Inflation/Deflation
Highlights Monetary Policy: Central bankers worldwide are promising to keeping policy rates near 0% for at least the next two years, even if inflation begins to rise again. This is an obvious form of forward guidance designed to keep borrowing costs as low as possible until the COVID-19 pandemic ends. It may also be the start of a true shift in policymaker strategy, tolerating a rise in inflation just as many of the secular forces that have dampened global inflation are fading. Bond Strategy: The recent divergence of inflation expectations and real bond yields can persist if central banks commit to their dovish forward guidance. Stay overweight inflation-linked bonds versus nominal government debt, particularly in the US, Canada and Italy. Feature “We’re not thinking about raising rates. We’re not even thinking about thinking about raising rates.” – Fed Chairman Jerome Powell Central bankers have emptied their bags of tricks in recent months, providing extreme monetary policy accommodation to fight the deflationary impacts of the COVID-19 recession. 0% policy interest rates, large-scale asset purchases and liquidity support programs have all been implemented in some form by the major developed market central banks. Even more extreme options like yield curve control have been contemplated in the US and implemented in Australia. Perhaps the most important tool used by policymakers, however, is the most simple of all – dovish forward guidance on future interest rate moves. The Fed, European Central Bank (ECB), Bank of Japan (BoJ) and others are now committing to keep rates at current levels for at least the next two years. Additional “state-based” guidance, tying future rate hikes only to a sustainable return of inflation back to policymaker targets, is the likely next step, with the Bank of Canada already making that connection at last week’s policy meeting. Given how difficult it has been for central banks to reach those targets, policy rates can now potentially stay lower for much longer. Interest rate markets have already discounted such an outcome, with overnight index swap (OIS) curves pricing in no change in policy rates in the US, Europe, UK, Japan, Canada or Australia until at least mid-2022 and only very mild increases afterward (Chart of the Week). It remains to be seen if policymakers will actually follow through on their promises to sit on their hands and do nothing for that long, even as global growth and inflation continue what will likely be an extended and choppy recovery from the deep COVID-19 recession. Chart of the WeekAggressive Forward Guidance Is Working
Can Central Bankers Credibly Be Not Credible?
Can Central Bankers Credibly Be Not Credible?
However, if central bankers are truly serious about keeping interest rates low even if inflation picks up, in an attempt to “catch up” from previous undershoots of inflation targets, that has major implications for global bond investors – in particular, raising the value of maintaining core holdings of inflation-linked bonds in fixed-income portfolios. The First Step To Higher Inflation: Stop Talking About Rate Hikes Central bankers are increasingly using the same arguments, and even the same language, to justify their current hyper-accommodative policy stance. Here are some examples, taken from speeches and policy meetings that took place last week: ECB President Christine Lagarde: “We expect interest rates to remain at their present or lower levels until we have seen the inflation outlook robustly converge to a level sufficiently close to, but below, 2% within our projection horizon and such convergence has been consistently reflected in underlying inflation dynamics.” Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard: “Looking ahead, it likely will be appropriate to shift the focus of monetary policy from stabilization to accommodation by supporting a full recovery in employment and a sustained return of inflation to its 2 percent objective […] policy should not preemptively withdraw support based on a historically steeper Phillips curve that is not currently in evidence.” Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem: "As the economy moves from reopening to recuperation, it will continue to require extraordinary monetary policy support. The Governing Council will hold the policy interest rate at the effective lower bound until economic slack is absorbed so that the 2 percent inflation target is sustainably achieved.” Chart 2Global Growth Expectations Have Rebounded
Global Growth Expectations Have Rebounded
Global Growth Expectations Have Rebounded
We could have switched the names on those three quotes and the message would be the same. Policy rates will stay at current levels until inflation has sustainably returned to the 2% target. Raising rates on the back of a forecast of higher inflation, driven by an expectation of lower unemployment, will not be enough this time for policymakers that have been repeatedly burned by their belief in the Phillips Curve. Bond investors have taken note of the central bankers’ message and now expect both stable policy rates and higher inflation expectations. The latest data from the ZEW survey of economic and financial market sentiment, that was published last week and covers the period to mid-July, shows this shift in expectations. On the economy, the current conditions indices for the euro area, US, UK and Japan have stopped falling, while the expectations data have all soared to the highest levels seen since 2015 (Chart 2). The ZEW also poses questions on expectations for interest rates and inflation, and there the answers are more interesting for bond investors. The net balances on expectations for long-term interest rates have bottomed out for the US, euro area and UK, as have expectations for inflation over the next twelve months (Chart 3). At the same time, expectations for short-term interest rates have lagged the moves seen in the other two series, with the net balances hovering around zero for all four countries. One possible interpretation of this data is that a greater number of the financial professionals who take part in the ZEW survey are starting to “get the hint” about central bankers’ dovish messages, expecting higher inflation and bond yields but with no change in short-term policy rates. Bond investors have taken note of the central bankers’ message and now expect both stable policy rates and higher inflation expectations. We see similar pricing in inflation-linked bond markets. While nominal bond yields have stayed stable, the mix between inflation expectations and real bond yields has shifted. Breakevens on 10-year bonds have been slowly climbing across the major developed markets since the end of March, while real yields have fallen roughly the same amount as breakevens have widened (Chart 4). Chart 3Global Inflation Expectations Are Drifting Higher
Global Inflation Expectations Are Drifting Higher
Global Inflation Expectations Are Drifting Higher
Chart 4Inflation Breakevens & Real Yields: Mirror Images
Inflation Breakevens & Real Yields: Mirror Images
Inflation Breakevens & Real Yields: Mirror Images
This is a relatively unusual development in the global inflation-linked bond universe. More often, breakevens and real yields move in the same direction. Inflation expectations tend to rise when economic growth is improving, which also puts upward pressure on real bond yields – often in tandem with markets pricing in higher policy rates at the short end of yield curves. That is not the case today. The latest fall in real bond yields may simply be markets pricing in slower potential economic growth, and lower equilibrium real interest rates, in a world where the COVID-19 pandemic is likely to leave lasting scars. That would be consistent with Bloomberg growth and inflation forecasts for the major developed economies, which expect unemployment rates to remain above pre-COVID levels in 2022, with inflation rates struggling to reach 2% (Chart 5). Chart 5The Consensus Expects A Slow Global Recovery
Can Central Bankers Credibly Be Not Credible?
Can Central Bankers Credibly Be Not Credible?
In a recent report, we presented some basic Taylor Rule estimates of the “appropriate” level of policy rates for the US, euro area, UK, Japan, Canada and Australia after the collapse in growth seen in response to the COVID-19 lockdowns. We used the most basic formulation of the Taylor Rule that put equal weight on deviations of headline inflation from central bank target levels, and deviations of unemployment from full-employment NAIRU measures. Chart 6Taylor Rules Suggest Rates Will Need To Head Higher
Can Central Bankers Credibly Be Not Credible?
Can Central Bankers Credibly Be Not Credible?
Given the surge in unemployment and collapse in inflation due to the COVID-19 recession, Taylor Rule estimates were calling for negative nominal interest rates across the developed economies (Chart 6). The estimates were most severe in the US, where a fed funds rate of -3.8% is deemed “appropriate” with an unemployment rate of 11% and headline CPI inflation at 0.6%. When the Bloomberg consensus forecasts for the next two years are put into the Taylor Rule, a rising path for interest rates is projected but with rates remaining below pre-COVID levels. However, if policymakers stick to their current pledge to keep rates on hold for longer to ensure that inflation not only returns to 2%, but also stays there without the help from very easy monetary policy, then the implication is that a “below-appropriate” interest rate will be maintained for an extended period. Interest rate markets have already come to that conclusion. 5-year OIS rates, 5-years forward are trading between 0% and 1% across the developed economies – levels that are below the neutral interest rate estimates we are using in our Taylor Rule forecasts (Chart 7). Chart 7Markets Priced For An Extended Period Of Below-Neutral Rates
Markets Priced For An Extended Period Of Below-Neutral Rates
Markets Priced For An Extended Period Of Below-Neutral Rates
With interest rates already at or near the zero bound, any rise in inflation from current levels also near 0% will result in real policy rates turning negative if central banks do nothing. This would be consistent with the messages sent by the ZEW survey, and global inflation linked bond markets where real yields are falling deeper into negative territory. That would be a major shift of global policymaker behavior, designed as a planned erosion of inflation-fighting credibility. This is especially true for the likes of the Fed, which has a well-established history of turning hawkish at the first sign of rising inflation pressures. The Fed has already hinted that it is considering shifting its policy strategy to allow overshoots of inflation after periods of undershooting the 2% target. Other central banks, like the ECB, have announced similar reviews of their inflation targets and strategy. Such a move to tolerate higher levels of inflation is a logical response to a global pandemic and deep global recession, coming on the heels of several years of low inflation. The timing may actually be ideal to run more dovish policies to boost inflation, with many of the structural factors that have helped restrain global inflation starting to turn in a more inflationary direction. That would be a major shift of global policymaker behavior, designed as a planned erosion of inflation-fighting credibility. Bottom Line: Central bankers worldwide are promising to keep policy rates near 0% for at least the next two years, even if inflation begins to rise again. This is an obvious form of forward guidance designed to keep borrowing costs as low as possible until the COVID-19 pandemic ends. It may also be the start of a true shift in policymaker strategy, becoming more tolerant of faster inflation. Potential Reasons Why Inflation Could Return Central bankers are talking a good game right now, pledging not to turn too hawkish, too soon and allowing inflation to move back above policy targets. It remains to be seen if they would actually follow through and do nothing if realized inflation rates were to start climbing back to 2% or even higher. It is unlikely that policymakers will be facing that choice anytime soon. The COVID-19 pandemic is showing no signs of slowing in the US and large emerging market countries, global growth remains fragile and heavily reliant on monetary and fiscal policy support, and inflation rates worldwide are currently closer to 0% than 2%. Yet at the same time, there are structural disinflationary forces now changing in a way that may create a more inflationary world after the threat of the pandemic has faded. Demographics Chart 8Demographics Have Turned Less Disinflationary
Demographics Have Turned Less Disinflationary
Demographics Have Turned Less Disinflationary
BCA Research Global Investment Strategy has noted that the global demographic trends that helped restrain inflation in recent decades are shifting.1 The ratio of the number of global workers to the number of global consumers – the global support ratio - peaked back in 2013 and is now steadily falling (Chart 8). There are structural disinflationary forces now changing in a way that may create a more inflationary world after the threat of the pandemic has faded. A rising support ratio implies there are more people producing through work than consuming which, on the margin, is disinflationary. Now, with baby boomers leaving the labor force in droves and becoming consumers in retirement (especially consuming services like health care), the support ratio is falling and becoming a potentially more inflationary force. Globalization Chart 9Globalization Has Turned Less Disinflationary
Globalization Has Turned Less Disinflationary
Globalization Has Turned Less Disinflationary
One of the biggest disinflationary forces of the past quarter-century has been the rapid increase in global trade. As trade barriers fell and global supply chains expanded, companies were able to lower their costs of production. This allowed companies to widen profit margins without resorting to large price increases, helping to dampen overall inflation rates. Now, with global populism and protectionism on the rise, trade as a share of global GDP is declining (Chart 9). The COVID-19 pandemic will likely exacerbate this trend as more companies bring production closer to home, reversing the disinflationary impact of global supply chains, on the margin. A Strong US Dollar The relentless rise of the US dollar in recent years has exerted a major disinflationary headwind to the world economy, with a large share of global traded goods and commodities priced in dollars. Now, with the greenback finally showing signs of rolling over on a more sustainable basis (Chart 10), fueled by less favorable interest rate differentials and signs of improving global growth, the dollar is slowly becoming a more inflationary force. Chart 10USD Weakness Would Be Inflationary
USD Weakness Would Be Inflationary
USD Weakness Would Be Inflationary
Chart 11Structural Reasons Why Policy Rates Need To Stay Low
Structural Reasons Why Policy Rates Need To Stay Low
Structural Reasons Why Policy Rates Need To Stay Low
Of course, these factors are slow moving and will not necessarily result in an immediate increase in global inflation. Yet the trends now in place are more inflationary, on the margin, than has been the case for many years. Coming at a time when global productivity growth is anemic, the potential for an inflationary spark from overly easy monetary policies should not be ignored. Especially given the very high levels of private and public debt in the developed world, which puts more pressure on policymakers to choose inflation as a way to reduce debt burdens (Chart 11). Investment Implication – Stay Overweight Inflation-Linked Bonds Central bankers are now signaling a desire to keep interest rates lower for longer, both to provide stimulus for virus-stricken economies and to boost weak inflation. Coming at a time when secular disinflationary forces are losing potency, this raises the risk of a protracted period of negative real policy rates as inflation rises and policymakers do little to stop it pre-emptively. Against this shifting backdrop, the value of owning global inflation-linked bonds as core holdings in fixed income portfolios is compelling. Chart 12Maintain A Core Overweight In Inflation-Linked Bonds
Maintain A Core Overweight In Inflation-Linked Bonds
Maintain A Core Overweight In Inflation-Linked Bonds
Against this shifting backdrop, the value of owning global inflation-linked bonds as core holdings in fixed income portfolios is compelling. Inflation breakevens are more likely to creep upward than soar higher in the near term given the lingering economic threat from the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet inflation-linked bonds are likely to outperform nominal government debt over the next few years – if central bankers stay true to their word and keep rates unchanged while welcoming a pickup in inflation. The experience of the years following the 2008 financial crisis, when global policy rates were kept near 0% and central banks expanded balance sheets through quantitative easing, may be a template to follow. Global inflation linked bonds, as an asset class, steadily outperformed nominal government bonds from 2012-2016, shown in Chart 12 on a rolling 3-year annualized basis using benchmark indices from Bloomberg Barclays. A similar extended period of outperformance is not out of the question over the next few years, with central banks ramping up asset purchases once again and promising to keep policy easy until inflation returns. Bottom Line: The recent divergence of inflation expectations and real bond yields can persist if central banks commit to their dovish forward guidance. Stay overweight inflation-linked bonds versus nominal government debt, particularly in the US, Canada and Italy where our models show that breakevens are most undervalued. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Research Global Investment Strategy "Third Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook, Navigating The Second Wave", dated June 30, 2020, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
Can Central Bankers Credibly Be Not Credible?
Can Central Bankers Credibly Be Not Credible?
