation Is An Early Career Phenomenon
The 3% Milestone
The 3% Milestone
Wage rigidity in this cycle suggests that there will be an upward correction in labor compensation. Chart 12 shows that 14.5% of workers did not have wage increases in 2017. Moreover, 18.9% of hourly workers and 9.2% of non-hourly workers saw no increase in pay in the year ending in December 2017 (Chart 13, top panel.) The bottom panel of Chart 13 shows that more than 20% of workers with less than a high school education received no pay increases in the past year; only 10% of college-educated workers experienced the same end. It is important to note that on balance, measures of wage rigidity have increased over time and are not overly sensitive to the business cycle. Chart 12More Than 14% Of Workers Didn't See A Raise In 2017
The 3% Milestone
The 3% Milestone
Chart 13Wage Rigidity By Type Of Employee
Wage Rigidity By Type Of Employee
Wage Rigidity By Type Of Employee
Bottom Line: BCA recommends that investors monitor a broad range of inflation indicators. Historical evidence suggests that when the labor market tightens, inflation eventually accelerates. However, wages do not always lead inflation at bottoms and maybe a lagging indicator in this cycle.13 In long economic cycles (1980s and 1990s), wage inflation was a lagging indicator. Most of these indicators show that inflation pressures are building, but only gradually. We expect the Fed to raise rates gradually in the next 12 months, but it may turn more aggressive in 2019 as pressures on inflation, driven in part by a tighter labor market, begin to mount. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Short-Term Caution Warranted," published April 23, 2018. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 2 https://www.clevelandfed.org/newsroom-and-events/publications/economic-commentary/2017-economic-commentaries/ec-201706-lingering-residual-seasonality-in-gdp-growth.aspx 3 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Yellen's Last Week," published February 5, 2018. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Investment Strategy Special Report, "Stock-To-Bond Correlation: When Will Good News Be Bad News?", published July 6, 2015. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "It's Still All About Inflation", January 16, 2018. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Short-Term Caution Warranted," published April 23, 2018. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see BCA U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Policy Line Up", March 12, 2018. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see BCA U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Policy Peril?", April 9, 2018. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see BCA U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Back To Basics", April 17, 2018. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 10 Please see BCA Research's Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Q2 2018 Strategy Outlook: It's More Like 1998 Than 2000", published March 30 2018. Available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 11 Please see BCA Research's The Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report, March 2017. Available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 12 FRBNY: Liberty Street Economics, "U.S. Real Wage Growth: Slowing Down With Age," September 28, 2016. 13 Please see BCA Research's The Bank Credit Analyst, September 2017. Available at bca.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Global equities are poised for a "blow-off" rally over the next 12-to-18 months. Long-term return prospects, however, are poor. The final innings of the 1991-2001 economic expansion saw a violent rotation in favor of value stocks and euro area equities. We expect history to repeat itself. After sagging by as much as 7% in the second half of 1998 and going nowhere in 1999, the dollar rose by 13% between January 2000 and February 2002. The greenback today is similarly ripe for a second wind. The correlation between the dollar and oil prices was fairly weak in the late 1990s. The correlation is likely to weaken again now that U.S. crude imports have fallen by about 70% from their 2006 highs thanks to the shale boom. The U.S. 10-year Treasury yield peaked at 6.79% in January 2000. Thus far, there is scant evidence that the recent increase in bond yields is having a major effect on either U.S. capital spending or housing demand. This suggests yields can go higher before they enter restrictive territory. Feature Learning From The Past The theme of this year's BCA annual Investment Conference - which will be held in Toronto in September and will feature a keynote address by Janet L. Yellen - is, appropriately enough, entitled "Investing In A Late-Cycle Economy."1 In the spirit of our conference, this week's report looks back at the market environment at the tail end of the 1991-2001 expansion in order to distill some lessons for today. The mid-to-late 1990s was a tale of contrasts. The U.S. was thriving, spurred on by accelerating productivity growth, falling inflation, and a massive corporate capex boom. Southern Europe was also doing well, aided by falling interest rates and optimism about the coming introduction of the euro. On the flipside, Germany - dubbed by many pundits at the time as the sick man of Europe - was still coping with the hangover from reunification. Japan was mired in deflation. Emerging markets were melting down, starting with the Mexican peso crisis in late 1994, followed by the Asian crisis, and finally the Russian default. In the financial world, the following points are worth highlighting (Chart 1): Chart 1AFinancial Markets In The Late 1990s (I)
Financial Markets In The Late 1990s (I)
Financial Markets In The Late 1990s (I)
Chart 1BFinancial Markets In The Late 1990s (II)
Financial Markets In The Late 1990s (II)
Financial Markets In The Late 1990s (II)
Russia's default and the implosion of Long-term Capital Management (LTCM) led to a gut-wrenching 22% decline in the S&P 500 in the late summer and early fall of 1998. This was followed by a colossal 68% blow-off rally over the subsequent 18 months. The collapse of LTCM marked the low point for EM assets for the cycle. The combination of cheap currencies, rising commodity prices, and a newfound resolve to enact structural reforms paved the way for a major EM boom over the following decade. The VIX and credit spreads trended upwards during the late 1990s, even as U.S. stocks climbed higher. Rising equity volatility and wider spreads were partly a reaction to problems abroad. However, they also reflected the deterioration in U.S. corporate health and heightened fears that stock market valuations had reached unsustainable levels. The U.S. stock market peaked in March 2000. However, that was only because the tech bubble burst. Outside of the technology sector, the S&P 500 actually increased by 9.2% between March 2000 and May 2001. Value stocks finally began to outperform growth stocks in 2000, joining small caps, which had begun to outperform a year earlier. European equities also surged towards the end of the bull market, outpacing the U.S. by 34% in local-currency terms and 21% in dollar terms between July 1999 and March 2000. The strong U.S. economy during the late 1990s ushered in a prolonged period of dollar appreciation that lasted until February 2002. That said, the greenback did not rise in a straight line. The dollar fell by as much as 7% in the second half of 1998 as the Fed cut rates in response to the LTCM crisis. It went sideways in 1999 before resuming its upward trend in early 2000. The correlation between the dollar and oil prices was much weaker in the 1990s compared to the first 15 years of the new millennium. After falling from a high of 6.98% in April 1997 to 4.16% in October 1998, the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield rose to 6.79% in January 2000. The Fed would keep raising rates until May of that year. The recession began in March 2001. Now And Then Just as in the tail end of the 1990s expansion, the global economy is doing reasonably well these days. Growth has cooled over the past few months, but should remain comfortably above trend for the remainder of the year. After struggling in 2014-16, Emerging Markets are on the mend, thanks in part to the rebound in commodity prices. During the 1990s cycle, the U.S. was the first major economy to reach full employment. The same is true today. The headline unemployment rate has fallen to 4.1%, just shy of the 2000 low of 3.8%. The share of the working-age population out of the labor market but wanting a job is back to pre-recession levels. The same goes for the share of unemployed workers who have quit - rather than lost - their jobs (Chart 2). One key difference concerns fiscal policy. The U.S. federal budget was in great shape in 2000. The same cannot be said today. Chart 3 shows that the fiscal deficit currently stands at 3.5% of GDP. The deficit is on track to deteriorate to 4.9% of GDP in 2021 even if growth remains strong. Federal government debt held by the public is also set to rise to 83.1% of GDP in 2021, up from 33.6% of GDP in 2000. Unlike in the past, the U.S. government will have less scope to ease fiscal policy when the next recession rolls around. Chart 2An Economy At Full Employment
An Economy At Full Employment
An Economy At Full Employment
Chart 3The U.S. Budget Deficit Is Set To Widen Even If The Unemployment Rate Continues To Decline
The U.S. Budget Deficit Is Set To Widen Even If The Unemployment Rate Continues To Decline
The U.S. Budget Deficit Is Set To Widen Even If The Unemployment Rate Continues To Decline
Further Upside For Global Bond Yields Deleveraging headwinds, excess spare capacity, slow potential GDP growth, and chronically low inflation have all conspired to keep a lid on global bond yields. That is starting to change. Credit growth has accelerated, while output gaps have shrunk. The structural outlook for productivity growth is weaker than it was in the 1990s, but a cyclical pickup is likely given the recent recovery in capital spending. Chart 4 shows that there is a reasonably strong correlation between business capex and productivity growth. On the inflation side, the 3-month annualized change in U.S. core CPI and core PCE has reached 2.9% and 2.8%, respectively. The prices paid component of the ISM manufacturing index hit a seven-year high in March. The New York Fed's Underlying Inflation Gauge has zoomed to 3.1% (Chart 5). The market has been slow to price in the prospect of higher U.S. inflation (Chart 6). The TIPS 10-year breakeven rate is still roughly 20 bps below where it traded in the pre-recession period, even though the unemployment rate is lower now than at any point during that cycle. As long-term inflation expectations reset higher, bond yields will rise. Higher inflation expectations will also push up the term premium, which remains in negative territory. Chart 4Pickup In Capex Brightens ##br##The Cyclical Productivity Outlook
Pickup In Capex Brightens The Cyclical Productivity Outlook
Pickup In Capex Brightens The Cyclical Productivity Outlook
Chart 5Inflation##br## Is Coming...
Inflation Is Coming... Inflation Is Coming...
Inflation Is Coming... Inflation Is Coming...
