Gov Sovereigns/Treasurys
Feature “People have been asking me whether this is the time to buy. My answer is more nuanced: it’s probably a time to buy.” Howard Marks, Oaktree Capital, Monthly Memo March 2020 Markets have moved dramatically since we published our Monthly Portfolio Update on March 2. Global stocks have fallen by 27% since then. The 10-year US Treasury yield fell from 1.2% to 0.4% before rebounding to 0.8%. And there have been some strange market moves: the US dollar fell then rebounded, and the classic safe haven, gold, has fallen by 7%. Investors are struggling with how to think about this environment, and how to position. Chart 1Risk Assets Should Bottom When New Ex-China Cases Peak
Risk Assets Should Bottom When New Ex-China Cases Peak
Risk Assets Should Bottom When New Ex-China Cases Peak
Table 1US Healthcare Is Top Quality
A Time To Buy, Or A Time To Panic?
A Time To Buy, Or A Time To Panic?
Our view has not greatly changed. We still believe that risk assets will bottom around the time when global COVID-19 cases peak. They showed signs of a rebound when cases in China peaked on February 13. And they started their recent crash when ex-China cases began to accelerate dramatically (Chart 1). It is likely – and well anticipated – that there will be a sharp rises in cases in the US (and probably the UK and Canada too) over the coming two or three weeks. It is wrong to think, though, that the US is particularly badly prepared for this. The US has a high standard of healthcare, with many more intensive-care beds per person than other developed countries (Table 1) – though it is worrying that some 20% of the US population is uninsured. We see two possibilities for how the pandemic will pan out in coming weeks: The US is the last big cluster and new cases peak there in early April. This causes a two-quarter recession. But if COVID-19 turns out to be seasonal (it has not spread much in hot countries such as Singapore, or in the southern hemisphere where it is now summer – Chart 2) and by April and May it peters out. US consumers stop going out for a while (the professional hockey, basketball, and soccer seasons have been put on hold) and so demand falls. Typically, stocks fall by 25-30% in a recession of this type (Table 2) – and so this is already close to being discounted. There are no longer-term impacts, and soon the world economy is getting back close to normal. Chart 2Will Hot Weather End The Pandemic?
A Time To Buy, Or A Time To Panic?
A Time To Buy, Or A Time To Panic?
Table 2Peak-To-Trough Falls In Equities In Bear Markets
A Time To Buy, Or A Time To Panic?
A Time To Buy, Or A Time To Panic?
The pandemic continues for months. Governments are able to slow contagion via social distancing in order to spread out the pressure on their health services over a longer period. But ultimately one-half to two-thirds of the world’s population gets the disease and the death rate among those people is 0.7% (the rate in Korea, which extensively tested for the virus and has a good medical system). This means worldwide deaths of about 20 million, disproportionately concentrated among the over-70-year-olds and those with chronic illnesses (Chart 3). The disease could spread to poor countries, such as India and Africa, where healthcare services would not be able to cope. The global economy would slow significantly, causing a severe recession. There would be second-round effects: for example, a blow-up in the US corporate credit markets, where debt is already high as a percentage of GDP (Chart 4), which could cause banks to drastically tighten lending conditions. This could cause problems with foreign-currency EM borrowers. It could trigger another euro zone crisis, as banks in southern Europe prove unable to cope with rising defaults. In this scenario, the peak-to-trough decline in global equities could be 40-50%. Chart 3COVID-19 Mostly Kills Old And Sick People
A Time To Buy, Or A Time To Panic?
A Time To Buy, Or A Time To Panic?
Chart 4US Corporate Debt Is A Vulnerability
US Corporate Debt Is A Vulnerability
US Corporate Debt Is A Vulnerability
In our last Monthly, we talked about the usefulness of a Bayesian approach in this sort of uncertain environment. We ascribed a “prior” probability of 10-20% for the latter scenario. The probability has now risen, to perhaps 25%. Chart 5Close To Capitulation
Close To Capitulation
Close To Capitulation
But the potential upside from Scenario 1) is considerable. Central banks around the world are throwing everything at the problem. Countries from the UK and Italy, to Japan and Australia have rolled out big fiscal packages this week. The key now is what will the US do. How positively would markets react if the US in coming days scripted a coordinated announcement, with the Fed cutting rates to zero, and the White House and Congress agreeing an $800 billion fiscal package. The Fed is likely to do this – indeed the market is pricing in the Fed Funds Rate at zero by the next FOMC meeting on March 18. The dynamics of fiscal stimulus are more complicated – the Democrats don’t want to give President Trump a boost that will help his election prospects, but they don’t want to be seen to be obstructive in a time of emergency either.1 So what should investors do? We have been tempted in recent days to lower our Overweight recommendation on equities, which has evidently proved wrong, to Neutral. But we fear it is too late to do this, particularly with equities having fallen by 15% over the past two days. There is probably still some downside. We would now look for signs of a bottoming-out, most notably the peak in new COVID-19 cases outside China, but also evidence of capitulation by investors (Chart 5). Moreover, we would pay attention to potential upside surprises (in addition to a Fed/White House/Congress joint package, maybe a making-up between Russia and Saudi Arabia on oil production cuts). In the meantime, when markets move as violently as they have, often the baby gets thrown out with the bathwater. There are many individual securities, in both debt and equity markets, that look very attractively valued now. For example, we see a lot of attraction in high-dividend-yield stocks, which might appeal to investors who no longer see the point of investing in government bonds, where the upside – even in a severe recession – is likely to be very limited. Table 3 shows a screening of large-cap stocks in developed markets with a dividend yield of more than 10%, taken from BCA Research’s ETS quants screening service. While many of these are in the Energy sector (where the price/book ratio is now below the lows of 2008 and 2015 – Chart 6), quality names among European Financials and Asia Industrials are also prominent. Table 3Stocks With Dividend Yield Above 10%
A Time To Buy, Or A Time To Panic?
A Time To Buy, Or A Time To Panic?
Chart 6Energy Sector Valuation At Record Low
Energy Sector Valuation At Record Low
Energy Sector Valuation At Record Low
For investors who want to remain risk-off, we would not recommend government bonds as a hedge. It is notable that the Swiss 10-year government bond yield has not fallen in the recent melt-down. They are simply at their theoretical lower bound. German Bunds must be close. The Fed has been clear that it will not cut policy rates below zero, which means that the lower limit for US Treasurys is probably around 0% too. Even in the severest recession, therefore, the upside for Treasurys is limited to 9% (Table 4). This means returns are likely to be very asymmetrical since, in a rebound in risk appetite, yields could rise sharply. Table 4Little Upside From Government Bonds
A Time To Buy, Or A Time To Panic?
A Time To Buy, Or A Time To Panic?
We prefer cash as a hedge. This gives investors dry powder for use when they do want to reenter risk assets. We have been recommending gold, and it will probably continue to serve as a safe haven in the event of our most pessimistic scenario happening. But it looks very overbought in the short term (Chart 7) – as demonstrated by the way that it has recently been correcting even on days when equities fall. TIPS offer a better hedge than nominal bonds, given how low inflation expectations have fallen – the 5-year/5-year forwards now point to CPI inflation in 2025-2030 averaging 1.5% (Chart 8). This implies – highly unrealistically – that the Fed will miss its 2% PCE inflation target by 1 percentage point a year over that period. Chart 7Gold Is Overbought
Gold Is Overbought
Gold Is Overbought
Chart 8Inflation Expectations Unrealistically Low
Inflation Expectations Unrealistically Low
Inflation Expectations Unrealistically Low
Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Chief Global Asset Allocation Strategist garry@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Geopolitical Strategy, Weekly Report, "GeoRisk Update: Leap Year, Or Steep Year?" available at gps.bcaresearch.com.
On a happy personal note, I will be away on paternity leave for a short time, reacquainting myself with nappies. As such, there will be no Weekly Reports for the next two weeks, but you will receive two excellent Special Reports penned by my colleagues. Given the ongoing turbulence in the financial markets I will also send out short Alerts as and when necessary. Highlights After the worst three-day rout for stocks versus bonds in living memory, six-month investors have fully capitulated, and the markets are now priced for a technical recession. If the recession can be limited to two quarters, stocks are more likely to outperform long-dated bonds by 12 percent than to underperform by a further 12 percent. Tactical trade: overweight S&P500 versus German 30-year bund, currency hedged, setting a 12 percent profit target with symmetrical stop-loss. The closer that a bond yield gets to the -1 percent lower bound, the more limited becomes the possibility for a further yield decline. Overweight positive yielding bonds versus negative yielding bonds, currency hedged. The most attractive structural pair is overweight the US 30-year T-bond versus the German 30-year bund. Feature Chart of the WeekWidow Makers: Shorting Bonds In Japan, Switzerland... And Now The US
Widow Makers: Shorting Bonds In Japan, Switzerland... And Now The US
Widow Makers: Shorting Bonds In Japan, Switzerland... And Now The US
A Recession Is Now Fully Priced Financial markets have fully priced a downturn when the time horizon of investors that have fully capitulated = the length of the downturn. A week can be a long time in the financial markets. Seven days ago, the markets were not priced for a global recession. Then came the worst three-day rout for stocks versus bonds in living memory, in which stocks underperformed long-dated bonds by 25 percent (Chart I-2).1 Chart I-2The Worst 3-Day Rout: Stocks Underperformed Bonds By 25 Percent
The Worst 3-Day Rout: Stocks Underperformed Bonds By 25 Percent
The Worst 3-Day Rout: Stocks Underperformed Bonds By 25 Percent
The upshot is that investors with six-month horizons have now fully capitulated, meaning the markets are now fully priced for a technical recession (Chart I-3) – defined as a downturn lasting two straight quarters. But the markets are not priced for a more prolonged downturn lasting longer than two quarters. Raising the question: can the downturn be limited to the first half of the year? Chart I-3Six-Month Investors Have Capitulated, Meaning A Recession Is Fully Priced
Six-Month Investors Have Capitulated, Meaning A Recession Is Fully Priced
Six-Month Investors Have Capitulated, Meaning A Recession Is Fully Priced
The pessimistic case is that the coronavirus can neither be contained nor normalised by the summer. Or that even if its direct impact ebbs, there might be second-round effects. A major credit default from, say, a distressed airline or other travel-dependent company could trigger aftershocks in the financial system. Moreover, the recent collapse in the oil price injects new uncertainty into the energy patch as well as into geopolitics. The optimistic case is that large segments of the economy are set to receive a 2009 type triple-boost: from a sharp deceleration in bond yields; from a sharp deceleration in the oil price; and from government spending and/or tax cuts – creating a potent cocktail of stimulants for the second half of this year. Investors with six-month horizons have now fully capitulated. Balancing the pessimistic and optimistic cases, we assess that the downturn can be limited to two quarters – albeit this cannot be our highest conviction view, as we are not experts in epidemiology or immunology. Nevertheless, if this assumption holds, there is now a higher probability that stocks outperform long-dated bonds by 12 percent than that they underperform by a further 12 percent. This three-month tactical trade has a slight twist. It is best expressed as: overweight US stocks versus European bonds (currency hedged). This is because core European bond yields are close to their lower limit, meaning that core European bond prices are close to their mathematical upper limit. All of which brings us to a much higher conviction recommendation. The ‘Widow Maker’ Is Back First the widow maker came to Japan, next to Switzerland, then to the rest of Northern Europe. Now the widow maker has come to America. In the financial lexicon, ‘widow maker’ refers to the fatal strategy of shorting high-quality government bonds in an era when yields have been grinding inexorably lower. Any investment manager who has dared to bet that government bond yields would rise, whether starting from 3 percent, 2 percent, or even 1 percent, and whether in Japan, Switzerland, or even the US – has ended up being carried out of their job in a box, feet first (Chart of the Week). Except that in Switzerland over the past year, the widow maker trade has not been as fatal as it used to be. While the 5-year yield in the US has collapsed by 200 bps, in Switzerland it has edged down by just 20 bps (Chart I-4). Put another way, shorting the US 5-year T-bond has cost 11 percent, but shorting the Swiss 5-year bond has been relatively painless (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Swiss Bond Yields Cannot Fall Much...
Swiss Bond Yields Cannot Fall Much...
Swiss Bond Yields Cannot Fall Much...
Chart I-5...Meaning Swiss Bond Prices Cannot Rise
...Meaning Swiss Bond Prices Cannot Rise
...Meaning Swiss Bond Prices Cannot Rise
The simple reason is that Swiss government bond yields are now very close to their lower bound. The Lower Bound To Bond Yields Is Around -1 Percent The practical lower bound to the policy interest rate is -1 percent, because -1 percent counterbalances the storage cost of holding physical cash and/or other stores of value.2 Imagine the policy rate fell to well below -1 percent. If banks passed this deeply negative rate to their depositors, it would be logical for the bank depositors to flee wholesale into cheaper-to-hold physical cash. This deposit flight would kill the banking system. But if the banks didn’t pass the deeply negative policy rate to their depositors, it would wipe out the banks’ net interest margin – the gap between rates on loans and deposits. This inability to make profits would also kill the banking system. At deeply negative interest rates, bank deposits would flee. Could policymakers just abolish physical cash, forcing us all into ‘digital cash’ with unlimited negative interest rates? No, because that would just push us into other stores of value: for example, gold, or ‘decentralised’ cryptocurrencies. The common objections to cryptocurrencies are that their susceptibility to volatility and fraud makes them a poor store of value. But both objections are also true for gold. Yet who has ever argued that gold cannot be a store of value just because it is volatile and can be stolen (Chart I-6)! Chart I-6Gold Is A Store Of Value Despite Its Volatility
Gold Is A Store Of Value Despite Its Volatility
Gold Is A Store Of Value Despite Its Volatility
The lower bound to the policy rate at around -1 percent also sets the lower bound of the bond yield, because a bond yield is just the expected average policy rate over the bond’s lifetime. For completeness, we should mention one technical exception. If bond investors price in the possibility of being repaid in a different and more valuable currency, the bond yield will carry a further redenomination discount as an offset for the potential currency gain. This is relevant to euro area bonds because there remains the remote possibility of euro disintegration. Therefore, bonds which carry the small possibility of a currency redenomination gain – notably, German bunds – possess a small additional discount on their yields. But in jurisdictions where no currency redenomination is possible, such as Switzerland or Sweden, the practical lower bound to bond yields is around -1 percent. Overweight Positive Yielding Bonds Versus Negative Yielding Bonds Switzerland teaches us that the closer that a bond yield gets to the -1 percent lower bound, the more limited becomes the possibility for a further yield decline (price gain), whereas the possibility for a yield increase (price loss) stays unlimited. Making such bonds a ‘lose-lose’ proposition. The convergence in bond yields has much further to go. Therefore, our high conviction recommendation is to short negative yielding bonds in relative terms. In other words, overweight positive yielding bonds versus negative yielding bonds. And currency hedge the position – as, right now, the cost of currency hedging is low. The recommendation is applicable for both tactical (3-month) and structural (2-year plus) investment horizons, and it is applicable for all bond maturities: 5-year, 10-year, and 30-year. Given where yields now stand, the most attractive structural pair is overweight the US 30-year T-bond versus the German 30-year bund (Chart I-7 and Chart I-8). Chart I-7Expect Yields To Converge At 10-Year Maturities...