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights The yield advantage behind the dollar bull market since 2011 has completely evaporated. This has unhinged one of the final pillars of dollar support. However, there is also a shifting paradigm in currency markets as nominal rates have hit zero – the highest real rates can now be found in defensive currencies, where deflation is more pervasive. Most cyclical currencies are still sporting very negative real rates. In such a world, the most appropriate strategy is a barbell – overweighting the cheapest currencies, like the NOK and SEK, along with some defensives like the JPY. Trades at the crosses also make sense. We added a long CAD/NZD trade to our basket last week. Stick with it. Eventually, when a full-fledged dollar bear market becomes more apparent, the barbell strategy will have performed much better than a short DXY position. Feature Chart I-1Our Trading Model Is Bearish The Dollar
Our Trading Model Is Bearish The Dollar
Our Trading Model Is Bearish The Dollar
Trading the foreign exchange markets can be complex and very humbling. That said, there are still some simple strategies that have consistently delivered excess returns over time. Regular readers of our bulletin are familiar with our framework based on three main vectors: the macroeconomic environment, valuation, and sentiment. Over time, a three-factor model based on these vectors has outperformed a buy-and-hold strategy for the majority of developed market currency pairs (Chart I-1).1 Within the model, an equal weight is assigned to all three factors, but the reality is that the most important variable to figure out is what the macro landscape will look like over a cyclical horizon. More often than not, the macro framework rather than valuation or sentiment is more important in timing turning points in currency markets. Over time, this can be a very potent source of alpha. Currencies, Inflation, And Real Rates Our starting point for figuring out the macro environment is to go back to the four-quadrant chart splitting inflation and growth with the performance of currencies (Chart I-2). Two key observations stand out: Early on in any cycle, the dollar depreciates across most currencies. This is when growth is improving but inflation is still weak, allowing for very easy global monetary settings. As the cycle matures and deflationary pressures set in, a bullish dollar strategy is an absolute winner. In between an upcycle and a downturn, the performance of the dollar is more ambiguous. Trades at the crosses tend to do well in this environment. Chart I-2The Dollar, Fed, And Business Cycles
A Simple Framework For Currencies
A Simple Framework For Currencies
The next step is to figure out which environment are we in today. An upturn is typically characterized by easy monetary settings and improving growth but weak inflation. This ensures the monetary impulse for growth remains at full throttle. The US dollar declines in this environment because the growth impulse is usually higher elsewhere, since the US has a lower manufacturing base. Early on in any cycle, the dollar depreciates across most currencies. One way to figure out if we are early in the cycle is from the bond market. Early in the cycle, the cost of capital is well below the return on capital. This is the case for the US, where the NY Fed’s neutral rate estimate is well above the fed funds rate. Unsurprisingly, this correlates quite well with the yield curve, suggesting borrowing to invest makes sense. In the same vein, most economic leading indicators are perking up (Chart I-3). Given that inflation is not a problem today, the next key driver for currencies will be what happens to real growth. The yield advantage behind the dollar bull market since 2011 has completely evaporated. However, there is also a shifting paradigm in currency markets as nominal rates have hit zero – the highest real rates are now being found in defensive currencies (Chart I-4). For that to change, real rates have to rise in cyclical markets. The evidence so far is encouraging: Chart I-3Cost Of Capital Is Less Than Return On Capital
Cost Of Capital Is Less Than Return On Capital
Cost Of Capital Is Less Than Return On Capital
Chart I-4Higher Real Rates In Switzerland And Japan
A Simple Framework For Currencies
A Simple Framework For Currencies
Relative PMIs outside the US are picking up faster than within the US (Chart I-5). In the euro zone, the improvement in the expectations component of the surveys are pointing to a very significant recovery in the PMIs in the months ahead (Chart I-6). China is stimulating aggressively. This is very potent fuel for domestic demand as well as global trade (Chart I-7). Chart I-5Growth Is Outperforming Outside The US
Growth Is Outperforming Outside The US
Growth Is Outperforming Outside The US
Chart I-6Eurozone Green Shoots
Eurozone Green Shoots
Eurozone Green Shoots
Chart I-7China Green Shoots
China Green Shoots
China Green Shoots
A pickup in real growth outside the US should improve bond yields in cyclical economies, encouraging flows into their capital markets. As we posited last week, an important component of these flows will also be into their equity markets, making the value-versus-growth debate very important for currencies.2 Coming back to our model, the main input into the macroeconomic component is real interest rate differentials. From this lens, the message so far is to remain long defensive currencies like the Swiss franc and Japanese yen that have the highest real rates. Measuring Value Chart I-8US Dollar Is Overvalued
A Simple Framework For Currencies
A Simple Framework For Currencies
The macroeconomic component is only one of three factors – valuation and sentiment being equally important. Over the years, our team has compiled a swath of valuation models, which we follow quite closely. For the purposes of a simple framework, we stuck to purchasing power parity (PPP) when building out the valuation component. PPP is a very poor tool for managing currencies over the short term, but an excellent one at extremes. We have enhanced the computation to adjust for a few roadblocks that have proved crucial in adding value. Consumer price baskets tend to differ in composition from one country to the next. In order to get closer to an apples-to-apples comparison across countries, an adjustment is necessary. This includes creating a synthetic price basket that looks at a very similar basket of goods and services across countries. If, for example, shelter is 33% in the US CPI basket but 19% in the Swedish CPI basket, relative shelter prices will represent 26% of the combined price ratio. This allows for a uniform cross-sectional comparison, as opposed to using the national CPI weights. The US dollar is overvalued, especially versus the Swedish krona, British pound, and Norwegian krone. The results show the US dollar as overvalued, especially versus the Swedish krona, British pound, and Norwegian krone. Commodity currencies are closer to fair value, and within the safe-haven complex, the Japanese yen is more attractive than the Swiss franc (Chart I-8). Using this valuation framework, long-term returns have been compelling. The bottom line is that while most cyclical currencies are still sporting very negative real rates, some are very undervalued from a cyclical perspective. This suggests the discount already accounts for negative real rates. Timing The Turning Point Turning points in foreign exchange markets tend to be most visible via capital flows. This makes the sentiment component of our model quite important. The nascent upturn in a few growth indicators is coinciding with an outperformance of value relative to growth and cyclicals versus defensive stocks. As we mentioned last week, it is an important signal to watch for currencies. Three ratios hold the key in determining when the dollar capitulates: The total return of US bonds versus gold, the USD/CNY exchange rate, and the gold-to-silver ratio (GSR). The rationale for the three is as follows: As the Fed continues to increase the supply of bonds, the ratio of the US bond ETF (TLT)-to-gold (GLD) will be an important proxy for investor sentiment on the dollar. One of the functions of money is as a store of value, and gold remains a viable threat to dollar liabilities. Foreigners already have been stampeding out of US bond markets. A falling ratio will suggest domestic private investors are dumping their holdings in exchange for precious metals (Chart I-9). As geopolitical tensions between the US and China mount, the USD/CNY exchange rate will become the key arbiter between two dollars: one versus emerging markets and the other versus developed markets. So far, the USD/CNY is depreciating, suggesting dollar liquidity is providing a blanket cover over other ancillary issues. Finally, the gold-to-silver ratio correlates well with the dollar. Gold does well when there is financial stress in the system, forcing the Fed to undermine the value of the dollar through massive dollar supply injections. Silver does well when entities take advantage of cheap dollar funding to finance higher-return projects. It is a timely indicator about the liquidity-to-growth transmission mechanism (Chart I-10). Importantly, the new economy, technology, and clean energy industries are significant buyers of silver . These industries are also cheaper outside the US, as we posited last week. Chart I-9Watch The Bond-To-Gold Ratio
Watch The Bond-To-Gold Ratio
Watch The Bond-To-Gold Ratio
Chart I-10Watch The Gold-To-Silver Ratio
Watch The Gold-To-Silver Ratio
Watch The Gold-To-Silver Ratio
In short, the huge directional indicator for the dollar bear market will be a crash in the GSR. This will act as both confirmation that the dollar bear market is full-fledged and that the tug-of-war between growth and liquidity is over. We have been highlighting this trade in recent months as one of our high-conviction calls. The sentiment component of our FX trading model uses a more traditional approach. As a momentum currency, signals like death crosses or bombed-out rates of change are potent. With the dollar in freefall, the signal is to keep selling. While it is true that speculators are already short, they were also long during most of the dollar bull market from 2011. Housekeeping Our currency strategy remains the barbell – overweighting the cheapest currencies like the NOK and SEK, along with some defensives like the JPY. Eventually, when a full-fledged dollar bear market becomes more apparent, the barbell strategy will have performed much better than an outright short DXY position. Our FX model, highlighted on the first page, suggests this will be the case. We have some trades at the crosses that are dollar-agnostic. These include short EUR/NOK, EUR/SEK and NZD/CAD. The macro landscape remains fraught with uncertainties, so we have some trades at the crosses that are dollar-agnostic. These include short EUR/NOK, EUR/SEK and NZD/CAD. Being long petrocurrencies versus the euro is also a nice carry trade. Finally, we were stopped out of our long cable position this week for a small profit of 2.4%. GBP has been one of our favorite contrarian trades, having booked 9.6% profits being long versus the yen last year. Volatility brings opportunity, and we will look to reestablish longs in the coming weeks. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report , "Introducing An FX Trading Model", dated April 24, 2020. 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report , "Currencies And The Value-Vs Growth Debate", dated July 10, 2020. Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
Chart II-2USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
Recent data in the US have been mostly positive: Headline consumer price inflation increased from 0.1% to 0.6% year-on-year in June. Core inflation was unchanged at 1.2% year-on-year. The NFIB business optimism index increased from 94.4 in May to 100.6. The NY Empire State manufacturing index surged from -0.2 to 17.2 in July. Producer prices fell by 0.8% year-on-year in June. Initial jobless claims increased by 1300K for the week ended July 10th. The DXY index fell by 0.7% this week. Risk sentiment continues to improve with higher hopes for vaccine and the reopening of economies. The Fed’s Beige Book released this Wednesday shows that economic activities are recovering in a lot of districts though well below pre-COVID-19 levels. It is remarkable that retail sales surged, led by a rebound in vehicle sales and home improvement purchases. Report Links: DXY: False Breakdown Or Cyclical Bear Market? - June 5, 2020 Cycles And The US Dollar - May 15, 2020 Capitulation? - April 3, 2020 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Recent data in the euro area have been improving: The ZEW economic sentiment index ticked up from 58.6 to 59.6 in July. Industrial production fell by 20.9% year-on-year in May, following a 28.7% contraction the previous month. The trade balance surged from €1.6 billion to €8 billion in May. The euro appreciated by 1.1% against the US dollar this week. The ECB kept policy unchanged this week. As interest rate spreads between the core and periphery converge, the ECB’s work is done. We remain positive on the euro against the US dollar, though petrocurrencies and the British pound will likely outperform should our bet on high-beta currencies pan out. Report Links: On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 On Money Velocity, EUR/USD And Silver - October 11, 2019 Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
Recent data in Japan have been negative: Industrial production plunged by 26.3% year-on-year in May, following a 25.9% contraction the previous month. Capacity utilization continued to fall by 11.6% year-on-year in May. The Japanese yen appreciated by 0.5% against the US dollar this week. The BoJ maintained its interest rate at -0.1% on Tuesday and made no changes to its asset purchase program. While Governor Haruhiko Kuroda warned the outlook remains highly uncertain (including downgrading the economic forecast for 2020), he sounded conciliatory to the fact that fiscal policy might be needed to boost Japanese demand. Report Links: The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar - February 28, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
Recent data in the UK have been mixed: The total trade surplus widened from £2.3 billion to £4.3 billion in May, boosted by a 6.6% jump in goods sales. Retail sales surged by 10.9% yearly in June. Both headline and core inflation increased to 0.6% and 1.4% year-on-year, respectively in June. The unemployment stayed flat at 3.9% in May. Average earnings fell by 0.3% year-on-year in the 3 months to May. However, industrial production fell by 20% year-on-year in May. The British pound was flat against the US dollar this week. The UK economy contracted by 19.1% in the three months to May, according to ONS data. GDP grew by 1.8% month-on-month in May alone, but this is still 25% below the February level. On the positive side, NIESR forecasts that the UK economy is likely to recover by 8-10% in the third quarter of 2020. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 2019 United Kingdom: Cyclical Slowdown Or Structural Malaise? - Sept. 20, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
Recent data in Australia have been positive: NAB business confidence increased from -20 to 1 in June. The business conditions index also jumped from -24 to -7. New home sales surged by 87.2% month-on-month in May. Employment increased by 210.8K in June, with an increase of 249K part-time jobs and a loss of 38.1K full-time jobs. The Australian dollar appreciated by 0.9% against the US dollar this week. The latest Labor Force Survey shows positive developments in recent months. While the unemployment rate ticked up slightly, both the underemployment rate and underutilisation rate declined by 1.4% and 1%, respectively in June. Moreover, the participation rate increased by 1.3% to 64%. Report Links: On AUD And CNY - January 17, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Contrarian View On The Australian Dollar - May 24, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
Recent data in New Zealand have been negative: Visitor arrivals plunged in May amid the global pandemic. ANZ monthly inflation gauge fell from 2.8% year-on-year to 2.4% year-on-year in June. Headline consumer price inflation slowed from 2.5% to 1.5% year-on-year in Q2. The New Zealand dollar fell by 0.2% against the US dollar this week. As we mentioned in last week’s report, the government’s effort to limit the spread of COVID-19 and curb immigration will hurt New Zealand’s labor market. The “Migration after COVID-19” released by NZIER this week also implied more restrictive immigration policy going forward. Stay short NZD/CAD. Report Links: Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Place A Limit Sell On DXY At 100 - November 15, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
Recent data in Canada have been positive: In June, the unemployment rate declined from 13.7% to 12.3%. The participation rate also increased from 61.4% to 63.8%. Manufacturing sales surged by 10.7% month-on-month in May, following a 27.9% decline the previous month. The Canadian dollar appreciated by 0.4% against the US dollar this week. On Wednesday, the BoC kept its benchmark interest rate unchanged, as widely expected. BoC’s new Governor Tiff Macklem said that “it’s going to be a long climb out” and implied that interest rates are likely to stay unusually low for a long time. Report Links: Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
Recent data in Switzerland have been negative: Producer and import prices declined by 3.5% year-on-year in June, following a 4.5% contraction the previous month. Total sight deposit continued to increase from CHF 687 billion to CHF 688.6 billion for the week ended July 10th. The Swiss franc fell by 0.2% against the US dollar this week. In a speech this Tuesday, SNB Chairman Thomas Jordan said that the current policy in place since 2015 is unlikely to change anytime soon. He also acknowledged that the SNB had intervened in the FX market more strongly in recent months to ease upward pressure on the franc amid the global pandemic. Report Links: On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 Portfolio Tweaks Before The Chinese New Year - January 24, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
Recent data in Norway have been mixed: Headline consumer prices increased by 1.4% year-on-year in June. Core inflation surged by 3.1% year-on-year in June, the highest since August 2016. Producer prices fell by 14.4% year-on-year in June, following a 17.5% contraction the previous month. The trade deficit widened from NOK1.2 billion to NOK10.2 billion in June. Exports fell by 15.6% year-on-year while imports rose by 10%, with a surge in food and manufactured goods purchases. The Norwegian krone increased by 2% against the US dollar this week. While the Norwegian krone has rebounded by 22% since the March lows, it is still 7-10% cheaper compared with pre-COVID-19 levels. Our bias is that the Norwegian krone still has tremendous room to run towards its fair value. Report Links: A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 On Oil, Growth And The Dollar - January 10, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
Recent data in Sweden have been positive: Headline consumer price inflation rose to 0.7% year-on-year in June, from -0.4% in April. Food and non-alcoholic beverages inflation slowed from 3.9% year-on-year the previous month but remained high at 2.6% year-on-year in June. The Swedish krona jumped by 2% against the US dollar this week on the back of positive inflation data. A bit less than the Norwegian krone, the Swedish krona has increased by 13% since its March lows but is still far below the value prior to COVID-19. We maintain a positive stance towards both NOK and SEK. Our Nordic basket is now 11% in the money. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Feature Over the last several years when I travelled to Europe, I would meet with Ms. Mea, an outspoken client of the Emerging Markets Strategy service. We have published our conversations with Ms. Mea in the past and this semi-annual series has complemented our regular reports. She has challenged our views and convictions, serving as a voice for many other clients. In addition, these conversations have highlighted nuances of our analysis, for her and to the benefit of our readers. With travel restrictions in force, this time we had to resort to an online meeting with Ms. Mea. Below are the key parts of our conversation from earlier this week. Ms. Mea: Let’s begin with your main thesis, which over the past several years has been as follows: China’s growth drives EM business cycles and financial markets overall. Indeed, as long as China’s growth dithers, EM growth and asset prices languish. However, since the pandemic started China has stimulated aggressively and there are clear signs that the economy is recovering. The latest surge in Chinese share prices confirms that a robust recovery is underway. Why do you not think China’s economy is on the upswing? Answer: True, we believe China’s business cycle is instrumental to EM economies’ growth and balance of payments. We upgraded our outlook for Chinese growth in our May 28 report as the National People’s Congress set the objective for monetary policy in 2020 to significantly accelerate the growth rate of broad money supply and total social financing relative to last year. Indeed, broad money growth as well as both private and public credit have accelerated since April and will continue to increase (Chart I-1). Domestic orders have also surged though export orders are still languishing (Chart I-2). Chart I-1China: Money And Credit Will Continue Accelerating
China: Money And Credit Will Continue Accelerating
China: Money And Credit Will Continue Accelerating
Chart I-2China: Improvement In Domestic Orders But Not In Export Ones
China: Improvement In Domestic Orders But Not In Export Ones
China: Improvement In Domestic Orders But Not In Export Ones
That said, financial markets, including the ones leveraged to China, have run ahead of fundamentals and a pullback is overdue. We have been waiting for such a setback to turn more positive on EM risk assets and currencies. Further, the snapback in business activity following the lockdown should not be confused with an economic expansion. As economies around the world reopened, business activity was bound to improve. Were any asset markets priced to reflect months or a whole year of closures? Even at the nadir of the global equity selloff in late March, we do not think risk assets were priced for extended lockdowns. The Chinese economy will likely eventually experience a robust expansion later this year but the nearterm outlook for global risk assets and commodities remains risky. In our view, the rally in global stocks and commodities has been much stronger than is warranted by the near-term economic conditions in a majority of economies around the world. In short, we have not been surprised at all by the economic data that has emerged since economies have reopened, but we have been perplexed by the markets’ response to these data. Even in China, which is ahead of all other countries in regards to the reopening and normalization of business activity, the level and thrust of economic activity remains worrisome. Specifically: China's manufacturing PMI new orders and the backlog of orders sub-components remain below the neutral 50 line (Chart I-3). The imports subcomponent of the manufacturing PMI has shown signs of peaking below the 50 line, portending a risk to industrial metals prices (Chart I-4). Chart I-3China Manufacturing PMI: Measures Of Orders Are Still Below 50
China Manufacturing PMI: Measures Of Orders Are Still Below 50
China Manufacturing PMI: Measures Of Orders Are Still Below 50
Chart I-4A Yellow Flag For Commodities
A Yellow Flag For Commodities
A Yellow Flag For Commodities