Chart 6...Which Could Take ##br##Bond Yields Higher
...Which Could Take Bond Yields Higher
...Which Could Take Bond Yields Higher
The upward pressure on yields could be amplified if the market revises up its assessment of the terminal real rate. Perhaps in a nod to what is to come, the Fed revised its terminal fed funds projection from 2.8% to 2.9% in the March 2018 Summary of Economic Projections. However, this is still well below the median estimate of 4.3% shown in the inaugural dot plot in January 2012. The U.S. Economy Is Not Yet Succumbing To Higher Rates For now, there is little evidence that higher rates are having a major negative effect on the economy. Business capital spending has decelerated recently, but that appears to be a global phenomenon. Capex has weakened even more in Japan, where yields have barely moved. In any case, the slowdown in U.S. investment spending has been fairly modest. Core capital goods orders disappointed in March, but are still up 7% year-over-year. Likewise, while our capex intention survey indicator has ticked lower, it remains well above its historic average. And despite elevated corporate debt levels, high-yield credit spreads are subdued and banks continue to ease lending standards for commercial and industrial loans (Chart 7). In the household realm, delinquency rates are rising and lending standards are tightening for auto and credit card loans. However, this has more to do with excessively strong lending growth over the preceding few years than with higher interest rates. Particularly in the case of credit card lending, even large movements in the fed funds rate tend to translate into only modest percent changes in debt service payments because of the large spreads that lenders charge on unsecured loans. The financial obligation ratio - a measure of the debt service burden for the average household - is rising but is still close to the lowest levels in three decades. Mortgage debt, which accounts for about two-thirds of all household credit, is near a 16-year low as a share of disposable income (Chart 8). As Ed Leamer perceptively argued in his 2007 Jackson Hole address entitled "Housing Is The Business Cycle," housing is the main avenue by which monetary policy affects the real economy.2 Similar to business capital spending, while the housing data has leveled off to some extent, it still looks pretty good: Building permits and housing starts continue to rise. New and existing home sales rebounded in March. Home prices have accelerated. The S&P/Case Shiller Home Price Index saw its strongest month-over-month gain in February since 2005. The MBA Mortgage Applications Purchase Index is up 11% year-over-year. The percentage of households looking to buy a home in the next six months is at a cycle high. Homebuilder sentiment has dipped slightly, but it remains at rock-solid levels (Chart 9). Chart 7Capital Spending ##br##Still Quite Robust
Capital Spending Still Quite Robust
Capital Spending Still Quite Robust
Chart 8Household Debt Load And Financial Obligations##br## Are At Pre-Housing Bubble Levels
Household Debt Load And Financial Obligations Are At Pre-Housing Bubble Levels
Household Debt Load And Financial Obligations Are At Pre-Housing Bubble Levels
Chart 9The Housing Sector##br## Is Doing Fine
The Housing Sector Is Doing Fine
The Housing Sector Is Doing Fine
Fixed-Income: Hedged Or Unhedged? Bond positioning is quite short, so a temporary dip in yields is probable. However, investors should expect bond yields to rise more than is currently discounted over the next 12 months. BCA's fixed income strategists favor cyclically underweighting the U.S., Canada, and core Europe, while overweighting Australia, the U.K., and Japan in currency-hedged terms. Table 1 shows that the hedged yield on U.S. 10-year Treasurys is only 20 bps in EUR terms, and 38 bps in yen terms. Table 1Global Bond Yields: Hedged And Unhedged
Investing In A Late-Cycle Economy: Lessons From The 1990s
Investing In A Late-Cycle Economy: Lessons From The 1990s
The low level of hedged U.S. yields today means that Treasurys are unlikely to enjoy the same inflows as in the past from overseas investors. This could push yields higher than they otherwise would go. To gain the significant yield advantage that U.S. government debt now commands, investors would need to go long Treasurys on a currency-unhedged basis. For long-term investors, this is a tantalizing investment. The current spread between 30-year Treasurys and German bunds stands at 192 bps. The euro would have to appreciate to 2.15 against the dollar for buy-and-hold investors to lose money by going long Treasurys relative to bunds.3 Such an overshoot of the euro is unlikely to occur, especially since the structural problems haunting Europe are no less daunting than those facing the United States. A Pop In The Dollar? Admittedly, the near-term success of a strategy that buys Treasurys, currency-unhedged, will hinge on what happens to the dollar. As occurred at the turn of the millennium, the dollar could find a bid as the Fed is forced to raise rates more aggressively than the market is pricing in. In this regard, large-scale U.S. fiscal stimulus, while arguably bearish for the dollar over the long haul, could be bullish for the dollar in the near term. My colleague Jennifer Lacombe has observed that flows into U.S.-listed European equity ETFs, such as those offered by iShares (EZU) and Vanguard (VGK), have reliably led the euro-dollar exchange rate by about six months (Chart 10).4 Recent outflows from these funds augur poorly for the euro. Rising hedging costs could also prompt more investors to buy U.S. fixed-income assets currency-unhedged, which would raise the demand for dollars (Chart 11).5 Chart 10ETF Flows Point To Lower EUR/USD
ETF Flows Point To Lower EUR/USD
ETF Flows Point To Lower EUR/USD
Chart 11The Dollar Could Bounce
The Dollar Could Bounce
The Dollar Could Bounce
The Oil-Dollar Correlation May Be Weakening Investors are accustomed to thinking that the dollar tends to be inversely correlated with oil prices. That relationship has not always been in place. Brent bottomed at just over $9/bbl in December 1998. Crude prices tripled over the subsequent 20 months. The broad trade-weighted dollar actually rose by 5% over that period. The dollar has strengthened by 2.8% since hitting a low on September 8, 2017, while Brent has gained 37% over this period. This breakdown in the dollar-oil correlation harkens back to late 2016: Brent rose by 26% between the U.S. presidential election and the end of that year. The dollar appreciated by 4% during those months. We are not ready to abandon the view that a stronger dollar is generally bad news for oil prices. However, the relationship between the two variables seems to be fading. Chart 12 shows that the two-year rolling correlation coefficient of monthly returns for Brent crude and the broad trade-weighted dollar has weakened in recent years. Chart 12The Negative Dollar-Oil Correlation Has Weakened
The Negative Dollar-Oil Correlation Has Weakened
The Negative Dollar-Oil Correlation Has Weakened
This is not too surprising. Thanks to the shale boom, U.S. oil imports have fallen by about 70% since 2006 (Chart 13). This has made the U.S. trade balance less sensitive to changes in oil prices. The recent surge in oil prices has also been strengthened by OPEC 2.0's decision to reduce the supply of crude hitting the market, ongoing turmoil in Venezuela, and the possibility that Iranian sanctions could take 0.3-0.8 million barrels a day off the market. A reduction in oil supply is bad for global growth at the margin. However, weaker global growth is good for the dollar (Chart 14). OPEC's production cuts also increase the scope for U.S. shale producers to gain global market share over the long haul, which should help the greenback. As such, while a modestly strong dollar over the remainder of the year will be a headwind for oil, it may not be a strong enough impediment to prevent Brent from rising another $6/bbl to reach $80/bbl, as per our commodity team's projections. Chart 13U.S. Oil Imports ##br##Have Collapsed
U.S. Oil Imports Have Collapsed
U.S. Oil Imports Have Collapsed
Chart 14Slowing Global Growth Tends##br## To Be Bullish For The Dollar
Slowing Global Growth Tends To Be Bullish For The Dollar
Slowing Global Growth Tends To Be Bullish For The Dollar
The Outlook For Equities Following the script of the late 1990s, stock market volatility has risen this year, as investors have begun to fret about the durability of the nine year-old equity bull market. Valuations are not as extreme as they were in 2000, but they are far from cheap. The Shiller P/E for U.S. stocks stands at 31, consistent with total nominal returns of only 4% over the next decade (Chart 15). On a price-to-sales basis, U.S. stocks have surpassed their 2000 peak (Chart 16). Such a rich multiple to sales can be justified if profit margins stay elevated, but that is far from a sure thing. Yes, the composition of the stock market has shifted towards sectors such as technology, which have traditionally enjoyed high margins. The explosion of winner-take-all markets has also allowed the most successful companies to dominate the stock market indices, while second-tier companies get pushed to the sidelines (Chart 17). Chart 15Long-Term Investors, Take Note
Long-Term Investors, Take Note
Long-Term Investors, Take Note
Chart 16U.S. Stocks Are Pricey
U.S. Stocks Are Pricey
U.S. Stocks Are Pricey
Chart 17Only The Best
Investing In A Late-Cycle Economy: Lessons From The 1990s
Investing In A Late-Cycle Economy: Lessons From The 1990s
Nevertheless, there continues to be a strong relationship between economy-wide profits and the ratio of selling prices-to-unit labor costs (Chart 18). The latest data suggest that U.S. wage growth has picked up in the first quarter (Table 2). Low-skilled workers, whose wages tend to be better correlated with economic slack than those of high-skilled workers, are finally seeing sizable gains. Chart 18U.S. Profit Margins Could Resume Mean-Reverting...
U.S. Profit Margins Could Resume Mean-Reverting...
U.S. Profit Margins Could Resume Mean-Reverting...