Expect Yields To Converge At 10-Year Maturities...
Expect Yields To Converge At 10-Year Maturities...
Chart I-8...And At Ultra-Long ##br##Maturities
...And At Ultra-Long Maturities
...And At Ultra-Long Maturities
Our structural overweight to a 50:50 combination of U.S. T-bonds and Italian BTPs versus a 50:50 combination of German Bunds and Spanish Bonos at 30-year bond maturities is up by 7 percent in just nine months. But the convergence in yields has much further to go (Chart I-9). Chart I-9Overweight Positive Yielding Bonds Versus Negative Yielding Bonds
Overweight Positive Yielding Bonds Versus Negative Yielding Bonds
Overweight Positive Yielding Bonds Versus Negative Yielding Bonds
Fractal Trading System* As discussed, this week’s recommended trade is to overweight stocks versus long-dated bonds expressed as overweight S&P500 versus German 30-year bund. The profit target is 12 percent with a symmetrical stop-loss. In a turbulent week for financial markets, overweight Poland versus Portugal achieved its profit target, short US utilities versus oil and gas and short EUR/CHF hit their stop-losses, and short palladium versus nickel moved comfortably into profit. The rolling 1-year win ratio now stands at 62 percent. Chart I-10Poland Vs. Portugal
Poland Vs. Portugal
Poland Vs. Portugal
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. * 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. Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 MSCI All-Country World Index (in dollars) versus US 30-year T-bond. 2 The cost of holding physical cash or gold is the cost of its safe storage. Fractal Trading Model
The Widow Maker Is Back... And A Recession Is Fully Priced
The Widow Maker Is Back... And A Recession Is Fully Priced
The Widow Maker Is Back... And A Recession Is Fully Priced
The Widow Maker Is Back... And A Recession Is Fully Priced
Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations
The Widow Maker Is Back... And A Recession Is Fully Priced
The Widow Maker Is Back... And A Recession Is Fully Priced
The Widow Maker Is Back... And A Recession Is Fully Priced
The Widow Maker Is Back... And A Recession Is Fully Priced
The Widow Maker Is Back... And A Recession Is Fully Priced
The Widow Maker Is Back... And A Recession Is Fully Priced
The Widow Maker Is Back... And A Recession Is Fully Priced
The Widow Maker Is Back... And A Recession Is Fully Priced
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 - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Bear markets occur in phases, and their narrative can mutate. What began as a selloff caused by the coronavirus outbreak could well mutate into an oil crash-led selloff, and then mutate again into a selloff due to policy omnipotence, or something else. We are reiterating our short positions in the EM equity index and a basket of EM currencies versus the US dollar as well as our defensive positioning in EM domestic bonds and credit markets. We are taking profits on our long gold/short oil and copper trade. Oil prices may stabilize, but risks are still skewed to the downside. We are also booking gains on our long Russian domestic bonds/short oil position. Feature Chart I-1A Record Low Currency VOL Is Followed By Major Market Disturbances
A Record Low Currency VOL Is Followed By Major Market Disturbances
A Record Low Currency VOL Is Followed By Major Market Disturbances
Global financial markets are witnessing the unwinding of the policy put. For the past several years, the consensus in the global investment community was that risk assets could not go down because of policy puts from the Federal Reserve, the US Treasury and President Trump, the European Central Bank and the Chinese authorities. Similarly, crude oil prices had been supported by OPEC 2.0’s put from December 2016 until recently. The latest panic and broad-based liquidation of risk assets has been due not only to fear and uncertainty related to the rapid escalation in COVID-19 cases around the world, but also to investor realization that these policy puts are ineffectual. The Fed’s 50-basis-point intra-meeting rate cut proved incapable of stabilizing global risk assets. Investors have begun to doubt the efficacy of policy puts and have thrown in the proverbial towel. Crucially, the high-speed and intensity of the selloff was due to widespread complacency and overbought conditions in risk assets. In our January 23 report, we quoted Bob Prince, co-CIO of Bridgewater, who stated in Davos that “…we have probably seen the end of the boom-bust cycle.” This comment was consistent with prevalent complacency in global financial markets, reflected in very tight credit spreads worldwide, high US equity multiples and record-low implied volatility in various asset classes. In the same January 23 report, we wrote: “Any time an influential person has made a similar declaration in the past, it marked a major turning point in financial markets. Remarkably, implied volatility for the US dollar has plummeted to a record low, as it has for EM currencies and a wide range of equity markets. Chart I-1 illustrates the implied volatility for EM currencies and the US dollar. Such low levels of implied currency market volatility historically preceded major moves in currency markets and often led to a material selloff in broad EM financial markets.” In that same report , we recommended going long implied EM currency volatility. Since then JP Morgan’s EM currency volatility has risen from 6% to 10%. What began as a selloff caused by the coronavirus outbreak could well mutate into an oil crash-led selloff, and then mutate again into a selloff due to policy omnipotence, or something else. Consistent with this thesis, we reinstated our short EM equity index recommendation in the following week’s report – on January 30. The MSCI EM stock index is down 11% since then. Our target is 800, which is 18% below current levels (Chart I-2, top panel). Chart I-2EM Stocks: A Breakdown In The Making
EM Stocks: A Breakdown In The Making
EM Stocks: A Breakdown In The Making
Market Narratives Mutate Chart I-3VIX Surge In Early 2018 Was A Trigger Not Cause Of Selloff
VIX Surge In Early 2018 Was A Trigger Not Cause Of Selloff
VIX Surge In Early 2018 Was A Trigger Not Cause Of Selloff
Narratives of all large market moves are always expounded in retrospect. Only after a selloff is well-advanced do investors and commentators come up with reasons for it and build a plausible narrative describing it. Critically, bear markets occur in phases, and their narrative can evolve. What began as a selloff caused by the coronavirus outbreak could well mutate into an oil crash-led selloff, and then mutate again into a selloff due to policy omnipotence, or something else. For example, the early 2018 selloff in global equities and industrial commodities was at the time attributed to the spike in US equity volatility (Chart I-3, top and middle panels). In retrospect, January 2018 marked a major top in the global business cycle (Chart I-3, bottom line). Hence, the true reason for the late-January 2018 top in global stocks and industrial commodities was a downturn in global manufacturing and trade and not the surge in the VIX. The key question investors are currently wrestling with is the following: How deep will this selloff be, and how long will it last? Our view is that the selloff in EM and global risk assets is not yet over. As such, we are reiterating our short positions in the EM equity index and a basket of EM currencies versus the US dollar, as well as our defensive positioning in EM domestic bonds and credit markets. Gauging The Downside There is no doubt that global growth will be affected by the spread of COVID-19 and the precautionary measures taken by the authorities, companies and households around the world to contain the outbreak. Further, growth visibility is extremely low, and that uncertainty is raising the risk premiums that investors demand. The latter is weighing on risk assets in general and global share prices in particular. Presently, precise forecasts for GDP growth and a potential trajectory of COVID-19 cases are not credible, and hence cannot be relied upon to formulate a sound investment strategy. If the current bloodbath in risk assets persists, a market bottom could be reached well before bad economic data are released or COVID-19 infection cases peak. Given the uncertainty related to both the global growth trajectory and the Covid-19 epidemic, the only way for investors to gauge a market bottom is to continuously examine valuations, technicals and market internals. With respect to valuations and technicals, we have the following observations: The EM equity index seems to breaking below its major support lines. If this breakdowns transpires, there is an air pocket until the index reaches its next technical support, which is 18% below its current level (please refer to the top panel of Chart I-2 on page 3). If the EM MSCI equity index drops to this support range, it would be trading at 11 times its trailing earnings (please refer to the bottom panel of Chart I-2 on page 3). At those levels, the EM equity index would be discounting a lot of bad news, making it immune to dismal economic data and general uncertainty. For the S&P 500, if the current defense line – which held been during 2011, 2015 and 2018 selloffs – is violated, the next long-term technical support is around 2400-2500 (Chart I-4). Inflows to EM fixed-income funds were enormous in 2019. Meanwhile, EM corporate and sovereign spreads have broken out (Chart I-5). Provided this selloff commenced from very overbought and expensive levels, the odds are that liquidation forces will not abate right now and that the selloff in EM fixed income has further to go. Chart I-4S&P 500: Where Technical Support Lies?
S&P 500: Where Technical Support Lies?
S&P 500: Where Technical Support Lies?
Chart I-5EM Sovereign And Corporate Spreads Have Broken Out
EM Sovereign And Corporate Spreads Have Broken Out
EM Sovereign And Corporate Spreads Have Broken Out
In a nutshell, we suspect that EM local currency bonds and credit markets received a lot of inflows from European investors in recent years because yields were negative across European fixed-income markets. A weak euro was a boon for European investors investing in EM. That, however, is reversing. Since the recent sharp appreciation in the euro and the nosedive in EM currencies, EM financial market returns in euros have collapsed. This will likely prompt an exodus of European investors from EM financial markets. Chart I-6A Major Breakdown In This Cyclical Indicator
A Major Breakdown In This Cyclical Indicator
A Major Breakdown In This Cyclical Indicator
Even though the EM equity index is not expensive or overbought, rising EM USD and local currency bond yields herald lower share prices, as we discussed at length in last week’s report. Our Risk-On/Safe-Haven currency ratio1 has plummeted below its major technical support and the next level is significantly lower. In other words, this indicator is also in an air pocket (Chart I-6). Given it is extremely well-correlated with EM share prices, the latter will not bottom until this indicator stabilizes. Technical configurations of high-beta and cyclical segments of the global equity universe are consistent with failed breakouts. Such a profile is typically not followed by a correction, but by a major drawdown. These include the European aggregate equity index, the Nikkei, global industrials and US high-beta stocks (Chart I-7). Chart I-7AFailed Breakouts Are Often Followed By Large Drawdowns
Failed Breakouts Are Often Followed By Large Drawdowns
Failed Breakouts Are Often Followed By Large Drawdowns
Chart I-7BFailed Breakouts Are Often Followed By Large Drawdowns
Failed Breakouts Are Often Followed By Large Drawdowns
Failed Breakouts Are Often Followed By Large Drawdowns
Chart I-8The Global Stocks-To-Bonds Ratio Is Back To 2011 Levels
The Global Stocks-To-Bonds Ratio Is Back To 2011 Levels
The Global Stocks-To-Bonds Ratio Is Back To 2011 Levels
Finally, the global stock-to-bond ratio has decisively broken below the upward sloping channel that has been in place since 2009 (Chart I-8). Typically, when a market or ratio experiences such a major breakdown, the recovery does not occur quickly and is unlikely to be V-shaped. In short, the structural breakdown in the global stocks-to-bond ratio suggests that global share prices will likely stay under downward pressure for some time. Bottom Line: Odds are that risk assets remain in a liquidation phase and investors should avoid catching a falling knife. The odds are also high that EM share prices in US dollar terms have another 18% downside. We reckon at those levels – where the MSCI EM equity index is around 800 – it would be safe to start accumulating EM equities, even if the global growth outlook remains mired in uncertainty. For now, we recommend playing EM on the short side. What To Do With Oil Plays Despite periodic spikes in crude prices over the past few years, we have held our conviction that oil is in a structural bear market. We doubted the sustainability of the OPEC 2.0 arrangement, arguing that Russia would not cooperate with Saudi Arabia in the long term. Russia did cooperate much longer than we had expected, temporarily supporting oil prices. Ultimately, Russian President Vladimir Putin abandoned the cartel late last week, and the Saudis have hit back with massive price discounts amid large output increases. Consequently, oil prices have crashed and are presently oversold (Chart I-9). Given the uncertainty related to both the global growth trajectory and the Covid-19 epidemic, the only way for investors to gauge a market bottom is to continuously examine valuations, technicals and market internals. However, there will be no rapprochement between the Saudis and the Russians for some time. Given the drop in demand amid sharp increases in supply, crude oil prices may well slide further. Since July 11, 2019, we have been recommending a long gold/short oil and copper trade (Chart I-10). This position has generated a large 40% gain. Today, we are taking profits on this trade. Instead, we are replacing it with a new position: long gold/short copper. Chart I-9A Long-Term Profile Of Oil Prices
A Long-Term Profile Of Oil Prices
A Long-Term Profile Of Oil Prices
Chart I-10Book Profits On Long Gold / Short Oil And Copper Trade
Book Profits On Long Gold / Short Oil And Copper Trade
Book Profits On Long Gold / Short Oil And Copper Trade
Among oil plays, we have been overweight Mexico and Russia within EM, both in fixed income and equity universes. That said, for absolute return investors, we have not been recommending unhedged long positions in either Mexico or Russia because of our expectation of a drop in oil prices and the ensuing broad-based EM selloff. Regarding Russia, for investors who were looking to gain exposure to local currency bonds, we have been recommending that they hedge this position by shorting oil since November 14, 2019. This recommendation has paid off well, and we are closing this position with a 26% gain. We will be looking to buy Russian local bonds unhedged in the weeks ahead. Chart I-11Relative Performance Of Russian And Mexican Domestic Bonds Is Facing Near-Term Headwinds
Relative Performance Of Russian And Mexican Domestic Bonds Is Facing Near-Term Headwinds
Relative Performance Of Russian And Mexican Domestic Bonds Is Facing Near-Term Headwinds
In Mexico, we have also been reluctant to recommend naked exposure to local currency or US dollar bonds because of our bearish view on oil and the risk of large outflows from EM that would hurt the peso. Indeed, the oil crash and outflows from EM have led to a plunge in the Mexican currency. Instead, in Mexico we have been recommending betting on yield curve steepening. The proposition has been that short rates are anchored by a disinflationary backdrop and tight fiscal policy in Mexico while the long end of the curve could sell off in a scenario of capital outflows from EM. As with Russia, we are monitoring Mexican markets and are looking to recommend buying domestic bonds without hedging the currency risk in the weeks or months ahead. Bottom Line: We are taking profits on our long gold/short oil and copper trade. Oil prices may stabilize, but risks are still skewed to the downside. In the near term, the relative performance of Mexican and Russian stocks and local currency bonds versus their respective EM benchmarks could be undermined by capital outflows from EM in general and these countries in particular (Chart I-11). Nevertheless, both nations’ macro fundamentals remain benign, and their fixed-income and equity markets will outperform their EM peers in the medium term. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Calculated as ratio of equal-weighted average of total return indices of cad, aud, nzd, brl, idr, mxn, rub, clp & zar relative to average of jpy & chf total returns (including carry); rebased to 100 at January 2000. Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
Highlights Uncertainty & Yields: Global bond yields, driven to all-time lows as investors seek safety amid rioting markets, now discount a multi-year period of very weak global growth and inflation. Bond Portfolio Strategy: Maintain overall neutral portfolio duration exposure with so much bad news already priced into yields. Downgrade overall global spread product exposure to underweight versus governments on a tactical (0-3 months) basis given intense uncertainties on COVID-19 and oil markets. Model Bond Portfolio Changes – Governments: Upgrade countries that are more responsive to changes in the level of overall global bond yields and with room to cut interest rates (the US & Canada) to overweight, while downgrading sovereign debt with a lower “global yield beta” and less policy flexibility (Germany, France, Japan) to underweight. Model Bond Portfolio Changes – Credit: Downgrade US high-yield, euro area corporates and emerging market USD sovereigns & corporates to underweight. Feature Chart of the WeekOn The Verge Of Global ZIRP
On The Verge Of Global ZIRP
On The Verge Of Global ZIRP
The title of this report is a quote from a worried BCA client this morning, discussing his daily commute into Manhattan from the New York suburbs. We can think of no better analogy for the mood of investors in the current market panic. After having enjoyed a decade of riding the gravy train of recession-free growth and robust returns on risk assets, all underwritten by accommodative monetary policies, worries about a deflationary bust following the boom have intensified. The global spread of COVID-19, the ebbs and flows of the US presidential election and, now, a stunning collapse in oil prices – markets have simply been unable to process the investment implications of these unpredictable events all at once. At times of such stress, the obvious thing to do is to stand aside and hedge portfolios while awaiting better visibility on the uncertainties. At times of such stress, the obvious thing to do is to stand aside and hedge portfolios while awaiting better visibility on the uncertainties. It is clear that global government bonds have been a preferred hedge, with yields collapsing to record lows worldwide. While most of the market attention has been on the breathtaking fall in US yields that has pushed the entire Treasury curve below 1% as the market has moved to discount a swift move to a 0% fed funds rate. New lows were also hit yesterday in countries that had been lagging the Treasury rally: the 10-year German bund reached -0.85% yesterday, while the 10-year UK Gilt fell to an intraday all-time low of 0.08% with some shorter-maturity Gilt yields actually dipping into negative territory (Chart of the Week). The common driver of yesterday’s yield declines was the 25% plunge in global oil prices after the weekend collapse of the OPEC 2.0 alliance between Russia and Saudi Arabia. The inflation expectations component of global bond yields fell accordingly, continuing the correlation with energy prices seen over the past decade. Yet the real component of global bond yields has also been falling, with markets increasingly pricing in an extended period of weak growth and negative real interest rates – especially in the US. Collapsing US Treasury Yields Discount A Recession, Not A Financial Crisis Chart 2Re-opening Old Wounds
Re-opening Old Wounds
Re-opening Old Wounds
While this latest plunge in US equity markets has been both rapid and powerful, the damage only takes us back to levels on the S&P 500 last seen as recently as January 2019 (Chart 2). The turmoil, however, has reopened old wounds in markets that had suffered their own crises over the past decade, with European bank stocks hitting new all-time lows and credit spreads on US high-yield Energy bonds and Italian sovereign debt (versus Germany) sharply blowing out. The backdrop remains treacherous and global equity markets will likely remain under pressure until the number of new COVID-19 cases peaks outside of China (especially in the US). If there is one silver lining amidst the market carnage, it is that there appears to be few signs of 2008-style systemic financial stress. If there is one silver lining amidst the market carnage, it is that there appears to be few signs of 2008-style systemic financial stress. Bank funding indicators like Libor-OIS spreads and bank debt spreads have widened a bit over the past week but remain at very subdued levels (Chart 3). This is in sharp contrast to classic risk aversion indicators like the price of gold and the value of the Japanese yen versus the Australian dollar, which are closing in on the highs seen during the 2008 global financial crisis and 2012 European debt crisis. Chart 3A Growth Downturn, Not A Systemic Crisis
A Growth Downturn, Not A Systemic Crisis
A Growth Downturn, Not A Systemic Crisis
We interpret this as investors being far more worried about a deep global recession than another major financial crisis. That is also confirmed in the pricing of US Treasury yields, especially when looking at the real yield. Chart 4Does The UST Market Think R* Is Negative?
Does The UST Market Think R* Is Negative?
Does The UST Market Think R* Is Negative?
Chart 5Another Convexity-Fueled Bond Rally
Another Convexity-Fueled Bond Rally
Another Convexity-Fueled Bond Rally
The entire TIPS yield curve is now negative for the first time, even with the real fed funds rate below the Fed’s estimate of the “r*” neutral real rate (Chart 4). The combination of low and falling inflation expectations, and plunging real yields, indicates that the Treasury market now believes that the neutral real funds rate is not 0.8%, as suggested by the Fed’s estimate of r*, but is somewhere well below 0%. With the fed funds rate now down to 0.75% after last week’s intermeeting 50bps cut, the Treasury market is not only pricing the Fed quickly returning to the zero lower bound on the funds rate, but staying trapped at zero for a very long time. The Treasury market is not only pricing the Fed quickly returning to the zero lower bound on the funds rate, but staying trapped at zero for a very long time. Yet that may be too literal an interpretation of the incredible collapse of US Treasury yields. The power of negative convexity is also at work, driving intense demand for long-duration bonds that puts additional downward pressure on yields. Large owners of US mortgage backed securities (MBS) like the big commercial banks have seen the duration of their MBS holdings collapse as yields have fallen. The result is that banks are forced to buy huge amounts of Treasuries (or receive US dollar interest rate swaps) to hedge their duration exposure of negative convexity MBS, hyper-charging the fall in Treasury yields – perhaps over $1 trillion worth of buying, by some estimates.1 This is a similar dynamic to what occurred last summer in Europe, when sharply falling bond yields triggered convexity-related demand for duration from large asset-liability managers like pension funds, further fueling the decline in bond yields (Chart 5). Yet even allowing that some of the Treasury yield decline has been driven by a mechanical demand for duration, a 10-year US Treasury yield of 0.56% clearly discounts expectations of a US recession, as well – which appears justified by the recent performance of some critical US economic data. In Charts 6 & 7, we show a “cycle-on-cycle” analysis of some key US financial and indicators and how they behave before and after the start of the past five US recessions. The charts are set up so the vertical line represents the start of the recession, and we line up the data for the current business cycle as if the latest data point represents the start of a recession. Done this way, we can see if the current data is evolving in a similar fashion to past US economic downturns. Chart 6The US Business Cycle Looks Toppy
The US Business Cycle Looks Toppy
The US Business Cycle Looks Toppy
Chart 7COVID-19 Will Likely Trigger A Confidence-Driven US Recession
COVID-19 Will Likely Trigger A Confidence-Driven US Recession
COVID-19 Will Likely Trigger A Confidence-Driven US Recession
The charts show that the current flat 10-year/3-month US Treasury curve and steady decline in corporate profit growth are both accurately following the path entering past US recessions. Other indicators like the NFIB Small Business confidence survey, the Conference Board’s leading economic indicator and consumer confidence series typically peak between 12-18 months prior to the start of a recession, but appear to be only be peaking now. The same argument goes for initial jobless claims, which are usually rising for several months heading into a recession but remain surprisingly steady of late – a condition that seems unlikely to continue as more companies suffer virus-related hits to their sales and profits and begin to shed labor. Net-net, these reliable cyclical US data suggest that the Treasury market is right to be pricing in elevated recession risk – especially with US cases of COVID-19 starting to increase more rapidly and US financial conditions having tightened sharply in the latest market rout. Bottom Line: Global bond yields, driven to all-time lows as investors seek safety amid rioting markets, now discount a multi-year period of very weak global growth and inflation – most notably in the US. Allocation Changes To Our Model Bond Portfolio The stunning fall in global bond yields has already gone a long way. Yet it is very difficult to forecast a bottom in yields, even with central banks easing monetary policy to try and boost confidence, before there is evidence that the global COVID-19 outbreak is being contained (i.e. a decreasing total number of confirmed cases). By the same token, corporate bonds (and equities) will continue to be under selling pressure until the worst of the viral outbreak has passed. We raised our recommended overall global duration stance to neutral last week – a move that was more tactical in nature as a near-term hedge to our strategic overweight corporate bond allocations in our Model Bond Portfolio amid growing market volatility. Yet with the new stresses coming from the collapse in oil prices and increasing spread of COVID-19 in the US and Europe, we are moving to a much more cautious near-term stance on global credit. Yet with the new stresses coming from the collapse in oil prices and increasing spread of COVID-19 in the US and Europe, we are moving to a much more cautious near-term stance on global credit. This week, we are making the following additional changes to our model bond portfolio to reflect the growing odds of a global recession: Downgrade global corporates to underweight versus global governments Maintain a neutral overall portfolio duration, but favor countries within the government bond allocation that are more highly correlated to changes in to the overall level of global bond yields. Chart 8Favor Higher-Beta Bond Markets With Room To Cut Rates
Favor Higher-Beta Bond Markets With Room To Cut Rates
Favor Higher-Beta Bond Markets With Room To Cut Rates
Given how far yields have declined already, we think raising allocations to “high yield beta” countries that can still cut interest rates, at the expense of reduced weightings toward low beta countries that have limited scope to ease policy, offers a better risk/reward profile than simply raising duration exposure across the board. Such a nuanced argument is less applicable to global corporates, where elevated market volatility, poor investor risk appetite and deteriorating global growth momentum all argue for continued near-term underperformance of corporates versus government bonds. Specifically, we are making the following changes to our recommended allocations, presented with a brief rationale for each move: Upgrade US Treasuries and Canadian government bonds to overweight: Both Treasuries and Canadian bonds are higher beta markets, as we define by a regression of monthly yield changes to changes in the yield of the overall Bloomberg Barclays Global Treasury index (Chart 8). The Fed cut 50bps last week as an emergency measure and has 75bps to go before reaching the zero bound, which the market now expects by mid-year. Additional bond bullish moves after reaching the zero bound, like aggressive forward guidance, restarting quantitative easing and even anchoring Treasury yields in a BoJ-like form of yield curve control, are all possible if the US enters a recession. Meanwhile, the Bank of Canada (BoC) followed the Fed’s cut with a 50bp easing the next day and signaled that additional rate cuts are likely to prevent a plunge in Canadian consumer confidence. The collapsing oil price likely seals the deal for additional rate cuts by the BoC in the next few months. Downgrade Japanese government bonds to maximum underweight: Japanese government bonds (JGBs) are the most defensive low-beta market in model bond portfolio universe, thanks to the Bank of Japan’s Yield Curve Control policy that anchors the 10yr JGB yield around 0%. This makes JGBs the best candidate for a maximum underweight stance when global bond yields are not expected to rise in the near term, as we expect. Downgrade Germany and France to Underweight: The ECB meets this week and will be under pressure to ease policy given recent moves by other major central banks. A -10bps rate cut is expected, which may happen to counteract the recent increase in the euro versus the US dollar, but there is also possibility that ECB will increase and/or extend the size and scope of its current Asset Purchase Program. Given the ECB’s lack of overall monetary policy flexibility, and low level of inflation expectations, we see limited scope for the lower-beta German and French government bonds to outperform their global peers. Remain overweight UK and Australia: While both Australian government bonds and UK Gilts have a “median” yield beta in our model bond portfolio universe, both deserve moderate overweights as there is still the potential for rate cuts in both countries. The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) cut the Cash Rate by -25bps last week and they are still open to cut further to boost a sluggish economy hurt by wildfires and weak export demand from China. The RBA will stay more dovish for longer until we will see clear signs of a rebound of the Chinese economy from the COVID-19 outbreak. The Bank of England (BoE) will likely cut its policy rate later this month, or even before the next scheduled policy meeting, as COVID-19 is starting to spread through the UK. Downgrade US High-Yield To Underweight: US junk bonds had already taken a hit during the global market selloff in recent weeks, but the collapse in oil prices pummeled the market given the high weighting of US shale producers in the index (Chart 9). With additional weakness in oil prices likely as Russia and Saudi Arabia are now in a full-fledged price war, US high-yield will come under additional spread widening pressure focused on the weaker Caa-rated segment that contains most of the energy names. We recommend a zero weight in the Caa-rated US junk bonds, within an overall underweight allocation to the entire asset class. Downgrade euro area investment grade and high-yield corporates to underweight: COVID-19 is now spreading faster in Germany and France, after leaving Italy in a full-blown national crisis. The export-oriented economies of the euro area were already vulnerable to a global growth slowdown, but now domestic growth weakness raises the odds of a full-blown recession – not a good environment to own corporate bonds, especially with the euro now appreciating. Downgrade emerging market (EM) USD-denominated sovereigns and corporates to underweight: EM debt remains a levered play on global growth, so the increased odds of a global recession are a problem for the asset class – even with sharply lower interest rates and early signs of a softening in the US dollar (Chart 10). Chart 9Downgrade US Junk Bonds To Underweight
Downgrade US Junk Bonds To Underweight
Downgrade US Junk Bonds To Underweight
Chart 10Still Not Much Broad-Based Weakness In The USD
Still Not Much Broad-Based Weakness In The USD
Still Not Much Broad-Based Weakness In The USD
We will present the new specific model bond portfolio weightings, along with a discussion of the risk management implications of these changes, in next week’s report. Bottom Line: Maintain overall neutral portfolio duration exposure with so much bad news already priced into yields. Downgrade overall global spread product exposure to underweight versus governments on a tactical (0-3 months) basis given intense uncertainties on COVID-19 and oil markets. Upgrade high-beta countries with room to cut interest rates (the US & Canada) to overweight, while downgrading lower-beta countries with less policy flexibility (Germany, France, Japan) to underweight. Downgrade US high-yield, euro area corporates and emerging market USD sovereigns & corporates to underweight. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, CFA Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1https://www.wsj.com/articles/fear-isnt-the-only-driver-of-the-treasury-rally-banks-need-to-hedge-their-mortgages-1158347080 Recommendations Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Duration: It is too soon to call the bottom in bond yields. To help make that call we will be looking for when: daily new COVID-19 infections reach zero, global growth indicators improve, US economic indicators worsen, technical indicators signal a reversal. Fed: Low inflation expectations mean that the Fed is unconstrained when it comes to easing policy. Rate cuts will continue until either the funds rate reaches zero, or financial markets signal that enough stimulus has been delivered. Spread Product: Investors with 12-month investment horizons should neutralize allocations to spread product versus Treasuries, including high-yield where the recent oil supply shock will weigh heavily on returns. Investors should also downgrade exposure to MBS with the goal of re-deploying into corporate credit once the current risk-off episode runs its course. Feature Risk off sentiment prevailed in financial markets again last week, as COVID-19 continues to spread throughout the world. Most recently, the city of Milan has been placed under quarantine and New York state has declared a state of emergency. It is difficult to have much certainty about the virus’ ultimate economic impact, but the prospect of US recession looms larger and larger. In bond markets, the 10-year Treasury yield has fallen to 0.54% and the yield curve is pricing-in 91 bps of Fed rate cuts over the next 12 months (Chart 1). If those expectations are met, it would bring the funds rate down to 0.18%, only slightly above the zero-lower-bound. Chart 1Market Priced For A Return To The Zero-Lower-Bound
Market Priced For A Return To The Zero-Lower-Bound
Market Priced For A Return To The Zero-Lower-Bound
On the bright side, there is ample evidence that global economic growth was trending up before the virus struck in late January, and we remain confident that a large amount of pent-up demand will be unleashed once its impact fades. However, we have no clarity on how much longer COVID-19 might weigh on growth. For this reason, we recommend a much more defensive US bond portfolio allocation, even for investors with 12-month horizons. Specifically, investors should keep portfolio duration close to benchmark and reduce spread product allocations to neutral. The market is sending the message that more rate cuts are needed. We will be quick to re-initiate a below-benchmark duration recommendation when we think that bond yields are close to bottoming. In the below section titled “How To Call The Bottom In Yields”, we discuss the factors that will help us make that decision. A State Of Monetary Policy Emergency The Fed took quick action last week, delivering an inter-meeting 50 basis point rate cut as the stock market tumbled on Tuesday morning. Alas, the market is sending the message that those 50 bps won’t be enough. Fed funds futures are pricing-in another 82 bps of easing by the end of next week’s FOMC meeting, followed by further cuts in April (Table 1). Table 1Expectations Priced Into The Fed Funds Futures Curve
When And Where Will Bond Yields Trough?
When And Where Will Bond Yields Trough?
Of course, easier monetary policy is not the solution to what ails the global economy. At his press conference last week, Fed Chair Powell justified the emergency cut by saying that it will help “avoid a tightening of financial conditions which can weigh on activity, and it will help boost household and business confidence.” This is a fair assessment of what monetary policy can hope to accomplish in the current environment. At most, monetary policy can limit the damage in financial markets, which is a worthwhile goal given the strong historical correlation between financial conditions and economic growth (Chart 2). Chart 2Fed Must Do Its Best To Support Financial Conditions
Fed Must Do Its Best To Support Financial Conditions
Fed Must Do Its Best To Support Financial Conditions
What’s more, with inflation expectations at very low levels – as we go to press the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is a mere 1.03% – there is no reason for the Fed to resist easing policy, even if the expected benefits from easing are small. Chart 3Markets Demand More Easing
Markets Demand More Easing
Markets Demand More Easing
From our perch, the only possible reason for the Fed to refrain from cutting rates quickly all the way back to zero would be to preserve some monetary policy ammunition for when it is needed most. The Fed probably doesn’t see things this way. In conventional economic models it is the level of interest rates that influences economic activity. Therefore, the way to get the most bang for your stimulus buck is to cut rates to zero as quickly as possible. However, if monetary policy is primarily influencing the economy via its impact on financial conditions and investor sentiment, as Chair Powell claimed, then it would be advisable to only deliver rate cuts when financial conditions are tightening rapidly. That is, don’t cut rates if the stock market is rebounding, save your ammo for when equities are in free fall and panic is widespread. We can’t know for certain what the Fed will do between now and the next FOMC meeting. But we can say that, with inflation pressures low, there are no constraints against cutting rates back to the zero bound. The safest takeaway for bond investors is to assume that rate cuts will continue until either (i) the fed funds rate hits zero or (ii) we see signs that the markets and economy are no longer calling for further stimulus. Those signs would be (Chart 3): Yield curve steepening, particularly at the short end. Stocks outperforming bonds. A rising gold price. A falling US dollar. Bottom Line: More rate cuts are coming, and they won’t stop until either the fed funds rate hits zero or financial markets signal that sufficient stimulus has been delivered. We can’t be certain whether that will occur with more or less than the 91 bps of rate cuts that are currently priced for the next 12 months. As such, we recommend keeping portfolio duration close to benchmark. How To Call The Bottom In Yields The US economy is on the cusp of entering a downturn of uncertain duration that will likely be followed by a rapid recovery. Given that outlook, the next big call to make is: When will bond yields put in a bottom? We identify four catalysts that we will monitor to make that call. 1. Virus Panic Abates This is the most important catalyst that could lead us to re-initiate a below-benchmark duration recommendation. The pattern of past viral outbreaks is that bond yields tend to fall until the number of daily new cases reaches zero. This is precisely what happened during the 2003 SARS epidemic (Chart 4A). As for COVID-19, the number of daily new cases looked like it was approaching zero a few weeks ago, but then reversed course as the virus moved on from China to the rest of the world (Chart 4B). One ray of hope is that the number of new cases in China is approaching zero. This suggests that it will also be possible for other countries to contain the virus, but right now it is unclear how long that will take. Chart 4AYields Will Bottom When New Cases Reach Zero
Yields Will Bottom When New Cases Reach Zero
Yields Will Bottom When New Cases Reach Zero
Chart 4BNew COVID-19 Cases Still ##br##Rising
New COVID-19 Cases Still Rising
New COVID-19 Cases Still Rising
In sum, we will keep tracking the global daily number of new cases and will shift to a below-benchmark duration recommendation as it approaches zero. 2. Global Economic Data Improve (Especially China) Chart 5Waiting For A Global Growth Rebound
Waiting For A Global Growth Rebound
Waiting For A Global Growth Rebound
China is where the COVID-19 outbreak started and it is also where we are now seeing the impact in the economic data. The Global Manufacturing PMI dropped from 50.4 to 47.2 in February, due in large part to the plunge in China’s index from 51.1 to 40.3 (Chart 5). In order to call the bottom in US bond yields we will need to see evidence that China can come out the other side of the economic downturn. This means seeing an improvement in the Chinese and Global Manufacturing PMIs. We would also like to see improvement in other global growth indicators such as the CRB Raw Industrials index (Chart 5, panel 2) and the relative performance of cyclical versus defensive equity sectors (Chart 5, bottom panel). Aggressive Chinese stimulus (both monetary and fiscal) might help speed this process along. China’s credit impulse is on the rise (Chart 5, panel 2), and our China Investment Strategy service observed that recently announced policy initiatives related to infrastructure, housing and the automobile sector resemble those that led to a V-shaped Chinese economic recovery in 2016.1 We will be inclined to shift back to below-benchmark portfolio duration when the Global Manufacturing PMI, CRB Raw Industrials index and the relative performance of cyclical versus defensive equities move higher. 3. The US Economic Data Worsen Chart 6Waiting For Weaker US Data
Waiting For Weaker US Data
Waiting For Weaker US Data
While the Global and Chinese economic data are currently in the doldrums, we still haven’t seen COVID’s impact on the US economy. The US ISM Manufacturing PMI is in expansionary territory and the Services PMI is at a healthy 57.3 (Chart 6). Meanwhile, US employment growth has averaged +200k during the past 12 months (Chart 6, panel 2) and the US Economic Surprise Index is above 60 (Chart 6, bottom panel)! Until the US economic data take a hit, another downleg in US bond yields is likely. Looking ahead, if the Global and Chinese economic data are improving as the US data are weakening, financial markets will extrapolate from the Chinese experience and start to price-in an eventual US recovery. Therefore, bond yields will probably start to move higher while the US economic data are still weak. For this reason, one catalyst for us to re-initiate below-benchmark portfolio duration will be when the US economic data weaken. 4. Technical Signals Table 2The 3-Month Golden Rule
When And Where Will Bond Yields Trough?
When And Where Will Bond Yields Trough?
We don’t recommend relying on technical trading rules when forming a 12-month investment view, but technical signals can help add discipline to investment strategies, especially when calling tops and bottoms. One framework with a decent track record is our Golden Rule of Bond Investing applied to a shorter 3-month investment horizon.2 While this 3-month rule doesn’t work as well as when it is applied to a 12-month horizon, we still find that if you correctly predict whether the Fed will deliver a hawkish or dovish surprise relative to market expectations during the next three months, you will make the right duration call 63% of the time (Table 2). The 3-month Golden Rule worked better for dovish surprises than for hawkish surprises in our sample but delivered solid results in both cases. The median 3-month excess Treasury index return versus cash was -1.09% (annualized) when there was a hawkish Fed surprise, compared to +2.56% (annualized) when there was a dovish Fed surprise. For context, the median annualized 3-month excess Treasury index return versus cash during our sample period was +1.79%. Until the US economic data take a hit, another downleg in US bond yields is likely. The overnight index swap curve is currently priced for 94 bps of rate cuts during the next three months, which would essentially take the funds rate back to the zero bound. As of now, we cannot rule out this possibility and are therefore not inclined to look for higher yields during the next 3 months. Momentum, Positioning & Sentiment Other technical signals can also help call tops and bottoms in bond yields. One such signal comes from our Composite Technical Indicator, an indicator that is based on yield changes, investor sentiment surveys and positioning in bond futures markets. Right now, the indicator is sending a strong “overbought” signal with a reading below -1 (Chart 7). Chart 7Technical Treasury Signals
Technical Treasury Signals
Technical Treasury Signals
In isolation, an overbought signal from our Composite Technical Indicator is not a strong reason to call for higher yields. We found that, historically, a reading below -1 from our indicator precedes a 3-month move higher in the 10-year Treasury yield only 53% of the time (Table 3). Table 3Technical Treasury Indicator Performance (1995 – Present)
When And Where Will Bond Yields Trough?
When And Where Will Bond Yields Trough?
One reason for the Composite Technical Indicator’s mediocre performance is that, even at low levels, the market can always become more overbought. But we can partially control for this by combining the overbought signal from our indicator with simple momentum measures that might signal a trend reversal. For example, a reading below -1 from our Composite Technical Indicator combined with a 1-week increase in the 10-year yield precedes a higher 10-year yield during the next three months 58% of the time. If we wait for a 2-week increase in the 10-year yield the rule’s success rate rises to 60%, and it rises to 71% if we wait for the 10-year yield to break above its 4-week moving average. At present, our Composite Technical Indicator shows that Treasuries are extremely overbought, but momentum measures are sending no signals about an imminent trend change (Chart 7, bottom 3 panels). Bottom Line: It is too soon to call the bottom in bond yields. To help make that call we will be looking for when: daily new COVID-19 infections reach zero, global growth indicators improve, US economic indicators worsen, technical indicators signal a reversal. Some Quick Notes On TIPS, MBS And Spread Product Allocations Along with raising recommended portfolio duration to benchmark on a 12-month horizon, we also recommend neutralizing exposure to spread product in US bond portfolios. This includes reducing exposure to high-yield corporate bonds. High-yield remains attractively valued but will continue to sell off as long as risk-off market sentiment prevails. The looming oil price war will also weigh heavily on the sector, which is highly exposed to the US shale energy space. Once again using the SARS epidemic as a comparable, we see that – like Treasury yields – junk excess returns bottomed when the number of daily new cases approached zero (Chart 8). We could still be relatively far from this point, so taking risk off the table makes sense. New all-time lows in Treasury yields will drag mortgage rates lower and lead to a spike in refinancing activity. We also recommend moving MBS allocations to underweight. New all-time lows in Treasury yields will drag mortgage rates lower and lead to a spike in refinancing activity. This spike is not yet fully reflected in MBS spreads, which remain relatively tight (Chart 9) Chart 8Too Soon To Call For Peak Junk Spreads
Too Soon To Call For Peak Junk Spreads
Too Soon To Call For Peak Junk Spreads
Chart 9Downgrade MBS
Downgrade MBS
Downgrade MBS
. Going forward, even after the economic fallout from COVID-19 has passed and it is time to increase exposure to spread product, we will likely continue to recommend an underweight allocation to MBS because better opportunities will be available in investment grade and high-yield corporate bonds where spreads will be much more attractive. On TIPS, last weekend’s oil supply shock – combined with the demand shock from COVID-19 – will conspire to keep long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates well below their “fundamental fair value” for some time yet. But for investors with longer time horizons we see exceptional value in TIPS relative to nominal Treasuries. Even before yesterday’s big drop in oil, the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate was 52 bps cheap relative to the fair value reading from our Adaptive Expectations Model (Chart 10).3 Chart 10TIPS Offer A Ton Of Long-Run Value
TIPS Offer A Ton Of Long-Run Value
TIPS Offer A Ton Of Long-Run Value
Investors with 12-month investment horizons should continue to favor TIPS over nominal Treasuries, but those with shorter horizons may be advised to stand aside and wait for the daily number of new COVID-19 cases to reach zero before re-initiating the position. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “China: Back To Its Old Economic Playbook?”, dated February 26, 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 2 For more details on our Golden Rule of Bond Investing please see US Bond Strategy Special Report, “The Golden Rule of Bond Investing", dated July 24, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 For more details on our Adaptive Expectations Model please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “How Are Inflation Expectations Adapting?”, dated February 11, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights An analysis on Colombia is available below. If EM share prices hold at current levels, a major rally will likely unfold. If they are unable to hold, a substantial breakdown will likely ensue. The direction of EM US dollar and local currency bond yields will be the key to whether EM share prices break down or not. We expect continuous EM currency depreciation that will likely trigger foreign capital outflows from both EM credit markets and domestic bonds. This leads us to reiterate our short position in EM stocks. We are booking profits on the long implied EM equity volatility and the short Colombian peso/long Russian ruble positions. Feature The Federal Reserve’s intra-meeting rate cut this week might temporarily boost EM risk assets and currencies. However, it is also possible that investors might begin questioning the ability of policymakers in general and the Fed in particular to continuously boost risk assets. In recent years, investors have been operating under the implicit assumption that policymakers in the US, China and Europe have complete control over financial markets and global growth, and will not allow things to get out of hand. Investors have been ignoring contracting global ex-US profits as well as exceedingly high US equity multiples and extremely low corporate spreads worldwide. In the past 12 months, investors have been ignoring contracting global ex-US profits (Chart I-1) as well as exceedingly high US equity multiples. This has been occurring because of the infamous ‘policymakers put’ on risk assets. As doubts about policymakers’ ability to defend global growth and financial markets from COVID-19 heighten, investors will likely throw in the towel and trim risk exposure. A sudden stop in capital flows into EM is a distinct possibility. The Last Line Of Defense EM share prices are at a critical juncture (Chart I-2). If they hold at current levels, a major rally will likely unfold. If they are unable to hold at current levels, a substantial breakdown will likely ensue. Chart I-1Profitless Rally In 2019 Makes Stocks Vulnerable
Profitless Rally In 2019 Makes Stocks Vulnerable
Profitless Rally In 2019 Makes Stocks Vulnerable
Chart I-2EM Share Prices Are At A Critical Juncture
EM Share Prices Are At A Critical Juncture
EM Share Prices Are At A Critical Juncture
What should investors be looking at to determine whether EM share prices will find a bottom close to current levels, or whether another major down-leg is in the cards? In our opinion, the direction of EM sovereign and corporate US dollar bond yields as well as EM local currency government bond yields will be the key to whether EM share prices break down or not. Chart I-3 illustrates that EM equity prices move in tandem with EM corporate US dollar bond yields as well as EM local currency bond yields (bond yields are shown inverted on both panels). Falling EM fixed income yields have helped EM share prices tremendously in the past year. Chart I-3EM Equities Drop When EM US Dollar & Domestic Bond Yields Are Rising
EM Equities Drop When EM US Dollar & Domestic Bond Yields Are Rising
EM Equities Drop When EM US Dollar & Domestic Bond Yields Are Rising
EM corporate US dollar bond yields can rise under the following circumstances: (1) when US Treasury yields are ascending more than corporate credit spreads are tightening; (2) when EM credit spreads are widening more than Treasury yields are falling; or (3) when both US government bond yields and EM credit spreads are increasing simultaneously. Provided the backdrop of weaker growth is bullish for US government bonds, presently EM corporate US dollar bond yields can only rise if their credit spreads widen by more than the drop in Treasury yields. In short, the destiny of EM equities currently rests with EM corporate spreads. EM corporate and sovereign credit spreads are breaking above a major technical resistance (Chart I-4). The direction of these credit spreads is contingent on EM exchange rates and commodities prices as demonstrated in Chart I-5. Credit spreads are shown inverted in both panels of this chart. Chart I-4A Breakout In EM Sovereign And Corporate Credit Spreads?
A Breakout In EM Sovereign And Corporate Credit Spreads?
A Breakout In EM Sovereign And Corporate Credit Spreads?
Chart I-5Falling EM Currencies And Commodities Herald Wider EM Credit Spreads
Falling EM Currencies And Commodities Herald Wider EM Credit Spreads
Falling EM Currencies And Commodities Herald Wider EM Credit Spreads
EM exchange rates are also crucial for foreign investors’ in EM domestic bonds. The top panel of Chart I-6 demonstrates that even though the total return on the JP Morgan EM GBI domestic bond index has been surging in local currency terms, the same measure in US dollar terms is still below its 2012 level. The gap is due to EM exchange rates. EM local currency bond yields are at all-time lows (Chart I-6, bottom panel), reflecting very subdued nominal income growth and low inflation in many developing economies (Chart I-7). Chart I-6EM Currencies Are Key To EM Domestic Bonds Total Returns
EM Currencies Are Key To EM Domestic Bonds Total Returns
EM Currencies Are Key To EM Domestic Bonds Total Returns
Chart I-7Inflation Is Undershooting In EM Ex-China
Inflation Is Undershooting In EM Ex-China
Inflation Is Undershooting In EM Ex-China
Hence, low EM domestic bond yields are justified by their fundamentals. Yet foreign investors are very large players in EM local bonds, and their willingness to hold these instruments is contingent on EM exchange rates’ outlook. The sensitivity of international capital flows into EM US dollar and local currency bonds to EM exchange rates has diminished in recent years because of global investors’ unrelenting search for yield. As QE policies by DM central banks have removed some $9 trillion in high-quality securities from circulation, the volume of fixed-income securities available in the markets has shrunk. This has led to unrelenting capital inflows into EM fixed-income markets, despite lingering weakness in their exchange rates. Nonetheless, sensitivity of fund flows into EM fixed-income markets to EM exchange rates has diminished but has not yet outright vanished. If EM currencies depreciate further, odds are that there will be a sudden stop in capital flows into EM fixed-income markets. Outside of some basket cases, we do not expect the majority of EM governments or corporations to default on their debt. Yet, we foresee further meaningful EM currency depreciation which will simply raise the cost of servicing foreign currency debt. It would be natural for sovereign and corporate credit spreads to widen as they begin pricing in diminished creditworthiness among EM debtors in foreign currency terms. Bottom Line: Unlike EM equities, EM fixed-income markets are a crowded trade and are overbought. Hence, any selloff in these markets could trigger an exodus of capital pushing up their yields. Rising yields will in turn push EM equities over the cliff. EM Currencies: More Downside We expect EM currencies to continue depreciating. EM ex-China currencies’ total return index (including carry) versus the US dollar is breaking down (Chart I-8, top panel). This is occurring despite the plunge in US interest rates. Notably, as illustrated in the bottom panel of Chart I-8, EM ex-China currencies have not been correlated with US bond yields. The breakdown in correlation between EM exchange rates and US interest rates is not new. This means that the Fed's easing will not prevent EM currency depreciation. EM currencies correlate with commodities prices generally and industrial metals prices in particular (Chart I-9, top panel). The latter has formed a head-and-shoulders pattern and has broken down (Chart I-9, bottom panel). The path of least resistance for industrial metal prices is down. Chart I-8More downside In EM Ex-China Currencies
More downside In EM Ex-China Currencies
More downside In EM Ex-China Currencies
Chart I-9A Breakdown In Commodities Points To A Relapse In EM Currencies
A Breakdown In Commodities Points To A Relapse In EM Currencies
A Breakdown In Commodities Points To A Relapse In EM Currencies
Chart I-10Chinese Imports Are Key To EM Currencies
Chinese Imports Are Key To EM Currencies
Chinese Imports Are Key To EM Currencies
EM currencies’ cyclical fluctuations occur in-sync with global trade and Chinese imports (Chart I-10). Both will stay very weak for now. Finally, China is stimulating, and we believe the pace of stimulus will accelerate. However, the measures announced by the authorities so far are insufficient to project a rapid and lasting growth recovery. In particular, the most prominent measure announced in China is the PBoC’s special re-lending quota of RMB 300 billion to enterprises fighting the coronavirus outbreak. However, this amount should be put into perspective. In 2019, private and public net credit flows were RMB 23.8 trillion, and net new broad money (M2) creation was RMB 16 trillion. Thus, this re-lending quota will boost aggregate public and private credit flow by only 1.2% and broad money flow by mere 2%. This is simply not sufficient to meaningfully boost growth in China. Notably, daily, commodities prices in China do not yet confirm any growth recovery (Chart I-11). Barring an irrigation-type of credit and fiscal stimulus, the mainland economy will disappoint. Bottom Line: The selloff in EM exchange rates will persist. As discussed above, this will likely lead to outflows from both EM credit markets and domestic bonds. Reading Markets’ Tea Leaves It is impossible to forecast the pace and scope of the spread of COVID-19 as well as the precautionary actions taken by consumers and businesses around the world. In brief, it is unfeasible to assess the COVID-19’s impact on the global economy. The direction of EM sovereign and corporate US dollar bond yields as well as EM local currency government bond yields will be the key to whether EM share prices break down or not. Rather than throwing darts with our eyes closed, we examine profiles of various financial markets with the goal of detecting subtle messages that financial markets often send: Aggregate EM small-cap and Chinese investable small-cap stocks seem to be breaking down (Chart I-12). Chart I-11Daily Commodities Prices In China: No Sign Of Revival
Daily Commodities Prices In China: No Sign Of Revival
Daily Commodities Prices In China: No Sign Of Revival
Chart I-12Investable Small Cap Stocks Seem To Be Breaking Down
Investable Small Cap Stocks Seem To Be Breaking Down
Investable Small Cap Stocks Seem To Be Breaking Down
The technical profiles of various EM currencies versus the US dollar on a total return basis (including the carry) are consistent with a genuine bear market (Chart I-13). Hence, their weakness has further to go. Global industrial stocks’ relative performance against the global equity benchmark has broken below its previous technical support (Chart I-14). This is a bad omen for global growth. Chart I-13EM Currencies Are In A Genuine Bear Market
EM Currencies Are In A Genuine Bear Market
EM Currencies Are In A Genuine Bear Market
Chart I-14A Breakdown In Global Industrials Relative Performance
A Breakdown In Global Industrials Relative Performance
A Breakdown In Global Industrials Relative Performance
Finally, Korean tech stocks as well as the Nikkei index seem to have formed a major top (Chart I-15). This technical configuration suggests that their relapse will very likely last longer and go further. Chart I-15A Major Top in Korean And Japanese Stocks?
A Major Top in Korean And Japanese Stocks?
A Major Top in Korean And Japanese Stocks?
All these signposts relay a downbeat message on global growth and, consequently, EM risk assets and currencies. A pertinent question to ask is whether the currently extremely high level of the VIX is a contrarian signal to buy stocks? Investors often buy the VIX to hedge their underlying equity portfolios from short-term downside. However, when and as they begin to view the equity selloff as enduring, they close their long VIX positions and simultaneously sell stocks. In brief, the VIX’s current elevated levels are likely to be a sign that many investors are still long stocks. When investors trim their equity holdings, they will likely also liquidate their long VIX positions. Thereby, share prices could drop alongside a falling VIX. Therefore, we are using the recent surge in equity volatility to close our long position in implied EM equity volatility. Even though risks to EM share prices are still skewed to the downside, their selloff may not be accompanied by substantially higher EM equity volatility. However, we continue to recommend betting on higher implied volatility in EM currencies. The latter still remains very low. Investment Conclusions We reinstated our short position on the EM equity index on January 30, and this trade remains intact. For global equity portfolios, we continue to recommend underweighting EM versus DM. Within the EM equity universe, our overweights are Korea, Thailand, Russia, central Europe, Mexico, Vietnam, Pakistan and the UAE. Our underweights are Indonesia, the Philippines, South Africa, Turkey and Colombia. We are contemplating downgrading Brazilian equities from neutral to underweight. The change is primarily driven by our downbeat view on banks (Chart I-16). This is in addition to our existing bearish view on commodities. We will publish a Special Report on Brazilian banks in the coming weeks. Barring an irrigation-type of credit and fiscal stimulus, the mainland economy will disappoint. Among the EM equity sectors, we continue to recommend a long EM consumer staples/short banks trade (Chart I-17, top panel) as well as a short both EM and Chinese banks versus their US peers positions (Chart I-17, middle and bottom panels). Chart I-16Brazilian Bank Stocks Are Breaking Down?
Brazilian Bank Stocks Are Breaking Down?
Brazilian Bank Stocks Are Breaking Down?
Chart I-17Our Favored EM Equity Sector Bets
Our Favored EM Equity Sector Bets
Our Favored EM Equity Sector Bets
We continue to recommend a short position in a basket of the following currencies versus the US dollar: BRL, CLP, ZAR, PHP, IDR and KRW. We are also structurally bearish on the RMB. Today we are booking profits on the short Colombian peso / long Russian ruble trade (please refer to section on Colombia on pages 13-17). With respect to EM local currency bonds and EM sovereign credit, our overweights are Mexico, Russia, Colombia, Thailand, Malaysia and Korea. Our underweights are South Africa, Turkey, Indonesia, and the Philippines. The remaining markets warrant a neutral allocation. As always, the list of recommendations is available at end of each week’s report and on our web page. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Colombia: Upgrade Domestic Bonds; Take Profits On Short Peso Trade Chart II-1Oil Makes A Huge Difference To Colombia's Current Account
Oil Makes A Huge Difference To Colombia's Current Account
Oil Makes A Huge Difference To Colombia's Current Account
Today we recommend upgrading local currency bonds and booking profits on the short Colombian peso / long Russian ruble trade. The reason is tight fiscal and monetary policies are positive for bonds and the currency. Although we are structurally bullish on Colombia’s economy, we remain underweight this bourse relative the EM equity benchmark. The primary reason is the high sensitivity of Colombia’s balance of payments to oil prices. In particular, oil accounts for a large share (40%) of Colombia’s exports. As of Q4 2019, the current account deficit was $14 billion or 4% of GDP with oil, and $25 billion or 7.5% of GDP excluding oil (Chart II-1). In short, each dollar drop in oil prices substantially widens the nation’s current account deficit and weighs on the exchange rate. Besides, the current hawkish monetary stance and overly tight fiscal policy will produce a growth downtrend. The Colombian economy has reached a top in its business cycle: The flattening yield curve is foreshadowing a major economic slowdown (Chart II-2, top panel). Our proxy for the marginal propensity to spend for businesses and households leads the business cycle by about six months and is presently indicating that growth will roll over soon (Chart II-2, bottom panel). Moreover, the corporate loan impulse has already relapsed, weighing on companies’ capital expenditures (Chart II-3). Chart II-2The Business Cycle Has Peaked
The Business Cycle Has Peaked
The Business Cycle Has Peaked
Chart II-3Investment Expenditures Heading South
Investment Expenditures Heading South
Investment Expenditures Heading South
The government considerably tightened fiscal policy in the past year and will continue to do so in 2020. The primary fiscal balance has surged to above 1% of GDP as primary fiscal expenditures have stagnated in nominal terms and shrunk in real terms last year (Chart II-4). In regards to monetary policy, the prime lending rate is 12% in nominal and 8.5-9% in real (inflation-adjusted) terms. Such high borrowing costs are restrictive as evidenced by several business cycle indicators that are in a full-fledged downtrend: manufacturing production, imports of consumer and capital goods, vehicle sales and housing starts (Chart II-5). Chart II-4Hawkish Fiscal Policy
Hawkish Fiscal Policy
Hawkish Fiscal Policy
Chart II-5The Economy Is In The Doldrums
The Economy Is In The Doldrums
The Economy Is In The Doldrums
Chart II-6Consumer Spending Has Been Supported By Borrowing
Consumer Spending Has Been Supported By Borrowing
Consumer Spending Has Been Supported By Borrowing
Overall, economic growth has been held up solely by very robust household spending, which accounts for 65% of GDP. Critically, consumer borrowing has financed such buoyant consumer expenditures (Chart II-6). However, the pace of household borrowing is unsustainable with consumer lending rates at 18%. Moreover, nominal and real (deflated by core CPI) wage growth are decelerating markedly and hiring will slow down in line with reduced capital spending. Besides, disinflationary dynamics in this country will be amplified due to the massive influx of immigration from Venezuela in the past two years. Currently, the number of immigrants from the neighboring country stands at 1.4 million people, or 5% of Colombia’s labor force. Such an enormous increase in labor supply introduces deflationary pressures in the Colombian economy by depressing wage growth. Therefore, despite the depreciating currency, core measures of inflation will likely drop to the lower end of the central bank’s target range in next 18-24 months. Investment Recommendations The economy is heading into a cyclical slump but monetary and fiscal policies will remain restrictive. Such a backdrop is bullish for the domestic bond market and structurally, albeit not cyclically, positive for the currency. We have been recommending fixed-income investors to bet on a yield curve flattening by receiving 10-year and paying 1-year swap rates. This trade has returned 77 basis points since its initiation on January 17, 2019. Given the central bank will stay behind the curve, this strategy remains intact. Today we recommend upgrading Colombian local currency bonds from neutral to overweight. Further currency depreciation and an exodus by foreign investors remain a risk. However, on a relative basis – versus its EM peers – this market is attractive. The share of foreign ownership of local currency government bonds in Colombia is 25%, smaller than in many other EMs. Additionally, Colombian bond yields are 80 basis points above the J.P. Morgan EM GBI domestic bonds benchmark and its currency is one standard deviation below its fair value (Chart II-7). We are also overweighting Colombian sovereign credit within an EM credit portfolio. Fiscal policy is very tight and government debt is at a manageable 50% of GDP. The government considerably tightened fiscal policy in the past year and will continue to do so in 2020. Continue to underweight Colombian equities relative to the emerging markets benchmark. We will be looking for a final capitulation in the oil market to upgrade this bourse. Finally, we are booking profits on our short COP versus RUB trade, which has returned a 19% gain since May 31, 2018 (Chart II-8). As mentioned earlier, the peso has already cheapened a lot according to the real effective exchange rate based on unit labor costs (Chart II-7). Meanwhile, Colombia’s macro policy mix is positive for the currency. Chart II-7The Colombian Peso Has Depreciated Substantially
The Colombian Peso Has Depreciated Substantially
The Colombian Peso Has Depreciated Substantially
Chart II-8Taking Profits On Our Short COP / Long RUB Trade
Taking Profits On Our Short COP / Long RUB Trade
Taking Profits On Our Short COP / Long RUB Trade
In contrast, Russia is relaxing its fiscal policy – which is marginally negative for the ruble – and the currency has become a crowded trade. Juan Egaña Research Associate juane@bcaresearch.com Footnotes Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
Treasury yields spent yesterday below 1%, which once again begs the question, is it time to sell? Unlike last week, our Composite Technical Indicator and our Bond Valuation Index are now consistent with a bottom. Only in 2008 were they more depressed than…
Highlights Chart 1Making New Lows
Making New Lows
Making New Lows
While the number of daily new COVID-19 cases is falling in China, the virus is spreading rapidly to the rest of the world. It is now clear that the outbreak will not be contained, though much uncertainty remains about the magnitude and duration of the global economic fallout. US bond yields have dropped dramatically, with the 10-year yield threatening to break below 1% for the first time ever (Chart 1). Interest rate markets are also pricing-in a rapid Fed response, with more than 100 bps of rate cuts priced for the next year and a 50 bps rate cut discounted for March. On Friday, BCA released a Special Alert making the case that stock prices have fallen enough to buy the market, even on a tactical (3-month) horizon. It is too early to make a similar call looking for higher bond yields. While risk assets will get near-term support from a dovish monetary policy shift, bond yields will stay low (and could even fall further) until global economic recovery appears likely. On a 12-month horizon, our base case scenario is that the Fed will not have to deliver the 110 bps of cuts that are currently priced. We therefore expect bond yields to be higher one year from now. But investors with shorter time horizons should wait before calling the bottom in yields. Feature Investment Grade: Neutral Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview
Investment Grade Market Overview
Investment Grade Market Overview
Investment grade corporate bonds underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 176 basis points in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -255 bps. Coronavirus fears pushed spreads wider in February, and the average spread for the overall investment grade index moved back above our cyclical target (Chart 2).1 As for specific credit tiers, Baa spreads are 9 bps above target and Aa spreads are 3 bps cheap. A-rated spreads are sitting right on our target, and Aaa debt remains 5 bps expensive. Looking beyond the economic fallout from the coronavirus, accommodative monetary conditions remain the key support for corporate bonds. Notably, both the 2-year/10-year and 3-year/10-year Treasury slopes steepened in February, and both remain firmly above zero. This suggests that the market believes that the Fed will keep policy easy. As we discussed two weeks ago, restrictive Fed policy – as evidenced by an inverted 3-year/10-year Treasury curve and elevated TIPS breakeven inflation rates – is required before banks choke off the supply of credit, causing defaults and a bear market in corporate spreads.2 Bottom Line: Corporate spreads will keep widening until coronavirus fears abate, but COVID-19 will not cause the end of the credit cycle. Once the dust settles, a buying opportunity will emerge in investment grade corporates, with spreads back above our cyclical targets. Table 3ACorporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation*
Too Soon To Call The Bottom In Yields
Too Soon To Call The Bottom In Yields
Table 3BCorporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward*
Too Soon To Call The Bottom In Yields
Too Soon To Call The Bottom In Yields
High-Yield: Overweight Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview
High-Yield Market Overview
High-Yield Market Overview
High-Yield underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 271 basis points in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -379 bps. The junk index spread widened 110 bps on the month and is currently 37 bps below its early-2019 peak. Ex-energy, the average index spread widened 93 bps in February. It is 71 bps below its 2019 peak. High-yield spreads were well above our cyclical targets prior to the COVID-19 outbreak and have only cheapened further during the past month. More spread widening is likely in the near-term, but an exceptional buying opportunity will emerge once virus-related fears fade. This is especially true relative to investment grade corporate bonds. To illustrate the valuation disparity between investment grade and high-yield, we calculated the average monthly spread widening for each credit tier during this cycle’s three major “risk off” phases (2011, 2015 and 2018). We then used each credit tier’s average option-adjusted spread and duration to estimate monthly excess returns for that amount of spread widening (Chart 3, bottom panel). The results show that, in past years, Baa-rated corporates behaved much more defensively than Ba or B-rated bonds. But now, because of the greater spread cushion and lower duration in the junk space, estimated downside risk is similar. In other words, the valuation disparity between investment grade and junk means that investment grade corporates offer much less downside protection than usual compared to high-yield. MBS: Neutral Chart 4MBS Market Overview
MBS Market Overview
MBS Market Overview
Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 7 basis points in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -60 bps. The conventional 30-year zero-volatility spread widened 1 bp on the month, driven by a 7 bps widening of the option-adjusted spread that was partially offset by a 6 bps reduction in expected prepayment losses (aka option cost). The 10-year Treasury yield has made a new all-time low, and the 30-year mortgage rate – at 3.45% – is only 14 bps above its own (Chart 4). At these levels, an increase in mortgage refinancing activity is inevitable, and indeed, the MBA Refi index has bounced sharply in recent weeks. MBS spreads, however, have not yet reacted to the higher refi index (panel 3). The nominal spread on 30-year conventional MBS is only 9 bps above where it started the year, and expected prepayment losses are 5 bps lower.3 Some widening is likely during the next few months, and we recommend that investors reduce exposure to Agency MBS. Even on a 12-month horizon, MBS spreads offer good value relative to investment grade corporate bonds for now (bottom panel), but investment grade corporates will cheapen on a relative basis if the current risk-off environment continues. This is probably a good time to start paring exposure to MBS, with the intention of re-deploying into corporate credit when spreads peak. 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 86 basis points in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -99 bps. Sovereign debt underperformed duration-equivalent Treasuries by 270 bps in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -367 bps. Foreign Agencies underperformed the Treasury benchmark by 162 bps on the month, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -189 bps. Local Authority debt underperformed Treasuries by 14 bps in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +47 bps. Domestic Agency bonds underperformed by 5 bps in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -7 bps. Supranationals outperformed by 5 bps on the month, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +7 bps. We continue to see little value in USD-denominated Sovereign debt, outside of Mexico and Saudi Arabia where spreads look attractive compared to similarly-rated US corporate bonds (Chart 5). The Local Authority and Foreign Agency sectors, however, offer attractive combinations of risk and reward according to our Excess Return Bond Map (see Appendix C). Our Global Asset Allocation service just released a Special Report on emerging market debt that argues for favoring USD-denominated EM sovereign debt over both USD-denominated EM corporate debt and local-currency EM sovereign bonds.4 Municipal Bonds: Overweight Chart 6Municipal Market Overview
Municipal Market Overview
Municipal Market Overview
Municipal bonds underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 80 basis points in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -114 bps (before adjusting for the tax advantage). The average Aaa-rated Municipal / Treasury (M/T) yield ratio rose 11% on the month to 88%, remaining below its post-crisis mean (Chart 6). For some time we have been advising clients to focus municipal bond exposure at the long-end of the Aaa curve, where yield ratios were above average pre-crisis levels. But last month’s sell-off brought some value back to the front end (panel 2). Specifically, the 2-year, 5-year and 10-year M/T yield ratios are all back above their average pre-crisis levels at 85%, 83% and 86%, respectively. 20-year and 30-year maturities are still cheapest, at yield ratios of 93% and 94%, respectively. Investors should adopt a laddered allocation across the municipal bond curve, as opposed to focusing exposure at the long-end. Fundamentally, state and local government balance sheets remain solid. Our Municipal Health Monitor is in “improving health” territory and state & local government interest coverage has improved considerably in recent quarters (bottom panel). Both trends are consistent with muni ratings upgrades continuing to outpace downgrades going forward. Treasury Curve: Maintain A Barbell Curve Positioning Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview
Treasury Yield Curve Overview
Treasury Yield Curve Overview
The Treasury curve bull-steepened dramatically in February, with yields down at least 30 bps across the board. The 2/10 Treasury slope steepened 9 bps on the month, reaching 27 bps. The 5/30 slope also steepened 9 bps to reach 76 bps. February’s plunge in yields was massive, but the fact that it occurred without 2/10 or 5/30 flattening signals that the market expects the Fed to respond quickly and that any economic pain will be relatively short lived. In fact, the front-end of the curve is now priced for 110 bps of rate cuts during the next 12 months (Chart 7). That amount of easing would bring the fed funds rate back to 0.48%, less than two 25 basis point increments off the zero lower bound. Though the drop in 12-month rate expectations didn’t move the duration-matched 2/5/10 or 2/5/30 butterfly spreads very much, the 5-year note remains very expensive relative to both the 2/10 and 2/30 barbells (bottom 2 panels). The richness in the 5-year note will reverse if the Fed delivers less than the 110 bps of rate cuts that are currently priced for the next year. At present, we view less than 110 bps of easing as the most likely scenario, and therefore maintain our position long the 2/30 barbell and short the 5-year bullet. TIPS: Overweight Chart 8Inflation Compensation
Inflation Compensation
Inflation Compensation
TIPS underperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 159 basis points in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -232 bps. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate fell 24 bps to 1.42%. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate fell 21 bps to 1.50%. Both rates remain well below the 2.3%-2.5% range consistent with the Fed’s inflation target. We have been recommending that investors own TIPS breakeven curve flatteners on the view that inflationary pressures will first show up in the realized inflation data and the short-end of the breakeven curve, before infecting the long-end.5 However, recent risk-off market behavior has caused long-end inflation expectations to fall dramatically, while sticky near-term inflation prints have supported short-dated expectations. Case in point, the 2-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate declined 16 bps in February, compared to a 24 bps drop for the 10-year (Chart 8). Inflation curve flattening could continue in the near-term but will reverse when risk assets recover. As a result, we recommend taking profits on TIPS breakeven curve flatteners and waiting for a period of re-steepening before putting the trade back on. Fundamentally, we note that the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is 38 bps cheap according to our re-vamped Adaptive Expectations Model (bottom panel).6 Investors should remain overweight TIPS versus nominal Treasuries on a 12-month horizon. ABS: Underweight Chart 9ABS Market Overview
ABS Market Overview
ABS Market Overview
Asset-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 6 basis points in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +26 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated ABS widened 7 bps on the month. It currently sits at 33 bps, right on top of its minimum pre-crisis level (Chart 9). Our Excess Return Bond Map (see Appendix C) shows that Aaa-rated consumer ABS ranks among the most defensive US spread products. This explains why the sector has weathered the recent storm so well, and why it is actually up versus Treasuries so far this year. ABS also offer higher expected returns than other low-risk spread sectors such as Domestic Agency bonds and Supranationals. For as long as the current risk-off phase continues, consumer ABS are a more attractive place to hide than Domestic Agencies or Supranationals. However, once risk-on market behavior re-asserts itself, consumer ABS will once again lag other riskier spread products. In the long-run, we also remain concerned about deteriorating consumer credit fundamentals, as evidenced by tightening lending standards for both credit cards and auto loans, and a rising household interest expense ratio (bottom 2 panels). Non-Agency CMBS: Neutral Chart 10CMBS Market Overview
CMBS Market Overview
CMBS Market Overview
Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 42 basis points in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +1 bp. The index option-adjusted spread for non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS widened 9 bps on the month. It currently sits at 76 bps, below its average pre-crisis level (Chart 10). In a recent Special Report, we explored how low interest rates have boosted commercial real estate (CRE) prices this cycle and concluded that a sharp drawdown in CRE prices is likely only when inflation starts to pick up steam.7 In that report we also mentioned that non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS spreads look attractive relative to US corporate bonds in risk-adjusted terms (Appendix C), and that the macro environment is close to neutral for CMBS spreads. Both CRE lending standards and loan demand were close to unchanged during the past quarter, as per the Fed’s Senior Loan Officer Survey (bottom 2 panels). Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS performed in line with the duration-equivalent Treasury index in February, leaving year-to-date excess returns unchanged at +35 bps. The index option-adjusted spread widened 2 bps on the month to reach 56 bps. Agency CMBS offer greater expected return than Aaa-rated consumer ABS, while also carrying agency backing (Appendix C). An overweight allocation to this sector remains appropriate. Appendix A: The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing We follow a two-step process to formulate recommendations for bond portfolio duration. First, we determine the change in the federal funds rate that is priced into the yield curve for the next 12 months. Second, we decide – based on our assessments of the economy and Fed policy – whether the change in the fed funds rate will exceed or fall short of what is priced into the curve. Most of the time, a correct answer to this question leads to the appropriate duration call. We call this framework the Golden Rule Of Bond Investing, and we demonstrated its effectiveness in the US Bond Strategy Special Report, “The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing”, dated July 24, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. Chart 11 illustrates the Golden Rule’s track record by showing that the Bloomberg Barclays Treasury Master Index tends to outperform cash when rate hikes fall short of 12-month expectations, and vice-versa. Chart 11The Golden Rule's Track Record
The Golden Rule's Track Record
The Golden Rule's Track Record
At present, the market is priced for 110 basis points of cuts during the next 12 months. We anticipate a flat fed funds rate over that time horizon, and therefore anticipate that below-benchmark portfolio duration positions will profit. We can also use our Golden Rule framework to make 12-month total return and excess return forecasts for the Bloomberg Barclays Treasury index under different scenarios for the fed funds rate. Excess returns are relative to the Bloomberg Barclays Cash index. To forecast total returns we first calculate the 12-month fed funds rate surprise in each scenario by comparing the assumed change in the fed funds rate to the current value of our 12-month discounter. This rate hike surprise is then mapped to an expected change in the Treasury index yield using a regression based on the historical relationship between those two variables. Finally, we apply the expected change in index yield to the current characteristics (yield, duration and convexity) of the Treasury index to estimate total returns on a 12-month horizon. The below tables present those results, along with 95% confidence intervals. Excess returns are calculated by subtracting assumed cash returns in each scenario from our total return projections.
Too Soon To Call The Bottom In Yields
Too Soon To Call The Bottom In Yields
Too Soon To Call The Bottom In Yields
Too Soon To Call The Bottom In Yields
Appendix B: Butterfly Strategy Valuations The following tables present the current read-outs from our butterfly spread models. We use these models to identify opportunities to take duration-neutral positions across the Treasury curve. The following two Special Reports explain the models in more detail: US Bond Strategy Special Report, “Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated July 25, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com US Bond Strategy Special Report, “More Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated May 15, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Table 4 shows the raw residuals from each model. A positive value indicates that the bullet is cheap relative to the duration-matched barbell. A negative value indicates that the barbell is cheap relative to the bullet. Table 4Butterfly Strategy Valuation: Raw Residuals In Basis Points (As Of February 28, 2020)
Too Soon To Call The Bottom In Yields
Too Soon To Call The Bottom In Yields
Table 5 scales the raw residuals in Table 4 by their historical means and standard deviations. This facilitates comparison between the different butterfly spreads. Table 5Butterfly Strategy Valuation: Standardized Residuals (As Of February 28, 2020)
Too Soon To Call The Bottom In Yields
Too Soon To Call The Bottom In Yields
Table 6 flips the models on their heads. It shows the change in the slope between the two barbell maturities that must be realized during the next six months to make returns between the bullet and barbell equal. For example, a reading of 50 bps in the 5 over 2/10 cell means that we would only expect the 5-year to outperform the 2/10 if the 2/10 slope steepens by more than 50 bps during the next six months. Otherwise, we would expect the 2/10 barbell to outperform the 5-year bullet. Table 6Discounted Slope Change During Next 6 Months (BPs)
Too Soon To Call The Bottom In Yields
Too Soon To Call The Bottom In Yields
Appendix C: Excess Return Bond Map The Excess Return Bond Map is used to assess the relative risk/reward trade-off between different sectors of the US bond market. It is a purely computational exercise and does not impose any macroeconomic view. The Map’s vertical axis shows 12-month expected excess returns. These are proxied by each sector’s option-adjusted spread. Sectors plotting further toward the top of the Map have higher expected returns and vice-versa. Our novel risk measure called the “Risk Of Losing 100 bps” is shown on the Map’s horizontal axis. To calculate it, we first compute the spread widening required on a 12-month horizon for each sector to lose 100 bps or more relative to a duration-matched position in Treasury securities. Then, we divide that amount of spread widening by each sector’s historical spread volatility. The end result is the number of standard deviations of 12-month spread widening required for each sector to lose 100 bps or more versus a position in Treasuries. Lower risk sectors plot further to the right of the Map, and higher risk sectors plot further to the left. Chart 12Excess Return Bond Map (As Of February 28, 2020)
Too Soon To Call The Bottom In Yields
Too Soon To Call The Bottom In Yields
Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 For more information on how we calculate our spread targets please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Value In Corporate Bonds”, dated February 19, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Credit Cycle Is Far From Over”, dated February 18, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Expected prepayment losses (or option cost) are calculated as the difference between the index’s zero-volatility spread and its option-adjusted spread. 4 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report, “Understanding Emerging Markets Debt”, dated February 27, 2020, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see US Bond Strategy Special Report, “2020 Key Views: US Fixed Income”, dated December 10, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “How Are Inflation Expectations Adapting?”, dated February 11, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see US Investment Strategy / US Bond Strategy Special Report, “Commercial Real Estate And US Financial Stability”, dated January 27, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification Corporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation
Highlights Policy Responses To The Virus: Markets are now pricing in significant monetary policy easing in response to the growth shock from the COVID-19 outbreak and related financial market instability. It is not yet clear, however, that central banks will NOT ease by as much as currently discounted in the low level of bond yields – especially as risk assets will riot anew if policymakers are not dovish enough. Duration: Raise overall global duration exposure to neutral on a tactical basis (0-3 months) until there is greater clarity on the full magnitude of the hit to global growth from the virus. Spread Product: The widening of global corporate bond spreads during last week’s equity market correction was relatively modest, suggesting that the COVID-19 outbreak has not become a credit event that raises downgrade/default risks. Maintain an overall overweight allocation to global corporates versus government bonds. Downgrade US MBS to neutral, however, given the risk of higher prepayments from falling mortgage rates. Feature What a wild ride it has been for investors. Equity markets worldwide corrected sharply last week as investors were forced to downgrade global growth expectations with the COVID-19 outbreak spreading more rapidly outside of China. US equities were particularly savaged with the S&P 500 shedding -11% of its value in a mere five trading sessions, with the VIX index of implied equity volatility spiking over 40, evoking comparisons to some of the darkest days of the 2008 financial crisis. Chart of the WeekCOVID-19 Concerns Causing Market Jitters
COVID-19 Concerns Causing Market Jitters
COVID-19 Concerns Causing Market Jitters
Government bond yields have collapsed alongside plunging equity values, with the benchmark 10-year US Treasury yield hitting an all-time intraday low of 1.04% yesterday. Investors are betting on aggressive rate cuts by global central bankers to offset weak growth momentum and disinflationary pressures that were already in place before the arrival of COVID-19. At the same time, corporate credit spreads widened worldwide last week, but the moves were relatively subdued and do not signal growing concern over future default losses (Chart of the Week). In this report, we discuss how to best position a global bond portfolio given these competing messages from government bond and credit markets. We conclude that maintaining selective strategic (6-12 months) overweights in global spread product versus governments, while also maintaining a neutral tactical (0-3 months) overall duration exposure - as a hedge against a more “U-shaped” recovery from the virus-driven downturn in global growth - is the best way to position for a backdrop where policymakers will need to be as easy as possible in a more uncertain world. What To Do Next On … Duration Risk assets were staging a massive rebound yesterday as we went to press, after policymakers worldwide signaled the need for stimulus measures to offset the COVID-19 growth shock. Both Fed Chairman Jerome Powell and Bank of Japan (BoJ) Governor Haruhiko Kuroda promised to ease monetary policy, if necessary, to stabilize markets. Meanwhile, looser fiscal policy may finally be on the way in Europe. The government of virus-stricken Italy announced a €3.6 billion stimulus package, while the German Finance Minister has hinted at a temporary suspension of Germany’s constitutional “debt brake” on deficit spending. A true coordinated global easing of both monetary and fiscal policy, would be very bullish for beaten-down growth-sensitive assets like equities and industrial commodities that have been focused on the shutdown of China’s economy in February to combat the spread of the virus. A true coordinated global easing of both monetary and fiscal policy, would be very bullish for beaten-down growth-sensitive assets like equities and industrial commodities that have been focused on the shutdown of China’s economy in February to combat the spread of the virus (Chart 2). It’s a different story for government bonds, however, as a rebound in yields from current depressed levels is not assured, even if monetary policy is eased further. This is because central bankers must maintain a dovish bias until the virus-driven uncertainty over global growth begins to fade, or else risk assets will riot once again. It’s all about financial conditions now, especially in the US where COVID-19 and the stock market selloff have become front-page news in a presidential election year. Chart 2How Quickly Will China Rebound?
How Quickly Will China Rebound?
How Quickly Will China Rebound?
For example, the entire US Treasury curve now trades below the mid-point of the fed funds target range, with the market now pricing in a very rapid dovish move by the Fed (Chart 3). Chart 3A Big Grab For Global Duration
A Big Grab For Global Duration
A Big Grab For Global Duration
Yield curves are now very flat in other major developed market (DM) economies, as well. This is partly due to the risk aversion bid for safe assets, which is evident in the deeply negative term premium component of bond yields. Flat curves also reflect a more long-lasting component, with markets pricing in lower equilibrium rates in the future. Investors are not only demanding immediate rate cuts to boost growth and stabilize financial markets, but also see little chance of those cuts eventually being reversed in the future. Chart 4Markets Increasingly Pricing In Global ZIRP
Markets Increasingly Pricing In Global ZIRP
Markets Increasingly Pricing In Global ZIRP
Our simple proxy for the market expectation of the nominal terminal rate- the 5-year overnight index swap (OIS) rate, 5-years forward – is between 0-1% for all major DM countries (Chart 4). The implication is that investors are not only demanding immediate rate cuts to boost growth and stabilize financial markets, but also see little chance of those cuts eventually being reversed in the future. Chart 5Our Central Bank Monitors Say More Easing Is Needed
Our Central Bank Monitors Say More Easing Is Needed
Our Central Bank Monitors Say More Easing Is Needed
Chart 6Global Yields Reflect Dovish Rate Expectations
Global Yields Reflect Dovish Rate Expectations
Global Yields Reflect Dovish Rate Expectations
At the moment, our global Central Bank Monitors – a compilation of economic and financial variables that influence monetary policy decisions – are all signaling a need for rate cuts (Chart 5). This is a function of sluggish growth & weak inflation. The plunge in global government bond yields already reflects that dovish shift in market expectations for central banks. Our 12-month discounters, which measure the expected change in short-term interest rates over the next year as extracted from OIS curves, are all priced for lower policy rates in the US (-97bps as of last Friday’s close), the euro area (-15bps) the UK (-35bps), Japan (-17bps), Canada (-72bps) and Australia (-46bps) (Chart 6). In the US, the current level of the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield is consistent with the extended slump in US industrial activity – as measured by the fall in the ISM manufacturing index – and risk-off sentiment measures like the CRB Raw Industrials/Gold price ratio (Chart 7). Yet at the same time, financial conditions remain very accommodative despite last week’s selloff, suggesting that the US economy can potentially weather a bout of COVID-19 uncertainty – as long as the Fed does not disappoint by delivering fewer rate cuts than the market is demanding and creating another down leg in the equity market. Chart 7UST Yields Need To Stay Lower For Longer
UST Yields Need To Stay Lower For Longer
UST Yields Need To Stay Lower For Longer
Outside the US, other central banks that have non-zero policy rates – like the Bank of Canada, Reserve Bank of Australia and Bank of England – can deliver on the rate cuts discounted in their OIS curves to fight a COVID-19 global growth downturn, if needed. Chart 8UST Bullishness Still Not At Historical Extremes
UST Bullishness Still Not At Historical Extremes
UST Bullishness Still Not At Historical Extremes
The negative rate club of the ECB and BoJ, however, is far less likely to actually cut rates and will rely on greater asset purchases and forward guidance to try and provide more policy stimulus. We prefer to view duration exposure – on a tactical basis – as a hedge to owning risk assets like corporate bonds, where we see some value now opening up after last week’s selloff, rather than a way to express a directional view on interest rates where we have less visibility and conviction. So what should a bond investor do with duration exposure? It is a difficult call with so many uncertainties on global growth momentum, the spread of the virus outside China, the size of any monetary or fiscal policy stimulus measures, and the degree of risk aversion still evident in financial markets. We prefer to view duration exposure – on a tactical basis – as a hedge to owning risk assets like corporate bonds, where we see some value now opening up after last week’s selloff, rather than a way to express a directional view on interest rates where we have less visibility and conviction. Therefore, we are raising our recommended overall duration exposure to neutral this week on a tactical basis. At the same time, we are maintaining an underweight stance on government bonds versus an overweight on corporate debt. We think a true bottom in yields will be reached when there are more decisive signs that bond positioning has reached a bullish extreme, according to indicators like the JP Morgan duration survey and the Market Vane US Treasury bullish sentiment index (Chart 8). In our model bond portfolio, we are expressing that extension of duration by shifting exposure from shorter maturity buckets to longer duration buckets in most countries. While also increasing exposure to “higher-beta” government bond markets like the US and Canada, at the expense of lower-beta Japanese government bonds. Bottom Line: Raise overall global duration exposure to neutral on a tactical basis (0-3 months) until there is greater clarity on the full magnitude of the hit to global growth from the COVID-19 outbreak. Increase allocations to countries with higher yield betas, like the US and Canada, at the expense of low-beta markets like Japan. What To Do Next On … Spread Product Allocations Chart 9US HY Selloff Was Focused On Energy Names
US HY Selloff Was Focused On Energy Names
US HY Selloff Was Focused On Energy Names
Last week’s equity market meltdown did spill over into corporate bond markets, with credit spreads widening for both investment grade and high-yield corporate debt in the US and Europe. In the US, however, the jump in high-yield spreads was particularly acute among Energy names, with the index option-adjusted spread (OAS) climbing over 1000bps as oil prices plunged (Chart 9). US high-yield ex-energy has been relatively more stable, with the spread climbing to 436bps, despite the surge in equity volatility. Stepping back and looking at US investment grade and high-yield corporates, more broadly, last week’s selloff has restored some value, most notably in high-yield. Stepping back and looking at US investment grade and high-yield corporates, more broadly, last week’s selloff has restored some value, most notably in high-yield. According to our framework for calculating spread targets for global credit, last week’s selloff pushed US investment grade spreads back to our spread targets from very expensive levels (Chart 10).1 Baa-rated US investment-grade moved slightly above our spread target, but we would describe investment grade spreads as now overall fairly valued. US high-yield spreads, on the other hand, have widened well in excess of our spread targets across all credit rating tiers (Chart 11). Chart 10US Investment Grade Spreads Now Fairly Valued
US Investment Grade Spreads Now Fairly Valued
US Investment Grade Spreads Now Fairly Valued
Chart 11US High-Yield Spreads Look Very Cheap
US High-Yield Spreads Look Very Cheap
US High-Yield Spreads Look Very Cheap
In our framework, the spread targets are determined by looking at 12-month breakeven spreads – the amount of spread widening necessary to eliminate the yield cushion of owning corporates over government bonds on a one-year horizon – relative to their long-run history. We group those spreads according to phases of the monetary policy cycle, as defined by the slope of the US Treasury yield curve. The spread target is then calculated based on the median breakeven spread for that phase of the cycle. Currently, we are in “Phase 2” of the policy cycle, which means that the Treasury yield curve (10-year minus 3-year) is positively sloped between 0 and 50bps. In Charts 10 & 11, we add a new wrinkle to our existing way to present the spread targets. We also calculate the targets using the 25th and 75th percentile observations for the breakeven spreads for that phase of the monetary policy cycle. This gives us a range for the spread target that encompasses more of the historical data. Given the improved valuations in US junk bonds, however, we think increasing allocations in our model bond portfolio makes sense. The spread widening in US high-yield has very clearly restored value to spreads, which are well above the upper level of our spread target range. The same cannot be said for US investment grade, where spreads are in the middle of the target range. Chart 12European Corporates Now Offer Better Value
European Corporates Now Offer Better Value
European Corporates Now Offer Better Value
Based on this analysis, we remain comfortable in maintaining our neutral recommended stance on US investment grade corporates and overweight stance on US high-yield. Given the improved valuations in US junk bonds, however, we think increasing allocations in our model bond portfolio makes sense. Thus, this week, we are adding to our recommended high-yield exposure (see Page 12). That increased allocation is “funded” by reducing our US Agency MBS exposure from overweight to neutral. Our colleagues at BCA Research US Bond Strategy are concerned that MBS spreads are likely to widen in the next few months to reflect the higher prepayment risk from the recent steep fall in US mortgage rates. One final note: our spread target framework for euro area corporates also indicates that last week’s global risk-off event also restored some value to European credit (Chart 12). Thus, we are maintaining our recommended overweights for both euro area investment grade and high-yield. Bottom Line: The widening of global corporate bond spreads during last week’s equity market correction was relatively modest, suggesting that the COVID-19 outbreak has not become a credit event that raises downgrade/default risks. Maintain an overall overweight allocation to global corporates versus government bonds. Downgrade US MBS to neutral, however, given the risk of higher prepayments from falling mortgage rates. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 We presented our framework for calculating global corporate spread targets, which builds on the work from our US Bond Strategy sister service, back in January. Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "How To Find Value In Global Corporate Bonds", dated January 21, 2020, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
What Bond Investors Should Do After The "Great Correction"
What Bond Investors Should Do After The "Great Correction"
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Feature “Bayesian: …statistical methods that assign probabilities or distributions to events…based on experience or best guesses before experimentation and data collection and that apply Bayes' theorem to revise the probabilities and distributions after obtaining experimental data.” — Merriam-Webster Dictionary Markets have reacted pretty rationally to the outbreak of the COVID-19 virus. Equities initially rebounded a few days ahead of the peak of new cases in China (Chart 1). But then, once the number of cases in the rest of the world started to accelerate, stock markets sold off again sharply. The MSCI All Country World Index is now down 13% from its peak on February 12. Recommended Allocation
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 1Markets Have Reacted In Line With New COVID-19 Cases
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
No one knows whether this episode will turn into an unprecedented pandemic, which will kill millions worldwide, last for months, and trigger a global recession. So it is the sort of environment in which Bayesian analysis becomes useful. Our “prior” for the probability of a full pandemic would be around 10-20%. If it doesn’t happen, an attractive buying opportunity for risk assets should present itself soon. But there could be further downside first, especially if the number of cases in major countries such as the US, Germany, and the UK were to accelerate significantly. There are some sign that Chinese activity is beginning to recover. There are some signs that Chinese activity is beginning to recover, as new cases of COVID-19 slow, thanks to the draconian measures taken by the authorities. Big Data can help analyze this. For example, live traffic statistics from TomTom show that by February 28, weekday road congestion in Shanghai was back to 50% of its normal level, compared to 19% on February 14 (Chart 2). The Chinese authorities have relaunched fiscal and monetary stimulus, causing short-term rates to fall to their lowest level since 2010 (Chart 3). Monetary policy has been upgraded from “prudent” to “flexible and moderate.” BCA Research’s China strategists believe there is even an increasing possibility of a stimulus overshoot in the next 6-12 months, as the authorities plan for the worst-case scenario but the economy rebounds.1 Chart 2Chinese People Getting Back On The Roads
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 3Chinese Stimulus Pushing Down Rates
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
In the short-term, it is clear that global growth will weaken, though quantifying this is hard. A 1% quarter-on-quarter decline in Chinese GDP in Q1 would bring growth down to 3.5% year-over-year. Our colleagues in BCA’s Global Investment Strategy estimate this would cause global growth to fall 0.8% below trend in Q1, mainly from a contraction in tourism, but that this would be largely made up in Q2, assuming that the epidemic is over by then (Chart 4).2 Could even a limited epidemic tip the world into recession? We doubt it. Consumer confidence remains strong in developed economies (Chart 5) and the virus is not yet serious enough to stop most consumers going out to spend. The global economy was in the process of bottoming out before COVID-19 hit (Chart 6) and there is little reason to think that we will not return to the status quo ante. Chart 4Global Growth To Slow In Q1, But Rebound In Q2
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 5Consumers Remain Confident
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 6Before COVID-19, Growth Was Bottoming Out
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
We see the two biggest risks being: 1) a rise in defaults in China, especially among smaller companies, that the government is unable or unwilling to prevent (Chart 7); and 2) a deterioration in the jobs market in the US, as companies start to postpone hiring, or lay off staff (Chart 8). We will watch these carefully over coming weeks. Chart 7Are Chinese Companies Vulnerable?
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 8Is The US Job Market Starting To Wobble?
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 9Markets Believe Trump Would Beat Sanders
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
There is one other risk that might give equity markets an excuse for a further sell-off: November’s US presidential election. The probability that Bernie Sanders wins the Democratic nomination has risen to 60% from 15% over the past two months. The consensus believes that Trump can easily defeat Sanders, which is why the President’s probability of being reelected has risen in tandem (Chart 9). But, if the economy starts to weaken and Trump’s approval rating slips, investors could become nervous about the likelihood of a market-unfriendly Sanders administration. We would not recommend long-term investors sell out of risk assets at this point. There could be an attractive buying opportunity over the next few weeks, and investors who have derisked should be looking for a reentry point. With US 10-year bonds yields at 1.2% and German yields at -60 basis points, it is hard to see much further upside for risk-free bonds. Equities should be able to outperform over the next 12 months, as growth rebounds following the COVID-19 episode. We have been recommending overweights in cash and gold, as hedges, since December, and these still make sense. However, if events over the coming weeks point to the risk of global pandemic being higher than we currently think, then investors should Bayesianally adjust and move more risk-off. Otherwise, a peak in COVID-19 cases ex-China should be a strong signal to buy risk assets again. Chart 10Why Should Long-Run Inflation Expectations Fall?
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Fixed Income: US Treasurys have become investors’ safe haven of choice over the past few weeks. A marked drop in long-run inflation expectations (Chart 10), in particular, has pushed the 10-year yield to a record low. This seems somewhat illogical, since the Fed will announce this summer the results of its review of monetary policy, which is likely to lead to a more dovish long-term inflation target (perhaps a commitment to achieve 2% on average over the cycle). The market has also priced in at least three Fed rate cuts by year-end (Chart 11). The Fed will certainly cut rates if US growth falters as a result of COVID-19, but this is by no means a certainty. History shows that Treasury yields jumped sharply once previous viral outbreaks ended (Chart 12). We expect yields to be significantly higher in 12 months, and so are underweight duration and prefer TIPS over nominal bonds. Credit will continue to underperform in the risk-off phase, but some interesting opportunities should arise soon, especially among the lowest-rated credits and in the Energy sector. Chart 11Will The Fed Really Be This Accommodating?
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 12After Previous Virus Outbreaks, Rates Leapt
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Equities: The sell-off has already put on fire sale some stocks most affected by the epidemic. For example, cruise lines are down by 40% over the past month or so, European oil stocks 25%, some luxury goods makers 30%, and airlines 30%. Opportunistic investors might want to buy a basket of the most oversold quality names. Our overweight on euro area stocks has not worked in the sell-off. But, as a cyclical, export-oriented market, we continue to expect Europe to outperform when global growth rebounds. Euro area banks, in particular, represent the best call option on a rise in bond yields, since their performance is highly correlated to the shape of the yield curve. We continue to have a somewhat cyclical tilt among our sector weightings (with overweights on, for example, Energy and Industrials), but may adjust this in our Quarterly Portfolio Outlook in early April if we decide to reduce risk. The sell-off has already put on fire sale some stocks most affected by the epidemic. Currencies: The dollar is a safe-haven currency and so, unsurprisingly, has benefitted from the rush to safety in recent weeks. However, it remains overvalued (Chart 13), and interest rate differentials would move further against it if the Fed does cut rates, since other major developed central banks have much less room to move (Chart 14). This suggests that it will probably resume the weakness it experienced from August to December last year as soon as global growth rebounds. Chart 13Dollar Is Overvalued...
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 14...And Interest Differentials Have Moved Against It
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 15Metals Prices Stabilized In Recent Weeks
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Commodities: Industrial metals fell sharply on the outbreak of COVID-19 in China, but have bottomed in line with the stabilization of the situation in that country (Chart 15). Gold has worked predictably as the best hedge in the sell-off. While it is starting to look technically overbought and would be hurt by a rise in bond yields (Chart 16), for prudent investors it remains a useful hiding place amid heightened risk and ultra-low interest rates. Oil is the commodity that has fallen the most surprisingly, with Brent close to the low it reached during the sell-off in December 2018 (Chart 17). It is much less dependent on Chinese demand than metals are, and so is maybe pricing in a global recession – as well as questioning the commitment of OPEC to cut production further. This would suggest upside to the oil price if global growth turns out not to be so bad, oil demand continues to pick up, and supply remains constrained. Chart 16How Much Could Gold Overshoot?
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 17Oil Discounting A Global Recession
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Chief Global Asset Allocation Strategist garry@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “China: Back To Its Old Economic Playbook?” dated 26 February 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Market Too Complacent About The Coronavirus,” dated 21 February 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com GAA Asset Allocation