Marginal propensity to spend for both enterprises and households continues to trend lower (Chart I-5). These gauge the willingness of consumers and companies to spend and, hence, reflect the multiplier effect of the stimulus. These indicators contend that the multiplier so far remains low/weak. Finally, with the exception of new economy stocks (such as Ali-Baba and Tencent) that have been exceptionally strong worldwide, Chinese share prices leveraged to capital expenditure and consumer discretionary spending had not been particularly strong before last week, as illustrated in Chart I-6. Chart I-5Marginal Propensity To Spend Among Chinese Households And Enterprises
Marginal Propensity To Spend Among Chinese Households And Enterprises
Marginal Propensity To Spend Among Chinese Households And Enterprises
Chart I-6Chinese Stocks Had Been Languishing Till Late Outside New Economy Ones
Chinese Stocks Had Been Languishing Till Late Outside New Economy Ones
Chinese Stocks Had Been Languishing Till Late Outside New Economy Ones
In a nutshell, the Chinese economy will likely eventually experience a robust expansion later this year but the near-term outlook for global risk assets and commodities remains risky. As to EM risk assets, the key risk to our stance is a FOMO-driven rally buoyed by the “visible hand” of governments. Ms. Mea: What is your interpretation of the latest policy push in China for higher share prices? Is it also a part of the “visible hand” of government? Don’t you think this could create another strong multi-month run like it did in early 2015? Answer: Yes, this is one of many instances of the “visible hand” of governments around the world. It is not clear why Beijing is boosting investor sentiment and explicitly promoting higher share prices given how badly similar efforts in 2015 ultimately ended. At the moment, we can only speculate that one or several of the following reasons are behind this move: Beijing is preparing for an escalation in the US-China geopolitical confrontation ahead of the US presidential elections. This latter is highly probable in our opinion.1 To limit the impact of this confrontation on their economy, they want to ensure that the stock market remains in an uptrend. The same can be said for the US authorities. Apparently, the “visible hands” of both Washington and Beijing have and will continue to push share prices higher in their domestic markets. Robust equity markets will become a prominent feature of the geopolitical confrontation between the US and China. In the long run, however, this is a very negative phenomenon for the world because the two of the largest and most prominent stock markets could increasingly be driven by the “visible hand” of their governments rather than by fundamentals. As a result, equity markets could regularly send wrong price signals and will no longer serve as an efficient mechanism of capital allocation. Chart I-7Foreign Inflows Into China Have Accelerated This Year
Foreign Inflows Into China Have Accelerated This Year
Foreign Inflows Into China Have Accelerated This Year
Beijing has been luring foreign investors to buy onshore stocks and bonds and this strategy has become more vital in expectation of an escalation in the US-China confrontation. Chart I-7 shows that net inflows into onshore stocks and bonds have been surging. The more US investors buy into mainland markets, the more these investors will exercise pressure on the current and future US administrations to go soft on China. Like those US companies relying on Chinese demand, large US investment funds will have a notable exposure to Chinese financial markets and will accordingly lobby the White House and Congress to take a less adversarial stance toward China. This will reduce the maneuvering room of US politicians in this geopolitical confrontation. Finally, it is also possible that these latest media reports encouraging a bull market in China were not initiated by leaders in Beijing but were in fact spurred by mid-level bureaucrats. If that is the case, a full-blown mania akin to the one in 2015 will not be repeated and the latest frenzy surrounding Chinese stocks could end up being the final surge before a correction sets in. In brief, Chinese stocks, like other bourses worldwide, are in a FOMO-driven mania that might last for a while. Nevertheless, regardless of the direction of Chinese stocks in absolute terms, we reiterate our overweight stance on Chinese equities within the EM benchmark. Also, we have a strong conviction with respect to the merits of a long Chinese/short Korean stocks trade. Both these positions were initiated on June 18 before the latest surge in Chinese stocks. The “visible hands” of both Washington and Beijing have and will continue to push share prices higher in their domestic markets. Ms. Mea: What will it take for you to go long EM risk assets and currencies in absolute terms? Answer: EM equities, credit markets and currencies are driven by three, or more recently four, factors. We need to witness or foresee an imminent improvement in three out of four of these to go outright long. These factors include: (1) China’s business cycle and its impact on EM via global trade; (2) each individual EM country’s domestic fundamentals (inflation/deflation, balance of payments, return on capital, domestic economic cycles, monetary and fiscal policies, health of the banking system, domestic politics, etc.); (3) global risk-on and risk-off cycles that drive portfolio flows into EM. The direction of the S&P500 is an important trendsetter for these risk-on and risk-off cycles; (4) swings in geopolitical confrontation between the US and China. The first element – China’s impact on EM – is becoming positive. There could be a minor setback in mainland business cycles in the near term, but this should be used as a buying opportunity. As to structural problems in China like credit/money and property bubbles as well as the misallocation of capital, ongoing money and credit growth acceleration will fill in holes and kick the can down the road. That said, those structural problems will become even more challenging in the years to come. In short, Beijing is making credit, money and property bubbles even bigger. The second factor – domestic fundamentals in EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan – remain downbeat. The COVID-19 outbreak has been out of control in a number of EM economies (Chart I-8). In addition, outside of China, Korea and Taiwan, EM fiscal stimulus has not been as large as in DM economies. Critically, the monetary transmission mechanism has been broken in several developing economies. In particular, central banks’ rate cuts have not translated to lower lending rates in real terms (Chart I-9). Chart I-8The COVID-19 Pandemic Has Not Peaked In Several Major EM Economies
The COVID-19 Pandemic Has Not Peaked In Several Major EM Economies
The COVID-19 Pandemic Has Not Peaked In Several Major EM Economies
Chart I-9Lending Rates Are Still High In EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan
Lending Rates Are Still High In EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan
Lending Rates Are Still High In EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan
The basis is two-fold: First, banks saddled with non-performing loans are reluctant to bring down their lending rates and lend more; and second, the considerable decline in EM inflation has pushed up real lending rates (Chart I-9). The third variable driving EM financial markets – the S&P 500 – remains at risk of a material setback. If the S&P drops more than 10 or 15%, EM stocks, currencies and credit markets will also sell off markedly. Finally, there is the fourth aspect of the EM view – geopolitics – which could be critical in the coming months. The US-China confrontation will likely heighten leading up to the US elections. This will likely involve North and South Korea and Taiwan. Chart I-10EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Stocks And Currencies
EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Stocks And Currencies
EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Stocks And Currencies
Chinese investable stocks as well as Korean and Taiwanese equities altogether make up 65% of the MSCI EM benchmark. Hence, a flareup in geopolitical tensions will weigh on these three bourses. Outside these markets, EM share prices and currencies have already rolled over (Chart I-10). In sum, out of the four factors listed above only the Chinese business cycle warrants an upgrade on overall EM. The other three drivers of the EM view are still negative. This keeps us on the sidelines for now. Importantly, we have been gradually moving our investment strategy from bearish to neutral on EM. Specifically, we: Took profits on the long EM currencies volatility trade on March 5. Took large profits on the long gold / short oil and copper trade on March 11. Booked gains on the short position in EM stocks on March 19. Recommended receiving long-term (10-year) swap rates (or buying local currency bonds while hedging the exchange rate risk) in many EMs on April 23. Upgraded EM sovereign credit from underweight and booked profits on our short EM corporate and sovereign credit / long US investment grade bonds strategy on June 4. The only asset class where we have not yet closed our shorts is EM currencies. In fact, we now recommend shifting our short in EM currencies (BRL, CLP, ZAR, TRY, KRW, PHP and IDR) from the US dollar to an equal-weighted basket of the Swiss franc, the euro and the Japanese yen. Unlike the March selloff, the dollar could depreciate even if the S&P 500 and global stocks drop. Ms. Mea: What is the rationale behind switching your short positions in EM currencies against the US dollar to short positions versus the Swiss franc, the euro and Japanese yen? Wouldn’t the selloff in global stocks drive the greenback higher? Answer: We have been bullish on the US dollar since 2011, consistent with our negative view on EM and commodities prices and recommendation of favoring the S&P 500 versus EM. What is making us question this strategy are the following, in order of importance: First, the Federal Reserve is monetizing US public and some private debt. The amount of US dollars is surging. Meanwhile, the pace of broad money supply growth is much more timid in the euro area, Switzerland and Japan. Broad money growth is 23% in the US, 9% in the euro area, 2.5% in Switzerland, 5% in Japan and 11% in China. This will reduce investors’ willingness to hold dollars as a store of value, incentivizing them to switch to other DM currencies. Second, the pandemic is out of control in the US and this will damage its near-term growth outlook. More fiscal stimulus and more debt monetization will be required to revive the economy. Third, the Fed will not hike interest rates even if inflation rises well above their 2% target in the next several years. This implies that the Fed will prefer to be behind the inflation curve in the years to come, which is bearish for the greenback. Finally, the yen and the euro as well as EM currencies are cheaper than the US dollar (Chart I-11 and Chart I-12). Chart I-11The US Dollar Is Expensive, The Yen Is Cheap
The US Dollar Is Expensive, The Yen Is Cheap
The US Dollar Is Expensive, The Yen Is Cheap
Chart I-12EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Currencies Are Cheap
EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Currencies Are Cheap
EM ex-China, Korea And Taiwan: Currencies Are Cheap
The broad trade-weighted US dollar has yet to break down as per the top panel of Chart I-13, but we are becoming nervous about it. Unlike the March selloff, the dollar could depreciate even if the S&P 500 and global stocks drop. Ms. Mea: That is interesting. Has there ever been an episode where the US dollar depreciated while the S&P 500 sold off? Answer: Yes, it occurred in late 2007 and H1 2008. The 2007-08 bear market in global stocks can be split into two periods. During the initial phase of that bear market, the US dollar depreciated substantially despite the drawdowns in global equity and credit markets (Chart I-14, top and middle panels). Chart I-13Trade-Weighted Dollar And Asian Currencies: At A Critical Juncture
Trade-Weighted Dollar And Asian Currencies: At A Critical Juncture
Trade-Weighted Dollar And Asian Currencies: At A Critical Juncture
Chart I-14In Late 2007 And H1 2008: The US Dollar Fell Amid An Equity Bear Market
In Late 2007 And H1 2008: The US Dollar Fell Amid An Equity Bear Market
In Late 2007 And H1 2008: The US Dollar Fell Amid An Equity Bear Market
EM stocks performed in line with DM ones during the first phase (Chart I-14, bottom panel). The economic backdrop was characterized by the US recession and US banks tightening credit. In fact, EM growth was still robust during that phase even though the US economy was shrinking. Remarkably, commodities prices were surging – oil reached $140 per a barrel and copper $4 per ton in June 2008. The second phase of that bear market commenced in autumn of 2008 when Lehman went bust. The orderly bear market in global stocks gave way to an acute phase – a crash in all global risk assets. Business activity collapsed worldwide and the US dollar surged. In the current cycle, the order will likely be the reverse of the 2007-08 bear market. March 2020 witnessed a crash in global risk assets and the global economy plunged similar to the second phase of the 2007-08 bear market while the US dollar surged. The second stage of this recession could resemble the first phase of the 2007-08 bear market. There will be neither worldwide lockdowns nor a crash in business activity. However, the level of activity might struggle to recover as rapidly as markets have priced in or there might be relapses in economic conditions in certain parts of the world. This is especially true for the US and other countries where the pandemic has not been effectively contained. On the whole, the second downleg in the S&P 500 and global stocks will be less dramatic but could last for a while and still be meaningful (more than 10-15%). Critically, unlike the March 2020 selloff, the greenback will likely struggle during this episode for the reasons we outlined above. Ms. Mea: What about overweighting EM equities and credit versus their DM peers? Will EM equities, credit and currencies underperform their DM peers in the potential selloff that you expect? Wouldn’t USD weakness help EM risk assets to outperform even in a broad risk selloff? Answer: Yes, we can see a scenario where EM stocks and credit markets perform in line or better than their DM peers in a potential selloff. The key is the dollar’s dynamics. If the dollar rebounds, EM stocks and credit markets will underperform their DM counterparts. If the dollar weakens during this selloff, EM stocks and credit will likely perform in line with or better than their DM peers. In sum, a technical breakdown in the broad trade-weighted dollar and a breakout in the emerging Asian currency index – both shown in Chart I-13 – would lead us to upgrade our EM allocation in both global equity and credit portfolios. For now, we are only switching our shorts in EM currencies from the US dollar to an equally-weighted basket of the Swiss franc, the euro and the Japanese yen. Ms. Mea: What are some of your other current observations on financial markets? Answer: The breadth and thrust of this global equity rally has already peaked and is weakening. It is just a matter of time before a narrowing breadth translates into lower aggregate stock indexes for both EM and DM equities as illustrated by our advance-decline lines in Chart I-15. Chart I-15EM and DM Equity Breadth Measures Have Rolled Over
EM and DM Equity Breadth Measures Have Rolled Over
EM and DM Equity Breadth Measures Have Rolled Over
Chart I-16Cyclicals And High-Beta Stocks Have Been Struggling
Cyclicals and High-Beta Stocks Have Been Struggling
Cyclicals and High-Beta Stocks Have Been Struggling
Consistently, there has already been a decoupling between various sectors and industries. The rally has been solely focused on tech and new economy stocks. Equity prices in China and Taiwan have been surging while the rest of the EM equity index has been languishing. In the DM equity space, global industrials, US high-beta stocks and micro caps have already rolled over (Chart I-16). Further, our Risk-On/Safe-Haven currency index is flashing red for EM equities (Chart I-17). Chart I-17A Red Flag For EM Equities?
A Red Flag For EM Equities?
A Red Flag For EM Equities?
Chart I-18Long Gold / Short Stocks
Long Gold / Short Stocks
Long Gold / Short Stocks
Finally, EM share prices have outperformed DM stocks since late May mostly due to the sharp rally in Chinese, Korean and Taiwanese stocks. Hence, the breadth of EM equity outperformance has been subdued. Ms. Mea: To wrap up our conversation, I want to ask you what is your strongest conviction trade for the coming months? Answer: Our strongest conviction trade is long gold / short global or EM stocks (Chart I-18). This trade will do well regardless of the direction of global share prices, the US dollar, and bond yields. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report "Watch Out For A Second Wave (Of US-China Frictions)," dated June 10, 2020, available at gps.bcaresearch.com Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
Highlights The cost of housing is the one item that has held up US inflation vis a vis European inflation in recent years. But as the cost of housing flips from being a strong tailwind to a strong headwind, US inflation is about to converge down to European levels and stay there. This means that US and European bond yields will also converge. If the US 30-year yield converges down to the UK 30-year yield, it would equate to a price appreciation of 15 percent. Underweight the dollar versus the most defensive European currency, the Swiss franc. Continue to favour long-duration defensive equities, technology and healthcare, whose net present values are most leveraged to a decline in the US T-bond yield. Fractal trade: long GBP/RUB. Feature Chart I-1Housing Cost Inflation Has Been Subdued In The UK...
Housing Cost Inflation Has Been Subdued In The UK...
Housing Cost Inflation Has Been Subdued In The UK...
Chart I-2...But Running Hot In The US. What Happens Next?
...But Running Hot In The US. What Happens Next?
...But Running Hot In The US. What Happens Next?
One of the biggest ongoing costs that we face is the cost of housing. Yet economists remain perplexed on how to measure this cost in a consumer price index. For people who rent their homes, the issue is straightforward – the rent paid every month captures the cost of the housing services that are consumed. But for owner occupiers, the biggest ongoing cost tends to be the mortgage interest payment. Therein lies a problem. Measuring Housing Costs Is A Challenge A consumer price index aims to measure the costs of consumption. But a mortgage interest payment measures the cost of borrowing money, rather than a cost of consumption. Therefore, capturing owner occupiers’ housing costs poses a challenge, and economists have developed several theoretical approaches to measure them (Box I-1). Box I-1The Different Methods Of Measuring Owner Occupiers’ Housing Costs
Why Housing Costs Matter More Than Ever
Why Housing Costs Matter More Than Ever
This report focusses on the approach known as rental equivalence or ‘owners’ equivalent rent’. The reason is that rental equivalence is the approach used in the UK CPI including housing (CPIH) – though be aware that the Bank of England still targets inflation using the CPI excluding housing. Rental equivalence is also the approach used in the US CPI and PCE, and the Federal Reserve does target inflation including housing. The treatment of housing costs in inflation matters enormously. The UK versus US comparison reveals something odd. In the UK, owner occupiers’ housing inflation has been running well below overall inflation, whereas in the US it has been running hot (Chart I-1 and Chart I-2). In fact, remove the 25 percent weighting to owners’ equivalent rent from the US consumer price index – to make it comparable with Europe – and the US inflation rate would now be one of the lowest in the world at minus 1 percent! (Chart I-3). Hence, the treatment of housing costs in inflation matters enormously. Chart I-3Excluding Owners' Equivalent Rent, US Inflation Is Minus 1 Percent
Excluding Owners' Equivalent Rent, US Inflation Is Minus 1 Percent
Excluding Owners' Equivalent Rent, US Inflation Is Minus 1 Percent
What Is Driving Housing Costs? A UK Versus US Comparison Rental equivalence uses the rent paid for an equivalent house as a proxy for the costs faced by an owner occupier. The approach answers the question: “how much rent would I have to pay to live in a home like mine?” In other words, the housing services are valued by looking at the cost of the next best alternative to owning the home, namely renting an identical or near-identical property. As rental equivalence aims to measure the cost of housing services rather than the asset value of the house, it should not be expected to move in line with house prices in the short-term. Indeed, the rent for a property is likely to be lower in relation to the house price when the monthly mortgage payment is lower. This is because a lower monthly mortgage payment makes it more affordable to own a house, pushing down the prices of rents and rental equivalence. Economists remain perplexed on how to measure housing costs in a consumer price index. In the UK, mortgages tend to have a variable interest rate linked to the Bank of England policy rate. Hence, the change in short-term mortgage rates explains the profile of housing cost inflation. For the past few years, UK owner occupiers’ housing inflation has been subdued because short-term mortgage rates have been drifting down (Chart I-4). Chart I-4UK Owner Occupiers' Housing Cost Inflation Tracks Changes In The Mortgage Rate
UK Owner Occupiers' Housing Cost Inflation Tracks Changes In The Mortgage Rate
UK Owner Occupiers' Housing Cost Inflation Tracks Changes In The Mortgage Rate
But in the US, mortgages tend to have fixed rates resulting in a different explanation for the profile of housing cost inflation. US owners’ equivalent rent inflation moves in lockstep with actual rent inflation. In fact, the two series are almost indistinguishable (Chart I-5). Raising the question: what drives US rent inflation? Empirically, the most important driver is the (inverted) unemployment rate – which establishes the number of people who can rent a property. Chart I-5US Owners' Equivalent Rent Tracks Actual Rent Inflation
US Owners' Equivalent Rent Tracks Actual Rent Inflation
US Owners' Equivalent Rent Tracks Actual Rent Inflation
This leads to a crucial finding. The last three times that the US unemployment rate moved into the high single digits – in the recessions of the early 1980s, early 1990s, and 2008 – rent inflation plus owners’ equivalent rent inflation flipped from being a strong tailwind to core inflation into a very strong headwind. Given the consistent relationship in each of the last three recessions, and with US unemployment rate now running in double digits, only a brave man would bet on it being any different in the 2020 recession (Chart I-6). Chart I-6Whenever US Unemployment Surges, Shelter Inflation Flips From An Inflation Tailwind To An Inflation Headwind
Whenever US Unemployment Surges, Shelter Inflation Flips From An Inflation Tailwind To An Inflation Headwind
Whenever US Unemployment Surges, Shelter Inflation Flips From An Inflation Tailwind To An Inflation Headwind
The combination of rent plus owners’ equivalent rent – shelter – comprises 34 percent of the US consumer price index, 42 percent of the core CPI, as well as a hefty weighting in the core PCE. It is the one item that has held up US core inflation vis a vis European core inflation in recent years (Chart I-7). But as shelter inflation flips from being a strong tailwind to a strong headwind, US inflation is about to converge down to European levels and stay there. Chart I-7Shelter Has Propped Up US Core Inflation... But For How Much Longer?