Table 2...If Wage Growth Continues Accelerating
Investing In A Late-Cycle Economy: Lessons From The 1990s
Investing In A Late-Cycle Economy: Lessons From The 1990s
Even if productivity growth accelerates, unit labor costs are likely to rise faster than prices, pushing profit margins for many companies lower. Bottom-up analysts expect annual EPS growth to average more than 15% over the next five years, a level of optimism not seen since 1998 (Chart 19). The bar for positive surprises on the earnings front is getting increasingly high. Go For Value Historically, stocks tend not to peak until about six months before the start of a recession. Given our expectation that the next recession will occur in 2020, global equities could still enjoy a blow-off rally after the current shakeout exhausts itself. But when the music stops, the stock market is heading for a mighty fall. Given today's lofty valuations and the uncertainty about the precise timing of the next recession, we would certainly not fault long-term investors for taking some money off the table. For those who feel compelled to stay fully invested, our advice is to shift allocations towards cheaper alternatives. Value stocks have massively underperformed growth stocks for the past 11 years (Chart 20). Today, value trades at a greater-than-normal discount to growth. Earnings revisions are moving in favor of value names. Just like at the turn of the millennium, it may be value's turn to shine. Chart 19The Bar For Positive Earnings Surprises Has Risen
The Bar For Positive Earnings Surprises Has Risen
The Bar For Positive Earnings Surprises Has Risen
Chart 20Value Stocks: An Attractive Proposition
Value Stocks: An Attractive Proposition
Value Stocks: An Attractive Proposition
Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 For more information about our Investment Conference, please click here or contact your account manager. 2 Edward E. Leamer, "Housing Is The Business Cycle," Proceedings, Economic Policy Symposium, Jackson Hole, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, (2007). 3 To arrive at this number, we multiply the current exchange rate by the degree to which EUR/USD would have to strengthen, on average, every year for the next 30 years in order to nullify the carry advantage of holding Treasurys over bunds. Thus, 1.217*(1.0192)^30=2.15. Granted, investors expect inflation to be about 45 bps lower in the euro area than in the U.S. over the next three decades. However, this would only lift the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) value of EUR/USD from its current level of 1.32 to 1.51. This would still leave the euro 42% overvalued. 4 Please see Global ETF Strategy Special Report, "Do ETF Flows Lead Currencies?" dated April 18, 2018. 5 When a foreign investor buys U.S. bonds currency-hedged, this entails two transactions. First, the investor must purchase the bond, and second, the investor must sell the dollar forward (which is similar to shorting it). The former transaction increases the demand for dollars, while the latter increases the supply of dollars. Thus, as far as the value of the dollar is concerned, it is a wash. In contrast, if foreign investors buy bonds currency-unhedged, there is no offsetting increase in the supply of dollars, and hence the dollar will tend to strengthen. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Our analysis is often focused on China, commodities prices and Asia's business cycle. The key points of these discussions are applicable to the majority of EM countries and their financial markets. Yet, there are some countries that are not exposed to China, commodities or global trade. India and Turkey are two prominent examples from the EM space that fall into this category. This week we re-visit our analysis on these economies and their financial markets. Feature India: Inflation Holds The Key Indian government bonds sold off sharply over the past eight months, with the yield gap widening significantly relative to EM local currency bonds (Chart I-1, top panel). During this time, the country's stock market has been underperforming the EM benchmark notably (Chart I-1, bottom panel). Rising Indian inflation was a main culprit behind the selloff. However, the most recent print for headline CPI was down (Chart I-2). Diminished inflation worries have recently led to a modest drop in bond yields. Chart I-1India Relative To EM: Bonds And Stocks
India Relative To EM: Bonds And Stocks
India Relative To EM: Bonds And Stocks
Chart I-2Indian Inflation Has Accelerated
Indian Inflation Has Accelerated
Indian Inflation Has Accelerated
The key question for investors is if inflation will rise or stay tame. This, by extension, will determine whether Indian stocks will outperform their EM counterparts. Risks: Inflation, Fiscal Balance And Bond Yields Odds point to upside inflation surprises ahead, and a potential rise in bond yields: The supply side of the economy has been stagnant. Chart I-3 illustrates that Indian consumption has been outpacing investments since 2012, creating a significant accumulated gap. Capex is now picking up (Chart I-4, top panel) but the fact that past investment was low means that the output gap could become positive sooner than later. Chart I-3Consumption Is Outpacing Investments
Consumption Is Outpacing Investments
Consumption Is Outpacing Investments
Chart I-4Timid Pick Up In Capex
Insufficient Pickup In India's Supply Side
Insufficient Pickup In India's Supply Side
Crucially, in order for the capex rebound to be robust and sufficient to expand the economy's productive capacity, Indian commercial banks need to finance corporate investments aggressively. The bottom panel of Chart I-4 shows that this is not yet the case. On the fiscal front, the Indian central government released a mildly expansionary 2018-2019 budget, and is pushing for fiscal consolidation beyond 2019. Importantly, this was the last budget announcement of the ruling National Democratic Alliance (NDA) coalition before the 2019 general elections. It therefore entails a 10% increase in government expenditures. Growing government expenditures are often inflationary in India; hence a 10% rise in government spending could boost inflation modestly (Chart I-5). Additionally, there are also non-trivial risks that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government might end up spending beyond the official budget announcement in order to appease voters in the run-up to the 2019 general elections. The risks of overspending extend to state governments as well. The latter plan to raise their employees' housing rental allowances (HRA). Depending on the magnitude and timing of these increases, inflation could accelerate significantly and have spillover effects. Turning to bond yields, excess demand for credit by borrowers against a restricted supply of financing by banks is also creating a ripe environment for higher bond yields: The combined Indian central and state fiscal deficit is very wide, signaling strong demand for credit by the government (Chart I-6, top panel). Yet broad money creation by banks has generally been weak (Chart I-6, bottom panel). Chart I-5Indian Government ##br##Expenditure Is Inflationary
Indian Government Expenditure Is Inflationary
Indian Government Expenditure Is Inflationary
Chart I-6Large General Fiscal Deficit ##br##Amid Slow Money Creation
Large General Fiscal Deficit Amid Slow Money Creation
Large General Fiscal Deficit Amid Slow Money Creation
Chart I-7 illustrates that the combined central and state government fiscal deficit plus the annual change in the total broad stock of money is negative. This signals that new money creation might be insufficient. Commercial banks' holdings of government bonds is also falling (Chart I-8, top panel). Indian banks are at the margin beginning to turn their focus to private sector lending (Chart I-8, bottom panel). Chart I-7Insufficient New Funding ##br##For The Economy
India: Insufficient Funding For The Economy
India: Insufficient Funding For The Economy
Chart I-8Indian Commercial Banks Are Shifting ##br##Focus To The Private Sector
Indian Commercial Banks Are Shifting Focus To The Private Sector
Indian Commercial Banks Are Shifting Focus To The Private Sector
This is expected as commercial banks' holdings of government bonds have reached 29% of total deposits, which is significantly above the minimum required Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR) of 19.5%. Given the ongoing improvement in private sector growth and hence demand for credit, Indian banks are now more inclined to augment their loan portfolios. Non-bank financial corporations such as insurance companies could offset banks' lower demand for government securities, but the former are not as large players as banks to make a meaningful impact. They own only 24% of government bonds compared to the banks' 42% ownership. Mutual funds and other non-bank finance corporations' ownership of government bonds is even smaller than that of insurance companies. Chart I-9India's Cyclical Profile
India's Cyclical Profile
India's Cyclical Profile
Bottom Line: Upside risks to government spending, the budget balance and inflation will likely keep upward pressure on domestic bond yields. That amid high equity valuations might lead to lower share prices in absolute terms. India Can Still Outperform The EM Benchmark While Indian government bonds could sell off and stocks could fall in absolute terms, India is in a better position relative to its EM counterparts. Our view remains that we will see a material slowdown in Chinese growth this year - which is negative for commodities prices and EM economies. This scenario will be beneficial for India at the margin relative to other EM bourses. Importantly, Indian economic activity is gaining upward momentum: Overall loan growth has picked up meaningfully, and consumer loan growth in particular is accelerating at a double-digit pace (Chart I-9, top panel). Motorcycle sales have resumed their upward trend (Chart I-9, panel 2). Commercial vehicle sales are now accelerating robustly (Chart I-9, panel 2) and manufacturing production has picked up noticeably (Chart I-9, panel 3). Bottom Line: We recommend investors keep an overweight position in Indian equities versus the EM benchmark. Ayman Kawtharani, Associate Editor ayman@bcaresearch.com Turkish Markets Are In Freefall The lira has been in freefall and local bond yields have spiked (Chart II-1) following the Turkish government's announcement that it wants to stimulate growth even further by implementing a new investment incentive package worth $34 billion, or 5% of GDP. Our view is that the recent lira depreciation as well as the selloff in stocks and bonds have further room to go. Stay short/underweight Turkish risk assets. The Turkish economy is clearly overheating and inflation has broken out into double digit territory (Chart II-2). This comes as no surprise, given high and accelerating wage growth together with stagnant productivity gains (Chart II-3, top panel). Unit labor costs are surging in both manufacturing and services sectors (Chart II-3, bottom panel). Demand is booming, as such firms will likely succeed in hiking selling prices further, reinforcing the wage-inflation spiral. Chart II-1Turkey: Currency Is Falling And ##br##Bond Yields Are Rising
Turkey: Currency Is Falling And Bond Yields Are Rising
Turkey: Currency Is Falling And Bond Yields Are Rising
Chart II-2Turkey: Genuine Inflation Breakout
Turkey: Genuine Inflation Breakout
Turkey: Genuine Inflation Breakout
Chart II-3Turkey: Wage Growth Is Too High
Turkey: Wage Growth Is Too High
Turkey: Wage Growth Is Too High
Most alarmingly, Turkish policymakers are doing the opposite of what is currently needed - instead of tightening, they have been easing policy: On the fiscal side, government expenditures excluding interest payments have accelerated significantly (Chart II-4). On the monetary policy side, Turkey's banking system has been relying on enormous amounts of liquidity provisions by the central bank (Chart II-5, top panel) to sustain its ongoing credit boom and hence economic growth. Chart II-4Turkey: Fiscal Policy Is Easing
Turkey: Fiscal Policy Is Easing
Turkey: Fiscal Policy Is Easing
Chart II-5Turkey: Monetary Policy Is Too Accommodative
Turkey: Monetary Policy Is Too Accommodative
Turkey: Monetary Policy Is Too Accommodative
On the whole, the central bank's net liquidity injections into the banking system continue to increase rapidly. The nature of the central bank's reserves provisions to commercial banks has shifted away from open market operations and more towards direct lending to banks (Chart II-5, bottom panel). Yet, the essence remains the same: to provide liquidity to banks so that the latter can continue expanding their balance sheets. Adding all the liquidity facilities - the intraday, overnight and late window facilities - the Central Bank of Turkey's (CBT) outstanding funding to banks is TRY 90 billion, or 3% of GDP, abnormally elevated on a historical basis. All this entails that monetary policy is too loose. Consistently, even though local currency bank loan growth has moderated, it still stands at 18% (Chart II-6). With the newly announced government stimulus plan, bank loan growth will likely accelerate from an already high level. As debt levels rise, so are debt servicing costs (Chart II-7). Notably, debt (both domestic/local currency and external debt) servicing costs will continue to escalate as the currency plunges. The reason is that Turkish private sector external debt stands at 40% of GDP, with 13% of GDP being short-term, the highest among EM countries. Currency depreciation will make external debt more expensive to service. Chart II-6Turkey: Rampant Credit Growth
Turkey: Rampant Credit Growth...
Turkey: Rampant Credit Growth...
Chart II-7Higher Debt Servicing Costs
...Means Higher Debt Servicing Costs
...Means Higher Debt Servicing Costs
Lastly, the Turkish authorities are expanding the Credit Guarantee Fund, what we would call the "free money" program. The aim of this fund is to incentivize banks to lend more, making the government essentially assume credit risk on loans extended to small and medium enterprises. Under this scheme, the government is effectively giving a green light to flood the economy with more money/credit. This will only heighten inflationary pressures and lead to much more currency devaluation. So far, the scheme has been responsible for the creation of TRY 250 billion, or 8% of GDP worth of new credit. The new tranche of this program announced in January of this year entails another TRY 55 billion. While smaller than the previous tranche, it is still significant at 1.8% of GDP. Fiscal and monetary policies are overly simulative and the country's twin deficits - both fiscal and current account - are widening (Chart II-8). The current account deficit now exceeds 6% of GDP. With foreign holdings of equities and government bonds already at historic highs (Chart II-9), it is questionable whether Turkey has the capacity to attract more capital inflows to finance a widening current account deficit on a sustainable basis. Chart II-8Turkey: Large Twin Deficits
Turkey: Large Twin Deficits
Turkey: Large Twin Deficits
Chart II-9Turkey: Foreign Holdings Of ##br##Stocks And Bonds Are Large
Turkey: Foreign Holdings Of Stocks And Bonds Are Large
Turkey: Foreign Holdings Of Stocks And Bonds Are Large
Remarkably, despite extremely strong exports due to robust growth in the euro area, the current account deficit in Turkey has been unable to narrow at all. This confirms the excessive domestic demand boom. Chart II-10The Turkish Lira Is Not Cheap
The Turkish Lira Is Not Cheap
The Turkish Lira Is Not Cheap
Even after undergoing large nominal depreciation, Chart II-10 demonstrates that the Turkish lira is still not cheap, according to unit labor cost-based real effective exchange rate, which in our opinion is the best valuation measure for currencies. With wage and general inflation in the double digits and escalating, it will take much more nominal deprecation for the lira to become cheap. At this point, the Turkish authorities are clearly over-stimulating growth while disregarding inflation. The current policy stance will all but ensure that the lira depreciates much further. Excessive money creation is extremely bearish for the local currency. To put the amount of outstanding money into perspective and gauge exchange rate risk, one can compute the ratio of foreign exchange reserves to broad money (local currency money supply). Chart II-11 illustrates that the current net level of foreign exchange reserves (excluding banks' foreign currency deposits at the central bank) including gold currently stands at US$30 billion, which is equivalent to a mere 11% of broad local currency money M3. The ratio for other EM countries is considerably higher (Chart II-12). Chart II-11Turkey: Central Bank FX ##br##Reserves Level Is Inadequate
Turkey: Central Bank FX Reserves Level Is Inadequate
Turkey: Central Bank FX Reserves Level Is Inadequate
Chart II-12Foreign Exchange Reserves Adequacy In EM
Country Perspectives: India And Turkey
Country Perspectives: India And Turkey
Given the inflationary backdrop and the risk of further currency depreciation, interest rates will have to rise. With time this will inevitably trigger another upward non-performing loan (NPL) cycle. Banks are very under-provisioned for non-performing loans (NPLs). Even worse, banks have been reducing the ratio of NPL provisions to total loans in order to book strong profits. NPLs and NPL provisions are set to rise substantially, and banks' equity will be considerably eroded as a result. Lastly, as Chart II-13 demonstrates, rising interest rates are bearish for bank share prices. Investment Implications The government is doubling down on pro-growth policies and is disregarding inflation. Hence, inflation will spiral out of control and the central bank will fall even more behind the curve. This is extremely bearish for the lira. We are reiterating our short position on the lira. We remain short the lira versus the U.S. dollar, but the lira will likely also continue to plummet versus the euro as well. As such, we are also reiterating our underweight/short stance on Turkish stocks in general, and banks in particular (Chart II-14). Chart II-13Turkey: Higher Interest Rates ##br##Will Hurt Bank Stocks
Turkey: Higher Interest Rates Will Hurt Bank Stocks
Turkey: Higher Interest Rates Will Hurt Bank Stocks
Chart II-14Stay Short/Underweight Turkish Stocks
Stay Short/Underweight Turkish Stocks
Stay Short/Underweight Turkish Stocks
A weaker lira will undermine returns for foreign investors on Turkish domestic bonds and assures widening sovereign and corporate credit spreads. Dedicated EM fixed income and credit portfolios should continue to underweight Turkey within their respective EM universes. Stephan Gabillard, Senior Analyst stephang@bcaresearch.com Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights U.S. Treasury Curve: The U.S. Treasury curve has flattened to new cyclical lows as the market has moved to fully price in the Fed's interest rate forecasts. Inflation expectations must rise further for those forecasts to be fully realized, however. Expect renewed U.S. curve steepening through higher inflation expectations and longer-term Treasury yields in the next 3-6 months. UST-Bund Spread Update: Stay in our recommended 10yr UST-Bund spread widening trade. as Treasury yield increases will not be matched in Bunds given slowing euro area economic momentum and a more balanced tone from the ECB. Global IG Corporate Sector Allocation: Our investment grade (IG) sector allocations, taken from our relative value models, have added positive performance since our last update in August. Feature The unpredictable, and at times unruly, behavior of financial markets over the first few months of 2018 has been exhausting for investors. A calm January was followed by the early February volatility spike and, more recently, huge intraday swings based on the ebb and flow of news on U.S. trade and foreign policy. Yet when looking at the year-to-date returns for various asset classes, the numbers do not seem unusually alarming given the amount of surrounding noise. Chart of the WeekA Long Road Back From The VIX Spike
A Long Road Back From The VIX Spike
A Long Road Back From The VIX Spike
The S&P 500 index is only down -0.7%, while both equities in both the euro area and emerging markets (EM) equities are up +1.8% and +1.1%, respectively (using MSCI data in U.S. dollar terms). Credit markets are also delivering rather boring performance so far in 2018, from U.S. high-yield (+1.2% excess return over government debt) to euro area investment grade and EM hard currency corporates (both with an -0.1% excess return in U.S. dollar terms). Admittedly, these numbers look far less flattering considering the robust rally in risk assets in January. Yet the year-to-date returns simply do not line up with our impression of how investors' feel about how this year has gone so far. The perception is much gloomier than the actual outcome. Right now, markets are looking for guidance and direction and finding little of both. A big problem is that global bond yields, most notably in the U.S., have not fallen much from the highs for the year - even with global growth clearly losing some steam in the first quarter of 2018. The reason? Global inflation is in a mild cyclical upswing, a product of persistently tight labor markets and rising oil prices (Chart of the Week). The "leadership" in government bond markets has shifted away from accelerating global growth and an upward repricing of future central bank tightening, to rising inflation and unchanged monetary policy expectations. The notion of central bankers not being friendly to the markets remains our key theme for this year. We continue to expect that policymakers will not respond to the latest softer patch of economic data and will focus more on the reacceleration of inflation. This is especially true with risk assets stabilizing and volatility measures like the U.S. VIX index continuing to drift lower and, more importantly, the "volatility of volatility" (as measured by the VVIX index) now back to the levels that prevailed before the early February volatility spike (bottom panel). Although as BCA's strategists discussed at our View Meeting yesterday, volatility can quickly return with a vengeance given softer global growth momentum, and with the geopolitical calendar heating up next month (the U.S. government must make its final decision on the China trade tariffs and investment restrictions).1 This led the group to downgrade our recommended global equity exposure and upgrade our global bond exposure on a tactical (0-3 months) basis, although our more medium-term cyclical allocations (6-12 months) were unchanged (overweight stocks versus bonds). From the point of view of global bond markets, we may now be in period of mild "stagflation" with softening growth and rising inflation. We remain of the view that the former is temporary and the latter is not. This backdrop will keep global bond yields under upward pressure for at least the next few months, with better expected performance of corporate debt over governments - albeit with the potential for higher volatility given more elevated geopolitical risks. What Next For The U.S. Treasury Curve? The Treasury curve flattened to a new cyclical low last week, with the spread between 2-year and 10-year bonds now sitting at 45bps. On the surface, this flattening seems consistent with a Fed that is maintaining a "cautiously hawkish" message and that its rate hike plans for 2018 are unchanged despite more volatile financial markets. Chart 2This UST Curve Flattening Is Different
This UST Curve Flattening Is Different
This UST Curve Flattening Is Different
What makes this current episode different from other bouts of Treasury curve flattening over the past five years, however, is the starting point for the absolute of bond yields. According to our two-factor valuation model for the 10-year Treasury yield, yields are now just a touch above fair value, which is currently 2.78%. That yield valuation was at least +25bps before the previous flattening episodes between 2014 and 2017 (Chart 2). That distinction is critical in differentiating a bull flattener from a bear flattener. Simply put, longer-dated Treasuries are not yet cheap enough to suggest that investors should extend duration risk to benefit from any additional curve flattening from here. In fact, we see a greater risk that Treasury curve re-steepens a bit from here, as there is more room for longer-term inflation expectations to move higher than there is for the front-end of the curve to reprice an even more hawkish Fed. The recent softening of cyclical global economic data has been occurring while realized inflation rates have been slowly rising from depressed levels (Chart 3). Yet in the U.S., the slowing of growth seen in the first quarter of the year remains very modest compared to that seen in Europe or Japan, while core inflation rates (for both the CPI index and the PCE deflator) have accelerated back to 2%. The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow forecasting model is calling for Q1/2018 growth of 1.9%, while the New York Fed's Nowcast model is predicting Q1 growth of 2.8%. While both forecasts are a deceleration from the 3% rates seen in the previous three quarters in 2017, neither is below U.S. potential GDP growth, which the U.S. Congressional Budget Office now estimates to be 1.9%. Even in China, where the economy had been slowing as policymakers have aimed to tighten monetary policy and slow credit growth, cyclical indicators such as the Li Keqiang index (the preferred indicator of our China strategists) have shown a bit of a rebound of late. Right now, underlying U.S. growth and inflation momentum are still pointing towards the Fed delivering on its current projection of an additional 50bps of rate hikes in 2018, taking the funds rate to 2.25%, with even a chance of an additional hike if inflation continues to accelerate. This is essentially fully priced with a 2-year Treasury yield just under 2.4%, however, and the real funds rate is now at neutral according to measures like the Fed's r-star. Therefore, additional flattening pressures from the front end of the curve are unlikely unless the Fed is willing to signal a faster pace of rate hikes than currently laid out in its economic projections (the "dots"). At the same time, the 10-year TIPS inflation breakeven remains 25-35bps below the 2.4-2.5% range that would be consistent with the market expecting U.S. inflation to sustainably return to the Fed's 2% inflation target on the headline PCE deflator. Hence, a steeper Treasury curve is far more likely than a flatter Treasury curve from current levels. Where could this view go wrong? Perhaps the Trump administration's trade skirmishes with China could broaden into a full-on trade war that could cause deeper damage to U.S. equities, dampen growth expectations and drive longer-term yields lower. Coming at a time when there is a significant short position in the U.S. Treasury market, this could look similar to the prolonged bull-flattening seen in 2015-16. During that episode, duration exposure flipped from a big net short to very net long according to measures like the J.P. Morgan Duration Survey (Chart 4, top panel), while the market priced out all expected Fed rate hikes (2nd panel). However, that also occurred alongside a 50bp decline in inflation expectations (3rd panel) and a big deceleration of U.S. growth (bottom panel), both related to a weakening global economy and collapsing oil prices. It is uncertain if the current U.S.-China trade skirmish would have an equivalent impact on both the U.S. economy and the Treasury curve, especially given a starting point of stronger global growth a far more positive demand/supply balance in world oil markets. Chart 3A Whiff Of Stagflation?
A Whiff Of Stagflation?
A Whiff Of Stagflation?
Chart 42018 Is Not 2015/16
2018 Is Not 2015/16
2018 Is Not 2015/16
In sum, we are sticking to our view that the Treasury curve is more likely to bear-steepen through higher longer-term yields than flatten bearishly through more discounted Fed hikes or flatten bullishly through much weaker growth and inflation. We continue to recommend a below-benchmark duration stance in the U.S., within an underweight allocation in a currency-hedged global government bond portfolio. We are also are sticking with our tactical trade of staying short the 10-year U.S. Treasury versus the 10-year German Bund, even with the spread now looking a bit too wide on our fundamentals-based valuation model (Chart 5). The unrelenting string of disappointing economic data in the euro area has already resulted in a far more cautious tone from European Central Bank (ECB) officials regarding the potential for quick rate hikes after the expected end of the asset purchase program at the end of this year. The gap between the U.S. and euro area data surprise indices has proven to be a good directional indicator for the Treasury-Bund spread (Chart 6, bottom panel). Given our views on the potential for renewed bear-steepening in the Treasury curve, which is unlikely to be matched in the German curve in the next 3-6 months, we see no reason to take profits yet on our spread trade. Chart 5UST-Bund Spread Now A Bit Too Wide...
UST-Bund Spread Now A Bit Too Wide...
UST-Bund Spread Now A Bit Too Wide...
Chart 6...But Too Soon For Spread Tightening
...But Too Soon For Spread Tightening
...But Too Soon For Spread Tightening
Bottom Line: The U.S. Treasury curve has flattened to new cyclical lows as the market has moved to fully price in the Fed's interest rate forecasts. Inflation expectations must rise further for those forecasts to be fully realized, however. Expect renewed U.S. curve steepening through higher inflation and longer-term Treasury yields in the next 3-6 months. Stay in our recommended 10-year Treasury-Bund spread widening trade, as Treasury yield increases will not be matched in Bunds given slowing euro area economic momentum and a more balanced tone from the ECB. A Brief (And Belated) Performance Update For Our Corporate Bond Sector Allocations It has been some time (August 2017) since we last published a performance update for our investment grade (IG) corporate sector allocations for the U.S., euro area and U.K. As a reminder, those allocations come from our relative value model, which is designed to measure the valuation of each individual sector compared to the overall Barclays Bloomberg corporate bond index for each region. The methodology takes each sector's individual option-adjusted spread (OAS) and regresses it in a panel regression with all the other sectors in each region, as a function of the sector's duration, convexity (duration squared) and credit rating - the primary risk factors for any corporate bond. Using the common coefficients from that regression, a risk-adjusted "fair value" spread is calculated. The difference between the actual OAS and the fair value OAS is our valuation metric from the model for each region. The latest output from the models can be found in the tables and charts in the Appendix starting on Page 14. We also show the duration-times-spread (DTS) for each sector in those tables, using that as our primary way to measure the volatility of each sector. The scatterplot charts in the Appendix show the tradeoff between the valuation residual from our model and each sector's DTS. Chart 7Performance Of Our IG Sector Allocations
Stagflation-ish
Stagflation-ish
We then apply individual sector weights based on the model output and our desired level of overall spread risk that we wish to take in our recommended credit portfolio. At our last update in August 2017, we made a decision to keep the overall (weighted) DTS of our sector tilts roughly equal to the overall IG corporate DTS for each region. With credit spreads looking tight at the time, credit spread curves flat relative to history, and with the Fed in the midst of a tightening cycle, we did not see a case for taking aggressive spread risk (i.e. having a high aggregate DTS) in the portfolio. The performance of our latest sector recommendations since our last update in August 2017, and in the first quarter of 2018, are shown in Chart 7. We show both the total return and excess return of each sector versus duration-matched government bonds. Since that last review, our U.K. sector allocations have performed the best, delivering an additional 12bps of total return and 10bps of excess return versus the U.K. IG corporate index. Our euro area corporate allocations have added 2bps of total return and 3bps of excess return, while our U.S. allocations have modestly underperformed both on total return (-1bp) and excess return. We also show the performance numbers for just the first quarter of 2018 in Chart 7, and we will present the return numbers on this quarterly basis in the future as part of our regular model bond portfolio performance reviews. The sector allocations offered a modest underperformance in Q1 2018, with -5bps of total return and -8bps of excess return coming mostly from euro area and U.K. allocations. The U.S. allocations actually outperformed by +3bps on a total return basis in Q1. The return numbers for our U.S. sector allocations can be found in Table 1. Since our last update in August, the best performing sectors (in excess return terms) for our U.S. portfolio allocation were the overweights to all Energy sub-sectors (+35bps combined), Cable & Satellite (+4bps) and Banks (+4bps). Of those names, only the Independent Energy sub-sector delivered a positive excess return (+3bps) in Q1 2018. Table 1U.S. Investment Grade Performance
Stagflation-ish
Stagflation-ish
The return numbers for our euro area sector allocations can be found in Table 2. Since our last update in August, the best performing sectors (in excess return terms) for our euro area portfolio allocation were the overweights to Financials (+35bps, coming mainly from Banks, Senior Debt and Insurance) and Integrated Energy (+13bps). Those overweights also delivered small positive excess returns (+3bps and +1bps, respectively) in Q1 2018. The return numbers for our U.K. sector allocations can be found in Table 3. Since our last update, the best performing sector (in excess return terms) was the overweight to Financials (+6bps, coming mostly from Banks). Looking ahead, credit spread curves remain very flat by historical standards (Chart 8), which suggests there is not enough spread compensation for extending credit risk to lower quality tiers. Thus, we are sticking with keeping our target DTS for our combined sector allocations equal to that of the overall IG index for each region. We will update our sector allocations in an upcoming Weekly Report. Table 2Euro Area Investment Grade Performance
Stagflation-ish
Stagflation-ish
Table 3U.K. Investment Grade Performance
Stagflation-ish
Stagflation-ish
Chart 8Credit Quality Curves Remain Very Flat
Credit Quality Curves Remain Very Flat
Credit Quality Curves Remain Very Flat
Bottom Line: Our investment grade (IG) sector allocations, taken from our relative value models, have added positive performance since our last update in August. We continue to recommend a cautious approach to sector allocation, targeting index levels of spread risk (in aggregate) in the U.S. euro area and U.K. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Expect Volatility ... Of Volatility", dated April 11, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. Appendix Appendix Chart 1U.S. Corporate Sector Valuation And Recommended Allocation*
Stagflation-ish
Stagflation-ish
Appendix Chart 1U.S. Corporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward*
Stagflation-ish
Stagflation-ish
Appendix Table 2Euro Area Corporate Sector Valuation And Recommended Allocation*
Stagflation-ish
Stagflation-ish
Appendix Chart 2Euro Area Corporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward*
Stagflation-ish
Stagflation-ish
Appendix Table 3U.K. Corporate Sector Valuation And Recommended Allocation*
Stagflation-ish
Stagflation-ish
Appendix Chart 3U.K. Corporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward*
Stagflation-ish
Stagflation-ish
Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
Stagflation-ish
Stagflation-ish
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights The ECB admits that its policy is considerably more accommodative than it would be absent the need to integrate the weaker euro area economies. But a strategy designed to integrate some is alienating others, both within the euro area and outside it. The yield shortfall on German long-dated bunds versus the equivalent U.S. T-bonds and U.K. gilts will narrow, one way or the other. It follows that the 10% undervaluation of the euro will eventually correct. And German consumer services will structurally outperform the consumer goods exporters. Feature Let's begin with some facts, which are difficult to dispute. Fact 1: The euro area is running a €400 billion trade surplus with the rest of the world, equivalent to 4% of euro area GDP. €300 billion of this surplus resides in Germany.1 Fact 2: The trade surplus is a direct result of the undervaluation of the euro (Chart of the Week). This we know, because the surplus has evolved as a perfect mirror image of the euro's undervaluation as calculated by the ECB itself. The central bank admits that the euro is undervalued by around 10%2 (Chart I-2). Chart of the WeekThe Euro Area's Huge Trade Surplus Is Due To The Undervalued Euro
The Euro's Huge Trade Surplus Is Due To The Undervalued Euro
The Euro's Huge Trade Surplus Is Due To The Undervalued Euro
Chart I-2The Euro Is Undervalued By 10%
The Euro Is Undervalued By 10%
The Euro Is Undervalued By 10%
Fact 3: The substantial undervaluation of the euro is the unavoidable result of the of the ECB's extreme experiment with bond buying and zero and negative interest rates. This we know, because the euro's undervaluation is a near perfect function of the yield shortfall on German long-dated bunds versus the equivalent U.S. T-bonds and U.K. gilts (Chart I-3 and Chart I-4). Chart I-3The Euro Is Undervalued Because Of The ##br##ECB's Ultra-Accommodative Policy
The Euro Is Undervalued Because Of The ECB's Ultra-Accommodative Policy
The Euro Is Undervalued Because Of The ECB's Ultra-Accommodative Policy
Chart I-4The Euro Has Tracked Expected##br## Relative Monetary Policy
The Euro Has Tracked Expected Relative Monetary Policy
The Euro Has Tracked Expected Relative Monetary Policy
Nevertheless, a reasonable riposte to facts 1-3 is that the ECB does not target the euro exchange rate. The ECB sets policy to achieve its price stability mandate, which it defines as an inflation rate of "below, but close to, 2%", the same definition as the Federal Reserve uses. Given that the ECB is further from its price stability mandate than the Fed is, the ECB has to set much more accommodative policy. And there the story might end. 2% Inflation In The Euro Area Is Different To 2% Inflation In The U.S. Except that the story has a twist. The price stability mandates of the ECB and Fed appear very similar, but they are not. The ECB mandate is much harder to achieve, because of two further facts. Fact 4: The definitions of consumer prices in the euro area and the U.S. are quite different. The euro area's Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) excludes the consumption costs of owner-occupied housing, whereas the U.S. consumer price basket includes it at a very substantial 25% weight. The omission of owner-occupied housing costs - which consistently tend to rise faster than other prices - makes it much more difficult for overall inflation to reach 2%. Indeed, excluding shelter, core inflation in the U.S. today is running at 1.2%, the same rate as in the euro area (Chart I-5 and Chart I-6). Chart I-5Core Inflation Is Higher##br## In The United States...
Core Inflation Is Higher In The United States...
Core Inflation Is Higher In The United States...
Chart I-6...But On A Like-For-Like Basis, Core Inflation##br## Is Not Higher In The United States
...But On A Like-For-Like Basis, Core Inflation Is Higher In The Euro Area!
...But On A Like-For-Like Basis, Core Inflation Is Higher In The Euro Area!
Fact 5: The ECB has a single mandate of price stability, whereas the Fed has a dual mandate of price stability and maximizing employment. Some people even argue that the Fed has a triple mandate which includes financial stability. The point is that for Fed policy, price stability is only one of several considerations, creating flexibility; whereas for ECB policy, price stability is the only consideration, creating inflexibility. Nevertheless, a reasonable riposte to facts 4-5 is that we must just accept that the ECB and Fed operate within different frameworks. If the ECB's framework necessitates ultra-accommodative monetary policy today, then so be it. And there the story might end. Why Should Americans Pay For European Integration? Except that the story has another twist. The ECB framework wasn't always what it is today. Fact 6: On May 8 2003, the ECB changed its definition of price stability from "inflation below 2%" to "inflation below, but close to, 2%". Thereby, the addition of three small words transformed the flexibility of a 0-2% inflation range to the inflexibility of a 2% point target. Why did the ECB change its objective and make it so much more difficult? Here is the answer, straight from the horse's mouth: "The founding fathers of the ECB thought about the adjustment within the euro area, the rebalancing of the different members. To rebalance these disequilibria, since the countries do not have the exchange rate, they have to readjust their prices. This readjustment is much harder if you have zero inflation than if you have 2%" - Mario Draghi So there you have it - the ECB admits that it changed its objective to ease the integration burden on weaker euro area economies. The undisputed consequence is structurally easier monetary policy than would be the case without the integration burden. The ECB also admits that an unavoidable result is a structurally undervalued euro, meaning a substantial competitive advantage for the euro area versus its major trading partners, including the United States. To which President Trump might rightly ask: why should American competitiveness shoulder the burden for European integration? Trump's crosshairs may be trained on Germany, which is running the largest export surplus. But he should redirect his focus to the ECB. The majority of German export hyper-competitiveness is no fault of Germany, it is due to the structural undervaluation of the euro (Chart I-7). Moreover, while an undervalued euro benefits exporters, it hurts euro area household real incomes by raising the prices of dollar-denominated energy and food imports, whose demand is inelastic. German households are also deeply unhappy about the negligible interest on their savings. Chart I-7The Majority Of Germany's Hyper-Competitiveness Is Due To The Undervalued Euro
The Majority Of Germany's Hyper-Competitiveness Is Due To The Undervalued Euro
The Majority Of Germany's Hyper-Competitiveness Is Due To The Undervalued Euro
The Way Forward, And Some Investment Considerations Ultra-accommodative policy was not the game changer that is sometimes claimed. The euro area's strong recovery started more than a year before the ECB even mooted its extreme accommodation. The turning point came in 2013 when euro area banks stopped aggressively de-levering their balance sheets ahead of the bank stress test (Chart I-8). Chart I-8The Euro Area Recovery Started In 2013 When Banks Ended Their Aggressive De-Levering
The Euro Area Recovery Started In 2013 When Banks Ended Their Aggressive De-Levering
The Euro Area Recovery Started In 2013 When Banks Ended Their Aggressive De-Levering
Mario Draghi admits that policy today is considerably more accommodative than it would be absent the need to integrate the weaker euro area economies. But a strategy designed to integrate some is alienating others, both within the euro area and outside it. The ECB has a legal obligation to achieve price stability as its sole objective, but the precise definition of price stability is up to the central bank. To reintroduce some flexibility, it has two options: 'cross-sectional' flexibility, by reintroducing an inflation target range; or 'longitudinal' flexibility by a more relaxed interpretation of the 'medium term' timeframe required to achieve its point target. Of these two options, we expect a gradual move to greater longitudinal flexibility, especially as 'medium term' is already open to considerable interpretation. This will create three structural investment opportunities. The yield shortfall on German long-dated bunds versus the equivalent U.S. T-bonds and U.K. gilts will narrow, one way or the other. It follows that the 10% undervaluation of the euro - as calculated by the ECB itself - will eventually correct. As the euro area's structural over-competitiveness gradually corrects, the decade-long outperformance of consumer goods exporters versus consumer services will reverse, especially in Germany (Chart I-9 and Chart I-10). Overweight German consumer services versus consumer goods exporters. Chart I-9Consumer Services Have ##br##Underperformed In Europe...
Consumer Services Have Underperformed In Europe...
Consumer Services Have Underperformed In Europe...
Chart I-10...But Are Starting To Turn ##br##Around In Germany
...But Are Starting To Turn Around In Germany
...But Are Starting To Turn Around In Germany
Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Q4 2017 at an annualised rate. 2 Please see https://www.ecb.europa.eu/stats/balance_of_payments_and_external/hci/html/index.en.html The ECB uses three metrics to assess the euro area's competitiveness versus its major trading partners: GDP deflators, CPIs, and unit labour costs. The average of the three metrics suggests that the euro is undervalued by around 10%.The assessment of euro undervaluation assumes that the major euro area economies entered the monetary union at a broadly correct level of competitiveness against each other and against their other major trading partners. This assumption seems valid, given that the net external position of these economies were all in equilibrium at the onset of monetary union. Fractal Trading Model* This week, we note that the rally in the Spanish 10-year government bond is extended and ripe for a countertrend reversal. Implement this as a pair-trade: short the Spanish 10-year bond, long the German 10-year bund. The profit target and symmetrical stop-loss is 1%. Lever up to increase potential return. We are also pleased to report that our short Helsinki OMX / long Eurostoxx600 trade achieved its 3% profit target and is now closed. This leaves five open trades. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-11
Spain 10-Year Gov. Bond Price
Spain 10-Year Gov. Bond Price
The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch##Br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Duration: The balance of risks does not suggest that we should abandon our cyclical below-benchmark duration stance. Positioning is stretched and global growth is no longer accelerating, but U.S. growth is firm and the Fed is less sensitive to tighter financial conditions than in the past. Inflation: The biggest risk for bond markets is that investors wake up to the fact that core inflation is trending quickly back to the Fed's 2% target. The re-anchoring of inflation expectations will pressure the 10-year Treasury yield higher by 23 - 43 basis points. Labor Market: A forecast for stronger wage growth at this stage of the cycle relies on relatively modest assumptions about future gains in employment. Feature Chart 1Bond Bear On Pause
Bond Bear On Pause
Bond Bear On Pause
It's risky out there. Confronted with pain in the equity market, increasingly hawkish trade rhetoric from Washington and some moderation in global economic data, investors have hit pause on the bond bear market. Yields at the front-end of the curve have leveled-off during the past few weeks and the 10-year yield is refusing to take out its 2013 peak (Chart 1). But could any of these risks actually derail the cyclical bear market in bonds? This week we stress test our cyclical below-benchmark duration recommendation by re-considering the three risks we outlined in February, plus one additional risk for good measure.1 Risk 1: Positioning Investors have been overwhelmingly short bonds for the past few months and this consensus has not wavered even as yields declined. Whenever there is widespread consensus around a trade it is often a signal of overbought/oversold conditions. Case in point, since the financial crisis extreme net short bond positions have often coincided with lower Treasury yields during the subsequent three months (Chart 2). This has been particularly true for net speculative positions in 10-year Treasury futures and the All Clients portion of the J.P. Morgan duration survey. The Active Clients portion of the survey has not displayed as consistent a relationship with yield changes, but much like the other two positioning indicators in Chart 2, it currently sits deep in "net short" territory. Chart 2Bond Market Looks Oversold
Bond Market Looks Oversold
Bond Market Looks Oversold
Interestingly, a survey of sentiment shows that investors have mostly been bullish on bonds since 2010, with only a few brief exceptions when more than 50% of respondents indicated that they were bearish. All of the cases when investors turned bearish coincided with a subsequent decline in yields, and sentiment is currently consistent with those prior episodes (Chart 2, bottom panel). In short, widespread consensus around the "short bond" trade was a risk that we flagged in February and it remains a risk today. Risk 2: Unrealistic Expectations Chart 3Data Surprises Still Positive
Data Surprises Still Positive
Data Surprises Still Positive
Related to the widespread consensus around the "short bond" trade is the risk that investors might also be overly optimistic about the pace of U.S. economic growth. U.S. economic data have been consistently surprising to the upside since the middle of last year (Chart 3). The risk is that, in the face of strong data, investors start to revise up their expectations for future economic growth. Eventually those expectations become unrealistically high and the economic data are bound to disappoint. This is why the economic surprise index is mean-reverting. In prior research we showed that if the data surprise index is below zero it is very likely that Treasury yields fell during the prior 30 days, and vice-versa.2 At the moment, the surprise index is still deep in positive territory, and our simple auto-regressive model predicts that it will remain in positive territory for the next 30 days. For now, positioning is consistent with lower yields in the near-term but data surprises are consistent with higher yields. We would likely recommend a tactical above-benchmark duration positioning if we received a consistent bond-bullish message from both our positioning indicators and our data surprise model. Risk 3: Global Growth Slowdown Chart 4Global Growth Has Peaked
Global Growth Has Peaked
Global Growth Has Peaked
While U.S. economic growth is on a firm footing, growth outside of the U.S. appears to be peaking. As evidence, we note that the fair value reading from our 2-factor Treasury model - a model of the 10-year Treasury yield based on the Global Manufacturing PMI and bullish sentiment toward the U.S. dollar - has fallen during the past few months and now sits at 2.78%, roughly consistent with the current 10-year yield (Chart 4).3 While the Global Manufacturing PMI fell back to 53.4 in March, down from its December peak of 54.5, it's important to note that the index is still elevated compared to recent history. Also, the U.S. contribution to the global index continues to rise, with the bulk of the decline concentrated in the Eurozone (Chart 4, panel 4). Even in the Eurozone we note that the PMI remains healthy, though not at the gaudy levels seen earlier in the year. Another important caveat about our 2-factor model is that it does not contain a variable to capture the degree of resource utilization in the economy.4 Logically, as slack dissipates in the economy and inflationary pressures mount, then the same level of global growth should be associated with a higher Treasury yield, all else equal. This means that at some point, as we approach the end of the cycle, we expect the model to break down and consistently produce fair value readings that are too low. It is unclear whether that point has been reached. Nevertheless, it is clear that global growth is no longer accelerating higher. For now the slowdown appears benign and consistent with continued economic recovery, but that could change if the Global PMI continues to fall in the coming months. Risk 4: Tighter Financial Conditions The decline in Treasury yields during the past few weeks is small potatoes compared to the steep drop in equity prices. This raises the possibility that continued weakness in the equity market will drive a flight-to-quality into bonds, leading to lower yields. Indeed, as we have often pointed out, the Fed has a strong track record of responding dovishly to periods of tightening financial conditions. This dynamic, which we have dubbed the Fed Policy Loop, explains why equity prices and bond yields are positively correlated when inflation is low, but also why this correlation reverses when inflation is high.5 When inflation is far below the Fed's target, the Fed needs the economic recovery to continue because it needs inflation to rise. Because the Fed also believes that sufficiently tight financial conditions lead to slower economic growth, it must respond dovishly whenever financial conditions tighten. This leads to a positive correlation between bond yields and equity prices - equity prices being a main driver of financial conditions. However, if we consider an environment where economic growth is strong and inflation is well above target, as was the case in the 1980s, then the Fed would actually encourage tighter financial conditions. In this instance you would expect a negative correlation between equity prices and bond yields (Chart 5). Chart 5The Fed's Reaction Function Explains The Stock/Bond Correlation
The Fed's Reaction Function Explains The Stock/Bond Correlation
The Fed's Reaction Function Explains The Stock/Bond Correlation
With inflation still below target, the Fed cannot tolerate a severe tightening of financial conditions. But the Fed's tolerance for tighter financial conditions also increases as inflationary pressures mount. As of today our sense is that the correlation between bond yields and equity prices is still positive, though weaker than we have become accustomed to in recent years. Turning to the data, we see that the recent equity sell-off has caused the financial conditions component of our Fed Monitor to fall quite sharply, though it still suggests that financial conditions are "easy" on balance (Chart 6). This squares with Fed Chairman Jerome Powell's interpretation. He described financial conditions as "accommodative" in a speech last Friday.6 Chart 6Fed Monitor Still Suggests Tighter Money
Fed Monitor Still Suggests Tighter Money
Fed Monitor Still Suggests Tighter Money
But most importantly, the top panel of Chart 6 shows that the recent tightening in financial conditions caused only a small tick down in our overall Fed Monitor. This is because tighter financial conditions have been offset by the accelerating economic growth and inflation components of our monitor (Chart 6, panels 3 & 4). This means that the Fed will need to see a more severe sell-off in the equity market or a slow-down in U.S. economic growth before it adopts a more dovish tilt. Unless this occurs, the impact of tighter financial conditions on bond yields will be relatively small. Bottom Line: As of yet we do not see the balance of risks as suggesting that we should abandon our cyclical below-benchmark duration stance. Positioning is stretched and global growth is no longer accelerating, but U.S. growth is on a firm footing and the Fed is less sensitive to tighter financial conditions than it has been in recent years. In fact, at the current juncture we think the biggest mispricing in the bond market is that yields do not adequately compensate investors for the risk of inflation. That could change very soon as inflation starts to print higher, as is explained in the next section. Inflation: The Biggest Risk Chart 7Higher Inflation Is Just Around The Corner
Higher Inflation Is Just Around The Corner
Higher Inflation Is Just Around The Corner
As of last Friday, the compensation for inflation protection priced into the 10-year Treasury yield was 2.07%. The same measure for the 5-year/5-year forward yield was 2.13%. During periods when core inflation is well-anchored around the Fed's target, both measures tend to trade in a range between 2.3% and 2.5% (Chart 7). This means that the re-anchoring of inflation expectations will impart another 23 bps to 43 bps of upside to the nominal 10-year Treasury yield. We think this re-anchoring could occur relatively soon. The main reason we think this could play out soon is that investors do not seem to appreciate how strong inflation has been in recent months. The Bloomberg consensus economic forecast currently calls for year-over-year core PCE inflation of 1.84% by the end of this year and of 2% by the end of 2019. Given that year-over-year core PCE inflation is currently 1.6%, it seems like investors are forecasting a significant jump (Chart 7, panel 2). But we think these forecasts under-appreciate the impact that base effects will have on core inflation during the next few months. Core inflation dropped sharply in March 2017 (Chart 7, bottom panel), a decline caused by a one-off re-pricing of cellphone data plans. This large negative print will fall out of the year-over-year calculation when the March PCE inflation data are reported later this month. In fact, we calculate that even if core inflation rises only 0.1% in March - well below recent readings - year-over-year core PCE inflation will rise to 1.85%, already above the Bloomberg consensus forecast for the end of the year. If core PCE inflation rises 0.2% in March - a reading more consistent with recent trends - then year-over-year core PCE inflation will rise to 1.95%, almost back to the Fed's 2% target. Bottom Line: The biggest risk for bond markets is that investors wake up to the fact that core inflation is trending quickly back to the Fed's 2% target. The re-anchoring of inflation expectations will pressure the 10-year Treasury yield higher by between 23 bps and 43 bps. Wage Growth Near An Inflection Point Chart 8Wage Growth And Labor Market Slack
Risk Review
Risk Review
Last week's employment report disappointed expectations with a nonfarm payroll gain of only 103k. The unemployment rate was flat at 4.1% for the sixth consecutive month, and the employment-to-population ratio for prime age (25-54) workers dropped one tick to 79.2%, from 79.3% in February. For bond investors, the main reason to track the monthly employment report these days is to get a read on the amount of slack remaining in the labor market and how that might translate into stronger wage growth and thus higher inflation and bond yields. This makes the prime age employment-to-population ratio particularly important because it has displayed the most consistent relationship with wage growth during the past 25 years (Chart 8). Based on the historical relationship and the current prime age employment-to-population ratio of 79.2%, the employment cost index for wages & salaries should be rising at a year-over-year pace of 2.8%. This is not too far from the current year-over-year wage growth rate of 2.61%, most recently updated for Q4 2017. Further, the historical relationship shown in Chart 8 suggests that we are quite close to an inflection point where smaller gains in the prime age employment-to-population ratio will lead to larger gains in wage growth. This is one reason why we think inflation will continue to surprise to the upside this year. The other advantage of tracking the prime age employment-to-population ratio instead of the headline unemployment rate is that it is easier to forecast because it does not depend on trends in labor force participation. As is shown in Chart 9, the labor force participation rate for the 25-54 age group has risen considerably since early 2016, suggesting that the headline unemployment rate overstated the tightness in the labor market in early 2016. While it is unclear how much further cyclical upside remains in prime age labor force participation, a focus on the prime age employment-to-population ratio allows us to set that question aside. For example, using demographic forecasts from the Census Bureau, we calculate that if nonfarm payrolls increase by 110k per month on average, then the prime age employment-to-population ratio will stay flat at its current level. With payroll gains currently averaging +211k on a trailing 6-month horizon and +188k on a trailing 12-month horizon (Chart 10), we think it is safe to assume that the prime age employment-to-population ratio will continue to rise in the coming months. Chart 9Prime Age Workers Are Re-Entering The Labor Force
Prime Age Workers Are Re-Entering The Labor Force
Prime Age Workers Are Re-Entering The Labor Force
Chart 10Monthly Employment Growth
Monthly Employment Growth
Monthly Employment Growth
Table 1 shows how different assumptions about monthly employment growth translate into the prime age employment-to-population ratio, and also how the prime age employment-to-population ratio translates into wage growth. For example, we see that if payroll gains average +160k or higher for the next 12 months, then we should see the employment cost index for wages & salaries grow by 2.94% during the next year. Table 1Mapping Employment Growth To Wage Growth
Risk Review
Risk Review
Bottom Line: A forecast for stronger wage growth at this stage of the cycle relies on relatively modest assumptions about future gains in employment. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Two-Stage Bear Market In Bonds", dated February 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "How Much Higher For Yields?", dated October 31, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 At the time of publication the 10-year Treasury yield was 2.77%. 4 The model was originally conceived to capture the impact of both the magnitude and the breadth of global growth on U.S. bond yields. For further details please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Message From Our Treasury Models", dated October 1, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Caught In A Loop", dated September 29, 2015, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/powell20180406a.htm Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Q1 Performance Breakdown: The GFIS recommended model bond portfolio returned -0.55% (hedged into U.S. dollars) in the first quarter of 2018, underperforming the custom benchmark index by -11bps. The overweight to U.S. corporate bonds was the main drag on performance. Stress Test & Scenario Analysis: We introduce a simple framework to conduct scenario analysis and stress testing of the model bond portfolio. Our conclusion is that some shifting in our corporate bond allocations - reducing exposure to U.S. investment grade, increasing exposure to euro area and emerging market corporates - can actually help eliminate expected losses in scenarios that run counter to our base case. Feature This week, we present our regular quarterly report on the performance of the BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy (GFIS) model bond portfolio. As a reminder to existing readers (and for new clients), the portfolio is a part of our service that is a departure from the usual BCA macro analysis of global fixed income markets. The model portfolio is how we communicate our opinion on the relative attractiveness between government bond and spread product sectors, by applying actual percentage weightings to each of our recommendations within a fully invested hypothetical bond portfolio. This framework also gives us a vehicle to discuss many of the typical bond portfolio management issues that our clients face on a daily basis. In that vein, we are introducing a new element to our framework in this report - estimating future portfolio performance using scenario analysis, and conducting stress testing of outcomes that are contrary to our base case expectations for global bond markets. Q1/2018 Model Portfolio Performance Breakdown: An Unexpected Hit From U.S. Corporates Chart of the WeekShifting Correlations Hurt##BR##The Model Portfolio In Q1
Shifting Correlations Hurt The Model Portfolio in Q1
Shifting Correlations Hurt The Model Portfolio in Q1
The surge in global market volatility in the first quarter of the year weighed on the returns for the GFIS model bond portfolio. The portfolio had a total return of -0.55% (hedged into U.S. dollars), which lagged that of our custom benchmark index by -11bps.1 The quarter started out on a good note, with the portfolio outperforming by +12bps in January, as gains from our below-benchmark duration stance offset some underperformance from our overweight on global spread product. The story changed in early February, however, as the U.S. wage inflation "scare" and the associated VIX spike resulted in wider U.S. corporate bond spreads. This counteracted the gains on the government bond side of the portfolio as bond yields continued to climb. After yields peaked in mid-February, the portfolio gave back much of the outperformance from duration, with no recovery of the early February losses from spread product (Chart of the Week). In terms of the breakdown between the government bond and spread product allocations in our model portfolio, the former generated +9bps of outperformance versus our custom benchmark index while the latter underperformed by -19bps (Table 1). The bar charts showing the total and relative returns for each individual government bond market and spread product sector are presented in Charts 2 and 3. The main individual sectors of the portfolio that drove the excess returns were the following: Biggest outperformers Underweight U.S. Treasuries (+16bps) Underweight emerging market (EM) U.S. dollar (USD) denominated corporate debt (+5bps) Overweight Japanese government bonds (JGBs) with maturities of ten years or less (+4bps) Underweight EM USD-denominated sovereign debt (+2bps) Biggest underperformers Overweight U.S. investment grade (IG) Financials (-14bps) Overweight U.S. IG Industrials (-8bps) Underweight JGBs with maturities beyond ten years (-8bps) Overweight U.S. Ba-rated high-yield (HY) corporates (-4bps) Table 1GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1-2018 Overall Return Attribution
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
Chart 2GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1-2018 Government Bond Performance Attribution By Country
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
Chart 3GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1-2018 Spread Product Performance Attribution By Sector
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
The hits from the overweight positions in U.S. corporate debt were the most surprising, given that the U.S. economy and corporate profits are still expanding at a solid pace. That would typically keep corporate credit spreads well-behaved, especially when U.S. Treasury yields are rising or stable as was the case in the first quarter. Yet volatility has spiked and stayed elevated in response to heightened uncertainty over slowing global growth momentum, rising U.S. inflation and worries about future U.S. trade policy. Investors have demanded moderately higher credit risk premiums in the U.S. as a result, to the detriment of U.S. corporate bond performance. This can be seen in Chart 4, which presents the returns of the individual countries and spread product sectors in the GFIS model bond portfolio. The returns are hedged into U.S. dollars (we do not take active currency risk in this portfolio) and also adjusted to reflect duration differences between each country/sector and the overall custom benchmark index for the model portfolio. We have also color coded the bars in each chart to reflect our recommended investment stance for each market.2 On this "apples-for-apples" basis, U.S. IG corporates were the worst performing fixed income market in the first quarter of 2018. Chart 4Ranking The Winners & Losers From The Model Portfolio In Q1
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
Looking ahead, we see no need yet to get out of our recommended overweight in global spread product or underweight in global government bond exposure (Chart 5). While there are some signs of slowing growth momentum in major economies (euro area, China), a deeper slowdown is not being heralded by leading economic indicators, which continue to rise. Much of the global economy continues to operate at or beyond full employment, which will continue to put moderate upward pressure on inflation rates. This will force central banks to maintain a relatively hawkish bias, despite more elevated financial market volatility. The most likely outcomes are still more bearish for government bonds than for corporate credit. Chart 5We're Sticking With Our##BR##Spread Product Overweight
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
Having said that - the higher volatility environment does argue for some reduction in the size of the spread product overweight in the model portfolio. Especially after we consider some scenario analysis on returns, as we discuss in the next section. Bottom Line: The GFIS recommended model bond portfolio returned -0.55% (hedged into U.S. dollars) in the first quarter of 2018, underperforming the custom benchmark index by -11bps. The overweight to U.S. corporate bonds was the main drag on performance, thanks to the more elevated level of market volatility and spread widening during the quarter. Stress Tests & Scenario Analysis A common analytical tool used by professional fund managers is to perform "stress tests" on their portfolios. This is done to estimate the size of potential losses that could occur after major market moves, typically those that went against current positioning in a portfolio. Those estimates are critical to the effective risk management of a portfolio. As part of the ongoing development of the infrastructure for our model bond portfolio framework, we are introducing scenario analysis and stress testing of our current recommended allocations. The goal is to determine the magnitude of potential returns that could be expected under our base case and alternative scenarios. This is meant to complement the main risk management tool that we added last year, a "risk budget" based on the tracking error (i.e. volatility difference) of the portfolio versus our custom benchmark.3 We have deliberately been targeting a modest tracking error for our model portfolio, given the historical richness (low yields, tight spreads) of so many parts of the global bond universe. Yet our estimate of the GFIS model bond portfolio's tracking error has fallen even below the low end of the 40-60bp range that we have been targeting (Chart 6).4 Chart 6Lower Tracking Error Through Higher##BR##Corporate Bond Volatility
Lower Tracking Error Through Higher Corporate Bond Volatility
Lower Tracking Error Through Higher Corporate Bond Volatility
This appears to be due to an odd development. The model bond portfolio's volatility was running below that of its benchmark index over the past year, but with the increase in the return volatility of U.S. IG corporate debt - the biggest overweight within spread product - the portfolio's volatility has been converging to that of the benchmark from below, hence lowering the tracking error. In other words, being overweight U.S. IG was a portfolio diversifier last year, but that is no longer the case. This obviously highlights some of the limitations of using tracking error as the sole risk management tool for a bond portfolio. Shifting cross-asset correlations and volatilities can wreak havoc on any "guesstimate" of a portfolio's underlying risk. A more simple solution is to conduct scenario analysis of expected returns, then shock the analysis for changes in the underlying assumptions. The key is having a reasonable framework for estimating returns for various asset classes. For our purposes in the model portfolio, we are using a simple approach to forecast the expected returns. We use a factor-based framework that models changes in global bond yields as a function of changes in the following four variables: the U.S. dollar, the price of oil, the fed funds rate and the VIX index. We show the regression results of our factor-based modeling of yield changes for each spread sector in our model bond portfolio in Table 2A. We ran the regressions for different time horizons, but we decided on using the post-crisis period since 2009 in all cases. We also attempted to model the yield changes of government bonds using those same four factors, but the R-squareds for all those regressions were far too low to make them useful. We instead used a simple approach of calculating the beta since 2009 of changes in individual bond yields to changes in U.S. Treasury yields for each corresponding maturity bucket. We present those yield betas in Table 2B. Table 2AFactor Regressions Used To Estimate Spread Product Yield Changes
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
Table 2BEstimated Government Bond Yield Betas To U.S. Treasuries
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
With these tools, we can forecast returns for each bond sector under different scenarios. We can then use those forecasts to predict the expected return for our model bond portfolio under those same scenarios. In Tables 3A & 3B. We show three differing scenarios, with all the following changes occurring over a one-year horizon: Table 3AScenario Analysis For The GFIS Model Portfolio
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
Table 3BU.S. Treasury Yield Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
Our Base Case: the Fed delivers another 75bps of rate hikes, the U.S. dollar rises by 5%, oil prices rise by 20% (the non-consensus view of BCA's commodity strategists), the VIX index stays unchanged at current elevated levels and there is a modest bear steepening of the U.S. Treasury curve. A Very Hawkish Fed: the Fed delivers 150bps of rate hikes, the U.S. dollar rises by 10%, oil prices fall by 10%, the VIX index increases by ten points from current levels and there is a sharp bear flattening of the U.S. Treasury curve. Chart 7U.S. IG Corporates Have A##BR##High Yield Beta (a.k.a. Duration)
U.S. IG Corporates Have A High Yield Beta (a.k.a. Duration)
U.S. IG Corporates Have A High Yield Beta (a.k.a. Duration)
A Very Dovish Fed: the Fed only hikes rates by 25bps, the U.S. dollar falls by 5%, oil prices fall by 5%, the VIX index increases by five points from current levels and there is a modest bull steepening of the U.S. Treasury curve. In Table 3A, we also show the expected yield changes generated by our regressions for each spread product sector and the yield betas to U.S. Treasuries for each government bond market. This produces expected returns for the GFIS model bond portfolio, which are shown in the top part of the table. In our base case, the portfolio is expected to outperform the benchmark by +42bps, but underperform by nearly equivalent amounts in both alternative scenarios. In the bottom part of the table, we show expected returns where we reduce our large overweight to U.S. IG corporates. The latter has a high sensitivity to rising global government bond yields compared to some of our other significant overweights like Japanese government debt and U.S. high-yield (Chart 7). We then take that reduced U.S. IG weighting and increase the exposure to euro area and EM corporate bonds. This adjusted portfolio results in higher excess returns not only in our base case (now +78bps) but even in the "very hawkish Fed" scenario (now +8bps). The "very dovish Fed" scenario produces a similar loss in this scenario (now -37bps), but that is to be expected since this includes a fall in global bond yields that would hurt our current underweight duration stance (Chart 8). Importantly, this adjusted portfolio would not alter the positive carry of the model portfolio (i.e. the portfolio yield remains at 16bps above that of the custom benchmark index, Chart 9) Chart 8Flattening Yield Curves##BR##Have Also Hurt Returns
Flattening Yield Curves Have Also Hurt Returns
Flattening Yield Curves Have Also Hurt Returns
Chart 9Some Help From##BR##Positive Carry
Some Help From Positive Carry
Some Help From Positive Carry
Based on this scenario analysis, we are going to implement the changes in the bottom half of Table 3A. We are cutting our overweight to U.S. IG corporates in half (which still leaves us overweight), raising euro area IG and HY corporate exposure to neutral and reducing the size of our EM corporate underweight. The changes to the model portfolio can be found on Page 14. These changes will reduce our exposure to a sector that not only has become riskier, but which also looks relatively expensive to U.S. high-yield (Chart 10) and which has been underperforming euro area (Chart 11) and EM equivalents (Chart 12). Chart 10U.S. IG Looks More##BR##Expensive Than U.S. HY
U.S. IG Looks More Expensive Than U.S. HY
U.S. IG Looks More Expensive Than U.S. HY
Chart 11An Unexpected Underperformance##BR##Of U.S. IG vs. European Corporates
An Unexpected Underperformance Of U.S. IG vs. European Corporates
An Unexpected Underperformance Of U.S. IG vs. European Corporates
Chart 12An Unexpected Underperformance##BR##Of U.S. IG Vs. Versus EM Corporates
An Unexpected Underperformance Of U.S. IG Vs. Versus EM Corporates
An Unexpected Underperformance Of U.S. IG Vs. Versus EM Corporates
Bottom Line: We introduce a simple framework to conduct scenario analysis and stress testing of the model bond portfolio. Our conclusion is that some shifting in our corporate bond allocations - reducing exposure to U.S. investment grade, increasing exposure to euro area and emerging market corporates - can actually help eliminate expected losses in scenarios that run counter to our base case. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 The GFIS model bond portfolio custom benchmark index is the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index, but with allocations to global high-yield corporate debt replacing very high quality spread product (i.e. AA-rated). We believe this to be more indicative of the typical internal benchmark used by global multi-sector fixed income managers. 2 For Italy & Spain, the bars have two colors since the portfolio weights were changed in mid-February, when we upgraded Italian debt to neutral at the expense of a reduction in Spanish government bond exposure. 3 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "Adding A Risk Management Framework To Our Model Bond Portfolio", dated June 20th 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 4 In general, we aim to target a tracking error no greater than 100bps. We think this is reasonable for a portfolio where currency exposure is fully hedged and less than 5% of the portfolio benchmark is in bonds with ratings below investment grade. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns