Gov Sovereigns/Treasurys
Long-time subscriber Mr. X recently visited our office to discuss three issues: Brexit, the outlook for China and the seeming contraction between the performance of equity and bond markets. This <i>Special Report</i> is a transcript of our conversation and, not surprisingly, the broad conclusions supported a cautious investment strategy.
A spike in economic uncertainty explains the recent move lower in Treasury yields. Given the resilience of global growth, we expect yields to rise as uncertainty ebbs in the coming months.
Today, on a tactical basis, we are moving our allocation on EM hard currency bonds to neutral from underweight. In this <i>Special Report</i>, we elaborate on the reasons leading to this decision.
The blowout June nonfarm payrolls report reflects a tightening labor market, consistent with stronger ISM manufacturing and non-manufacturing readings. This will take time to impact Fed policy.
Please see attached our <i>Third Quarter Strategy Outlook<i/> which discusses the major investment themes and views we see playing out for the rest of the year.
We test three channels of contagion from the Brexit shock: political, banking system, and economic.
A number of divergences have emerged in global financial markets. These gaps are unsustainable. The recent improvement in Asian trade/manufacturing has been largely due to firming demand for electronics/semiconductors. Meanwhile, demand/output for industrial goods and basic materials - the areas leveraged to Chinese capital spending - remain weak. Fixed-income traders should bet on yield curve steepening in India: receive 1-year/pay 10-year swap rates.
Yield and Protector Portfolios should continue to benefit in current environment. Equities face seasonal headwinds.
A benchmark overall duration stance is still warranted, as central banks will maintain exceptionally accommodative monetary policies to offset potential Brexit-related shocks to confidence.
Some near-term upside in Treasury yields is very likely as flight to safety flows begin to unwind. However, given that global growth divergences remain in place, we will continue to look for an opportunity to increase duration on any meaningful back-up in yields.