Shelter Has Propped Up US Core Inflation... But For How Much Longer?
Shelter Has Propped Up US Core Inflation... But For How Much Longer?
The Implications Of Converging Inflation As US inflation converges down to European levels, the last few years of divergence in US bond yields from European yields will prove to be a brief aberration. Before 2016, US and European yields were joined at the hip. It is highly likely that they will soon re-join at the hip (Chart I-8 and Chart I-9). Chart I-8The Last Few Years Of Divergence Between US And European Bond Yields...
The Last Few Years Of Divergence Between US And European Bond Yields...
The Last Few Years Of Divergence Between US And European Bond Yields...
Chart I-9...Will Prove To Be A Brief ##br##Aberration
...Will Prove To Be A Brief Aberration
...Will Prove To Be A Brief Aberration
All of which reinforces three of our existing investment recommendations: Stay overweight US T-bonds versus high-quality European government bonds. In fact, if the US 30-year yield converges down to the UK 30-year yield, it would equate to a price appreciation of 15 percent. Meaning that an absolute overweight to the US long bond will also reap rewards. Turning to currencies, yield convergence should be bearish for the dollar versus European currencies. That said, the dollar has the merit of being well bid during periods of economic and financial stress which might prove to be regular occurrences in the coming year. On this basis, the best strategy is to underweight the dollar versus the most defensive European currency, the Swiss franc. If the US 30-year yield converges down to the UK 30-year yield, it would equate to a price appreciation of 15 percent. Finally, in the equity markets, continue to favour long-duration growth defensives – whose net present values are most leveraged to a decline in the US T-bond yield. This means technology and healthcare. Fractal Trading System* The rally in the Russian rouble is technically stretched and susceptible to a countertrend reversal. Accordingly, this week’s recommended trade is long GBP/RUB. Set the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 3 percent. Chart I-10GBP/RUB
GBP/RUB
GBP/RUB
In other trades, long Australia versus New Zealand closed at the end of its 65 day holding period flat. The rolling 1-year win ratio now stands at 59 percent. 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 Fractal Trading System Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - 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 Money Supply Drivers: About 70% of the unprecedented increase in broad money supply is the result of the Fed’s asset purchase activity. The remaining 30% is due to an uptick in C&I loan growth, almost all of which is from nonfinancial firms tapping existing credit lines, an activity that will taper off in the coming months. Money Supply Impact: We don’t find broad money supply measures (M1 and M2) to be useful indicators of economic growth, inflation or financial asset performance. Bank Bonds: After viewing the results of the Fed’s stress tests, we still think the odds of bank ratings downgrades this year are low. Investors should stay overweight subordinate bank bonds. Feature The COVID-19 recession and associated policy response have led to unprecedented moves in a number of economic indicators. In this week’s report we focus on one such move that is particularly difficult to square with the rest of the economic landscape, at least judging by the large volume of client questions we’ve received on the topic. The move in question: Broad money supply growth (M1 & M2) is faster today than at any time since the mid-1940s (Chart 1). This week, we look at what has driven money growth to such heights and consider what it might mean for bond investors. We also update our call to overweight subordinate bank bonds based on last week’s release of the Fed’s bank stress tests. Chart 1Massive Money Growth!
Massive Money Growth!
Massive Money Growth!
Money Supply Drivers The US economy’s broad money supply is more or less the sum total of all the money sitting in bank deposits at any point in time. More specifically, the M1 measure includes currency in circulation, demand deposits and traveler’s checks. The M2 measure includes all of M1 plus savings accounts, time deposits and retail money market funds. Fed asset purchases and bank lending are the two drivers of money supply growth. There are two ways for these broad money supply measures to grow. First, the Fed can purchase securities from the private market. Second, banks can lend money to the private sector. We consider both of these drivers in turn. The Federal Reserve’s Contribution To Money Growth The Fed influences the money supply by changing the amount of reserves in the banking system. To see how this works, Table 1 shows recent balance sheets for both the Fed and the aggregate US banking system. Table 1The Link Between The Fed’s Balance Sheet And The Aggregate US Banking System
The Case Against The Money Supply
The Case Against The Money Supply
The largest line items on the Fed’s balance sheet are the securities it owns (on the asset side) and the reserves it supplies to the banking system (on the liability side). The Treasury Department’s General Account has also become a sizeable liability for the Fed during the past couple of months (see Box). Box 1: The Large Treasury General Account Is Not Stimulus Waiting To Be Deployed The Treasury General Account (TGA), aka the Treasury Department’s cash account at the Fed, has skyrocketed during the past couple of months and now totals $1.6 trillion (Chart 3). This has prompted more than a few client questions, mostly asking whether this large amount of money represents fiscal stimulus that is waiting to be deployed. Chart 3Treasury Holds A Huge Cash Buffer
Treasury Holds A Huge Cash Buffer
Treasury Holds A Huge Cash Buffer
It does not. Any new fiscal stimulus must be authorized by Congress and with most of the funds from the CARES act having already been paid out, any further fiscal stimulus is contingent upon Congress passing a follow-up bill. So why is the TGA balance so large? The Treasury Department’s job is to finance the federal government’s deficit by issuing bonds. To do this, it must make estimates about what tax revenues and government spending will be in the future. To avoid a situation where it has not issued enough bonds to finance the deficit, it will typically err on the side of caution and issue some extra bonds, holding the proceeds in cash in its account at the Fed. Due to the heightened uncertainty of the current macro environment, it recently decided to target a larger-than-usual cash balance of $800 billion. It even overshot that target during the past couple of months, likely because tax revenues came in higher than expected. Going forward, heightened uncertainty about federal deficit projections will ensure that the Treasury continues to hold an elevated cash balance. However, it will probably try to bring the TGA balance down a bit in the second half of the year, closer to its stated $800 billion target. It will accomplish this by simply issuing fewer T-bills in the second half of the year. This will have the result of increasing the broad money supply through the same mechanism as Fed asset purchases. That is, any drawdown in the TGA increases the amount of reserves supplied on the liability side of the Fed’s balance sheet. When the Fed buys a Treasury security it removes that security from the private market and replaces it with cash in the form of a bank reserve. Those bank reserves are a liability for the Fed, but appear on the asset side of the banking sector’s aggregate balance sheet. Please note that the amount of reserves supplied on the Fed’s balance sheet in Table 1 doesn’t exactly match the amount of reserves shown on the banking sector’s balance sheet. This is only because the numbers were recorded on different days. Turning to the banking sector’s balance sheet, we see that when the amount of reserves increases there are only a few different things that can occur to keep the balance sheet in balance. Banks can accommodate the increase in reserves by reducing the amount of loans or securities they hold. Alternatively, banks can raise capital, borrow in private debt markets or show an increase in deposits. When banks accommodate the increase in reserves by raising deposits, the money supply rises. Charts 2A and 2B show the change in the main items on the aggregate banking system balance sheet since the end of February. First, we see that banks did not reduce their other asset holdings in response to the sharp increase in reserves. Neither did they raise capital or debt. Rather, deposit growth accommodated the entire increase in bank reserves. Chart 2AChange In Commercial Bank Assets: February 26 To June 17, 2020
The Case Against The Money Supply
The Case Against The Money Supply
Chart 2BChange In Commercial Bank Liabilities & Capital: February 26 To June 17, 2020
The Case Against The Money Supply
The Case Against The Money Supply
In fact, deposits have grown by about $2 trillion since February compared to reserve growth of $1.4 trillion. Roughly, we can say that Fed asset purchases are responsible for 70% of the growth in the money supply since then. The remaining 30% is attributable to the second driver of the money supply: bank lending. Bank Lending’s Contribution To Money Growth Looking again at Table 1, we see that an increase in bank loans must also lead to an increase in deposits, unless the bank raises debt and/or capital instead. Further, Chart 2A shows that increased bank lending since February accounts for about 30% of the growth in deposits. However, we expect bank loan growth to moderate in the coming months, easing some of the upward pressure on the money supply. This year's increase in bank loan growth has been driven entirely by C&I loans. A look at bank loan growth by category shows that this year’s increase has been driven entirely by Commercial & Industrial (C&I) loans (Chart 4). Growth in other major loan categories – commercial real estate, residential real estate and consumer – has flagged. Further, the increase in C&I lending has been mostly due to firms drawing on existing credit lines. Chart 4A Spike In C&I Lending
A Spike In C&I Lending
A Spike In C&I Lending
The Fed’s Senior Loan Officer Survey for the first quarter of 2020 showed a small increase in C&I loan demand. But the survey also asked about potential reasons for the demand uptick (Chart 5). When faced with that question, 95% of respondents reported that “precautionary demand for cash” was a “very important” reason for increased C&I loan demand in Q1. 71% of respondents also pointed to a lack of internally generated funds as a “very important” reason. Importantly, no respondents reported increased C&I loan demand due to investment needs or M&A activity. Chart 5Possible Reasons For Greater C&I Loan Demand In Q1 2020
The Case Against The Money Supply
The Case Against The Money Supply
The distinction is important. Greater investment needs and M&A activity would suggest an improving economic back-drop, and would imply a more sustainable increase in bank lending. In contrast, there is a limit to how much firms can tap existing credit lines for immediate cash needs, and this activity should taper off during the next few months. Bottom Line: About 70% of the unprecedented increase in broad money supply is the result of the Fed’s asset purchase activity. The remaining 30% is due to an uptick in C&I loan growth, almost all of which is from nonfinancial firms tapping existing credit lines, an activity that will taper off in the coming months. The Implications Of Rapid Money Growth According to some theory and popular thought, there are three possible channels through which rapid money growth could impact the economy and financial markets: Fast money growth could lead to stronger economic growth in the future. Fast money growth could lead to rising inflationary pressures. A larger money supply could suggest that there are more funds available to deploy in financial markets. As such, it could lead to price appreciation in risky financial assets. We are inclined to downplay the importance of M1 and M2 as indicators in all three of these areas, for reasons discussed below. The Money Supply’s Impact On Economic Growth In the past, measures of the broad money supply (M1 and M2) did a good job of forecasting economic growth and were tracked closely (and at times targeted) by the Federal Reserve. But as the banking and monetary systems evolved, M1 and M2 became less important. As Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan explained in 1996:1 At different times in our history a varying set of simple indicators seemed successfully to summarize the state of monetary policy and its relationship to the economy. Thus, during the decades of the 1970s and 1980s, trends in money supply, first M1, then M2, were useful guides. […] Unfortunately, money supply trends veered off path several years ago as a useful summary of the overall economy. Chairman Greenspan’s insight is backed up by the empirical data (Chart 6). Real M2 growth was an excellent leading indicator of economic growth until the early 1990s. The relationship has broken down since then, and in fact, the only reliable trend in Real M2 since the 1990s is that it tends to spike during recessions. Chart 6Broad Money Growth Has Been A Poor Indicator For Economic Activity Since The 1990s
Broad Money Growth Has Been A Poor Indicator For Economic Activity Since The 1990s
Broad Money Growth Has Been A Poor Indicator For Economic Activity Since The 1990s
The Conference Board also noticed this trend and removed Real M2 from its Leading Economic Indicator in 2012. According to the Conference Board, Real M2 ceased to function as a leading economic indicator because (i) the Fed began targeting interest rates instead of monetary aggregates and (ii) the creation of interest-bearing checking accounts and money market funds increased safe haven demand for M2. The latter helps explain why money growth has surged during the last three recessions. All in all, broad money growth is now a poor indicator for GDP. The Money Supply’s Impact On Inflation Another popular theory is that money growth is a leading indicator of inflation. This stems from the following identity, aka the Equation of Exchange: MV = PY Where: M = money supply, V = velocity of money, P = price level and Y = real output The identity holds, but is of little practical value, mainly because there is no good way to measure (or model) velocity (V) without relying on money growth and nominal GDP (P*Y). This means that an increase in the money supply doesn’t necessarily tell us anything about inflation, because we have no idea how velocity will respond. In fact, many commentators have observed that the stronger empirical correlation is actually between money velocity (PY/M) and core inflation (Chart 7). When nominal GDP growth exceeds money growth, core inflation tends to rise 18 months later. However, this relationship also holds if we remove money supply from the equation entirely (Chart 7, bottom panel). What we’re actually observing is that core inflation tends to lag economic growth by about 18 months. Chart 7Inflation Lags Economic Growth, Not Broad Money Growth
Inflation Lags Economic Growth, Not Broad Money Growth
Inflation Lags Economic Growth, Not Broad Money Growth
Since we’ve already seen that money supply does a poor job forecasting economic growth, it’s clear that indicators such as M1 and M2 don’t improve our ability to forecast inflation, and in fact probably only confuse the picture. The Money Supply’s Impact On Financial Markets BCA’s US Bond Strategy definitely subscribes to the notion that the stance of monetary policy is one of the most important drivers of financial market performance. If the Fed keeps interest rates low and signals to the market that rates will stay low for a long time, then we would expect investors to chase greater returns in riskier assets, driving up the prices of corporate bonds and equities. That being said, the appropriate way to measure the stance of monetary policy is with interest rates. Money supply measures like M1 and M2 are not helpful guides for risk asset performance. We have already seen that an increase in the money supply can only arise via (i) greater bank lending or (ii) the Fed’s purchase of securities and injection of reserves into the banking system. Both of these things are likely to occur when interest rates are low and monetary policy is accommodative. Low interest rates boost loan demand, and large-scale Fed asset purchases are more likely to occur when interest rates are already at the zero-lower-bound. We would argue that it is, in fact, low interest rates that influence both money growth and financial asset prices. The drivers of money supply growth – bank lending and Fed asset purchases – don’t offer any new information beyond what the interest rate already tells us. On loan growth, both loan demand and risk asset price appreciation are functions of low interest rates. In fact, financial markets will respond more quickly to changes in interest rates than will bank lending: Stock prices are included in the Conference Board’s Leading Economic Indicator, while C&I bank lending is included in the Lagging Economic Indicator.2 This means that, practically, any money supply growth that is driven by bank lending is not useful as an indicator for financial asset prices. What about money growth that is driven by Fed asset purchases? Here, we need to distinguish between the signaling impact of Fed asset purchases and any other potential impact that purchases might have on asset prices. In the first half of 2019, financial markets responded to the Fed's dovish interest rate policy, not to its shrinking balance sheet. Though the data are difficult to parse, our reading is that the only meaningful impact of Fed purchases on financial asset prices is through what the purchase announcements signal to markets about the future path of interest rates. To test this theory, we need to search for periods when the Fed’s signaling about its future interest rate policy diverges from its balance sheet policy. That is, we need to find periods when the balance sheet is shrinking and Fed rate guidance is becoming more dovish, or periods when the balance sheet is growing and rate policy is becoming more hawkish. Unfortunately, we can only identify one such period and that is the first half of 2019 when the Fed was simultaneously shrinking its balance sheet and signaling to markets that interest rate policy was becoming more dovish (Chart 8A). During that period, financial markets responded to the more dovish interest rate policy and not to the shrinking of the Fed’s balance sheet (Chart 8B). Bond yields fell, the dollar weakened and both corporate bonds and equities delivered strong returns. Chart 8ARates Policy Trumps Balance Sheet Part I
Rates Policy Trumps Balance Sheet Part I
Rates Policy Trumps Balance Sheet Part I
Chart 8BRates Policy Trumps Balance Sheet Part II
Rates Policy Trumps Balance Sheet Part II
Rates Policy Trumps Balance Sheet Part II
Bottom Line: We don’t find broad money supply measures (M1 and M2) to be useful indicators of economic growth, inflation or financial asset performance. Subordinate Bank Bonds: Still In The Sweet Spot Chart 9Still In The Sweet Spot
Still In The Sweet Spot
Still In The Sweet Spot
Two months ago we made the case for owning subordinate bank bonds.3 The premise for this call is that subordinate bank bonds are a high-quality cyclical sector, exactly the sweet spot of the investment grade corporate bond market that we want to own in the current environment. We expect that extraordinary Fed support for the market will cause investment grade corporate bond spreads to tighten during the next 6-12 months. In that environment we want to focus on cyclical (or “high beta”) bond sectors, ones that outperform the index during periods of spread tightening. However, we also recognize that the Fed’s emergency lending facilities will not prevent a surge in ratings downgrades. Therefore, the sweet spot we want to own is cyclical bonds that are unlikely to be downgraded. High-quality Baa-rated securities, like subordinate bank bonds, fit the bill nicely. Chart 9 shows that the subordinate bank bond index has a duration-times-spread ratio above 1.0.4 This confirms that the sector will trade cyclically relative to the corporate benchmark. We also see that subordinate bank bonds have outperformed both the overall corporate index and other Baa-rated bonds since the start of the year (Chart 9, panel 2). Further, subordinate bank bonds offer a spread pick-up versus the corporate index in both option-adjusted spread terms (Chart 9, panel 3) and 12-month breakeven spread terms (Chart 9, bottom panel). What Did We Learn From The Stress Tests? Last week the Fed released the results of its 2020 bank stress tests. Results for individual banks were released for a “severely adverse scenario”, the details of which had been publicly available since February. However, because of concern that the “severely adverse scenario” wasn’t dire enough to capture the potential fallout from the pandemic, the Fed also stress tested three COVID-specific scenarios and released results only for the banking system in aggregate. The three scenarios are: A ‘V’-shaped recovery, where economic growth recovers in Q3 and Q4 of this year after contracting significantly in the first half. A ‘U’-shaped recovery, where the growth pick-up in the second half of 2020 is much milder. A ‘W’-shaped recovery, where economic growth recovers in Q3 but then dips again near the end of the year. Table 2 shows a few key assumptions of the three scenarios along with how the actual economy is tracking. It seems that, absent the re-imposition of lock-down measures, the economy is tracking to be in a slightly better place than in any of the three scenarios. Note that the unemployment rate has already peaked below 15%, lower than assumed by any of the three scenarios. Table 2Three Stress Test Scenarios*
The Case Against The Money Supply
The Case Against The Money Supply
Chart 10Banks Have Huge Capital Buffers
Banks Have Huge Capital Buffers
Banks Have Huge Capital Buffers
Chart 10 shows the Common Equity Tier 1 Capital Ratio for the aggregate banking sector, and the dashed horizontal lines show how far it would fall in the three different COVID scenarios. The results show that the ‘V’-shaped scenario is manageable for the banking system, but a significant number of banks would run into trouble in the ‘U’ and ‘W’ shaped scenarios. The good news for bank credit quality is that, based on how the economy is tracking and the prospects for further fiscal stimulus, the worst ‘U’ and ‘W’ shaped scenarios will probably be avoided. Further, the Fed has already suspended share buybacks and capped dividend payouts. It will also re-run the stress tests later this year. Another round of stress tests this year is credit positive, as it will encourage banks to strengthen their capital buffers during the next few months. Bottom Line: After viewing the results of the Fed’s stress tests, we still think the odds of bank ratings downgrades this year are low. Investors should stay overweight subordinate bank bonds. Appendix A: Buy What The Fed Is Buying The Fed rolled out a number of aggressive lending facilities on March 23. These facilities focused on different specific sectors of the US bond market. The fact that the Fed has decided to support some parts of the market and not others has caused some traditional bond market correlations to break down. It has also led us to adopt of a strategy of “Buy What The Fed Is Buying”. That is, we favor those sectors that offer attractive spreads and that benefit from Fed support. The below Table tracks the performance of different bond sectors since the March 23 announcement. We will use this to monitor bond market correlations and evaluate our strategy’s success. Table 3Performance Since March 23 Announcement Of Emergency Fed Facilities
The Case Against The Money Supply
The Case Against The Money Supply
Footnotes 1 https://www.federalreserve.gov/BOARDDOCS/SPEECHES/19961205.htm 2 https://www.conference-board.org/data/bci/index.cfm?id=2160 3 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Negative Oil, The Zero Lower Bound And The Fisher Equation”, dated April 28, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Duration-Times-Spread (DTS) is a simple measure that is highly correlated with excess return volatility for corporate bonds. The DTS ratio is the ratio of a sector’s DTS to that of the benchmark index. It can be thought of like the beta of a stock. A DTS ratio above 1.0 signals that the sector is cyclical (or “high beta”), a DTS ratio below 1.0 signals that the sector is defensive or (“low beta”). For more details on the DTS measure please see: Arik Ben Dor, Lev Dynkin, Jay Hyman, Patrick Houweling, Erik van Leeuwen & Olaf Penninga, “DTS (Duration-Times-Spread)”, Journal of Portfolio Management 33(2), January 2007. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Global Inflation: The worst of the 2020 collapse in global inflation is over; economic growth is starting to rebound, monetary and fiscal policies are highly stimulative, commodity prices are rising and the US dollar is losing some steam. This boosts the investment case for developed market inflation-linked bonds, which appear cheap on our models on a breakeven basis versus nominal government debt. Inflation-Linked Bonds: Starting this week, we are permanently adding inflation-linked bonds as a “discretionary” allocation option in our model bond portfolio framework. We begin with allocations to linkers in the US, Italy and Canada. Tactical Overlay 2.0: We are introducing our revamped Tactical Trade Overlay, using specific securities to implement shorter-term trade ideas in a practical fashion. This week, we begin by initiating inflation-linked bond breakeven trades in the US, Italy and Canada. Feature Chart of the WeekThe Early Days Of An Inflation Expectations Revival
The Early Days Of An Inflation Expectations Revival
The Early Days Of An Inflation Expectations Revival
With global growth now showing signs of rebounding from the COVID-19 recession as lockdown restrictions ease, inflation expectations in the major developed economies have started to drift upward. Higher inflation breakevens have helped stabilized nominal government bond yields in the majority of countries, even with the latest reads on realized inflation still showing few signs of life (Chart of the Week). In our view, it is still far too soon for bond investors to shift to a below-benchmark stance on overall duration exposure. The threat of a new set of COVID-19 lockdowns is growing, given surging numbers of new infections across much of the southern US and in major emerging economies like Brazil and India. The social and political instability in the US, with elections less than five months away, raises the risk of a renewed flare-up of negative headline risk that can upset overheated equity and credit markets. Amidst all that uncertainty, policymakers worldwide will continue to use aggressive monetary and fiscal stimulus to fight off the risk of an extended recession. That means there is little risk of a big surge in global bond yields from a hawkish repricing of central bank policy expectations over at least the next 6-12 months. At the same time, the extraordinarily loose policy settings, combined with the continued rebound in global commodity prices (most notably, oil), should allow inflation expectations to continue drifting higher. While this will likely also push nominal bond yields higher as well, positioning for wider inflation breakevens remains the “cleaner” way to position for the initial impact of policy reflation. In a report published back on April 28, we introduced a series of valuation models for inflation-linked bonds in the developed economies.1 These models showed that the historic collapse in global oil prices earlier this year, combined with the deflationary impulse from the deep global COVID-19 recession, pushed breakeven inflation rates to levels well below fair value in most countries. Positioning for wider inflation breakevens remains the “cleaner” way to position for the initial impact of policy reflation. This week, we take the output from our inflation breakeven models to determine specific inflation-linked trade recommendations over both strategic (6-12 months) and tactical (0-6 months) time horizons. For the former, we are adding inflation-linked bonds as an allocation option for all countries in our model bond portfolio. For the latter, we are reviving our Tactical Trade Overlay by introducing some specific trade recommendations using actual inflation-linked bonds in the US, Europe and Canada. Why Global Inflation Expectations Have Bottomed The recent pickup in global market-based inflation expectations has occurred even as actual realized headline inflation rates have fallen dangerously close to 0% in the US, euro area and the UK (Chart 2). Canada is now in outright deflation, with the year-over-year rate of headline CPI inflation falling to -0.4% in May. The decline is not fully attributable to the earlier collapse in oil prices, as core inflation rates have also fallen across the developed world. Chart 2A Threat Of Realized Deflation
A Threat Of Realized Deflation
A Threat Of Realized Deflation
Despite the plunge in realized inflation, inflation expectations have moved higher for both market-based indicators like inflation breakevens and survey-based measures as well. Chart 3Inflation Expectations Improving Everywhere ….
Inflation Expectations Improving Everywhere ...
Inflation Expectations Improving Everywhere ...
Chart 4… Even Within Europe
... Even Within Europe
... Even Within Europe
The German ZEW economic research institute - well known for their surveys of economic forecasters for Germany and the major developed countries - also produces inflation expectations surveys for the same countries. In Charts 3 & 4, we show those ZEW inflation expectations measures alongside the breakeven inflation rates for 10-year government bonds in the US, UK, Japan and the euro area including country-level data for Germany, France and Italy. It is clear that the upturn in breakevens has also occurred as a growing number of economic forecasters have started to anticipate a move higher in both economic growth and inflation over the next year. With recent economic data surprising to the upside in the US, China and in much of Europe, a more optimistic view on global growth is a logical reason helping explain why inflation expectations have been drifting higher. Even more so has been a shift in the deflationary momentum stemming from a rising US dollar and falling commodity prices – trends that are in the process of reversing. Perhaps the strongest deflationary force over the past couple of years has been the persistent strength of the US dollar. World export prices have been contracting on a year-over-year basis since December 2018, which has coincided with a similar period of positive annual growth in the trade-weighted US dollar since June 2018 (Chart 5). While the dollar is still at elevated levels, its momentum has started to roll over (middle panel), suggesting less deflationary pressure from the currency. The same can be said for commodity prices, which reflect both the global demand story and the trend in the US dollar as well, given that important industrial commodities like oil and copper are priced in US dollars. With the prices of those commodities off their lows, the annual growth rates of the CRB Energy and Metals indices have bottomed out, implying less global deflationary pressure from commodities (bottom panel). A reflationary boost to the global economy – and to inflation expectations – from a softer dollar is likely over the next 6-12 months. Looking ahead, the US dollar is likely to continue losing strength for two reasons: less-supportive interest rate differentials and improving global growth (Chart 6). The Fed’s aggressive interest rate cuts over the past year have eliminated much of the attractive carry that helped fuel the dollar’s rise over the past few years. At the same time, the US dollar remains an “anti-growth” currency that tends to weaken during periods of improving global growth, and vice versa. Chart 5Easing Of Disinflationary Pressures From The USD & Commodities
Easing Of Disinflationary Pressures From The USD & Commodities
Easing Of Disinflationary Pressures From The USD & Commodities
Chart 6A Softer USD Will Help Lift Global Inflation Expectations
A Softer USD Will Help Lift Global Inflation Expectations
A Softer USD Will Help Lift Global Inflation Expectations
With global growth starting to emerge from the COVID-19 recession, the US dollar is now more exposed to less attractive interest rate differentials. This suggests that a reflationary boost to the global economy – and to inflation expectations – from a softer dollar is likely over the next 6-12 months. Chart 7Rising Oil Prices Will Help Lift Global Inflation Expectations
Rising Oil Prices Will Help Lift Global Inflation Expectations
Rising Oil Prices Will Help Lift Global Inflation Expectations
The same can be said for commodity prices like oil, which have considerable upside as global growth improves. Our colleagues at BCA Research Commodity & Energy Strategy are quite bullish on the outlook for oil over the next 12-18 months, given the improved demand/supply balance and aggressive global monetary and fiscal stimulus. Their expect the Brent benchmark to rise to $46/bbl by the end of 2020 and $73/bbl by the end of 2021 – levels that would push inflation expectations in the US and other major developed markets higher given the usual strong correlation between oil and breakevens (Chart 7).2 Summing it all up, the trends that have helped stabilize and lift global inflation expectations look set to continue over the next 6-12 months. Bottom Line: The worst of the 2020 collapse in global inflation is over; economic growth is starting to rebound, monetary and fiscal policies are highly stimulative, commodity prices are rising and the US dollar is losing some steam. This boosts the investment case for developed market inflation-linked bonds, which appear cheap on our models on a breakeven basis versus nominal government debt. Adding Inflation-Linked Bonds To Our Model Bond Portfolio Our model bond portfolio framework is how we translate our main global fixed income strategic themes into actual investment recommendations. We apply specific weightings to government bond and spread product allocations within a fully invested hypothetical portfolio with a custom benchmark index (which is essentially the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate with additional allocations to high-yield and emerging market corporates). We had not included inflation-linked bonds in the model portfolio, as we have always maintained a focus on the larger and more liquid parts of the developed market fixed income universe. We chose to express views on inflation expectations through duration or yield curve positioning, under the assumption that wider breakevens correlate to higher bond yields and/or steeper yield curves. Chart 8Global Inflation Breakevens Are Too Low
Global Inflation Breakevens Are Too Low
Global Inflation Breakevens Are Too Low
We now are of the view that inflation-linked bonds should be included in our model portfolio investment universe, but on an “opportunistic” basis. In other words, we are not adding linkers to the custom benchmark index. Instead, we will be using potential allocations to inflation-linked bonds as another way to play for periods of rising inflation expectations beyond recommended duration and curve tilts in the model portfolio – particularly now that we have valuation models for inflation breakevens in almost all countries in the portfolio (the US, UK, Japan, Germany, Italy, France, Canada and Australia). Based on the output of our fundamental fair value framework for 10-year inflation breakevens, inflation protection looks “cheap” in all countries where we have valuation models except the UK (Chart 8). Charts with the details of each country’s 10-year inflation breakeven model can be found in the Appendix on pages 11-14. The inputs to the model are the same for each country: a) the 5-year moving average of headline CPI, representing the medium-term trend that anchors inflation expectations; and b) the annual percentage change in the Brent oil price in local currency terms, which creates deviations from the trend to account for moves in oil and currencies. For all countries excluding the UK, breakevens are below fair value because of the collapse in oil prices earlier this year. Inflation protection looks “cheap” in all countries where we have valuation models except the UK. The UK is the one market that does not appear cheap in our framework, with breakevens very close to both fair value and the medium-term trend in realized inflation. Those relatively high breakevens are also a reflection of the very low real bond yields for UK index-linked Gilts. Chart 9Linkers Offer Better Value In The US & Euro Area Than The UK
Linkers Offer Better Value In The US & Euro Area Than The UK
Linkers Offer Better Value In The US & Euro Area Than The UK
For the past several years, UK real yields have traded well below measures of equilibrium real interest rates like the New York Fed’s estimates of “r-star”. This differs from real yields for US TIPS or French OATis, which trade roughly in line with the r-star estimates for the US and euro area (Chart 9). We suspect that is because of the chronic demand/supply mismatch for UK inflation-linked bonds, which are always in high demand from UK pension funds who need real assets for asset/liability management and regulatory purposes. So based on the output from the fair value models, inflation-linked bonds look most attractive on a breakeven basis in Italy, Canada, the US, Japan, Germany and France. From this list, we are choosing to add recommended positions in the US, Italy and Canada only. For Germany and France, we are already very underweight both countries in the model portfolio, so it is difficult to make a meaningful switch out of nominal bonds into linkers. For Japan, the Bank of Japan’s Yield Curve Control policy, which caps the level of 10-year bond yields near 0%, makes us reluctant to recommend any breakeven widening positions. The changes to the model bond portfolio can be found in the tables on pages 15-16. Bottom Line: Starting this week, we are permanently adding inflation-linked bonds as a “discretionary” allocation option in our model bond portfolio framework. We begin with allocations to linkers in the US, Italy and Canada. Tactical Trade Overlay 2.0, Starting With Inflation-Linked Bonds This week, we are introducing a remodeled version of our Tactical Trade Overlay, which we put on hiatus a few months ago because of “mission creep”. Many of our recommendations were being held too long to be truly considered tactical, or short-term, in nature, thus defying the original purpose of the Overlay. This week, we are introducing a remodeled version of our Tactical Trade Overlay, which we put on hiatus a few months ago because of “mission creep”. All trades in the new Overlay will have a shorter term investment horizon of six months or less. All recommended trades will be implemented with specific securities, rather than just using generic Bloomberg tickers or bond indices. This will allow for a more transparent process where clients can “follow along” with the performance of our trades. Chart 10Inflation-Linked Bonds Have A Duration To Real Yields, Unlike Nominals
Inflation-Linked Bonds Have A Duration To Real Yields, Unlike Nominals
Inflation-Linked Bonds Have A Duration To Real Yields, Unlike Nominals
To begin, we are putting three inflation-linked bond trades into our new Tactical Trade Overlay, positioning for wider 10-year breakevens in the US, Italy and Canada. All trades will be implemented using a long position in an inflation-linked bond and a short position in the government bond futures contract for each country. We are using futures rather than a short position in a cash government bond for the sake of simplicity, both for implementing the trade and measuring returns. The new trades will be implemented on a duration-matched basis. This means only selling enough of the 10-year bond futures to hedge against any directional move in the yield of the long 10-year inflation-linked bond. A straight comparison of the duration of linkers to futures cannot be made, since inflation-linked bonds have a duration to real yields while futures (and cash government bonds) have a duration to nominal yields. The durations for inflation-linked bonds are always higher than those of nominals (Chart 10), thus the index-linked durations must be adjusted by the beta of changes in real yields to changes in nominal bond yields. To determine the correct duration adjustment, we use betas taken from rolling three-year regressions of monthly changes of 10-year inflation-linked yields on changes in 10-year nominal government yields, using generic Bloomberg tickers. The common convention is to simply apply a yield beta of 0.5 for all inflation-linked bonds (this is the default setting on Bloomberg valuation tools). We think having a variable yield beta is a more accurate way to hedge out the directional risk in each trade from shifts in real bond yields. Chart 11Yield Betas For Inflation-Linked Bonds Vary Across Countries
Yield Betas For Inflation-Linked Bonds Vary Across Countries
Yield Betas For Inflation-Linked Bonds Vary Across Countries
The current yield betas for all eight countries where we have inflation breakeven fair value models are shown in Chart 11 – it is clear from the chart that using a constant yield beta of 0.5 across countries is not accurate, as they vary widely across countries. Multiplying the duration of the actual inflation-linked bond used in our breakeven trades by our rolling yield beta creates a “nominal” duration measure that can then be compared to the duration on the short leg of the breakeven trade. For futures, we use the empirical duration estimates from Bloomberg using the “FRSK” function. The ratio of the beta-adjusted linker duration to the empirical duration of the bond futures creates the hedge ratio that we will use when measuring the returns of this now “risk-matched” breakeven trade. The actual bonds, futures contracts and hedge ratios for all of our new breakeven trades can all be found in the table on page 18, with initial entry prices for all securities. We will begin to monitor the trade returns in next week’s report. Bottom Line: We are reviving our Tactical Trade Overlay with inflation-linked bond breakeven trades in the US, Italy and Canada. Appendix: 10-Year Inflation Break Even Model Chart 12Our US 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Our US 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Our US 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Chart 13Our UK 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Our UK 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Our UK 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Chart 14Our France 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Our France 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Our France 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Chart 15Our Italy 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Our Italy 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Our Italy 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Chart 16Our Japan 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Our Japan 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Our Japan 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Chart 17Our Germany 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Our Germany 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Our Germany 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Chart 18Our Canada 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Our Canada 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Our Canada 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Chart 19Our Australia 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Our Australia 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Our Australia 10-Year Inflation Breakeven Model
Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Global Inflation Expectations Are Too Low", dated April 28, 2020, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Low Vol, High Uncertainty Keeps Oil-Price Rally On Tenterhooks", dated June 18, 2020, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
How To Play The Revival Of Global Inflation Expectations
How To Play The Revival Of Global Inflation Expectations
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights We conservatively estimate lost output from shutdowns and social distancing will equal $10 trillion, and we expect the jobs market to be permanently scarred. Inflation, even at 2 percent, is a pipe dream, which leads to three investment conclusions on a 1-year horizon: Overweight US T-bonds and Spanish Bonos versus German Bunds and French OATs. Any high-quality bond yield that can decline will decline. Overweight CHF/USD. The tightening yield spread will structurally favour the CHF, while the haven status of the CHF should prevent it from underperforming in periods of market stress. Overweight defensive equities (technology and healthcare) versus cyclical equities (banks and energy). This implies underweight European equities versus other markets. Fractal trade: Short Germany versus the UK. The recent outperformance of German equities is technically extended. Feature Chart of the WeekCredit Impulses Are Large, But The Hole In Output Is Much Larger
Credit Impulses Are Large, But The Hole In Output Is Much Larger
Credit Impulses Are Large, But The Hole In Output Is Much Larger
Big numbers befuddle us. Hardly a day passes without someone listing the unprecedented global stimulus unleashed to counter the coronavirus forced shutdowns – the trillions in government spending promises, tax relief, loan guarantees, money supply growth, and central bank asset-purchases. The most optimistic estimates quantify the total stimulus at $15 trillion. This includes $7 trillion of loan guarantees plus increases in central bank balance sheets which do not directly boost demand. So the direct stimulus is closer to $7 trillion.1 Yet the size of the stimulus is meaningless until we quantify the massive hole in economic output that needs to be filled. Assuming no further large-scale shutdowns, we conservatively estimate that the hole will amount to 12 percent of world output, or $10 trillion. A $10 Trillion Hole In Output Last week, the UK’s Office for National Statistics (ONS) helped us to estimate the hole in output, because unusually the ONS calculates UK GDP on a monthly basis. Between February and April, when the UK economy went from fully open to full shutdown, UK GDP collapsed by 25 percent. This despite the UK having an outsized number of jobs suitable for ‘working from home.’ For a more typical economy, we estimate that a full shutdown collapses output by 30 percent (Chart I-2). Chart I-2A Full Shutdown Collapses Output By 30 Percent
A Full Shutdown Collapses Output By 30 Percent
A Full Shutdown Collapses Output By 30 Percent
The next question is: how long does the full shutdown last? Assuming it lasts for three months, output would suffer a hole amounting to 7.5 percent of annual GDP.2 But in practice, the economy will not fully re-open after three months. Social distancing will persist until people feel confident that the pandemic is under control. An effective vaccine against Covid-19 is unlikely to be available for a year. So, even without government policy to enforce social distancing, many people will choose to avoid crowds and congregations for fear of catching the virus. The size of the stimulus is meaningless until we quantify the massive hole in economic output. This means that the sectors that rely on crowds and congregations – leisure and hospitality and retail trade – will be operating at half-capacity, at best. Given that these sectors generate 9 percent of GDP, operating at half-capacity will create an additional hole amounting to 4.5 percent of output. More worryingly, these two sectors employ 21 percent of all workers, so operating at sub-par will leave the jobs market permanently scarred.3 Combining the 7.5 percent existing hole with the 4.5 percent future hole, the full hole in economic output will amount to around 12 percent of annual GDP. As global GDP is worth around $85 trillion, this equates to $10 trillion. Crucially though, our estimate assumes that a second wave of the pandemic will not force a new cycle of shutdowns. If it does, the hole will become even bigger. Don’t Be Fooled By Money Supply Growth The recent growth in broad money supply seems a big number. Since the start of the year, the outstanding stock of bank loans has increased by around $0.7 trillion in the euro area, and by $1 trillion in both the US and China (Chart I-3 and Chart I-4). This has boosted the 6-month credit impulses in all three economies. Indeed, the US 6-month credit impulse recently hit its highest value of all time, and the combined 6-month impulse across all three blocs equals around $2 trillion (Chart of the Week). Chart I-3Don't Be Fooled By Money Supply Growth In The Euro Area And The US...
Don't Be Fooled By Money Supply Growth In The Euro Area And The US...
Don't Be Fooled By Money Supply Growth In The Euro Area And The US...
Chart I-4...And In ##br##China
...And In China
...And In China
This 6-month credit impulse quantifies the additional borrowing in the most recent six-month period compared to the previous period. Ordinarily, a $2 trillion impulse would create a huge boost to demand. After all, the private sector does not usually borrow just to hold the cash in a bank. Yet in the coronavirus crisis this is precisely what has happened. While the shutdowns lasted, firms drew on existing bank credit lines to build up emergency cash buffers. Therefore, much of the money growth will not generate new demand. While the shutdowns lasted, firms drew on existing bank credit lines to build up emergency cash buffers. To the extent that this cash is sitting idly in a firm’s bank account, the monetary velocity will decline. Meaning there will be a much-reduced transmission from credit impulses to spending growth. Furthermore, when the economy re-opens, many firms will relinquish the precautionary credit lines. There is no point holding cash in the bank when there are few investment opportunities. Hence, credit impulses will fall back – as seems to be the case right now in the US. QE: The Great Misunderstanding To repeat, big numbers befuddle us. They must always be put into context. No truer is this than when it comes to central bank asset-purchases. The great misunderstanding is that the act of central banks buying assets, per se, drives up those asset prices. Central banks act as lenders of last resort to solvent but illiquid banks and sovereigns. If there is ample liquidity in these markets – as is the case now – then the primary function of central bank asset-purchases is to set the term-structure of interest rates. In turn, the term-structure of global interest rates establishes the prices of $500 trillion of global assets. The prices of these assets are inextricably inter-connected and inter-dependent4 (Chart I-5). Chart I-5The Prices Of $500 Trillion Of Assets Are Inextricably Inter-Connected
The Prices Of $500 Trillion Of Assets Are Inextricably Inter-Connected
The Prices Of $500 Trillion Of Assets Are Inextricably Inter-Connected
The great misunderstanding is that the act of central banks buying assets, per se, drives up those asset prices. Yet central banks set no price target for their asset-purchases. They leave that to the market. Moreover, in the context of the $500 trillion of inter-dependent asset prices, the $10-15 trillion or so of central bank asset-purchases to date constitutes chicken feed (Chart I-6). Hence, the mechanism by which asset-purchases work is through the signal they give to the $500 trillion market on the likely course of interest rate policy. This sets the term-structure of interest rates, which in turn sets the required return on all the $500 trillion of assets (Chart I-7). Chart I-6$10-15 Trillion Of QE Is Chicken Feed...
$10-15 Trillion Of QE Is Chicken Feed...
$10-15 Trillion Of QE Is Chicken Feed...
Chart I-7...Compared To $500 Trillion Of Assets Priced By The Term-Structure Of Interest Rates
...Compared To $500 Trillion Of Assets Priced By The Term-Structure Of Interest Rates
...Compared To $500 Trillion Of Assets Priced By The Term-Structure Of Interest Rates
As the ECB’s former Chief Economist, Peter Praet, explains: “There is a signalling channel inherent in asset purchases, which reinforces the credibility of forward guidance on policy rates. This credibility of promises to follow a certain course for policy rates in the future is enhanced by the asset purchases, as these asset purchases are a concrete demonstration of our desire (to keep policy rates at the lower bound.)” The credible commitment to keep policy rates near the lower bound for an extended period depresses bond yields towards the lower bound too. But once bond yields have reached their lower bound the effectiveness of central bank asset-purchases becomes exhausted. Three Investment Conclusions The main purpose of this report was to put the $7 trillion of direct stimulus dollars unleashed into the economy into a proper context. With lost output estimated at $10 trillion and the jobs market permanently scarred, inflation – even at 2 percent – is a pipe dream. Moreover, a second wave of the pandemic and a new cycle of shutdowns would inject a further disinflationary impulse. This leads to three investment conclusions on a 1-year horizon: Any high-quality bond yield that can decline – because it is not already near the -1 percent lower bound to yields – will decline. An excellent relative value trade is to overweight US T-bonds and Spanish Bonos versus German Bunds and French OATs (Chart I-8). Long CHF/USD is a win-win. The tightening yield spread will structurally favour the CHF, while the haven status of the CHF should prevent it from underperforming in periods of market stress. Overweight defensive equities versus cyclical equities, with technology correctly defined as defensive, not cyclical. The performance of cyclicals (banks and energy) versus defensives (technology and healthcare) is now joined at the hip to the bond yield (Chart I-9). This implies underweight European equities versus other markets. Chart I-8Bond Yields That Can Decline Will Decline
Bond Yields That Can Decline Will Decline
Bond Yields That Can Decline Will Decline
Chart I-9The Performance Of Cyclicals Versus Defensives Is Joined At The Hip To The Bond Yield
The Performance Of Cyclicals Versus Defensives Is Joined At The Hip To The Bond Yield
The Performance Of Cyclicals Versus Defensives Is Joined At The Hip To The Bond Yield
Fractal Trading System* The recent outperformance of German equities is technically extended. Accordingly, this week’s recommended trade is to go short Germany versus the UK, expressed through the MSCI dollar indexes. Set the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 5 percent.
MSCI: Germany Vs. UK
MSCI: Germany Vs. UK
In other trades, long euro area personal products versus healthcare achieved its 7 percent profit target at which it was closed. The rolling 1-year win ratio now stands at 65 percent. 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. Footnotes 1 Source: Reuters estimate. 2 A 30 percent loss in output for a quarter of a year (3 months) amounts to a 30*0.25 = 7.5 percent loss in annual output. 3 Using the weights of leisure and hospitality and retail trade in the US economy as a proxy for the global weights. 4 The $500 trillion of assets comprises: real estate $300 trillion, public and private equity $100 trillion, corporate bonds and EM debt $50 trillion, and high-quality government bonds $50 trillion. Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Interest Rate Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Historically, when global growth picks up, the yen weakens. But this is less likely in an environment where global yields remain anchored at low levels. Meanwhile, there is rising risk that consumption in Japan will remain muted. This will limit any pickup in domestic inflation. A modest rise in real rates will lead to a self-reinforcing upward spiral for the yen. That said, cheap yen valuations will buffet Japanese exports. Go short USD/JPY with an initial target of 100. Feature Chart I-1Higher Volatility, Higher Yen
An Update On The Yen
An Update On The Yen
The powerful bounce in global markets since the March lows is at risk of a bigger technical correction. As we enter the volatile summer months, it may only require a small shift in market sentiment to trigger this reversal. The yen has tended to strengthen when market volatility rises (Chart I-1). Should this happen, it will provide the necessary catalyst for established long yen positions. On the other hand, if risk sentiment stays ebullient, the yen will surely weaken on its crosses but can still strengthen vis-à-vis the dollar. This places short USD/JPY bets in an enviable “heads I win, tails I do not lose too much” position. Growth And Monetary Policy Like most other economies, Japan entered a recession in the first quarter of this year, with GDP contracting at a 2.2% annualized pace. For the private sector, this is the worst growth rate since the Fukushima crisis in 2011. This is particularly significant, since the structural growth rate of the economy has fallen below interest rates. Going back to Japan’s lost decades, where private sector GDP growth averaged well below nominal rates (due to the zero bound), it is particularly imperative that Japan exits this liquidity trap in fast order (Chart I-2). A strong yen back then, on the back of deficient domestic demand, led to a self-fulfilling deflationary spiral. Chart I-2The Story Of Japan In One Chart
The Story Of Japan In One Chart
The Story Of Japan In One Chart
The Bank of Japan began to acknowledge this problem with the end of the Heisei era1 last year. For example, with the BoJ owning almost 50% of outstanding JGBs, the supply side puts a serious limitation on how much more stimulus the BoJ can provide. The yen has become extremely sensitive to shifts in the relative balance sheets between the Federal Reserve and the BoJ. If the BoJ continues to purchase securities at the current pace, then the rate of expansion in its balance sheet will severely lag behind the Fed, and could trigger a knee-jerk rally in the yen (Chart I-3). Chart I-3The Yen And QE
The Yen And QE
The Yen And QE
Inflation And The 2% Target The US is a much more closed economy than Japan, and has not been able to maintain a 2% inflation rate since the Global Financial Crisis. This makes the BoJ’s target of 2% a pipe dream for any timeline in the near future. There are three key variables the authorities pay attention to for inflation: Core CPI, the GDP deflator and the output gap. All three indicators point towards deflationary pressures, with the recent slowdown in the global economy exacerbating the trend. In fact, since the financial crisis, prices in Japan have only been able to really rise during a tax hike (Chart I-4). Always forgotten is that the overarching theme for prices in Japan is a rapidly falling (and ageing) population, leading to deficient demand. The overarching theme for prices in Japan is a rapidly falling (and ageing) population, leading to deficient demand. More importantly, almost 50% of the Japanese consumption basket is in tradeable goods, meaning domestic inflation is as much driven by the influence of the BoJ as it is by globalization. Even for domestically-driven prices, an ageing demographic that has a strong preference for falling prices is a powerful conflicting force. For example, over the years, a strong voting lobby has been able to advocate for lower telecom prices, which makes it difficult for the BoJ to re-anchor inflation expectations upward (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Japan CPI At A Glance
Japan CPI At A Glance
Japan CPI At A Glance
Chart I-5Strong Deflationary Pressures In Japan
Strong Deflationary Pressures In Japan
Strong Deflationary Pressures In Japan
Meanwhile, the BoJ understands that it needs domestic banks to expand the credit intermediation process if any inflation is to take hold. Unfortunately, the yield curve control strategy and negative interest rates have been anathema for Japanese net interest margins and share prices (Chart I-6). This puts the BoJ in a precarious balance between trying to stimulate the economy further and biting the hand that will feed a pickup in inflation. Chart I-6Point Of No Return For Japanese Banks?
Point Of No Return For Japanese Banks?
Point Of No Return For Japanese Banks?
Japanese Consumption And Fiscal Policy The consumption tax hike last year delivered a severe punch to aggregate demand in Japan. COVID-19 has dealt a fatal blow. In prior episodes of the tax hikes, it took around three to four quarters for growth to eventually bottom. This suggests that a protracted slowdown in Japanese consumption is a fait accompli (Chart I-7). Foreign and domestic machinery orders are slowing, employment growth has gone from over 2% to free fall and the availability of jobs relative to applicants has reversed a decade-long rising trend. The Abe government has passed an additional 117 trillion yen of fiscal stimulus. With overall fiscal announcements near 40% of GDP, could this fully plug the spending gap? Not quite. The consumption tax hike last year delivered a severe punch to aggregate demand in Japan. First, as is usually the case with Japanese stimulus announcements, the timeframe is uncertain for when the funds will be deployed. It could be one year or ten years. Chart I-7A V-Shaped Recovery Might Stall
A V-Shaped Recovery Might Stall
A V-Shaped Recovery Might Stall
Chart I-8More Jobs, More Savings
More Jobs, More Savings
More Jobs, More Savings
Second, Japanese consumption has been quite weak for some time. Despite relatively robust economic conditions since the Fukushima disaster, Japanese consumption has trended downward. The reason is that government spending triggered a rise in private savings, because of expectations of higher taxes. In other words, the savings ratio for workers has surged. If consumers were not willing to spend prior to COVID-19 due to Ricardian equivalence,2 they are unlikely to do so with much higher fiscal deficits (Chart I-8). Some of the government’s outlays will certainly go a long way to boosting aggregate demand, since the fiscal multiplier tends to be much larger in a liquidity trap. This will especially be the case for increased social security spending such as child education, construction activity or the move towards promoting cashless transactions (with a tax rebate). However, there are important near-term offsets. In particular, the postponement of the Olympics will continue to be a drag on Japanese construction activity, and the labor (and income) dividend from immigration has practically vanished. The important tourism industry that faced sudden death will only recover slowly. This suggests a much more protracted recovery in many nuggets of Japanese activity. The Yen As A Safe Haven Real interest rates are already higher in Japan, well before any of the above factors began to meaningfully generate a deflationary impulse. As such, the starting point for yen long positions is already favorable (Chart I-9). Real interest rates are already higher in Japan, well before any of the above factors began to meaningfully generate a deflationary impulse. With global growth bottoming, a continued rise in global equity markets is a key risk to our scenario. However, if inflows into Japan accelerate on cheap equity valuations, the propensity of investors to hedge these purchases will be much less today, given how cheap the yen has become. This is especially important since in an era of rising budget deficits, balance of payments dynamics can resurface as the key driver of currencies. This suggests the negative yen/Nikkei correlation will continue to weaken, as has been the case in recent quarters. Chart I-9Real Rates And The Yen
Real Rates And The Yen
Real Rates And The Yen
Chart I-10USD/JPY And DXY Are Positively Correlated
USD/JPY And DXY Are Positively Correlated
USD/JPY And DXY Are Positively Correlated
As a low-beta currency, our contention is that the yen will surely weaken on its crosses, but could strengthen versus the dollar. The yen rises versus the dollar not only during recessions, but during most episodes of broad dollar weakness (Chart I-10). This places short USD/JPY trades in an envious “heads I win, tails I do not lose too much” position. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The Heisei era refers to the period of Japanese history corresponding to the reign of Emperor Akihito from 8 January 8th, 1989 until his abdication on April 30th, 2019. 2 Ricardian equivalence suggests in simple terms that public sector dissaving will encourage private sector savings. Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
Chart II-2USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
Recent data in the US have been robust: Nonfarm payrolls increased by 2.5 million in May after declining by a record 20.7 million in April. This was better than expectations of an 8 million job loss. The unemployment rate fell from 14.7% to 13.3%. The NFIB business optimism index increased from 90.9 to 94.4 in May. Headline consumer price inflation fell from 0.3% to 0.1% year-on-year in May. Core inflation fell from 1.4% to 1.2%. Initial jobless claims increased by 1542K for the week ended June 5th. The DXY index fell by 1.3% this week. On Wednesday, the Fed left interest rates unchanged, with a signal that rates might not be increased before the end of 2022. The Fed also stated that it will maintain the current pace of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities purchases, at minimum. Report Links: DXY: False Breakdown Or Cyclical Bear Market? - June 5, 2020 Cycles And The US Dollar - May 15, 2020 Capitulation? - April 3, 2020 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Recent data in the euro area have been improving: The Sentix investor confidence index improved from -41.8 to -24.8 in June. Employment increased by 0.4% year-on-year in Q1. GDP contracted by 3.1% year-on-year in Q1. The euro appreciated by 1.2% against the US dollar this week. At an online seminar held this week, Isabel Schnabel, member of the executive board of the ECB, noted that "evidence is increasingly pointing towards a protracted impact of the crisis on both demand and supply conditions in the euro area and beyond" and that the current PEPP remains appropriate in de aling with the global recession. Report Links: On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 On Money Velocity, EUR/USD And Silver - October 11, 2019 Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
Recent data in Japan have been negative: The coincident index fell from 88.8 to 81.5 in April. The leading economic index also decreased from 85.1 to 76.2. The current account surplus shrank from ¥1971 billion to ¥262.7 billion in April. Annualized GDP fell by 2.2% year-on-year in Q1. Machine tool orders plunged by 52.8% year-on-year in May, following a 48.3% decrease the previous month. The Japanese yen appreciated by 2.6% against the US dollar this week. According to a Bloomberg survey, the majority of economists believe that the BoJ has done enough to cushion the economy, and expect the BoJ to leave current monetary policy unchanged next week. We continue to recommend the yen as a safe-haven hedge, especially given a possible second wave of COVID-19. Report Links: The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar - February 28, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
Recent data in the UK have been positive: Halifax house prices increased by 2.6% year-on-year in May. Retail sales surged by 7.9% year-on-year in May, up from 5.7% the previous month. GfK consumer confidence was little changed at -36 in May. The British pound rose by 1% against the US dollar this week. On Wednesday, BoE governor Andrew Bailey noted that easing lockdown restrictions has been fueling a recovery in the UK, which could be faster than previously anticipated. Our long GBP/USD and short EUR/GBP positions are 4% and 0.2% in the money, respectively. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 2019 United Kingdom: Cyclical Slowdown Or Structural Malaise? - Sept. 20, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
Recent data in Australia have been mixed: The NAB business confidence index increased from -45 to -20 in May. The business conditions index also ticked up from -34 to -24. The Westpac consumer confidence index increased from 88.1 to 93.7 in June. Home loans declined by 4.8% month-on-month in April, down from a 0.3% increase the previous month. That said, expectations were for a fall of 10%. AUD/USD was flat this week. While the RBA has other options in its policy toolkit to combat the global recession, negative interest rates is still on the table and hasn't been totally ruled out. We remain positive on the Australian dollar both against the US dollar and the New Zealand dollar due to cheap valuations and increasing Chinese stimulus. Report Links: On AUD And CNY - January 17, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Contrarian View On The Australian Dollar - May 24, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
Recent data in New Zealand have been mixed: Manufacturing sales declined by 1.7% quarter-on-quarter in Q1, down from a 2.8% increase the previous quarter. ANZ business confidence increased from -41.8 to -33 in June. The activity outlook index also ticked up from -38.7 to -29.1. The New Zealand dollar appreciated by 0.8% against the US dollar this week. RBNZ's Deputy Governor Geoff Bascand said that house prices in New Zealand could fall by 9-10% or even worse. Besides disrupting exports and imports for a trade-reliant country like New Zealand, the global health crisis is also likely to further reduce immigration to New Zealand, curbing housing demand. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Place A Limit Sell On DXY At 100 - November 15, 2019 USD/CNY And Market Turbulence - August 9, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
Recent data in Canada have been positive: The unemployment rate ticked up from 13% to 13.7% in May, versus expectations of a rise to 15%, but this was due to a rise in the participation rate from 59.8% to 61.4%. Average hourly wages increased by 10% year-on-year in May. Net employment increased by 289.6K, up from a 1994K job loss the previous month. Housing starts increased by 193.5K in May, up from 166.5K the previous month. The Canadian dollar fell by 0.2% against the US dollar this week. The labor market has seen some recovery in May with the gradual easing of COVID-19 restrictions and re-opening of the economy. Employment rebounded and absences from work dropped. Notably, Quebec accounts for nearly 80% of overall employment gains in May. Report Links: More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 The Loonie: Upside Versus The Dollar, But Downside At The Crosses Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
There was scant data out of Switzerland this week: FX reserves increased from CHF 801 billion to CHF 816 billion in May. The unemployment rate increased from 3.1% to 3.4% in May, lower than the expected 3.7%. The Swiss franc appreciated by 2.3% against the US dollar this week, reflecting a flight back to safety amid concerns over political risks and a second wave of COVID-19. While the euro has been strong recently and EUR/CHF touched 1.09, the franc has lost most of those gains. We are lifting our limit buy on EUR/CHF to 1.055 on expectations we are in a run-of-the-mill correction. Report Links: On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 Portfolio Tweaks Before The Chinese New Year - January 24, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
Recent data in Norway have been mixed: Manufacturing output shrank by 1.6% month-on-month in April. PPI fell by 17.5% year-on-year in May. Headline consumer prices increased by 1.3% year-on-year in May, up from 0.8% the previous month. Core inflation also increased from 2.8% to 3% in May. The Norwegian krone fell by 1.5% against the US dollar this week. The recent OPEC meeting over the weekend concluded that all members agreed to the extension to curb oil production. We believe that oil prices will continue to recover, and recommend to stay long the Norwegian krone. Report Links: A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 On Oil, Growth And The Dollar - January 10, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
Recent data in Sweden have been mixed: Household consumption plunged by 10% year-on-year in April. The current account surplus increased from SEK 43.2 billion to SEK 80.6 billion in Q1. Headline consumer prices recovered from a 0.4% year-on-year decline to flat in May. The Swedish krona increased by 0.6% against the US dollar this week. Sweden is benefitting economically from a less stringent Covid-19 agenda. With very cheap valuations, we remain short EUR/SEK and USD/SEK. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Please note that yesterday we published Special Report on Egypt recommending buying domestic bonds while hedging currency risk. Today we are enclosing analysis on Hungary, Poland and Colombia. I will present our latest thoughts on the global macro outlook and implications for EM during today’s webcast at 10 am EST. You can access the webcast by clicking here. Yours sincerely, Arthur Budaghyan Hungary Versus Poland: Mind The Reversal Conditions are set for the Hungarian forint to outperform the Polish zloty over the coming months. We recommend going long the HUF against the PLN. Hungarian opposition parties criticized the government about the considerable depreciation in the forint. As a result, we suspect that political pressure from Prime Minister Viktor Orban led monetary authorities to alter their stance since April. Critically, the main architect of super-dovish monetary policy Marton Nagy resigned from the board of the central bank on May 28. In line with tighter liquidity, interbank rates have risen above the policy rate. This is marginally positive for the forint. The Hungarian central bank (NBH) tweaked its monetary policy in April after the currency had plunged to new lows against the euro, underperforming its Central European counterparts. The NBH widened its policy rate corridor by hiking the upper interest band to 1.85% and keeping the policy rate at 0.90%. The wider interest rate corridor makes it more costly for commercial banks to borrow reserves from the central bank. Hence, such liquidity tightening is positive for the forint. For years, Hungary was pursuing a super-easy monetary policy and consumer price inflation rose to 4% (Chart I-1). With the NBH keeping interest rates close to zero, real rates have plunged well into negative territory (Chart I-2, top panel). Chart I-1Hungary: Inflation Could Pause For Now
Hungary: Inflation Could Pause For Now
Hungary: Inflation Could Pause For Now
Chart I-2Hungary Vs. Poland: Real Rates Reversal Is Coming
Hungary Vs. Poland: Real Rates Reversal Is Coming
Hungary Vs. Poland: Real Rates Reversal Is Coming
In brief, the central bank has been behind the inflation curve. As a result, the forint has been depreciating against both the euro and its central European peers. In such a situation, the key to reversal in the exchange rate trend would be the monetary authority’s readiness to raise real interest rates. The NBH has made a small step in this direction. Going forward, the central bank will be restrained in its quantitative easing (QE) program and will not augment it any further. So far, QE uptake has been slow: around half out of the available HUF 1,500 billion has been tapped by commercial banks and corporates. Importantly, the NBH announced its intention to sterilize its government and corporate bond purchases. Already, the commercial banks excess reserves at the central bank have fallen to zero, which suggests that liquidity is no longer abundant in the banking system (Chart I-3). In line with tighter liquidity, interbank rates have risen above the policy rate. This is marginally positive for the forint. Hungarian authorities have become more cognizant of the economic and financial risks associated with their ultra-accommodative policies. For instance, they initiated a clampdown on real estate speculation, which is leading to dwindling real estate prices. This will lead to a decline in overall inflation expectations and, thereby, lift expected real interest rates. The open nature of Hungary’s economy – whereby exports of goods and services constitute 85% of GDP - makes it much more sensitive to pan-European tourism and manufacturing cycles. With the collapse in its manufacturing and tourism revenues, wage growth in Hungary is bound to decelerate rapidly (Chart I-4). Chart I-3Hungary: Central Bank Has Drained Liquidity
Hungary: Central Bank Has Drained Liquidity
Hungary: Central Bank Has Drained Liquidity
Chart I-4Economic Growth: Hungary Is More Vulnerable Than Poland
Economic Growth: Hungary Is More Vulnerable Than Poland
Economic Growth: Hungary Is More Vulnerable Than Poland
Rapidly deteriorating wage and employment dynamics reduces the odds of an inflation breakout anytime soon. This will cool down inflation and, thereby, increase real rates on the margin. The central bank in Poland will stay super accommodative while the National Bank of Hungary will be a bit less aggressive. Bottom Line: Although this monetary policy adjustment does not entail the end of easy policy in Hungary, generally, it does signal restraint on the part of monetary authorities resulting from a much reduced tolerance for currency depreciation. This creates conditions for the forint to outperform. Poland In the meantime, Polish monetary authorities have switched into an ultra-accommodative mode. Recent policy announcements by the National Bank of Poland (NBP) represent the most dramatic example of policy easing in Central Europe. Such a policy stance in Poland will produce lower real rates than in Hungary, which is negative for the Polish zloty against the forint. The NBP is set to finance the majority of a new 11% of GDP fiscal spending program enacted by the government amid the COVID-19 lockdowns. This amounts to de-facto public debt and fiscal deficit monetization. The latter will not be sterilized unlike in Hungary and will therefore lead to an excess liquidity overflow in the banking system. The Polish central bank has cut interest rates by 140 bps to 10 bps since March. Pushing nominal rates down close to zero has produced more negative real policy rates than in Hungary (Chart I-2, top panel on page 2). Also, Polish prime lending rates in real terms have fallen below those in Hungary (Chart I-2, bottom panel). Chances are that inflation in Poland will also prove to be stickier than in Hungary due to the minimum wage raise at the beginning of the year and very aggressive fiscal and monetary stimulus since the pandemics has erupted (Chart I-5). Critically, the Polish economy is much less open than Hungary’s, and it is therefore less vulnerable to the collapse of pan-European manufacturing and tourism. This will ensure better employment and wage conditions in Poland. All in all, Poland’s final demand outperformance, versus Hungary, will contribute to a higher rate of inflation there. Bottom Line: The central bank in Poland will stay super accommodative while the National Bank of Hungary will be a bit less aggressive. This is producing a U-turn in both countries’ nominal and relative real interest rates, which heralds a reversal in the HUF / PLN cross rate (Chart I-6). Chart I-5Polish Inflation Will Be Sticker Than In Hungary
Polish Inflation Will Be Sticker Than In Hungary
Polish Inflation Will Be Sticker Than In Hungary
Chart I-6Go Long HUF / Short PLN
Go Long HUF / Short PLN
Go Long HUF / Short PLN
Investment Strategy For Central Europe A new trade: go long the HUF versus the PLN. Take a 3% profit on the short HUF and PLN / long CZK trade. Close the short IDR / long PLN trade with a 20% loss. Downgrade central European bourses (Polish, Czech and Hungarian) from an overweight to a neutral allocation within the EM equity benchmark. Lower for longer European interest rates disfavor bank stocks that dominate central European bourses. Andrija Vesic Associate Editor andrijav@bcaresearch.com Colombia: Continue Betting On Lower Rates Colombia has been badly hit by two shocks: the precipitous fall in oil prices and the strict quarantine measures to constrain the spread of the COVID-19 outbreak. An underwhelming fiscal stimulus in response to the lockdowns will further weigh on private demand. An underwhelming fiscal stimulus in response to the lockdowns will further weigh on private demand. We have been recommending receiving 10-year swap rates in Colombia since April 23rd and this strategy remains unchanged: While oil prices seem to have rebounded sharply, they will remain structurally low (Chart II-1). The Emerging Markets Strategy team's view is that oil prices will average $40 per barrel this year and next.1 After the recent rally, chances of further upside in crude prices are limited. Chart II-1A Long-Term Perspective On Oil Prices
A Long-Term Perspective On Oil Prices
A Long-Term Perspective On Oil Prices
Table II-1Colombia’s Fiscal Package Is The Lowest In The Region
Hungary Versus Poland; Colombia
Hungary Versus Poland; Colombia
Colombia's high sensitivity to oil prices is particularly visible via its current account balance. Indeed, Colombia’s net crude exports cover as much as 50% of the current account deficit, such that low oil prices severely affect the currency and produce a negative income shock for the economy. Fiscal policy remains unreasonably tight, especially in the face of the global pandemic. The government’s fiscal response plan amounts to only a meagre 1.5% of GDP. This is low not only compared to advanced economies but also to the rest of Latin America (Table II-1). Moreover, President Duque’s administration has been running the tightest fiscal budget in almost a decade, with the primary fiscal balance reaching 1% of GDP before the pandemic. The country’s COVID-19 response has been fast and effective. Colombia has managed to achieve the lowest amount of infections and deaths among major economies in Latin America (Chart II-2). Chart II-2COVID-19 Casualties Across Latin America
COVID-19 Casualties Across Latin America
COVID-19 Casualties Across Latin America
Duque’s administration has taken a pragmatic approach to handling the pandemic by enforcing strict lockdowns and banning international and inter-municipal travel since late March, only three days after the country’s first casualty. Further, the nationwide confinement measures have been extended until July 1st, with particularly stringent rules applying to major cities. These have helped the country avoid a nation-wide health crisis, but they will engender prolonged economic pain. Regarding monetary stimulus, the central bank (Banrep) has cut interest rates by 150 basis points since March of this year. It also embarked on the first and largest QE program in the region. Banrep has committed to purchase 12 trillion pesos worth of government and corporate securities (amounting to a whopping 8% of GDP). Consumer price inflation is falling across various core measures and will drop below the low end of Banrep’s target range (Chart II-3). This will push the central bank to continue cutting rates. Despite the monetary easing, nominal lending rates are still restrictive. Real lending rates (deflated by core CPI) remain elevated at 7% (Chart II-4). Chart II-3Colombia: Inflation Will Fall Below Target
Colombia: Inflation Will Fall Below Target
Colombia: Inflation Will Fall Below Target
Chart II-4Colombia: Real Lending Rates Are Still High
Colombia: Real Lending Rates Are Still High
Colombia: Real Lending Rates Are Still High
Chart II-5The Colombian Economy Was Already Under Pressure
The Colombian Economy Was Already Under Pressure
The Colombian Economy Was Already Under Pressure
Importantly, there has not been an appropriate amount of credit support and debt waving programs for SMEs, as there has been in many other countries. Given that SMEs employ a large share of the workforce, and that household spending accounts for about 70% of GDP, consumer spending and overall economic growth will contract substantially and be slow to recover. Employment rates had already been contracting, and wage growth downshifting, before the pandemic started (Chart II-5). Household income is now certainly in decline as major cities are in full lockdown and economic activity is frozen. Investment Recommendations Even though we are structurally positive on the country due to its orthodox macroeconomic policies, positive structural reforms, and low levels of debt among both households and companies, we maintain a neutral allocation on Colombian stocks within an EM equity portfolio. This bourse is dominated by banks and energy stocks. The lack of both fiscal support and bank loan guarantees amid the recession means that banks will carry the burden of ultimate losses. They will suffer materially due to loan restructuring and defaults. For fixed income investors, we reiterate our call to receive 10-year swap rates and recommend overweighting local currency government bonds versus the EM domestic bond benchmark. The yield curve is steep and real bond yields are elevated (Chart II-6). Hence, long-term interest rates offer great value. Additional monetary easing, including quantitative easing, will suppress yields much further. Chart II-6A Great Opportunity In Colombian Rates
A Great Opportunity In Colombian Rates
A Great Opportunity In Colombian Rates
Chart II-7The COP Has Depreciated Considerably
The COP Has Depreciated Considerably
The COP Has Depreciated Considerably
We are upgrading Colombia sovereign credit from neutral to overweight within an EM credit portfolio. General public debt (including the central and state governments) stands at 59% of GDP. Conservative fiscal policy and the central bank’s large purchases of local bonds will allow the government to finance itself locally. Presently, 40% of public debt is foreign currency and 60% local currency denominated. As a result, sovereign credit will outperform the EM credit benchmark. In terms of the currency, we recommend investors to be cautious for now. Even though the peso is cheap (Chart II-7), another relapse in oil prices or a potential flare up in social protests could cause further downfall in the currency. Juan Egaña Research Associate juane@bcaresearch.com 1 This differs from the view of BCA’s Commodities and Energy Strategy service. We believe structural forces such as the lasting decline in air travel and commuting will impede a recovery in oil demand while, at the same time, US shale production will rise again considerably if crude prices rise and remain well above $40 Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
Highlights Rising Bond Yields: Global risk assets are discounting a V-shaped economic recovery. With economic data starting to revive as more economies emerge from virus-related shutdowns, bond yields are showing signs of following suit. Duration Strategy: Even with global yields showing signs of a cyclical bottom, we continue to recommend a neutral duration stance. Central banks will remain highly accommodative given the lack of inflationary pressures after the deep COVID-19 recessions. There are still significant risks in the coming months from a potential second wave of coronavirus after economies reopen, worsening US-China relations and domestic US sociopolitical turmoil. Duration Proxy Trades: Given those lingering uncertainties, we prefer to focus on “duration-lite” trades in the developed economies, like overweighting inflation-linked government bonds versus nominals as inflation expectations will drift higher over the next 6-12 months. Feature Dear Client, Next week, instead of publishing a regular Weekly Report, we will hold a webcast on Tuesday, June 16 at 10:00 am ET, discussing our latest views on global fixed income markets. The format will be a short presentation, followed by a Q&A session. We hope you will join us, armed with interesting questions. Kind regards, Rob Robis, Chief Fixed Income Strategist Chart of the WeekBond Yields Bottoming, But Backdrop Not Yet Bearish
Bond Yields Bottoming, But Backdrop Not Yet Bearish
Bond Yields Bottoming, But Backdrop Not Yet Bearish
Bond yields around the world awoke from their COVID-19 induced slumber last week, responding to a growing body of evidence indicating that global growth has bottomed. Over a span of four days, benchmark 10-year government bond yields rose in the US (+20bps), Germany (+13bps), Canada (+20bps), China (+14bps), Japan (+4bps), Mexico (+13bps) and the UK (+12bps). There is potential for yields to continue drifting higher over the next few months, as more countries reopen from virus-related shutdowns. The bounce already seen in survey data like manufacturing and services PMIs, as well as economic sentiment measures like the global ZEW index, should soon translate into real improvements in activity data. This comes at a time when rising commodity prices, most notably oil, suggest that depressed inflation expectations can lead bond yields higher. The cyclical bottom for global yields has likely passed, based on the improvement already seen in our own Global Duration Indicator (Chart of the Week). However, economic policy uncertainty remains elevated as devastated economies try to reopen from lockdowns. In addition, our Central Bank Monitors continue to indicate pressure on policymakers to keep interest rates as low as possible to maintain easy financial conditions as easy as possible. Tighter monetary policies remain a distant prospect, given very high unemployment rates. The cyclical bottom for global yields has likely passed, based on the improvement already seen in our own Global Duration Indicator. Amid those uncertainties, we recommend maintaining a neutral strategic (6-12 months) and tactical (0-6 months) stance on overall duration exposure in fixed income portfolios. Instead, we prefer focusing on lower volatility trades that will benefit from improving global growth and policy reflation, like going long inflation-linked bonds versus nominal government debt throughout the developed markets with breakevens looking too low on our models. Why Are Bond Yields Rising Now? We see five main reasons why global bond yields have started to move higher: 1) Investor risk aversion is declining There has been a sharp recovery in global risk appetite since late March, diminishing the demand for risk-free global government debt. In the US, the S&P 500 is up 43% from its March lows, while the NASDAQ index is back to the all-time highs reached before the coronavirus turned into a global pandemic (Chart 2). US corporate debt has also performed well since the March 23rd peak in spreads, with investment grade and high-yield spreads down -227bps and -564bps, respectively. Non-US assets are also flying, with emerging market (EM) equities up 29% and EM USD-denominated corporate debt up 14% in excess return terms over US Treasuries since the March trough. Even severely lagging assets like European bank stocks are showing a pulse, up 38% since the lows of May 15. Commodity prices are also improving, led not only by gains in oil after the April crash by recoveries in the prices of growth-sensitive commodities like copper (+17%) and lumber (+42%). Add it all up, and the message is clear: investors now prefer risk to safety, which has tempered the demand for government bonds. The flipside of the boom in risk appetite is weakening prices for safe haven assets (Chart 3). The price of gold in US dollar terms is down -4% from the 2020 high on May 20, while the euro price of gold is down –6%. Safe haven currencies like the Japanese yen and Swiss franc have underperformed, while interest rate volatility measures like the US MOVE index and long-dated euro swaption volatility are back to the pre-coronavirus lows. Chart 2Risk Assets Are Booming Worldwide
Risk Assets Are Booming Worldwide
Risk Assets Are Booming Worldwide
Chart 3Safe Haven Trades Losing Luster
Safe Haven Trades Losing Luster
Safe Haven Trades Losing Luster
Add it all up, and the message is clear: investors now prefer risk to safety, which has tempered the demand for government bonds that helped drive yields lower when risk assets were tanking in late February and March. 2) Global growth is improving One of the reasons for the improvement in investor risk appetite is belief that the world economy has exited from the severe COVID-19 global recession. While timely real data is still coming in slowly given reporting lags, there has been a notable bounce in survey data in many countries. PMIs for both manufacturing and services climbed higher in May (Chart 4). The expectations components of economic confidence measures like the ZEW indices have also recovered the losses seen in February and March. Data surprises have also been increasingly on the positive side of late in China, Europe and the US, including the shocking 2.5 million increase in US employment in May. However, the US unemployment rate remains very high at 13.3%, indicating abundant spare capacity that will likely take years, not months, to work off – a problem that most of the world will continue to deal with post-recession. 3) Central bank liquidity is booming The other main reason for the boom in risk asset performance that has started to put upward pressure on bond yields is the extremely accommodative stance of global monetary policy. This is occurring through 0% policy rates in the developed economies but, even more importantly, the aggressive expansion of central bank balance sheets through quantitative easing (QE). The Fed has its foot firmly on the monetary accelerator, with year-over-year growth in its balance sheet of 87% (Chart 5). The European Central Bank (ECB) is no slouch, though, with its balance sheet up 19% from a year ago and having expanded its Pandemic Emergency Purchase Program (PEPP) by another €600 billion last week. Chart 4Signs Of Life In The Global Economy
Signs Of Life In The Global Economy
Signs Of Life In The Global Economy
Chart 5'QE Forever' Driving Money From Bonds To Risk Assets
QE Forever' Driving Money From Bonds To Risk Assets
QE Forever' Driving Money From Bonds To Risk Assets
The combined annual growth of the central bank balance sheets for the “G4” (the Fed, ECB, Bank of Japan and Bank of England) is now up to 26%. The rate of G4 balance sheet expansion has been a reliable leading indicator of global risk asset performance since the 2008 financial crisis (with about a 12-month lead), and the current boom in “liquidity” suggests that the current rise in global equity and corporate bond markets can continue over the next year. Easing global financial conditions are now returning to levels that should support economic growth in the coming months, helping to mitigate (but not eliminate) the potential credit stresses from companies that have suffered during the COVID-19 recession. This recovery remains fragile, however, and policymakers will continue to maintain an extremely dovish policy bias – even with significant fiscal stimulus measures also in place to help economies climb out of recession. This suggests that the current rise in global bond yields is not the start of a new bond bear market driven by expectations of tighter monetary policies. The current rise in global bond yields is not the start of a new bond bear market driven by expectations of tighter monetary policies. Chart 6Global Bond Sentiment Is Still Very Bullish
Global Bond Sentiment Is Still Very Bullish
Global Bond Sentiment Is Still Very Bullish
4) Bullish sentiment for bonds is at extremes From a contrarian perspective, another factor helping put a floor underneath bond yields is investor sentiment towards fixed income, which remains bullish. The widely followed ZEW survey of economic forecasters also contains a question on the expected change in bond yields over the next year. The latest read on the surveys shows a net balance still expecting lower bond yields in the US, Germany, the UK and Japan, nearing levels seen prior to the end of the recessionary bond bull markets in the early 2000s and after the 2008 financial crisis (Chart 6). In addition, the Market Vane survey of bullish sentiment on US Treasuries is nearing past cyclical peaks, suggesting limited scope for new bond buyers that could drive US yields to new lows. 5) Inflation expectations are moving higher Finally, global yields are rising because the inflation expectations component of yields has started to move higher. The hyper-easy stance of monetary policy is playing a role here. Market-based inflation expectations measures like the breakevens on inflation-linked bonds (or CPI swap rates) are a vote of confidence by investors in the “appropriateness” of policy settings. The fact that inflation expectations are now drifting higher suggests that bond markets now believe that central banks are now "easy" enough to give inflation a shot at rising sustainably as growth recovers. Global yields are rising because the inflation expectations component of yields has started to move higher. Chart 7Oil Prices & Breakeven Inflation Rates Are Both Recovering
Oil Prices & Breakeven Inflation Rates Are Both Recovering
Oil Prices & Breakeven Inflation Rates Are Both Recovering
This move higher in inflation expectations can continue in the coming months, particularly with global oil prices likely to move even higher. Our colleagues at BCA Research Commodity & Energy Strategy are quite bullish on oil prices, forecasting the benchmark Brent oil price to rise to around $50/bbl by the end of 2020 and continuing up to $78/bbl by the end of 2021. Such an outcome would push up market-based inflation expectations, and likely put more upward pressure on nominal bond yields, given the strong correlation between oil and inflation breakevens in the developed economies that has existed over the past decade (Chart 7). Bottom Line: Global risk assets are discounting a V-shaped economic recovery. With economic data starting to revive as more economies emerge from virus-related shutdowns, bond yields are showing signs of following suit. Duration Strategy For The Next Few Months The trends in growth, inflation and financial conditions all suggest bond yields can continue to drift higher over at least the next 3-6 months. Yet given the potential for a negative shock from a second wave of coronavirus infection, or geopolitical uncertainties in a volatile US election year, a below-benchmark global duration stance is not yet warranted. This is especially true with unemployment rates in most countries remaining elevated even as growth rebounds from recession, forcing central banks to maintain a very dovish policy posture. Our “Risk Checklist” that we have been monitoring to move to a more aggressive recommended investment stance on global spread product – the US dollar, the VIX and the number of new COVID-19 cases - can also be helpful in helping us determine when to shift to a more defensive bias on global duration. On that note, the Checklist still argues for a neutral duration stance, rather than positioning for a big move higher in yields. The US dollar has started to soften, but remains at a very high level relative to interest rate differentials (Chart 8). A weaker greenback is a source of global monetary reflation, primarily through changes in the prices of commodities and other traded goods that are denominated in dollars, but also by helping alleviate funding pressures for companies that have borrowed heavily in US dollars (especially in the emerging world). The dollar is also an “anti-growth” currency that appreciates during periods of slowing global growth, and vice versa, so some depreciation should unfold as more of the world economy emerges from lockdown (middle panel). The VIX index – a measure of investor uncertainty - continues to climb down from the massive surge in February and March, now sitting at 26 after peaking around 80. This is the one part of our Risk Checklist that argues for reducing duration exposure now. We prefer trades that will benefit from the combination of continued global policy reflation and growing investor risk appetite. We call these “duration-lite” trades. The daily number of new reported cases of COVID-19 (using data from the World Health Organization) has come down dramatically in Europe, but in the US the decline in new cases has stalled over the past month – a worrisome sign as the country continues to reopen amid mass protests in major cities (Chart 9). New cases outside the US and Europe are rapidly moving higher, however, primarily in major Latin American countries like Brazil and Mexico. This suggests that while there is a concern about a “second wave” of coronavirus later in the year, the risks from the first wave are far from over. Chart 8Still Not Much Reflationary Push From A Weaker USD
Still Not Much Reflationary Push From A Weaker USD
Still Not Much Reflationary Push From A Weaker USD
Chart 9The COVID-19 Threat Has Not Gone Away
The COVID-19 Threat Has Not Gone Away
The COVID-19 Threat Has Not Gone Away
Instead of shifting to a below-benchmark recommended stance on overall portfolio duration too soon in the cycle, we prefer trades that will benefit from the combination of continued global policy reflation and growing investor risk appetite. We call these “duration-lite” trades. Specifically, we like owning inflation-linked government bonds versus nominal debt, while also positioning for steeper government yield curves (on a duration-neutral basis). Longer-dated breakeven inflation rates within the major developed markets are becoming increasingly correlated to both the level of 10-year government bond yields (Chart 10) and the slope of the 2-year/10-year yield curve (Chart 11). Chart 10Rising Inflation Expectations Will Lead To Higher Bond Yields ...
Rising Inflation Expectations Will Lead To Higher Bond Yields ...
Rising Inflation Expectations Will Lead To Higher Bond Yields ...
Chart 11... And Steeper Yield Curves
... And Steeper Yield Curves
... And Steeper Yield Curves
In terms of country selection for these trades, we look to the valuations on inflation-linked bond breakevens from our modeling framework that we introduced back in late April.1 In that framework, we model 10-year breakevens as a function of oil prices, exchange rates and the long-run trend in realized inflation. Chart 12Global Inflation Breakevens Look Cheap On Our Models
Global Inflation Breakevens Look Cheap On Our Models
Global Inflation Breakevens Look Cheap On Our Models
In Chart 12, we show the deviation of 10-year inflation breakevens from the model-implied fair value, shown both terms of standard deviations and basis points. The “cheapest” breakevens from our models are for inflation-linked bonds in Italy and Canada, although almost all counties (outside of the UK) have breakevens to look far too low. This suggests that global bond investors should consider a multi-country portfolio of inflation-linked bonds versus nominal paying equivalents – or in countries where the inflation-linked bond markets are small and illiquid, duration-neutral yield curve steepeners - as a more efficient way to play for a continuation of the current reflationary global backdrop without taking duration risk. Bottom Line: Even with global yields showing signs of a cyclical bottom, we continue to recommend a neutral duration stance. Given the lingering uncertainties about a second wave of coronavirus, and the rising political and social tensions in the US only five months before the presidential election, we prefer to focus on “duration-lite” trades in the developed economies - like overweighting inflation-linked government bonds versus nominals as inflation expectations will drift higher over the next 6-12 months. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Global Inflation Expectations Are Now Too Low", dated April 28, 2020, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
Global Yields Are Stirring, But It’s Not Yet A Bond Bear Market
Global Yields Are Stirring, But It’s Not Yet A Bond Bear Market
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns