Monetary
Dear Client, This week, I provided an update through a webcast on the economic and financial market outlook in the era of the COVID-19 outbreak. You can access the webcast here. In lieu of our regular report this week, we are sending you a Special Report from my colleague Jonathan LaBerge. Jonathan shows why the most widely cited estimate of the US neutral rate of interest, the Laubach & Williams estimate of “R-star”, is very likely wrong and that the true neutral rate may be higher than many investors believe. While bond yields may not rise significantly in the near-term, this underscores that they have the potential to rise meaningfully over a cyclical and secular horizon once a post-COVID-19 expansion takes hold. I hope you find the report insightful. Please note that next week we will be publishing our quarterly Strategy Outlook. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights Global investors have come to accept the secular stagnation narrative as described by Larry Summers in November 2013, and have gravitated to the only available real time estimate of the real neutral rate of interest: the Laubach & Williams (“LW”) “R-star” estimate. With this apparent visualization of secular stagnation as a guide, many investors have concluded that monetary policy ceased to be stimulative last year and that recent Fed rate cuts will be of limited benefit to economic activity even once economic recovery takes hold unless inflation meaningfully accelerates (thus pushing real rates lower for any given nominal Fed funds rate). This report revisits the “LW” R-star estimate in detail, and demonstrates why the estimation is almost certainly wrong, at least over the past two decades. We also outline an inferential approach that investors can use to monitor where the neutral rate is in real time and whether it is rising or falling. The core conclusion for investors is that US Treasury yields reflect a “low rates forever” view with much higher certainty than is analytically warranted and thus appear to be anchored by a false narrative. While bond yields may not rise significantly in the near-term, investors should avoid dogmatic medium-to-longer term views about yields as they may rise meaningfully over a cyclical and secular horizon once a post-COVID-19 expansion takes hold. Feature Over the past several weeks financial markets have moved rapidly to price in a global recession stemming from the COVID-19 outbreak. As financial market participants began to turn to policy makers for support, eyes focused first on the Federal Reserve, and then fiscal authorities. Earlier this week, the ECB joined the party and announced aggressive further measures of its own. When responding to the Fed’s return to the lower bound and its other recent monetary policy decisions, many market participants have expressed the view that the Fed is largely impotent to deal with a global pandemic. There are three elements to this view. The first is that interest rate cuts are ill equipped to stimulate domestic demand if quarantine measures or other forms of “social distancing” are in effect. The second element is that the Fed has only been capable of delivering a fraction of the reduction in interest rates compared to what has occurred in response to previous contractions. The third aspect of this view is that because the neutral rate of interest is so much lower now than it was in the past, Fed rate cuts will not be as stimulative as they were before. Chart 1Monetary Policy Ceased To Be Stimulative Last Year, According To The LW R-star Estimate
Monetary Policy Ceased To Be Stimulative Last Year, According To The LW R-star Estimate
Monetary Policy Ceased To Be Stimulative Last Year, According To The LW R-star Estimate
While we at least partly agree with the first and second elements of this view, we feel strongly that the third is flawed. Global investors have come to accept the secular stagnation narrative as described by Larry Summers in November 2013,1 and have gravitated to the only available real time estimate of the neutral rate of interest: the Laubach & Williams (“LW”) “R-star” estimate. This time series, which is regularly updated by the New York Fed,2 suggests that the real fed funds rate reached neutral territory in the first quarter of 2019 (Chart 1). With this apparent visualization of secular stagnation as a guide, many investors have concluded that monetary policy ceased to be stimulative last year and that recent Fed rate cuts will be of limited benefit to economic activity even beyond the near term unless inflation meaningfully accelerates (thus pushing real rates lower for any given nominal Fed funds rate). In this Special Report we revisit the “LW” R-star estimate in detail, and demonstrate why the estimation is almost certainly wrong, at least over the past two decades. Our analysis does not reveal a precise alternative estimate of the neutral rate, although we do provide some inferential perspective on how investors may be able to monitor where the neutral rate is in real time and whether it is rising or falling. However, the core insight emanating from our report, particularly for US fixed income investors, is that US Treasury yields reflect a “low rates forever” view with much higher certainty than is analytically warranted and thus appear to be anchored by a false narrative. While bond yields may not rise significantly in the near-term, this underscores that they have the potential to rise meaningfully over a cyclical and secular horizon once economic activity recovers. As such, we caution fixed-income investors against dogmatic medium-to-longer term views about bond yields, as their potential to rise may be larger than many investors currently expect. Demystifying The LW R-star Estimate The LW estimate of the neutral rate of interest has gained credibility for three reasons. First, as noted above, the evolution of the series fits with the secular stagnation narrative re-popularized by Larry Summers. Second, the series is essentially sponsored by the Federal Reserve even if it is not officially part of the Fed’s forecasting framework, as its two creators are long-time Fed employees (Thomas Laubach is a director of the Fed’s Board of Governors, and John Williams is the current President of the New York Fed). But, in our view, there is a third important reason that global investors have accepted the LW R-star estimate of the neutral rate of interest: the methodology used to generate the estimate is extremely technically complex, and thus is difficult for most investors to penetrate. Much of the technical complexity of the LW estimate is centered around the use of a statistical procedure called a Kalman filter (“KF”). Simply described, the KF is an algorithm that tries to estimate an unobservable variable based on 1) an idea of how the unobservable variable might relate to an observable variable (the “measurement equation”), and 2) an idea of how the unobservable variable might change through time (the “transition equation”). Through a repeated process of simulating the unobserved variable based on a set of assumptions, the KF is able to compare predicted results to actual results on an observation-by-observation basis, and use that information to generate ever more reliable future estimates of the unobserved variable (Chart 2). Chart 2A Very Simplified Overview Of The Kalman Filter Algorithm
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
We acknowledge that a full technical treatment of the Kalman Filter as it relates to the LW estimate of the neutral rate of interest is beyond the scope of this report, and we provide a more technical overview in Box 1. But what emerges from a detailed analysis of the model is that the Kalman Filter jointly estimates R-star, potential GDP growth, potential GDP, and the variable “z”, the determinants of R-star that are not explained by potential GDP growth. As we will highlight in the next section, this joint estimation of these four variables is a crucial aspect of the model, because a valid estimate of R-star necessitates a valid estimate of the remaining variables. Box 1 A Technical Overview Of The Laubach & Williams R-star Model
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
Debunking The LW R-star Estimate Before criticizing the LW estimate of the neutral rate of interest, it is important for us to note that we have the utmost respect for the Federal Reserve and its research methods. We fully acknowledge that the LW R-star estimation is rooted in solid economic theory, and we have identified no technical errors in the setup of the LW model. Nevertheless, valid analytical efforts sometimes lead to problematic real-world results, and there are two key reasons to believe that the Kalman filter in the LW model is almost certainly misspecifying R-star, at least in terms of its estimate over the past two decades. The first reason relates to the sensitivity of the model to the interval of estimation (the period over which R-star is estimated). Chart 3 presents the range of quarterly estimates of R-star since 2005, along with the difference between the high and low end of the range in the second panel. The chart shows that while previous estimates of R-star have generally been stable for values ranging between the early-1980s and 2006/2007, pre-1980 estimates have varied quite substantially and we have seen material revisions to the estimates over the past decade. Q1 2018 serves as an excellent example: in that quarter R-star was estimated to be 0.14%; today, the Q1 2018 R-star estimate sits at 0.92%. Chart 3Since 2005, There Has Been Some Instability In The LW R-star Estimates
Since 2005, There Has Been Some Instability In The LW R-star Estimates
Since 2005, There Has Been Some Instability In The LW R-star Estimates
However, Table 1 and Chart 4 highlight the real instability of the Kalman filter estimation by demonstrating the effect of varying the starting point of the model (please see Box 2 for a brief description of how our estimation of R-star using the LW approach differs slightly from the original procedure). Laubach & Williams originally estimated R-star beginning in Q1 1961; Table 1 shows what happens to today’s estimate of R-star simply by incrementally varying the starting point of the model from Q1 1958 to Q4 1979. Table 1Alternative Current LW Estimates Of R-star By Model Starting Point
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
Chart 4Alternative Starting Points Produce Wildly Different Estimates Of R-star Today
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
Box 2 The Laubach & Williams R-star Model With Simplified Inflation Expectations
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
The table highlights that the model fails to even generate a result in a majority of the cases (only 39 out of 88 of the model runs were error-free). In addition, Chart 4 shows that of the successful estimates of R-star using the LW procedure and alternate starting dates of the model, the estimate of R-star today varies from -2% (in one case) to +2%. Excluding the one extremely negative outlier results in an effective estimate range of 0% to 2%, but the key point for investors is that this range is massive and underscores that the original model’s estimate of R-star today is heavily and unduly influenced by the interval of estimation. Investors should also note that of all of the alternative estimates of R-star today shown in Chart 4, the estimate using the original interval is very much on the low end of the distribution. The second (and most important) reason to believe that the LW estimate is misspecifying R-star is that the output gap estimate generated by the model is almost certainly invalid, at least over the past two decades. Chart 5 presents the LW output gap estimate alongside an average of the CBO, OECD, and IMF estimates of the gap; panel 1 shows the official current LW output gap estimate, whereas panel 2 shows the range of output gap estimates that are generated using the different estimation intervals highlighted in Table 1 and Chart 4. Given that the Kalman filter in the LW model jointly determines R-star and the output gap (by way of estimating potential output via estimating potential GDP growth) and that these estimates are dependent on each other, Chart 5 highlights that in order to believe the LW R-star estimate investors must believe three things: That the US economy was chronically below potential in the late-1990s when the unemployment rate was below 5%, real GDP growth averaged nearly 5%, and the equity market was booming, That output exceeded potential in 2004/2005 by a magnitude not seen since the late-1970s / early-1980s despite an average unemployment rate, That the 2008/2009 US recession was not particularly noteworthy in terms of its deviation from potential output, and that the economy had returned to potential output by 2010/2011 when the unemployment rate was in the range of 8-9%. Chart 5The LW Output Gap Estimates, Upon Which R-star Depends, Have Been Wrong For Two Decades
The LW Output Gap Estimates, Upon Which R-star Depends, Have Been Wrong For Two Decades
The LW Output Gap Estimates, Upon Which R-star Depends, Have Been Wrong For Two Decades
While we do not believe any of these three statements, the third is especially unlikely. Chart 6 highlights that the economic expansion from 2009 – 2020 was the weakest on record in the post-war era in terms of average annual real per capita GDP growth. To us, this is a clear symptom of a chronic deficiency in aggregate demand, and that it is essentially unreasonable to argue that the economy was operating at full employment prior to 2014/2015. This means that the Kalman filter is generating incorrect and unreliable estimates of the output gap, which means in turn that the filter’s estimation of R-star is almost assuredly wrong. Chart 6The US Economy Was Definitely Not At Full Employment In 2010
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
How Can Investors Tell What The Neutral Rate Is? An Inferential Approach Table 2 presents the sensitivity of the original Q1 1961 LW estimate of R-star to a series of counterfactual scenarios for inflation, real GDP growth, nominal interest rates, and import and oil prices since mid-2009. While these scenarios do not in any way improve the validity of the LW R-star estimate, they do help clarify the theoretical basis of the model and they help reveal how investors may infer whether the neutral rate of interest is higher or lower than prevailing market rates, and whether it is rising or falling. Table 2 highlights that today’s estimate of R-star using the original LW approach is mostly sensitive to our counterfactual scenarios for growth and interest rates, but not inflation or oil prices. Shifting down import price growth also has a meaningful effect on R-star, but since core import price growth has been particularly weak over the past several years (Chart 7), it seems unreasonable to suggest that they have been abnormally high and thus “explain” a low R-star estimate today. Table 2Sensitivity Of Current LW R-star Estimate To Counterfactual Scenarios (2009 - Present)
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
Chart 7Core Import Price Growth Has Been Weak On Average During This Expansion
Core Import Price Growth Has Been Weak On Average During This Expansion
Core Import Price Growth Has Been Weak On Average During This Expansion
Table 2 essentially highlights that the entire question of the neutral rate of interest over the past decade, and the core contradiction that led to the re-emergence of the secular stagnation thesis, can effectively be boiled down to the following simple question: “Why hasn’t US economic growth been stronger this cycle, given that interest rates have been so low?” Based on the (hopefully uncontroversial) view that interest rates influence economic activity and that economic activity influences inflation, we propose the following checklist for investors to ask themselves in order to not only determine the answer to this important question, but to help identify whether R-star in any given country is likely higher or lower than existing policy rates at any given point in time. Are interest rates above or below the prevailing level of economic growth? Are interest rates rising or falling, and how intensely? Are there identifiable non-monetary shocks (positive or negative) that appear to be influencing economic activity? Is private sector credit growth keeping pace with economic growth? Are debt service burdens in the economy high or low? The first question reflects the most basic view of R-star, which is that the real neutral rate of interest should be equal to, or at least closely related to, the potential growth rate of the economy, ceteris paribus. Questions 2 through 5 attempt to determine whether ceteris paribus holds. In terms of how the answers to these questions relate to identifying the neutral rate, consider two economies, “Economy A” and “Economy B” (Chart 8). Economy A has broadly stable or slightly rising interest rates that are well below prevailing rates of economic growth (questions 1 & 2), no obvious beneficial shocks to domestic demand from fiscal policy or other factors (question 3), and strong private sector credit growth that is perhaps above or strongly above the current pace of GDP growth (question 4). Chart 8''Economy A'', Versus ''Economy B''
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
Inferentially, it would seem that interest rates in this hypothetical economy are below R-star today. Question 5 is in our list because the more that active private sector leveraging occurs (thus pushing up debt burdens), the more that we would expect R-star in the future to fall. This is because debt payments as a share of income cannot rise forever, and we would expect that the capacity of economy A’s central bank to raise interest rates in the future are negatively related to economy A’s private sector debt service burden today. Now, imagine another economy (“Economy B”) with interest rates well below average rates of economic growth, an interest rate trend that is flat-to-down, no identifiable non-monetary policy shocks that are restricting aggregate demand, persistently sluggish credit growth, and high private sector debt service burdens in the past. If economy B is growing (even sluggishly) and not in the middle of a recession, it would seem that prevailing interest rates are below R-star, but not significantly so. In this scenario it would seem reasonable to conclude that R-star in economy B has fallen non-trivially below its potential growth rate, and that interest rate increases are likely to move monetary policy into restrictive territory earlier than otherwise would be the case. Is The United States “Economy B”? From the perspective of some investors, our description of economy B above perfectly captures the experience of the US over the past decade: an extremely low Fed funds rate, sluggish to weak growth and inflation, all the result of a huge build-up in leverage and debt service burdens during the last economic cycle. We do not doubt that R-star fell in the US for some period of time during the global financial crisis and in the early phase of the economic recovery. But we doubt that it is as low today as the secular stagnation narrative would imply, in large part because it ignores several important aspects concerning questions 2 through 5 noted above. Chart 9Fiscal Austerity Has Been A Serious Non- Monetary Shock To Aggregate Demand
Fiscal Austerity Has Been A Serious Non-Monetary Shock To Aggregate Demand
Fiscal Austerity Has Been A Serious Non-Monetary Shock To Aggregate Demand
Non-monetary shocks to the US and global economies: Over the past 12 years, there have been at least five deeply impactful non-monetary shocks to both the US and global economies that have contributed to the disconnect between growth and interest rates: 1) a prolonged period of US household deleveraging from 2008-2014, 2) the euro area sovereign debt crisis, 3) fiscal austerity in the US, UK, and euro area from 2010 – 2012/2014 (Chart 9), 4) the US dollar / oil price shock of 2014, and 5) the recent trade war between the US and China. Several of these shocks have been policy-driven, and in the case of austerity the negative consequences of that policy has led to a lasting change in thinking among fiscal authorities (outside of Japan) that is unlikely to reverse in the near-future. Private sector credit growth: Chart 10 highlights the extent of household deleveraging noted above by showing the growth in total household liabilities over the past decade alongside income growth. Panel 2 shows the leveraging trend of firms, as represented by the nonfinancial corporate sector debt-to-GDP ratio. Chart 10 underscores two points: the first is that while US household sector credit contracted for several years following the global financial crisis, it is now growing again and has largely closed the gap with income growth. The second point is that the nonfinancial corporate sector has clearly leveraged itself over the course of the expansion, arguing that interest rates have not in any way been restrictive for businesses. While it is true that firms have largely leveraged themselves to buy back stock instead of significantly increasing capital expenditures, in our view this reflects the fact that US consumer demand was impaired for several years due to deleveraging. We doubt that firms would have altered their capital structures to this degree if they did not view interest rates as extremely low. Chart 10Recent Trends In US Private Sector Leverage Do Not Suggest R-star Is Very Low
Recent Trends In US Private Sector Leverage Do Not Suggest R-star Is Very Low
Recent Trends In US Private Sector Leverage Do Not Suggest R-star Is Very Low
Debt service burdens: Chart 11 highlights that US household debt service burdens were at very elevated levels prior to the financial crisis, suggesting that the neutral rate did fall for some time following the recession. But today, the debt burden facing households is the lowest it has been in the past 40 years due to both rate reductions and deleveraging, arguing against the view that household debt levels will structurally weigh on interest rates in the years to come. Chart 12 shows that the picture is different for nonfinancial corporations, as the substantial leveraging noted above has indeed raised debt service burdens for firms. However, the nonfinancial corporate sector debt service ratio remains 400 basis points below early-2000 levels when excess corporate sector liabilities had a clear impact on the economy, suggesting that the Fed’s capacity to raise interest rates still exists following the onset of economic recovery if corporate sector credit growth does not rise sharply relative to GDP over the coming 6-12 months. Chart 11The Debt Burden Facing US Households Is At A Record Low
The Debt Burden Facing US Households Is At A Record Low
The Debt Burden Facing US Households Is At A Record Low
Chart 12Businesses Have Levered Up Their Balance Sheets, But There Is Still Room For Rates To Rise
Businesses Have Levered Up Their Balance Sheets, But There Is Still Room For Rates To Rise
Businesses Have Levered Up Their Balance Sheets, But There Is Still Room For Rates To Rise
The intensity of recent interest rate changes: Finally, many investors have pointed to sluggish housing activity over the past three years as evidence of a low neutral rate. However, Chart 13 highlights that the rise in the 30-year US mortgage rate from late-2016 to late-2018 was one of the largest two-year changes in US history, and Chart 14 shows that the growth in household mortgage credit did not fall below its trend during this period until Q4 2018, when the US stock market fell 20% from its high in response to the economic consequences of the US/China trade war. Chart 14 also shows that mortgage credit growth responded sharply to a recent reduction in interest rates. All in all, Charts 13 & 14 cast doubt on the notion that the level of mortgage rates over the past three years reached restrictive territory. Chart 13Mortgage Rates Rose Very Significantly From Late-2016 To Late-2018
Mortgage Rates Rose Very Significantly From Late-2016 To Late-2018
Mortgage Rates Rose Very Significantly From Late-2016 To Late-2018
Chart 14A Record Rise In Mortgage Rates Did Not Crack The Housing Market
A Record Rise In Mortgage Rates Did Not Crack The Housing Market
A Record Rise In Mortgage Rates Did Not Crack The Housing Market
Investment Conclusions In the face of a global pandemic and an attendant global recession this year, the idea of eventual Fed rate hikes and the notion that the US economy will be able to tolerate them likely seems preposterous to many investors. We agree that over the coming 6-12 months US Treasury yields are unlikely to rise; even at current levels of the 10-year Treasury yield, we are reluctant to call a trough. Chart 15US 10-Year Treasurys Are Mostly Priced For A Repeat Of The Past Decade
US 10-Year Treasurys Are Mostly Priced For A Repeat Of The Past Decade
US 10-Year Treasurys Are Mostly Priced For A Repeat Of The Past Decade
However, Chart 15 highlights that over a long-term time horizon, the bond market is now essentially priced for a repeat of the ten-year path of the Fed funds rate following the global financial crisis. While some investors will view this as a reasonable expectation in the face of what they see as a persistent and unexplainable gap between growth and interest rates over the past decade, we think this gap is explainable and we highly doubt that a pandemic with minimal mortality risk to the working age population and the young will cause the US economy to be afflicted with active consumer deleveraging lasting 4 to 6-years, substantial and wide-ranging fiscal austerity, persistently rising trade tariffs, and sharply lower oil prices. So while we agree that the US economy will be substantially cyclically affected by COVID-19, US Treasury yields reflect a “low rates forever” view with much higher certainty than is analytically warranted and thus appear to be anchored by a false narrative. As such, we caution fixed-income investors against dogmatic medium-to-longer term views about bond yields, as their potential to rise following the upcoming recession may be larger than many investors currently believe. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 "IMF Fourteenth Annual Research Conference in Honor of Stanley Fischer," Washington DC, November 8, 2013. 2 "Measuring the Natural Rate of Interest," Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Global Investment Strategy View Matrix
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
Revisiting The Neutral Rate Of Interest: A Contrarian View In A Time Of Crisis
Dear clients, In addition to this short weekly report, you will also receive a Special Report penned by my colleague Jonathan LaBerge on Sweden, with implications for the SEK. I hope you will find the report both useful and insightful. In the interim, I wish safety for you and your families. Best Regards, Chester Ntonifor Highlights The lack of dollar liquidity had been a tailwind behind the dollar bull market. However, an expansion in the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet should help stem the global shortage of dollars. Ditto if there is an expansion of swap lines beyond the five major central banks. The risk is that the shortage of dollars has already begun to trigger negative feedback loops in a few countries. Until tentative signs emerge that the global economy is on better footing, expect spikes in the dollar. The caveat is that a big fiscal spending package in the US should lead to a deterioration in the current account. This will improve the offshore dollar liquidity situation. Feature The latest flare-up in risk aversion has also rotated to the offshore dollar funding market. Across G10 countries, US dollar cross-currency basis swaps - a measure of the costs to obtain greenbacks domestically - have been rising at an alarming pace. During the Federal Reserve’s emergency meeting on Sunday, swap lines were extended to five major central banks. The terms were very generous, with costs at the overnight index swap rate + 25 basis points, as well as a maturity of 84 days. However, the following day, the dollar continued its fervent rally, with the euro-US cross-currency basis swap touching -120 points (Chart 1). Chart 1A Broad-Based Funding Crisis
A Broad-Based Funding Crisis
A Broad-Based Funding Crisis
The lack of follow through from the Fed’s liquidity injection highlights a fundamental risk to our sanguine view that the dollar should top out sooner rather than later. While we maintain this view, it has been discouraging that the DXY has broken above 100. We had anticipated a move higher on February 21, prompting us to close our long DXY position for a loss. Today, we suggest waiting for better signposts to short the greenback outright.1 US Dollar Flows The dollar remains the reserve currency of today, with the Fed at the center of the global financial architecture. The process behind dollar shortages is a simple one: Chart 2Global FX Reserve Growth Was Anemic
Global FX Reserve Growth Was Anemic
Global FX Reserve Growth Was Anemic
Countries that are experiencing falling trade balances (because of a trade slowdown or trade war) will see a fall in their foreign exchange reserves. This naturally means that their supply of dollars is declining (Chart 2). Wary of seeing local dollar interest rates rise (leading to a higher dollar, and some companies going bust), central banks could sell dollars to the private sector in exchange for local currency. As a reserve currency, the US trade deficit is also settled in dollars. This naturally leads to a flow of greenbacks outside US borders. However, it also means that the current account deficit finances the budget deficit. Therefore, a falling trade surplus in exporting countries naturally means a falling deficit in the US. In order to stimulate the US economy, the authorities pursue macroeconomic policies that tend to weaken the dollar, such as lowering rates and/or running a wider fiscal deficit. The central bank helps finance this fiscal deficit via expanding the monetary base (Seigniorage). The drop in rates causes the yield curve to steepen. This incentivizes banks to lend, which in turn boosts US money supply. As the economy recovers and demand for imports (machinery, commodities, consumer goods) rises, the current account deficit widens. This leads to a renewed outflow of dollars. It is easy to see where the process can get short-circuited, especially via an external shock. If you accept the premise that the sum of the Fed’s custody holdings together with the US monetary base constitutes the root of global dollar liquidity, then it is not yet accelerating fast enough.2 Like in the past, the Fed has been quick to correct the situation: Recently, it has instituted swap lines. However, they remain inadequate for three key reasons: The swap lines should be extended from the five central banks to many countries, because Covid-19 is now a global pandemic. Not even China (along with other emerging markets) was included in the swap agreements. The swap lines usually have terms/limits/amounts, which means that even if the domestic central bank decided to be the lender of last resort, it could still run short of dollars. Widespread fiscal measures have been announced, but this has been mostly geared towards sustaining income. Until governments unilaterally backstop airlines, shipping firms, restaurants, or any other company afflicted by the virus from going bankrupt, a negative self-reinforcing feedback loop will remain. Chart 3The Dollar As An Arbiter Of Growth
The Dollar As An Arbiter Of Growth
The Dollar As An Arbiter Of Growth
We continue to recommend standing aside on the dollar until the dust has settled. Longer-term fundamentals suggest a dollar-bearish view, but until the world gets a sense that global growth is bottoming soon, the dollar uptrend remains intact (Chart 3). We continue to use internals and market fundamentals as a guide for when to time a top.3 Finally, we have been stopped out of a few trades and are tightening stops on a few. Please see this week’s trade table for a few recommendations. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, “The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar”, dated February 28, 2020, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, “Is The World Short Of Dollars?”, dated September 13, 2019, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, “Currency Technicals And Market Internals”, dated March 13, 2020, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Highlights Since 2004, Sweden’s private sector leverage trend can be explained using a simple Taylor rule approach. The approach clearly highlights three distinct monetary policy phases, and underscores the singular role of inflation (not systemic risk from rising indebtedness) as a driving factor for Riksbank policy. Since 2015, the Riksbank has maintained interest rates well below what a Taylor rule approach would suggest, owing to the desire to raise inflation expectations and Sweden’s high trade exposure to the euro area. This highlights strong similarities between the experience of Sweden and Canada: both countries are in the orbit of a major neighboring central bank, which has created serious distortions in both economies. Given the extent of the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, especially in Europe, our assessment of the Riksbank’s reaction function suggests the odds appear to be high that the repo rate will move back into negative territory at some point this year (despite their reluctance to do so). Over the near-term, Swedish policy easing suggests that investors should avoid the krona versus both the US dollar and euro. Over a medium-term time horizon, one implication of a return to negative interest rates is that Swedish house price appreciation is likely to trend higher once the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic ends, potentially to the benefit of Swedish consumer durable and apparel stocks. Finally, over the long-term, Sweden is very likely to face a period of domestic economic stagnation stemming from the extraordinary rise in private sector debt that has built up over the past two decades. The co-ordinated global response to the pandemic suggests that this is not the end of Sweden’s debt supercycle, but timing the transition from reflation to stagnation will be of crucial importance for investors exposed to the domestic Swedish economy over the coming few years. Feature One of the worrying legacies of the global financial crisis has been a substantial buildup in private sector debt in many economies around the world. This has most famously occurred in China, but private indebtedness is also very high in many developed economies. Among advanced countries, Sweden stands out as being particularly exposed to elevated private sector debt. Chart I-1 highlights that Sweden’s private sector debt-to-GDP ratio has ballooned to a massive 250% of GDP over the past 15 years, from a starting point of roughly average indebtedness. Chart I-1Sweden's Extremely Indebted Private Sector
Sweden's Extremely Indebted Private Sector
Sweden's Extremely Indebted Private Sector
In this report we explore why Sweden has seen an explosion in private sector debt-to-GDP, and highlight that Sweden’s experience can be compared closely with that of Canada – both countries are in the orbit of a major neighboring central bank, which has created distortions in each economy. We also summarize what this implies for Riksbank policy, and what investment recommendations can be drawn from our analysis. We conclude that while the Riksbank is clearly reluctant to cut the repo rate after having just existed its negative interest rate position last year, it appears likely that they will forced to do so unless the negative economic impact from the COVID-19 pandemic abates very soon. Over the short-term, this suggests that investors should avoid the Swedish krona, versus either the US dollar or the euro. Why has Sweden seen such an explosion in private-sector debt? Over the medium-term, easy Riksbank policy and the probable absence of any additional macroprudential measures is likely to spur a renewed increase in Swedish house prices and household debt, which will likely benefit consumer durables and apparel stocks relative to the broad Swedish equity market. But this will reinforce Sweden’s existing credit bubble, and similar to Canada will set the stage for domestic economic stagnation over the very long-term. Riksbank Policy and Sweden’s Private Sector Debt: A Tale Of Three Phases Much of the investor attention on Sweden's extremely high private sector debt load has occurred following the global financial crisis. But Chart I-1 clearly highlights that the process of private sector leveraging began in 2004, arguing that the Riksbank’s easy monetary policy stance following the global financial crisis is not the only cause of Sweden’s extremely elevated private debt-to-GDP ratio. In a previous Special Report for our Global Investment Strategy service,1 we investigated a similar experience in Canada and used a simple Taylor rule approach to show that the Bank of Canada’s decision to maintain interest rates below equilibrium levels for nearly two decades has contributed to a substantial buildup in private sector leverage. A similar approach for Sweden highlights similar conclusions, albeit with some complications: Chart I-2 shows our Taylor rule estimate for Sweden alongside the policy rate, and shows the deviation from the rule in the second panel. Chart I-2Since 2000, Sweden Has Had Three Distinct Monetary Policy Phases
Since 2000, Sweden Has Had Three Distinct Monetary Policy Phases
Since 2000, Sweden Has Had Three Distinct Monetary Policy Phases
Compared with Canada’s experience, which has maintained too-low interest rates consistently for the past 20 years, Chart I-2 shows that the stance of Sweden’s monetary policy since 2000 falls into three distinct phases: Persistently easy policy from 2000 to 2008 A period of less easy and then relatively tight policy from 2009 to early-2014 A period of extremely easy policy from 2015 until today. The first phase noted above closely resembles the experience of Canada: policymakers in both countries simply kept interest rates too low during the last global economic expansion. In the second phase, the stance of monetary policy in Sweden became progressively less easy: the Taylor rule collapsed in 2009/2010, and trended lower again during the euro area sovereign debt crisis as well as its aftermath. In fact, Chart I-2 suggests that Sweden’s monetary policy stance was outrightly tight from 2012-2014, and in early-2014 the Taylor rule recommended negative policy rates while the actual policy rate was above 1%. In the third phase, the Riksbank appears to have overcompensated for the second phase of relatively less easy and eventually tight monetary policy. The Riksbank pushed policy rates into negative territory in late-2014, as had been recommended by the Taylor rule a year before, at a time when the rule was rising sharply. Roughly 2/3rds of the rise in the rule from early-2014 to late-2018 occurred due to the significant rise in Swedish inflation, with the rest due to a rise in Sweden’s output gap – which turned positive in late-2016 according to the OECD (Chart I-3). It is this third phase, featuring a massive and glaring gap between Swedish policy rates and a monetary policy rule that correctly recommended easy policy from 2010 – 2014, that has attracted global investor attention over the past few years. But Chart I-4 presents Sweden’s Taylor rule gap alongside its private sector debt-to-GDP ratio, and highlights that over 80% of the rise in the latter since 2000 actually occurred in the first phase described above – a period of persistently easy monetary policy as defined by our Taylor rule approach. The behavior of Sweden’s private sector debt-to-GDP ratio in the second and third phases also seems to validate our approach, as gearing essentially stopped during the second phase and restarted in the third phase. Chart I-3Since 2014, Sweden’s Rising Taylor Rule Has Been Driven Mostly By Inflation
Since 2014, Sweden's Rising Taylor Rule Has Been Driven Mostly By Inflation
Since 2014, Sweden's Rising Taylor Rule Has Been Driven Mostly By Inflation
Chart I-4Sweden’s Monetary Policy Phases Explain Its Private Sector Leveraging
Sweden's Monetary Policy Phases Explain Its Private Sector Leveraging
Sweden's Monetary Policy Phases Explain Its Private Sector Leveraging
The Riksbank: “Talk To Us About Inflation, Not Debt” Chart I-5During Phase 2, Households Clearly Took Advantage Of Low Mortgage Rates
During Phase 2, Households Clearly Took Advantage Of Low Mortgage Rates
During Phase 2, Households Clearly Took Advantage Of Low Mortgage Rates
It is crucial to understand the motivations of Sweden’s central bank during each of these phases in order to be able to forecast the likelihood of a return to negative interest rates this year, as well as the Riksbank’s likely policy response once the COVID-19 pandemic subsides. In the first monetary policy phase that we have described, Sweden was not the only country to maintain persistently easy monetary policy. Given the relative scarcity of private sector deleveraging events in the post-war era, most policy makers, academic economists, and market participants were regrettably unconcerned about rising private sector indebtedness during this period, and only came to understand the consequences during the crisis and its aftermath. Most advanced economies leveraged during the first of Sweden’s monetary policy phases, and Sweden really only stands out as a major outlier from 2007 – 2009 when nearly 60% of the country’s total 2000-2019 private sector leveraging occurred (most of which, in turn, occurred before the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008). In essence, by the time that Swedish policymakers were given a vivid and painful demonstration of the dangers of elevated private sector debt, it was too late to prevent most of the increase in debt-to-GDP that is facing the country today. In the second phase of Sweden's modern monetary policy, our Taylor rule framework highlights that the Riksbank largely acted as appropriate. One complication, however, is the difference in the leverage trend between Sweden's nonfinancial corporate and household sectors. Chart I-5 clearly highlights that Sweden's household sector took advantage of low interest rates during the country’s second monetary policy phase. Household sector leveraging began to rise again starting in late-2011, whereas it was completely absent for the corporate sector during the period. A crucial reason why the Riksbank ignored this renewed household sector leveraging is also part of the reason that it has maintained extremely low policy rates in the third phase noted above. The Riksbank’s monetary policy strategy, which is published in every monetary policy report, includes the following: “According to the Sveriges Riksbank Act, the Riksbank’s tasks also include promoting a safe and efficient payment system. Risks linked to developments in the financial markets are taken into account in the monetary decisions. With regard to preventing an unbalanced development of asset prices and indebtedness however, well-functioning regulation and effective supervision play a central role. Monetary policy only acts as a compliment to these.” In other words, the Riksbank has been very clear that preventing excessive leveraging is not its responsibility, and that the job ultimately falls to the Swedish government. But if the Taylor rule was recommending meaningfully higher interest rates during phase 3, then why did the Riksbank continue to lower interest rates into negative territory until last year? In our view, their behavior can be explained by the confluence of three factors: 1. Sweden’s deflation scare in 2014: Sweden’s underlying inflation rate had been trending lower for four years by the time that it dipped briefly into negative territory in March 2014. By this point, the Riksbank appears to have become increasingly concerned about inflation expectations rather than the trend in actual inflation. Chart I-6 presents Sweden’s underlying inflation rate and an adaptive-expectations based estimate of inflation expectations alongside the repo rate, and shows that inflection points in the repo rate match inflection points in expectations. Specifically, the repo rate continued to fall until inflation expectations stabilized in early-2016, and the Riksbank did not raise the repo rate until expectations crossed above 1.5%, a level that was reasonably close to the central bank’s 2% target. Chart I-6During Phase 3, The Riksbank Focused On Low Inflation Expectations
During Phase 3, The Riksbank Focused On Low Inflation Expectations
During Phase 3, The Riksbank Focused On Low Inflation Expectations
2. Sweden’s high trade sensitivity: Chart I-7 highlights that Sweden’s economy, like Canada and other Scandinavian countries, is highly exposed to exports to top trading partners. The euro area accounts for a large portion of Sweden’s exports, and Chart I-8 highlights that nominal euro area imports from Sweden remained very weak from 2012-2016. In addition, Sweden’s import sensitivity is also very high, with total imports of goods and services accounting for over 40% of Sweden’s GDP. By our calculations, roughly 2/3rds of Swedish imports are for domestic consumption,2 and Chart I-9 highlights how closely (inversely) correlated imported consumer and capital goods prices are to Sweden’s trade-weighted currency index. By pushing the repo rate into negative territory, the Riksbank reinforced rising inflation expectations by supporting exports and importing inflation from its trading partners via a weaker krona. Chart I-7Sweden, Like Other Small DM Countries, Are Highly Exposed To Trade
Sweden, Like Other Small DM Countries, Are Highly Exposed To Trade
Sweden, Like Other Small DM Countries, Are Highly Exposed To Trade
Chart I-8Euro Area Demand For Swedish Goods Remained Weak For Several Years
Euro Area Demand For Swedish Goods Remained Weak For Several Years
Euro Area Demand For Swedish Goods Remained Weak For Several Years
Chart I-9To 'Import' Inflation, The Riksbank Had To Weaken The Krona
To 'Import' Inflation, The Riksbank Had To Weaken The Krona
To 'Import' Inflation, The Riksbank Had To Weaken The Krona
3. The euro area’s persistently weak inflation and extremely easy monetary policy: While this is related to Sweden's overall trade sensitivity, the fact that the euro area had to combat persistently weak inflation with negative interest rates and asset purchases from late-2014 to late-2018 has had a particularly strong impact on Riksbank policy given the latter’s goal of boosting Swedish inflation via higher import prices. Chart I-10 highlights the strong link between the SEK-EUR exchange rate and the real interest rate differential between the two countries, and in particular shows that the Riksbank had to lower the differential into negative territory in order to bring the krona below “normal” levels (defined here as the average of the past global economic expansion). When faced with a real euro area policy rate of roughly -1.5% during the period (Chart I-11), the only way to achieve a negative real rate differential was to maintain the repo rate at an extremely low level as Swedish inflation rose. Chart I-10To Weaken The ##br##Krona...
To Weaken The Krona...
To Weaken The Krona...
Chart I-11…Deeply Negative Real Policy Rates Were Required
...Deeply Negative Real Policy Rates Were Required
...Deeply Negative Real Policy Rates Were Required
Where Next For The Repo Rate? In February 2019 the Riksbank was forecasting that the repo rate would return into positive territory by the end of this year, and would rise as high as 80 basis points by mid-2022. They downgraded this assessment in April, and again in October, highlighting that they expected a 0% repo rate for essentially the entire three-year forecast period. In other words, the Riksbank had been moving in a dovish direction even before the COVID-19 pandemic began. Prior to the outbreak, we would have been inclined to argue that the Riksbank’s forecast of a 0% repo rate beyond 2020 was suspect, given the budding recovery in global growth. Chart I-12 highlights that the global PMI had been improving for several months prior to the outbreak, and the Swedish PMI and consumer confidence index had recently rebounded sharply. A negative repo rate was essential to “import” inflation. But, given the extent of the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, especially in Europe, and our description of the Riksbank mandate and reaction function, the odds appear to be high that the repo rate will move back into negative territory at some point this year. Besides the very negative direct impact to global trade from the pandemic, Chart I-13 highlights that Swedish inflation is now falling, and that our measure of inflation expectations has now peaked. Chart I-12Swedish Economic Momentum Was Building Prior To The Pandemic...
Swedish Economic Momentum Was Building Prior To The Pandemic...
Swedish Economic Momentum Was Building Prior To The Pandemic...
Char I-13...But Inflation Is Falling And The Unemployment Rate Is Rising
...But Inflation Is Falling And The Unemployment Rate Is Rising
...But Inflation Is Falling And The Unemployment Rate Is Rising
In addition, the Swedish unemployment rate has been trending higher since early-2018 (Chart I-13, second panel), in response to several factors: a shock to household wealth in late-2015/early-2016 due to sharply falling equity prices, a meaningful decline in house prices driven by newly introduced macroprudential policies, and a sharp albeit seemingly one-off decline in the contribution to Swedish economic growth from government expenditure (Chart I-14). These trends would have likely reversed at some point this year given the building economic momentum that was evident in January and early-February, but it is now clear that the pandemic will more than offset the budding improvement in economic activity. Chart I-14Swedish Policymakers Will Have To Reverse The Factors That Caused The Pre-Pandemic Slowdow
Swedish Policymakers Will Have To Reverse The Factors That Caused The Pre-Pandemic Slowdow
Swedish Policymakers Will Have To Reverse The Factors That Caused The Pre-Pandemic Slowdow
Over the past week the Riksbank has announced two policies: it will provide cheap loans to the country’s banks (500 billion SEK) to bolster credit supply to Swedish small & medium-sized enterprises, and it will increase its asset purchase program by 300 billion SEK. The Riksbank is clearly reluctant to cut the repo rate after having just existed its negative interest rate position last year, and has argued that strong liquidity support and stepped up asset purchases are more likely to be effective measures in the current environment. However, Charts I-10 & I-11 underscored the link between real interest rate differentials and the currency, and the Riksbank will risk having the krona appreciate versus the euro and other currencies if inflation continues to fall and the policy rate is kept unchanged. Chart I-15 shows that market participants have already begun to price in cuts to the repo rate, and our sense is that the Riksbank will be forced to act in a way that is consistent with the market’s view. Chart I-15The Market Expects The Riksbank To Return To Negative Interest Rates. We Agree.
The Market Expects The Riksbank To Return To Negative Interest Rates. We Agree.
The Market Expects The Riksbank To Return To Negative Interest Rates. We Agree.
Investment Conclusions Over a cyclical (i.e. 6-12 month) time horizon, the Swedish krona is the asset with the clearest link to our discussion of Riksbank policy, and investors should recognize that the krona call is now a binary one based on the evolution of the COVID-19 pandemic. It is one of the cheapest currencies in the G10 space, but foreign exchange markets have recently ignored fundamentals such as interest rate differentials and valuation. This is particularly true in the face of a spike in US dollar cross-currency basis swaps, which have started to send the dollar higher even against the safe haven currencies. In such an a environment, selling pressure could continue to push SEK lower, especially if the Riksbank is pushed to reduce the repo rate sooner rather than later. The SEK is one of the most procyclical currencies in the FX space, suggesting that investors should stand aside until markets stabilize (Chart I-16). Right now, the Swedish krona is the clearest play on Riksbank policy. As for the EUR/SEK cross, any renewed ECB stimulus suggests that Sweden will act accordingly to prevent the SEK from appreciating too far, too fast. EUR/SEK will top out after global growth is in an eventual upswing, and the Riskbank has eased policy further. Over the medium-term time horizon, one implication of a return to negative interest rates is that Swedish house price appreciation is likely to trend higher once the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic ends. House prices will likely decelerate in the near term given the shock to household wealth from falling equity prices, but we showed in Chart I-5 that Sweden’s household sector ultimately took advantage of low interest rates during Sweden’s second monetary policy phase. We expect a similar dynamic to unfold beyond the coming 6-9 months, and Chart I-17 highlights that overweighting Swedish consumer durable and apparel stocks within the overall Swedish equity market is likely the best way to eventually play a resumption of household leveraging and rising house prices. Chart I-16Avoid Krona Exposure ##br##For Now
Avoid Krona Exposure For Now
Avoid Krona Exposure For Now
Chart I-17Swedish Consumer Durables & Apparel Stocks Linked To Domestic, Not Global, Demand
Swedish Consumer Durables & Apparel Stocks Linked To Domestic, Not Global, Demand
Swedish Consumer Durables & Apparel Stocks Linked To Domestic, Not Global, Demand
With the exception of a selloff in 2013, the relative performance of the industry group has closely correlated with house price appreciation, and is now deeply oversold. The companies included the industry group earn a significant portion of their revenue from global sales, but the close correlation of relative performance with Swedish house prices and limited correlation with the global PMI suggests that domestic economic performance matter in driving returns for these stocks (Chart I-17, bottom panel). We are not yet prepared to recommend a long relative position favoring this industry group, but we are likely to view signs of policy traction and a relative performance breakout as a good entry point. Finally, the key long-term implication of our research is that Sweden will at some point likely face a period of stagnation stemming from the extraordinary rise in private sector debt that has built up over the past two decades. While regulators had begun to combat excessive debt with macroprudential measures, further measures to restrict household sector debt are extremely unlikely to occur until after another substantial reacceleration in Swedish house prices and another nontrivial rise in household sector leverage. This will be cyclically positive for Sweden coming out of the pandemic, but will ultimately make Sweden’s underlying debt problem meaningfully worse. Macroprudential control of rising nonfinancial corporate debt has not and is not likely to occur, and no regulatory control measure will be able to significantly ease the existing debt burden facing the private sector. Chart I-18 highlights that while Sweden’s private sector debt service ratio (DSR) is not the highest in the world, is it extremely elevated compared to other important DM countries such as the US, UK, Japan, and core euro area. Several other countries with higher private sector DSRs, such as Canada and Hong Kong, are also at serious risk of long-term stagnation. Chart I-18Swedish Domestic Economic Stagnation Is A 'When', Not An 'If'
Swedish Domestic Economic Stagnation Is A 'When', Not An 'If'
Swedish Domestic Economic Stagnation Is A 'When', Not An 'If'
We have not yet identified a specific list of assets that will be negatively impacted by Swedish domestic economic stagnation over the longer term. Our European Investment Strategy service recently argued that Swedish stocks are attractive over the very long term versus Swedish bonds, based on valuations and the fact that the Swedish equity market as a whole is heavily driven by the global business cycle. We plan on revisiting the question of which equity sectors are most vulnerable to domestic stagnation in a future report, as the onset of stagnation draws nearer. As we noted in our report on Canada,3 it is difficult to identify precisely when Sweden’s high debt load will meaningfully and sustainably impact Swedish economic activity and related equity sectors. The acute shock to global activity from the COVID-19 pandemic is an obvious potential trigger, but the fact that policymakers around the world are responding forcefully to the pandemic suggests that this is not the end of Sweden’s debt supercycle. In this regard, the prospect of globally co-ordinated fiscal spending is especially significant. Our best guess is that Sweden’s true reckoning will come once US and global activity contracts for conventional reasons, instigated by tight monetary policy to control rising and above-target inflation. This may mean that Sweden will avoid a balance sheet recession for some time, but investors exposed to domestically-linked Swedish financial assets should take heed that the eventual consequences of such an event are likely to grow in magnitude the longer it takes to arrive. In short, beyond the acute nearer-term impact of the pandemic, Sweden is likely to experience short-term gain for long-term pain. The short- to medium-term focus of investors should be on the former, but with full recognition that the latter will eventually occur. Timing the transition between these two states will be of crucial importance for investors exposed to the domestic Swedish economy over the coming few years. Stay tuned! Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report "Canada: A (Probably) Happy Moment In An Otherwise Sad Story," dated July 14, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com 2 We assume that all services imports are consumed domestically. Among goods exports, we assume domestic consumption of all imports of food & live animals, beverages & tobacco, mineral fuels, lubricants, and related materials, miscellaneous manufactured articles, road vehicles, and other goods. 3 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report "Canada: A (Probably) Happy Moment In An Otherwise Sad Story," dated July 14, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com
Highlights Policy Responses: The COVID-19 pandemic has become a full-blown global crisis and recession. Governments and central bankers worldwide are now responding with aggressive monetary easing and fiscal stimulus. Markets will not respond positively to such stimulus, however, until there is some visibility on the true depth, and duration, of the economic downturn. Fixed Income Strategy: With a global recession now a certainty, bond yields will remain under downward pressure and credit spreads should widen further. Given how far yields have already fallen, we recommend emphasizing country and credit allocation in global bond portfolios, while keeping overall duration exposure around benchmark levels. Model Portfolio Changes: Following up on our tactical changes last week, we continue to recommend overweighting government debt versus spread product. Specifically, overweighting US & Canadian government bonds versus Japan and core Europe, and underweighting US high-yield and all euro area and EM credit. Feature In stunning fashion, the sudden stop in the global economy due to the COVID-19 pandemic has triggered a rapid return to crisis-era monetary and fiscal policies. The battle has now shifted to trying to fill the massive hole in global private sector demand left by efforts to contain the spread of the virus. It is unlikely that lower interest rates and more quantitative easing can mitigate the negative growth effects from travel bans, closing of bars and restaurants, and full scale lockdowns of cities. Fiscal policy, combined with efforts to boost market liquidity and ease the coming collapse of cash flows for the majority of global businesses, are the only plausible options remaining. It is unlikely that lower interest rates and more quantitative easing can mitigate the negative growth effects from travel bans, closing of bars and restaurants, and full scale lockdowns of cities. While the speed of these dramatic policy moves is unprecedented, the reason for them is obvious. Plunging equities and surging corporate bond credit spreads are signaling a global recession, but one of uncertain depth and duration given the uncertainties surrounding the spread of COVID-19 (Chart of the Week). Chart of the WeekCan Crisis-Era Monetary Policies Be Effective During A Pandemic?
Can Crisis-Era Monetary Policies Be Effective During A Pandemic?
Can Crisis-Era Monetary Policies Be Effective During A Pandemic?
Chart 2Risk Assets Will Not Bottom Until New COVID-19 Cases Ex-China Peak
Risk Assets Will Not Bottom Until New COVID-19 Cases Ex-China Peak
Risk Assets Will Not Bottom Until New COVID-19 Cases Ex-China Peak
The ability for policymakers to calibrate stimulus measures is pure guesswork at this point. The same thing goes for investors who see zero visibility on global growth, with the full extent of the virus yet to be felt in large economies like the United States and Germany – even as new cases in China, where the epidemic began, approach zero. The response from central bankers has been swift and bold – rapid rate cuts, increased liquidity programs for bank funding and increased asset purchases. The fact that global financial markets have remained volatile, even after what is a clear coordinated effort from policymakers, highlights how the unique threats to growth from the COVID-19 pandemic may be beyond fighting with traditional demand-side stimulus measures. We continue to recommend a cautious near-term investment stance, particular with regards to corporate bond exposure, until there is clear evidence that the growth rate of new COVID-19 cases outside China has peaked (Chart 2). Policymakers Throw The Kitchen Sink At The Problem The market moves and policy announcements have come fast and furious this past week, from virtually all major economies. We summarize some of the moves below: United States The Fed cut rates by -100bps in a Sunday night emergency move, taking the funds rate back to the effective lower bound of 0% - 0.25%. Importantly, Fed Chair Powell made it clear at his press conference that negative rates are not on the table, suggesting that we may have seen the last of the rate cuts for this cycle. A new round of quantitative easing (QE) was also announced, with purchases of $500 billion of Treasury securities and $200 billion of agency MBS that will occur in the “coming months”; Powell hinted that those amounts could be increased, if necessary (Chart 3). The MBS purchases are a clear effort to help bring down mortgage rates, which have not declined anywhere near as rapidly as US Treasury yields during the market rout (bottom panel). The Fed also cut the discount window rate – the rate at which banks can borrow from the Fed for periods of up to 90 days – by -150bps, bringing it down to 0.25%. The Fed said it is “encouraging banks to use their capital and liquidity buffers” – essentially telling banks to hold less cash for regulatory purposes. The Fed also reduced the rate on its US dollar swap lines with other central banks. The new rate is OIS +25bps. Coming on top of the massive increase in existing repo lines last week, the Fed is attempting to ensure that banks, both in the US and globally, that need USD funding have more liquidity available to support lending. Already, there are signs of worsening liquidity in the bank funding markets, like widening FRA-OIS spreads, but also evidence of illiquidity in financial markets like wide bid-ask spreads on longer-maturity US Treasuries and the growing basis between high-yield bonds and equivalent credit default swaps (Chart 4). Chart 3A Return To Fed QE
A Return To Fed QE
A Return To Fed QE
Chart 4Market Liquidity Issues Forced The Fed's Hand
Market Liquidity Issues Forced The Fed's Hand
Market Liquidity Issues Forced The Fed's Hand
Turning to fiscal policy, the full response of the Trump administration is still being formed, but a major $850bn spending package has been proposed that would provide tax relief for American households and businesses while also including a $50bn bailout of the US airline industry. This comes on top of previously announced plans to offer free testing for the virus, paid sick leave, business tax credits and a temporary suspension of student loan interest payments. Chart 5The ECB Has Limited Policy Options
The ECB Has Limited Policy Options
The ECB Has Limited Policy Options
Euro Area The European Central Bank (ECB) unexpectedly made no changes to policy interest rates last week. It opted instead to increase asset purchases by €120bn until the end of 2020 (both for government bonds and investment grade corporates), while introducing more long-term refinancing operations (LTROs) to “provide a bridge” to the targeted LTRO (TLTRO-3) that is set to begin in June. The terms of TLTRO-3 were improved, as well; banks that accessed the liquidity to maintain existing lending could do so at a rate up to -25bps below the current ECB deposit rate of -0.5%, for up to 50% of the existing stock of bank loans. The ECB obviously had to do something, given the coordinated nature of the global monetary policy response to COVID-19. Yet the decisions taken show that the ECB is much more limited in its ability to ease policy further, with interest rates already negative, asset purchases approaching self-imposed country limits and, most worryingly, inflation expectations falling to fresh lows (Chart 5). The bigger responses to date have come on the fiscal front, with stimulus packages proposed by France (€45bn), Italy (€25bn), Spain (€3bn) and the European Commission (€37bn). The biggest news, however, came from Germany which has offered affected businesses tax breaks and cheap loans through the state development bank, KfW – the latter with an planned upper limit of €550bn (and with the German government assuming a greater share of risk on those new KfW loans). The German government has also vaguely promised to temporarily suspend its so-called “debt brake” to allow deficit financing of virus-related stimulus programs, if necessary. Other Countries The Bank of England cut interest rates by -50bps last week, while also lowering capital requirements for UK banks by allowing use of counter-cyclical buffers for lending. On the fiscal side, a £30bn package was introduced last week that included a tax cut for retailers, cash grants to small business, sick pay for those with COVID-19 and extended unemployment benefits. The Bank of Japan held an emergency meeting this past Sunday night, announcing no changes in policy rates but doubling the size of its ETF purchase program to $56 billion a year to $112 billion, while also increasing purchases of corporate bonds and commercial paper. The central bank also announced a new program of 0% interest loans to increase lending to businesses hurt by the virus. The Bank of Canada delivered an emergency -50bps cut in its policy rate last Friday, coming soon after the -50bp reduction from the previous week. The central bank also introduced operations to boost the liquidity of Canadian financial markets. The Canadian government also announced a fiscal package of up to C$20bn, including increased money for the state business funding agencies. The Reserve Bank of Australia did not cut its Cash Rate last week, which was already at a record-low 0.5%. It did, however, signal that it would begin a quantitative easing program for the first time, and introduce Fed-like repo operations, to provide more liquidity to the economy and local financial markets. The Australian government has also announced A$17bn of fiscal stimulus. Fiscal packages have also been introduced in New Zealand (where the Reserve Bank of New Zealand just cut its policy rate by -75bps), Sweden, Switzerland, Norway, and South Korea. To date, China has leaned more on monetary and liquidity measures – lowering interest rates and cutting reserve requirements – rather than a big fiscal stimulus package. Will all these policy measures be enough to offset the hit to global growth from COVID-19 and help stabilize financial markets? It is certainly a good start, particularly in countries with low government and deficit levels that have the fiscal space for even more stimulus, like Germany, Australia and Canada (Chart 6). Given these competing forces of global recession and monetary policy exhaustion on one side, but with increasingly more expansive fiscal policy on the other, we recommend a neutral (at benchmark) stance on overall global duration exposure on both a tactical and strategic basis. The ability to calibrate the necessary policy response is impossible to assess without knowing the full impact of COVID-19 pandemic on the global economy – including the size of related job losses and corporate defaults/bankruptcies. Policymakers are likely to listen to the combined message of financial markets – equity prices, credit spreads and government bond yields. The low level of yields and flat yield curves, despite near-0% policy rates across the developed world (Chart 7), suggests that investors see monetary policy as “tapped out”, leaving fiscal stimulus as the only way to fight the economic war against COVID-19. Chart 6At Global ZIRP, The Policy Focus Shifts To Fiscal
At Global ZIRP, The Policy Focus Shifts To Fiscal
At Global ZIRP, The Policy Focus Shifts To Fiscal
Chart 7Are Bond Yields Discounting A Global Liquidity Trap?
Are Bond Yields Discounting A Global Liquidity Trap?
Are Bond Yields Discounting A Global Liquidity Trap?
Given these competing forces of global recession and monetary policy exhaustion on one side, but with increasingly more expansive fiscal policy on the other, we recommend a neutral (at benchmark) stance on overall global duration exposure on both a tactical and strategic basis. Bottom Line: The COVID-19 pandemic has become a full-blown global crisis and recession. Governments and central bankers worldwide are now responding with aggressive monetary easing and fiscal stimulus. Markets will not respond positively to such stimulus, however, until there is some visibility on the true depth, and duration, of the economic downturn. Corporate Bonds In The US & Europe – Stay Tactically Defensive Chart 8This Crisis Is Different Than 2008
This Crisis Is Different Than 2008
This Crisis Is Different Than 2008
The COVID-19 global market rout has generated levels of market volatility not seen since the 2008 Global Financial Crisis. The US VIX index of option-implied equity volatility spiked to a high of 84, while the equivalent German VDAX measure reached a shocking high of 93. Equity valuations in both the US and Europe remain much higher on a forward price/earnings ratio basis compared to the troughs seen in 2008, even after the COVID-19 bear market. Yet even though volatility has returned to crisis-era extremes, and corporate credit has sold off hard in both the US and Europe, credit spreads remain well below the 2008 highs (Chart 8). Nonetheless, the credit selloff seen over the past few weeks has still been intense. Both investment grade and high-yield spreads have blown out, and across all credit tiers in both the US (Chart 9) and euro area (Chart 10). Even the highest-rated segments of the corporate bond universe have seen spreads explode, with AAA-rated investment grade spreads having doubled in both the US and Europe. Chart 9Broad-Based Spread Widening For Both Investment Grade...
Broad-Based Spread Widening For Both Investment Grade...
Broad-Based Spread Widening For Both Investment Grade...
Chart 10...And High-Yield
...And High-Yield
...And High-Yield
With the COVID-19 pandemic tipping the global economy into recession, it is not clear that the spread widening seen to date has been enough to compensate for the typical surge in downgrades and defaults seen during recessions – even though spreads do look wide on a duration-adjusted basis. With the COVID-19 pandemic tipping the global economy into recession, it is not clear that the spread widening seen to date has been enough to compensate for the typical surge in downgrades and defaults seen during recessions – even though spreads do look wide on a duration-adjusted basis. One of our favorite metrics to value corporate bonds is to look at option-adjusted spreads, adjusted for interest rate duration risk. We call this the 12-month breakeven spread, as it measures the amount of spread widening over one year that would leave corporate bond returns equal to those of duration-matched US Treasuries. We then look at the percentile rankings of those breakeven spreads versus their history as one indicator of corporate bond value. Chart 11US Corporates Look Cheaper On A Duration-Adjusted Basis
US Corporates Look Cheaper On A Duration-Adjusted Basis
US Corporates Look Cheaper On A Duration-Adjusted Basis
For the US, the 12-month breakeven spreads for the overall Bloomberg Barclays investment grade and high-yield indices are in the 82nd and 97th percentiles, respectively (Chart 11). This suggests that the latest credit selloff has made corporate debt quite cheap, although only looking through the prism of spread risk rather than potential default losses. Another of our preferred valuation metrics for high-yield debt is the duration-adjusted spread, or the high-yield index option-adjusted spread minus default losses. We then look at that default-adjusted spread versus its long-run average (+250bps) as a measure of high-yield value. To assess the current level of spreads, we use a one-year ahead forecast of the expected default rate using our own macro model. Over the past 12 months, the high-yield default rate was 4.5% and our macro model is currently calling for a rise to 6.2%. That estimate, however, does not yet include the certain hit to corporate profits from the COVID-19 recession. By way of comparison, the default rate peaked at 11.2% during the 2001/02 default cycle and at 14.6% during the 2008 financial crisis. In Chart 12, we show the historical default rate, our macro model for the default rate, and the history of the default-adjusted spread. We also show what the default-adjusted spread would look like in four different scenarios for the default rate over the next 12 months: 6%, 9%, 11% and 15%. The placement of these numbers in the bottom panel of Chart 12 indicates where the Default-Adjusted Spread will be if each scenario is realized. Chart 12US High-Yield Is Not Cheap On A Default-Adjusted Basis
US High-Yield Is Not Cheap On A Default-Adjusted Basis
US High-Yield Is Not Cheap On A Default-Adjusted Basis
Right now, our expectation is that there will be a virus driven US recession, but it will be shorter in magnitude than past recessions; this suggests a peak default rate closer to 9%. Such a scenario would still be consistent with a positive default-adjusted spread and likely positive excess returns for US high-yield relative to US Treasuries on a 12-month horizon. However, if a default rate similar to that seen during past recessions (11% or 15%) is realized, that would lead to a negative default-adjusted spread. Adding up both pieces of our valuation framework suggests that, while US high-yield spreads offer value on a duration-adjusted basis, spreads do not compensate enough for potential default losses if the US recession lasts longer than we expect. Thus, we recommend a tactical underweight position in US high-yield until we see better visibility on the severity, and duration, of the US recession. Adding up both pieces of our valuation framework suggests that, while US high-yield spreads offer value on a duration-adjusted basis, spreads do not compensate enough for potential default losses if the US recession lasts longer than we expect. As for euro area corporates, spreads for both investment grade and high-yield do look relatively wide on a breakeven spread basis, although less so than US credit (Chart 13). However, with the World Health Organization declaring Europe as the new epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic, the harsh containment measures seen in Italy, Germany, France and elsewhere – coming from a starting point of weak overall economic growth – suggest that euro area spreads need to be wider to fully reflect downgrade and default risks. Chart 13Euro Area Corporates Look A Bit Cheaper On A Duration-Adjusted Basis
Euro Area Corporates Look A Bit Cheaper On A Duration-Adjusted Basis
Euro Area Corporates Look A Bit Cheaper On A Duration-Adjusted Basis
We recommend a tactical underweight allocation to both euro area corporate debt and Italian sovereign debt, as spreads have room to reprice wider to reflect a deeper recession (Chart 14). Chart 14Stay Underweight Euro Area Spread Product
Stay Underweight Euro Area Spread Product
Stay Underweight Euro Area Spread Product
Bottom Line: Corporate bond spreads on both sides of the Atlantic discount a sharp economic slowdown, but the odds of a deeper recession – and more spread widening - are greater in Europe relative to the US. A Quick Note On Recent Changes To Our Model Bond Portfolio In last week’s report, we made several adjustments to our model bond portfolio recommended allocations on a tactical (0-6 months) basis.1 Specifically, we downgraded our overall recommended exposure to global spread product to underweight, while increasing the overall allocation to government debt to overweight. The specific changes made to the model bond portfolio are presented in tables on pages 14 & 15. Within the country allocation of the government bond side of the portfolio, we upgraded US and Canada (markets more sensitive to changes in global bond yields, and with central banks that still had room to ease policy) to overweight, while downgrading core Europe to underweight and Japan to maximum underweight (both markets less sensitive to global yields and with no room to cut rates). On the credit side of the portfolio, we downgraded US high-yield to underweight (with a 0% allocation to Caa-rated debt), while also downgrading euro area investment grade and high-yield debt to underweight. We also lowered allocations to emerging market USD denominated debt, both sovereign and corporate, to underweight. We left the allocation to US investment grade debt at neutral, as the other reductions left our overall spread product allocation at the desired level (35% versus the 43% spread product weighting in our custom benchmark portfolio index). In terms of the specific weightings, the portfolio is now +11% overweight US fixed income versus the benchmark, coming most through US Treasury exposure. The portfolio is now -7% underweight euro area versus the benchmark, equally thorough government bond and corporate debt exposure. The portfolio is now also has a -7% weight in Japan versus the benchmark, entirely from government bonds. Note that these weightings represent a tactical allocation only, as we are recommending a defensive stance on spread product exposure given the near-term uncertainties over COVID-19 and global growth. On a strategic (6-12 months) horizon, however, we are neutral overall spread product exposure versus government bonds. Corporate bond spreads already discount a sharp economic slowdown and some increase in defaults. However, the rapid shift to aggressive monetary and fiscal easing by global policymakers to combat the virus will likely limit the duration and, potentially, the severity of the global slowdown currently discounted in wide credit spreads. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "The Train Is Empty", dated March 10, 2020, available at gfis.bcarsearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
Panicked Policymakers Move To A Wartime Footing
Panicked Policymakers Move To A Wartime Footing
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Duration: We are not prepared to say that bond yields have troughed, even with the fed funds rate now back to the zero bound. Investors should keep portfolio duration close to benchmark. We do not rule out longer-maturity Treasury yields falling to 0% during the next couple of months, but negative bond yields in the US are not possible. TIPS: Current low TIPS breakeven inflation rates signal a rare buying opportunity. Though price swings will be volatile for the next few months, investors with horizons of 1-year or longer would be well advised to go long TIPS versus equivalent-maturity nominal Treasuries. Corporate Bonds: Corporate spreads are widening rapidly but still don’t offer above-average compensation if we adjust for likely future default scenarios. We will wait for a better entry point before recommending a shift back to overweight. Feature Does The Fed’s Bazooka Signal The Bottom In Yields? Chart 1Back To The Zero-Lower-Bound
Back To The Zero-Lower-Bound
Back To The Zero-Lower-Bound
In response to liquidity stresses witnessed in Treasury and MBS markets last week, the Fed decided to move this month’s FOMC meeting up to Sunday afternoon. It then took the opportunity to roll out a massive amount of easing. First the facts: The Fed cut the policy rate by 100 bps, back to the effective lower bound of 0% - 0.25%. Chair Powell also made it clear at his press conference that negative rates are not on the table. The Fed announced purchases of at least $500 billion of Treasury securities and $200 billion of agency MBS that will occur in the “coming months.” The Fed cut the discount window rate – the rate at which banks can borrow from the Fed for periods of up to 90 days – by 150 bps, bringing it down to 0.25%. The Fed said it is “encouraging banks to use their capital and liquidity buffers” (more on this below). The Fed also reduced the rate on its US dollar swap lines with other central banks. The new rate is OIS + 25 bps. The first major question for bond investors is whether this move will mark the bottom in yields (Chart 1). We aren’t so sure. As we write this on Monday morning the 2-year yield is 0.35%, down 14 bps from Friday’s close and the 10-year yield is 0.79%, down 15 bps from Friday. Obviously, further rate cuts won’t be the catalyst for lower bond yields, but investors can still push long-dated yields down if they start to price-in a longer period of time at the zero bound. In contrast, long-dated bond yields will only move up if we start to price-in an eventual economic recovery and exit from zero-bound rate policy. The fact that S&P futures went limit down immediately after the Fed’s big announcement suggests we aren’t at that point yet. Further rate cuts won’t be the catalyst for lower bond yields, but investors can still push long-dated yields down if they start to price-in a longer period of time at the zero bound. In last week’s report we introduced four criteria to monitor to decide when to call the trough in bond yields.1 Even with the Fed’s move back to zero, these four factors remain the most important things to watch. First, we want to see signs that the COVID-19 pandemic is becoming contained. That is, we want to see the daily number of new cases fall close to zero. We are still far away from that point (Chart 2), but evidence from China shows that containment is possible if the rest of the world follows a similar roadmap. Second, we want to see evidence of improving global growth, particularly in China. We showed last week how the Global and Chinese Manufacturing PMIs plunged in February. Since then, higher frequency global growth indicators – such as the performance of cyclical equities over defensives and the CRB Raw Industrials index – have not recovered at all (Chart 3). With very few new COVID cases in China and a large amount of stimulus on the way, we expect Chinese growth indicators to rebound in the coming months. Chart 2Tracking ##br##COVID-19
Tracking COVID-19
Tracking COVID-19
Chart 3Waiting For A Stronger Global Growth & Weaker US Growth
Waiting For A Stronger Global Growth & Weaker US Growth
Waiting For A Stronger Global Growth & Weaker US Growth
Third, we want to see some bad economic data coming out of the US. As of today, the US Economic Surprise Index is a robust +74 and last week’s initial jobless claims and Consumer Sentiment releases were healthy (Chart 3, bottom 2 panels). We know the weak economic data are coming, but they haven’t arrived yet. Until they do, there is an elevated risk of another downleg in bond yields. We expect the time to call the bottom in bond yields will be when the US data are very weak and the Global and Chinese data are improving. Investors will use the global rebound as a roadmap for the US and start to push yields higher. Finally, we would like to see signals from some technical trading rules that have good track records of calling bottoms in bond yields. The technical rules we examined last week are all based on identifying periods when bond market sentiment is extremely bullish and when bond yield momentum hooks up. Chart 4Technical Trading Rules
Technical Trading Rules
Technical Trading Rules
So far, none of the technical rules we identified have been triggered. Our Composite Technical Indicator remains in deeply “overbought” territory (Chart 4), but to generate a sell signal we also need one of our momentum measures to turn positive (Chart 4, bottom 3 panels). This hasn’t happened yet. All in all, none of our four criteria have been met. We are therefore inclined to think that it is too soon to call the bottom in bond yields. Investors should keep portfolio duration close to benchmark. Negative Yields In The US? We think it’s entirely possible that the 10-year Treasury yield could fall as low as 0% during the next couple of months. With the front-end of the curve already pinned at zero, any further market panic will be disproportionately felt at the long-end, and another spate of bad news could easily push the 10-year yield down to 0%. However, if the 10-year yield were to fall to 0%, we would declare that the trough in yields. In other words, negative bond yields will not occur in the US. Why is this the case? We can think of the 10-year Treasury yield as the market’s expected average fed funds rate for the next decade.2 That being the case, the 10-year yield would only turn negative if the market believed that the Federal Reserve was willing to take the policy rate below zero. On Sunday, Chair Powell was adamant that negative interest rates won’t be considered. He said that any further easing would take the form of forward guidance and asset purchases. The strongest form of that would involve caps on intermediate- and/or long-maturity bond yields. Please note that Powell didn’t mention yield caps specifically on Sunday, this is our inference based on past Fed communications. But the main point is that negative bond yields are a policy choice, one that the Federal Reserve is not inclined to make any time soon. It’s highly notable that no country without a negative policy rate has seen negative bond yields further out the curve. One result of the Fed’s “lower for longer” bias is that, coming out of the current crisis, we would expect the equity market to bottom and corporate bond spreads to peak before Treasury yields move higher. Another factor that will weigh on how low long-end Treasury yields fall is whether the market thinks that the Fed views its recent rate cut as an “emergency measure” that will be quickly reversed when the COVID crisis passes, or as a more long-lasting policy change. The Fed was deliberately vague on this question in its statement, saying that it will maintain the current fed funds rate “until it is confident that the economy has weathered recent events and is on track to achieve its maximum employment and price stability goals.” The Fed was deliberately vague precisely because it doesn’t know how quickly it will tighten policy. But given that the result of this year’s Strategic Review will likely be an explicit targeting of above-2% inflation, we can be fairly certain that the Fed will be slow to remove accommodation. We continue to view inflation expectations and financial conditions as the two most important indicators to track to determine the pace of eventual tightening.3 One result of the Fed’s “lower for longer” bias is that, coming out of the current crisis, we would expect the equity market to bottom and corporate bond spreads to peak before Treasury yields move higher. Bottom Line: We are not prepared to say that bond yields have troughed, even with the fed funds rate now back to the zero bound. So far, none of the four triggers we will use to call the bottom in yields have sent a signal. In fact, we do not rule out longer-maturity Treasury yields falling to 0% during the next couple of months, but negative bond yields in the US are not possible. The Fed’s Emergency Liquidity Measures Chart 5A Lack Of Liquidity
A Lack Of Liquidity
A Lack Of Liquidity
On Sunday, Fed Chair Powell said that the reason for moving the FOMC meeting forward was because of worrying signs of deteriorating liquidity in Treasury and Agency MBS markets. Specifically, many observed that the spreads between short-term financing rates (both secured and unsecured) and the risk-free OIS curve jumped last week (Chart 5). Also, mortgage rates didn’t follow Treasury yields lower (Chart 5, bottom panel) and bid/ask spreads widened in the Treasury market. Diagnosing The Problem Our assessment of last week’s liquidity problems is that they arose because, in this post Dodd-Frank/Basel III world, dealer banks are still not sure how to respond during periods of stress. Last week, a lot of nonfinancial firms tapped their revolving credit lines in an attempt to weather the upcoming downturn. This caused an outflow of cash from the banking system. With banks now holding less cash than they were comfortable with, the price of cash in money markets (repo, LIBOR, etc…) started to spike. Because repo is a commonly used tool for financing Treasury trades, the knock-on effect of a spike in the repo rate is a loss of liquidity in the Treasury market. But are banks really short of cash? We got a small taste of the confusion around this issue when repo rates spiked last September. The Fed assumed that it had plenty of room to shrink its balance sheet and drain cash from the banking system because the banks were operating with large liquidity buffers, in excess of what was mandated by regulations like the Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR). However, it turned out that banks wanted to hold much more cash than was required by the LCR, in large part because they worried about the Fed’s periodic stress tests, the criteria of which can change over time. The Fed’s Solutions Fortunately, the Fed has taken a lot of aggressive action to help mitigate these problems. First, it announced a large quantity of repo operations last week, then followed that up by announcing direct Treasury and MBS purchases on Sunday. The Fed also lowered the discount window rate to a mere 0.25%, and is encouraging banks to tap that facility if necessary. But, in our view, perhaps the most important measure the Fed announced is simply that policymakers will encourage banks to “use their capital and liquidity buffers”. The fact of the matter is that banks are carrying large amounts of cash but have been hesitant to deploy it because they are worried about regulatory backlash from the Fed. If the Fed can effectively assure banks that it won’t be aggressively enforcing any regulatory action against them for the foreseeable future, then there is already a lot of liquidity in the system waiting to be deployed. Though we expect the Fed’s measures will have a significant positive impact on market liquidity, it will be important to monitor money market spreads going forward. The Fed has still not taken the extreme step of re-launching its crisis-era commercial paper facility and lending directly to nonfinancial corporates. This would be a likely next step if liquidity conditions continue to deteriorate. A Rare Opportunity In TIPS Together, the COVID-induced global demand shock and the OPEC-induced oil supply shock have taken TIPS breakeven inflation rates down to extraordinarily low levels. As of Friday’s close, the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate was a mere 0.92%, the 5-year rate was 0.56% and the 1-year rate was an absurd -0.49%. In fact, both the 1-year and 2-year breakeven rates were negative! For buy and hold investors, this presents an outstanding opportunity to buy TIPS and short the equivalent-maturity nominal bond. For example, a buy and hold investor will make money by going long TIPS and short nominals as long as headline CPI inflation averages above 0.56% per year for the next five years or above 0.92% per year for the next decade (Chart 6). The fact that the 1-year and 2-year breakeven rates are negative is an even greater mispricing because TIPS come with embedded deflation floors. That is, TIPS principal is adjusted higher by the rate of headline CPI inflation but it is never adjusted lower if headline CPI inflation turns negative. The deflation floor means that a negative 1-year or 2-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate represents risk-free profit for anyone who can commit capital for the entire 1-year or 2-year investment horizon. A buy and hold investor will make money by going long TIPS and short nominals as long as headline CPI inflation averages above 0.56% per year for the next five years or above 0.92% per year for the next decade. But abstracting from deflation floors, is it even realistic to expect negative headline CPI during the next 12 months? Even in a worst-case scenario, it is difficult to imagine. First, let’s assume that the Brent crude oil price falls to $20 during the next month and then stays there. The second panel of Chart 7 shows that this would cause year-over-year Energy CPI to hit -20% before recovering. Second, let’s assume that core CPI follows the path implied by our Pipeline Inflation Pressure Gauge, falling from its current 2.4% to 1.8% for the next 12 months (Chart 7, panel 4). Third, let’s assume that year-over-year food inflation collapses all the way to 0% (Chart 7, panel 3). Chart 6TIPS Breakeven Inflation Rates Are Too Low
TIPS Breakeven Inflation Rates Are Too Low
TIPS Breakeven Inflation Rates Are Too Low
Chart 7Worst-Case Scenario For CPI
Worst-Case Scenario For CPI
Worst-Case Scenario For CPI
This worst-case scenario would result in 12-month headline CPI of +0.09% for the next 12 months (Chart 7, bottom panel). Now, core CPI inflation did fall below 1% during the last recession, an occurrence that would certainly lead to headline CPI deflation if it happened again. However, shelter makes up 42% of core CPI. Without a significant slowdown in the housing market, such a large decline in core inflation is unlikely. Bottom Line: Current low TIPS breakeven inflation rates signal a rare buying opportunity. Though price swings will be volatile for the next few months, investors with horizons of 1-year or longer would be well advised to go long TIPS versus equivalent-maturity nominal Treasuries. Corporate Bond Spreads:Too Soon To Buy Corporate bond spreads have widened dramatically during the past few weeks. Within the investment grade space, the overall index spread and the average spread excluding the energy sector have both broken above their 2016 peaks. The investment grade energy spread is still 56 bps below its 2016 peak (Chart 8A). In high-yield, the overall index spread is still 112 bps below its 2016 peak. The energy spread is 23 bps below its 2016 peak and the ex-energy spread is 112 bps below its 2016 peak (Chart 8B). Chart 8AInvestment Grade Corporate Bond Spreads
Investment Grade Corporate Bond Spreads
Investment Grade Corporate Bond Spreads
Chart 8BHigh-Yield Corporate Bond Spreads
High-Yield Corporate Bond Spreads
High-Yield Corporate Bond Spreads
Obviously, spreads are widening quickly and value is returning to the sector. This raises the important question of: When will it be a good idea to step in and buy? To answer this question we need to view current spread levels relative to the magnitude of the upcoming economic shock. During the past 12 months, the speculative-grade corporate default rate was 4.5% and our macro model already anticipates a rise to 6.2%. This would bring the default rate above the 5.8% peak seen in 2017, but is probably still too low of an estimate given that the upcoming corporate profit hit is not yet reflected in our model (Chart 9). Gross leverage – the ratio of total debt to pre-tax profits – enters our default rate model with a roughly six month lag, meaning that we wouldn’t expect any current hit to profits to impact the default rate for another six months. For further context, we note that the default rate peaked at 11.2% during the 2001/02 default cycle and at 14.6% during the 2008 financial crisis. Chart 9An Above-Average Default-Adjusted Spread Signals A Buying Opportunity
An Above-Average Default-Adjusted Spread Signals A Buying Opportunity
An Above-Average Default-Adjusted Spread Signals A Buying Opportunity
The bottom panel of Chart 9 shows our High-Yield Default-Adjusted Spread. This is a measure of the excess spread in the high-yield index after subtracting ex-post default losses. Its historical average is around 250 bps. We shocked our Default-Adjusted Spread to see what it would be in four different scenarios for the default rate: 6%, 9%, 11% and 15%. The placement of these numbers in the bottom panel of Chart 9 indicates where the Default-Adjusted Spread will be if each scenario is realized. For example, if the default rate comes in at 6% for the next 12 months then the Default-Adjusted Spread will be +347 bps, above its historical average. If the default rate is 9% during the next 12 months the Default-Adjusted Spread will still be positive, at +108 bps, but will be below historical average. A default rate similar to what was seen during past recessions (11% or 15%) would lead to a negative Default-Adjusted Spread. Right now, our best estimate of a short-lived recession would suggest a peak default rate of somewhere between 6% and 9%, probably closer to 9%. Such a scenario would be consistent with a positive Default-Adjusted Spread and likely positive excess returns for corporate bonds (both investment grade and high-yield) relative to Treasuries on a 12-month horizon. However, we also note that periods of spread widening usually culminate with our Default-Adjusted Spread measure well above its historical average. This was the case in 2016, 2009 and 2002. As of now, this sort of attractive valuation will only be achieved if the default rate is 6% or lower during the next 12 months, a forecast that seems overly optimistic. The bottom line is that we are inclined to wait for a more attractive entry point before recommending a shift back to an overweight allocation to corporate bonds versus Treasuries. Though it is probably too late for investors with long time horizons (12 months or more) to sell. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “When And Where Will Bond Yields Trough?”, dated March 10, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Technically, the 10-year yield is equal to 10-year rate expectations plus a term premium to compensate investors for locking up funds for 10 years instead of rolling over a series of overnight investments. The term premium is difficult to estimate in practice, but it is likely to be quite close to zero at present. 3 For further details on why investors should focus on these two measures to assess the pace of eventual policy tightening please see US Bond Strategy / Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, “The Fed In 2020”, dated December 17, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights The S&P 500 is in a bear market, and a recession appears to be inevitable, … : The longest bull market in S&P 500 history succumbed last week to the Saudi-Russia oil war, the relentless drumbeat of spreading COVID-19 disruptions and the realization that it will take even worse market conditions to prompt a meaningful fiscal response. … but it is BCA’s view that the recession will be short, if sharp: Although our conviction level is low, and our view is subject to change as more information becomes available, we expect that the recession is much more likely to produce a V-bottom than a U-bottom. Pent-up demand will be unleashed once the coronavirus runs its course, stoked by monetary and fiscal stimulus initiatives around the world. Are central banks out of bullets?: We are not yet ready to embrace the most provocative idea that came up at our monthly View Meeting last week, but the question highlights the uncertainty that currently pervades markets. First, do no harm: What should an investor do now? Watch and wait. It is too early to re-risk a portfolio, but safe-haven assets are awfully overbought. Cash is worth its weight in gold right now, and those who have it should remember that they call the shots. Feature The S&P 500 entered a bear market last Thursday, bringing down the curtain on the longest US equity bull market in recorded history at just under 11 years.1 We are duly chastened by the misplaced bravado we expressed in last week’s report, which crumbled under the force of the ensuing weekend’s oil market hostilities between Saudi Arabia and Russia. We see the plunge in oil prices, and the looming spike in oil-patch defaults, bankruptcies and layoffs, as the straw that broke the camel’s back, ensuring a 2020 recession. Now that it has slid so far, we expect that the S&P 500 will generate double-digit returns over the next twelve months, but we do not believe that investors should be in any rush to buy. Wild oscillations are a sign of an unhealthy market, and stocks don’t establish a durable bottom while they are still experiencing daily spasms. The Fundamental Take (For What It’s Worth) We nonetheless believe that the recession will be fairly brief, even if it is sharp. The global economy was clearly turning around before the virus emerged, and the US economy was as fit as a fiddle. Data releases across February were decidedly positive, on balance, and the year-to-date data, as incorporated in the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model, pointed to robust first quarter growth in an economy that was firing on all cylinders (Chart 1). We continue to believe that most of the demand that goes missing across the first and the second quarters will not be lost for good, but will simply be deferred to the second half of this year and the beginning of next year. The coronavirus has brought an end to the expansion, but the US economy was in rude health before it was infected, and we expect it will make a full and swift recovery. Chart 1The First Quarter Had Been Shaping Up Really Well
March Sadness
March Sadness
Chart 2Old Faithful
Old Faithful
Old Faithful
That pent-up demand will be goosed by abundant monetary and fiscal stimulus. We expect that China and the US will take the lead, and will have the most impact on global aggregate demand, but that policymakers in other major economies will also lend a hand. Central banks in Australia, Canada and England have all cut rates in the last two weeks, and British policymakers took the boldest step, pairing last week’s rate cut with an immediate 30-billion-pound infusion of emergency spending, and a pledge to spend 600 billion pounds on infrastructure upgrades between now and 2025.2 Australia announced a plan to inject fiscal stimulus equivalent to about 1% of GDP Thursday morning, and Germany’s ruling party indicated a willingness to run a budget deficit to combat the virus.3 Our China Investment Strategy team notes that the Chinese authorities are already supporting domestic demand via aid to threatened businesses and out-of-work individuals, and are poised to open the infrastructure taps (Chart 2). Global aggregate demand is also set to receive a boost from the oil plunge, although it will arrive with a lag. Energy sector layoffs and the tightening in monetary conditions from wider bond spreads and marginally tighter bank lending standards will exert an immediate drag on activity. Once that drag fades, however, the positive supply-shock effects will take hold, helping households stretch their paychecks and non-energy businesses expand their profit margins. Although the effect of falling oil prices is mixed for the US now that fracking has made it a heavyweight oil producer, more economies are oil importers than exporters, and global growth is inversely related to oil price moves. We are keenly aware that markets are paying no attention whatsoever to economic data releases right now. They are backward-looking, after all, and fundamentals are not the driving force behind current market moves anyway. The data are useful, however, for evaluating the fundamental backdrop once the non-stop selling abates, as it eventually will. When it becomes important to take the measure of the economy and where it’s headed, investors will be able to make a more informed judgment if they have a good read on how the economy was doing before it was exposed to the virus (Chart 3). Chart 3Layoffs Are Coming, But They Hadn't Started By Early March
Layoffs Are Coming, But They Hadn't Started By Early March
Layoffs Are Coming, But They Hadn't Started By Early March
Investment Strategy The near-term equity view was cautious when we held our View Meeting Wednesday morning before the open. No one thought investors should be in any hurry to buy, and while not everyone shared the bleakest S&P 500 downside estimate of 2,400 (well within sight now), no one suggested that the index had already bottomed. One participant made the case for a negative 10-year Treasury yield, but we still have little appetite for Treasuries as a house. We expect the 10-year yield will be higher in twelve months than it is now, if perhaps only modestly. We like equities' 12-month prospects, but they may have to decline some more before Congress joins hands and puts a floor under them. For anyone expecting US fiscal stimulus to bail out the markets, our geopolitical team sounded a note of caution. A recession is kryptonite for incumbent presidential candidates, and the more the virus squeezes the economy, the greater the Democrats’ chances of capturing the White House and the Senate. Our Geopolitical Strategy service fully expects that Democrats will eventually agree to a sizable spending package, but only after allowing the situation to deteriorate some more. As long as they don’t look like they’re putting party concerns ahead of the nation’s welfare, they can dent the president’s re-election prospects by waiting to throw a lifeline to the economy and financial markets. The administration’s initial proposal, as alluded to in the president’s prime-time Oval Office address on Wednesday night, fell way short of what the market sought. Its small-bore items seemed woefully inadequate to stem the tide, and raised the unsettling prospect that the fiscal cavalry might fail to ride to the rescue because the administration didn’t think it needed to be summoned. The good news for markets is that governments get an almost unlimited number of do-overs.4 The first iteration’s failure ensures that the second will be more ambitious, and if that fails, the third iteration will be even bigger. Thank You, Sir, May I Have Another? News of disruptions to economic activity, and daily life, in the United States piled up last week. Colleges closed their gates en masse for what remains of the academic year; concerts and music festivals were cancelled; the NCAA basketball tournament was initially closed to fans, then cancelled altogether; and all of the major North American professional sports leagues have suspended their seasons. In many instances, city and state ordinances banning mass gatherings forced sports franchises’ and concert promoters’ hands. The relentless drumbeat of bad news did markets no favors, and it surely did not help business or consumer confidence as broadcasters, hotels, restaurants, bartenders, taxi drivers and arena staff totted up their lost income. Today’s pain may be tomorrow’s gain, however. While draconian measures weigh on peoples’ spirits and crimp economic activity in the immediate term, they increase the chances of limiting the virus’ spread and mitigating its ultimate effect. As our Global Investment Strategy colleagues have pointed out, there is a trade-off between health and growth. Bulking up health safeguards unfortunately involves some growth sacrifices. Are Central Banks Out Of Bullets? Chart 4If At First You Don't Succeed, ...
If At First You Don't Succeed, ...
If At First You Don't Succeed, ...
The most provocative line of argument in last week’s firm-wide discussion was the idea that the coronavirus is a bit of a red herring, and that the true driver of the global market selloff is the failure of the policy put. That’s to say that the efficacy of, and the belief in, central banks’ ability to shore up markets and the economy has crumbled. So far, this round of emergency rate cuts has failed to stem the flow of red on Bloomberg terminals and television screens (Chart 4). Spending plans have underwhelmed as well, with British, Australian and Japanese equities all fizzling following the announcement of fiscal stimulus measures. The end of markets’ monetary policy era would mark a major inflection point, if not a full-on regime change. We are hesitant to make such a sweeping declaration now, however. As one of our colleagues put it in making the case for further declines in rates, the golden rule of investing is never to lean against a primary trend. Positioning for an end to central banks’ influence on markets would mean going against 33 years of history that began with the Fed’s post-Black Monday statement affirming its “readiness to serve as a source of liquidity to support the economic and financial system.” Central bankers are neither omniscient nor omnipotent, but there’s a reason why You can’t fight the Fed became a cherished truism. It affects the real economy when it turns its policy dials. If monetary stimulus is aligned with fiscal stimulus, as it just might be next week, it can make for a potent cocktail. A devotee of the Austrian School of Economics may grind his or her teeth to dust over the endless intervention in markets, but the results are popular with the public and elected officials, and we can expect that they’ll continue over most professional investors’ relevant timeframes. Public officials will let go of the Debt Supercycle controls only when they’re pried out of their cold, dead hands. What Now? It feels like it was a month ago, but just last week we were of the view that a correction was more likely than a bear market. As we wrote then: We remain constructive on risk assets because we think the selling has gotten overdone. There may well be more of it, and the S&P 500 could reach its 2,708.92 bear-market level before we can publish again next Monday, but we will be buying it in our own account all the way there. Compounding our embarrassment and regret, we actually did buy shares in a SIFI bank on Tuesday as they approached their tangible book value. Markets were unimpressed with the initial monetary salvo, but there's more where that came from (and some fiscal artillery, too). We have learned our lesson and will wait before committing any more capital. We have also learned our lesson about “overdone selling.” Despite the dramatic gap between the S&P 500 and its 200-day moving average (Chart 5), every single sale over the last three weeks has proven to be a good one. Cutting one’s losses is a deservedly celebrated portfolio management rule, and we cannot object to any client who wants to take some exposure off the table. Chart 5The Equity Selloff Has Become Extreme
The Equity Selloff Has Become Extreme
The Equity Selloff Has Become Extreme
We have little love for the havens that have already spiked, like gold, Treasuries, utilities and makers and sellers of hand sanitizer, disinfectant wipes and surgical masks. Insurance in the form of index puts is bracingly expensive. Our preferred way of taking advantage of the massive market disruption (Chart 6 and Table 1) is to write out-of-the money puts on individual stocks at strike prices where we’d be happy to own them. With the VIX in the 50s, much less the 60s or 70s, an investor writing puts 10% out of the money on a range of S&P 500 constituents5 can get paid double-digit annualized returns in exchange for agreeing to get hit down 10% between now and March 20th or April 17th. Chart 6Selling Insurance Looks More Appealing Than Buying It Right Now
Selling Insurance Looks More Appealing Than Buying It Right Now
Selling Insurance Looks More Appealing Than Buying It Right Now
Table 1One Week, Two Historic Declines
March Sadness
March Sadness
We recognize that not every investor has discretion to write puts, and it is not something to be done lightly in any event. The compensation is so high because it is a contractual agreement to buy stock in a relentlessly falling market. (Options only confer a right to transact for their buyers; they’re an iron-clad obligation to transact for their sellers.) Our species’ cognitive biases being what they are, however, we like the strapped-to-the-mast feature of writing puts because it commits an investor to following through on a course of action s/he decided upon before price declines had a chance to shake his/her resolve. It is one thing to have said that one would buy a 35-dollar stock if it ever got to 18, and quite another to follow through now that it’s gone from 35 to 21 in short order. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The bull market began on March 10, 2009, at 676.53, and ended February 19, 2020, at 3,386.15. Its 400% advance was achieved at an annualized rate of 15.8%. 2 Nominal 4Q19 UK GDP was about 560 billion pounds. 3 Believe it or not, this is kind of a big deal for Berlin. 4 As we were going to press, it looked as if House Democrats and the administration were nearing agreement on a package to protect vulnerable workers and small businesses, while the combined private- and public-sector efforts outlined in the Rose Garden suggested that the US might be capable of stemming the spread of the virus soon. 5 Type [ticker]-F8-PUT into Bloomberg for the full menu of maturities and strike prices for any given stock. The annualized return for writing the put is equal to the option premium divided by the strike price, multiplied by (360/the number of days until expiration). For near-month contracts, if the premium is around 1% of the strike, the annualized return on the notional capital committed is 10%.
Highlights China should fare a global recession better than most G20 economies, given its large domestic market and powerful policy response. China is likely to frontload a large portion of its multi-year infrastructure investment projects to this year. We project a near 10% increase in infrastructure investments in 2020. While at the moment we do not have high conviction in the absolute trend in Chinese stock prices, we think Chinese equities will still passively outperform global benchmarks in a global recession. Feature Chart 1A Black Monday Triggered By A "Perfect Storm"
A Black Monday Triggered By A "Perfect Storm"
A Black Monday Triggered By A "Perfect Storm"
Investors are now pricing in a global recession, triggered by a worsening COVID-19 epidemic outside of China and a full-blown price war in the oil market. Global stocks tumbled by 7% on Monday March 9 while the US 10-year Treasury yield dropped to a record low (Chart 1). This extreme volatility reflects investors’ inability to predict how the epidemic will evolve or how long the oil price war will persist. If growth in the US and other major economies turns negative, then China’s disrupted supply side in Q1 will be met with weaker global demand in Q2 and even Q3. While our visibility is limited on the predominantly medically- or politically-oriented crisis, what we have conviction in forecasting at this point is that the Chinese economy will weather the storm better than most G20 economies. China’s policy response and the recovery in domestic demand will more than offset weaknesses from external demand. Thus Chinese stocks will likely outperform global benchmarks in the next 3 months and over a 6-12 month span, even though the absolute trend in both Chinese and global stock prices remains unclear over both these time horizons. A One-Two Punch In a recessionary scenario affecting the entire global economy, China would receive a one-two punch through shocks to both supply and demand tied to the COVID-19 outbreak and shrinking global demand. However, while a global recession would impact China’s export growth, it would not have the kind of bearing on China’s aggregate economy as it did in either 2008/2009 or 2015/2016. The reason is that the Chinese economy is less reliant on exports than it was in 2015 and considerably less than in 2008 (Chart 2). Domestic demand is now dominant, accounting for more than 80% of China’s economy, meaning that the country is less vulnerable to reductions in global demand. Chart 2The Chinese Economy Is Much Less Reliant On Exports
The Chinese Economy Is Much Less Reliant On Exports
The Chinese Economy Is Much Less Reliant On Exports
Chart 3Global Economy Showing Reflation Signs Before COVID-19
Global Economy Showing Reflation Signs Before COVID-19
Global Economy Showing Reflation Signs Before COVID-19
Our current assessment is that the shocks from the virus epidemic and oil price rout on global demand will be brief.Global manufacturing and trade were on a path to recovery prior to the crisis (Chart 3). China’s external and domestic demand rebounded sharply in December and likely have improved even further until late January when the COVID-19 outbreak took hold in China (Chart 4). Even though China’s trade figures in the first two months of 2020 were distorted by COVID-19 (Chart 5),1 a budding recovery in both China’s domestic and global demand before the outbreak suggests the epidemic should disrupt rather than completely derail the global economy. Moreover, a rebound in trade following the crisis will likely be powerful, as the short-term disruption in business activities will lead to a sizable buildup in manufacturing orders. A rebound in trade following the crisis will likely be powerful. Chart 4Chinese Exports Likely To Have Improved Further Until COVID-19 Hit
Chinese Exports Likely To Have Improved Further Until COVID-19 Hit
Chinese Exports Likely To Have Improved Further Until COVID-19 Hit
Chart 5Chinese Demand Likely To Pick Up Sharply In Q2
Chinese Demand Likely To Pick Up Sharply In Q2
Chinese Demand Likely To Pick Up Sharply In Q2
Bottom Line: China’s export growth will moderate if the virus outbreak prolongs and substantively weakens the global economy. However, the demand shock should have a relatively minor impact on China’s aggregate economy and the subsequent recovery should be robust. Infrastructure Investment Comes To Rescue, Again Chart 6Substantial Acceleration In Infrastructure Investment Likely In 2020
Substantial Acceleration In Infrastructure Investment Likely In 2020
Substantial Acceleration In Infrastructure Investment Likely In 2020
Infrastructure investment in China will likely ramp up significantly in 2020, which will mitigate the influence on the domestic economy from both COVID-19 and slowing global growth. The message from the March 4th Politburo Standing Committee2 chaired by President Xi Jinping further supports our view, that Chinese policymakers are committed to a major increase in infrastructure investment in 2020. Our baseline projection suggests a near 10% increase in infrastructure investment growth in 2020 (Chart 6). Local governments’ infrastructure investment plans for the next several years amount to about 34 trillion yuan.3 While local government budget and bond issuance will be approved at the annual National People’s Congress, which is delayed due to the epidemic, we have high conviction that a significant portion of the planned spending will be frontloaded this year. A significant portion of the multi-year infrastructure projects will likely be moved up to this year. In the first two months, local governments have frontloaded 1.2 trillion yuan worth of bonds, including nearly 1 trillion yuan of special-purpose bonds (SPBs). The consensus forecasts a total of 3-3.5 trillion yuan of SPBs to be issued in 2020, a 30% jump from 2019. Given tightened restrictions on the use of SPBs, we expect that 50% of the bonds will be invested in infrastructure projects, up from about 25% from 2019. This should contribute to about 10-15% of infrastructure spending in 2020. We are likely to also see significant additional funding channels to support infrastructure spending this year: Debt-swap program: With the aggressive easing by the PBoC in recent weeks, there is a high probability that another round of debt-swap program will materialize this year – a form of fiscal stimulus similar to the debt-to-bond swap program that the Chinese government initiated during the 2015-2016 cycle (Chart 7). As we pointed out in our report dated July 24, 2019, the Chinese authorities were formulating another round of local government off-balance-sheet debt swaps, which we estimated would be about 3-4 trillion.4 What was absent back then was a concerted effort from the PBoC to equip commercial banks with the required liquidity and further lower policy rate (Chart 8). Both monetary and policy conditions are now ripe for such a program to be rolled out. Chart 7Money Supply Likely To Pick Up Strongly At The Onset Of Substantial Stimulus
Money Supply Likely To Pick Up Strongly At The Onset Of Substantial Stimulus
Money Supply Likely To Pick Up Strongly At The Onset Of Substantial Stimulus
Chart 8Monetary Conditions Are Ripe For Major Money Base Expansion
Monetary Conditions Are Ripe For Major Money Base Expansion
Monetary Conditions Are Ripe For Major Money Base Expansion
Construction bond issuance: Borrowing through local government financing vehicles (LGFV) has climbed since the second half of last year. This follows two years of tightened regulations on local government borrowing. Net issuance of urban construction investment bonds (UCIB) reached 1.2 trillion in 2019, nearly doubling the amount from a year earlier. A total of 457 billion yuan in UCB has already been issued in the first two months of 2020, which indicates that the authorities are further relaxing LGFV borrowing. We think that net UCIB issuance could reach 1.5 trillion this year, a 25% increase compared with last year. Chart 9More Room To Widen Government Budget Deficit
More Room To Widen Government Budget Deficit
More Room To Widen Government Budget Deficit
Government budget: Funding from the central and local governments budgets accounts for about 15% of overall infrastructure financing. We think that the government budget deficit will likely expand by about 2% of GDP in 2020. As Chart 9 shows, this figure is a conservative estimate compared with the 3%+ widening in the budget deficit during the 2008 and 2015 easing cycles. Bottom Line: Fiscal efforts to support the economy will significantly escalate this year. Monetary conditions and policy directions have already paved the way for a 2015-2016 style credit expansion. We expect infrastructure investment to rise to about 10% in 2020 compared with 2019. Will The RMB Join The Devaluation Club? The RMB appreciated by more than 1% against the USD in the past week, fanned by the expectation that China will have a faster recovery than other countries. The latest round of interest rate cuts by central banks around the world also pushed yield-seeking investors to RMB assets (Chart 10). Still, it is highly unlikely that the PBoC will allow the RMB to continue to appreciate at this rate. When other economies are in a competitive currency devaluation cycle, a strong RMB will generate deflationary headwinds for China’s economy and will partially offset the PBoC’s easing efforts (Chart 11). Chart 10Too Much Too Fast?
Too Much Too Fast?
Too Much Too Fast?
Chart 11A Strong RMB Will Choke Off PBoC's Easing Efforts
A Strong RMB Will Choke Off PBoC's Easing Efforts
A Strong RMB Will Choke Off PBoC's Easing Efforts
If the upward pressure in the RMB persists, then Chinese policymakers will be more inclined to expand the money base. Chart 12PBoC Likely To Rapidly Expand Its Balance Sheet Again
PBoC Likely To Rapidly Expand Its Balance Sheet Again
PBoC Likely To Rapidly Expand Its Balance Sheet Again
We do not expect the PBoC to follow the US Federal Reserve and chase its policy rate even lower. However, if the upward pressure in the RMB persists, then Chinese policymakers will be more inclined to expand the money base. This further raises the probability that local government debt-swap programs will develop this year (Chart 12). The government may allow financial institutions to extend or swap maturing local government off-balance sheet debt with bank loans that carry lower interest rates and longer maturities. Or, it will simply move the debt to the PBoC’s balance sheet. Bottom Line: If upward pressure in the RMB endures, the PBoC will likely expand its balance sheet and make more room to buy local government debt, but it is unlikely to aggressively cut interest rates. Investment Conclusions Chart 13Chinese Stocks Will Likely Continue To Outperform, Even In A Global Recession
Chinese Stocks Will Likely Continue To Outperform, Even In A Global Recession
Chinese Stocks Will Likely Continue To Outperform, Even In A Global Recession
Our recent change in view5 concerning the willingness of Chinese authorities to “stimulate the economy at all costs” meant that Chinese stocks were likely to outperform the global benchmarks in a rising equity market. In a global recessionary, which is now a fait accompli, Chinese leadership’s willingness to stimulate the economy will only intensify. China’s large domestic economy also makes the country less vulnerable to a global demand shock. At this point in time we do not have high conviction in the absolute trend in either Chinese or global stock prices, as their near-term performance is predominantly driven by a medically- and politically-oriented crisis. However, as we expect the Chinese economy to outperform in a global recession, our overweight call on Chinese equities remains intact on both a 3-month and 12-month horizon, in relative terms (Chart 13). Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 China had postponed January’s data release and instead, has combined the first two months of the year. 2 “We should select investment projects; strengthen policy support for land use, energy use, and capital; and accelerate the construction of major projects and infrastructure that have been clearly identified in the national plan.” http://cpc.people.com.cn/n1/2020/0305/c64094-31617516.html?mc_cid=2a979… 3 https://m.21jingji.com/article/20200306/504edc15217322ab37337da2ca35a49e.html?[id]=20200306/nw.D44010021sjjjbd_20200306_9-01.json 4 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report " Threading A Stimulus Needle (Part 2): Will Proactive Fiscal Policy Lose Steam?," dated July 24, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "China: Back To Its Old Economic Playbook?," dated February 26, 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights Duration: It is too soon to call the bottom in bond yields. To help make that call we will be looking for when: daily new COVID-19 infections reach zero, global growth indicators improve, US economic indicators worsen, technical indicators signal a reversal. Fed: Low inflation expectations mean that the Fed is unconstrained when it comes to easing policy. Rate cuts will continue until either the funds rate reaches zero, or financial markets signal that enough stimulus has been delivered. Spread Product: Investors with 12-month investment horizons should neutralize allocations to spread product versus Treasuries, including high-yield where the recent oil supply shock will weigh heavily on returns. Investors should also downgrade exposure to MBS with the goal of re-deploying into corporate credit once the current risk-off episode runs its course. Feature Risk off sentiment prevailed in financial markets again last week, as COVID-19 continues to spread throughout the world. Most recently, the city of Milan has been placed under quarantine and New York state has declared a state of emergency. It is difficult to have much certainty about the virus’ ultimate economic impact, but the prospect of US recession looms larger and larger. In bond markets, the 10-year Treasury yield has fallen to 0.54% and the yield curve is pricing-in 91 bps of Fed rate cuts over the next 12 months (Chart 1). If those expectations are met, it would bring the funds rate down to 0.18%, only slightly above the zero-lower-bound. Chart 1Market Priced For A Return To The Zero-Lower-Bound
Market Priced For A Return To The Zero-Lower-Bound
Market Priced For A Return To The Zero-Lower-Bound
On the bright side, there is ample evidence that global economic growth was trending up before the virus struck in late January, and we remain confident that a large amount of pent-up demand will be unleashed once its impact fades. However, we have no clarity on how much longer COVID-19 might weigh on growth. For this reason, we recommend a much more defensive US bond portfolio allocation, even for investors with 12-month horizons. Specifically, investors should keep portfolio duration close to benchmark and reduce spread product allocations to neutral. The market is sending the message that more rate cuts are needed. We will be quick to re-initiate a below-benchmark duration recommendation when we think that bond yields are close to bottoming. In the below section titled “How To Call The Bottom In Yields”, we discuss the factors that will help us make that decision. A State Of Monetary Policy Emergency The Fed took quick action last week, delivering an inter-meeting 50 basis point rate cut as the stock market tumbled on Tuesday morning. Alas, the market is sending the message that those 50 bps won’t be enough. Fed funds futures are pricing-in another 82 bps of easing by the end of next week’s FOMC meeting, followed by further cuts in April (Table 1). Table 1Expectations Priced Into The Fed Funds Futures Curve
When And Where Will Bond Yields Trough?
When And Where Will Bond Yields Trough?
Of course, easier monetary policy is not the solution to what ails the global economy. At his press conference last week, Fed Chair Powell justified the emergency cut by saying that it will help “avoid a tightening of financial conditions which can weigh on activity, and it will help boost household and business confidence.” This is a fair assessment of what monetary policy can hope to accomplish in the current environment. At most, monetary policy can limit the damage in financial markets, which is a worthwhile goal given the strong historical correlation between financial conditions and economic growth (Chart 2). Chart 2Fed Must Do Its Best To Support Financial Conditions
Fed Must Do Its Best To Support Financial Conditions
Fed Must Do Its Best To Support Financial Conditions
What’s more, with inflation expectations at very low levels – as we go to press the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is a mere 1.03% – there is no reason for the Fed to resist easing policy, even if the expected benefits from easing are small. Chart 3Markets Demand More Easing
Markets Demand More Easing
Markets Demand More Easing
From our perch, the only possible reason for the Fed to refrain from cutting rates quickly all the way back to zero would be to preserve some monetary policy ammunition for when it is needed most. The Fed probably doesn’t see things this way. In conventional economic models it is the level of interest rates that influences economic activity. Therefore, the way to get the most bang for your stimulus buck is to cut rates to zero as quickly as possible. However, if monetary policy is primarily influencing the economy via its impact on financial conditions and investor sentiment, as Chair Powell claimed, then it would be advisable to only deliver rate cuts when financial conditions are tightening rapidly. That is, don’t cut rates if the stock market is rebounding, save your ammo for when equities are in free fall and panic is widespread. We can’t know for certain what the Fed will do between now and the next FOMC meeting. But we can say that, with inflation pressures low, there are no constraints against cutting rates back to the zero bound. The safest takeaway for bond investors is to assume that rate cuts will continue until either (i) the fed funds rate hits zero or (ii) we see signs that the markets and economy are no longer calling for further stimulus. Those signs would be (Chart 3): Yield curve steepening, particularly at the short end. Stocks outperforming bonds. A rising gold price. A falling US dollar. Bottom Line: More rate cuts are coming, and they won’t stop until either the fed funds rate hits zero or financial markets signal that sufficient stimulus has been delivered. We can’t be certain whether that will occur with more or less than the 91 bps of rate cuts that are currently priced for the next 12 months. As such, we recommend keeping portfolio duration close to benchmark. How To Call The Bottom In Yields The US economy is on the cusp of entering a downturn of uncertain duration that will likely be followed by a rapid recovery. Given that outlook, the next big call to make is: When will bond yields put in a bottom? We identify four catalysts that we will monitor to make that call. 1. Virus Panic Abates This is the most important catalyst that could lead us to re-initiate a below-benchmark duration recommendation. The pattern of past viral outbreaks is that bond yields tend to fall until the number of daily new cases reaches zero. This is precisely what happened during the 2003 SARS epidemic (Chart 4A). As for COVID-19, the number of daily new cases looked like it was approaching zero a few weeks ago, but then reversed course as the virus moved on from China to the rest of the world (Chart 4B). One ray of hope is that the number of new cases in China is approaching zero. This suggests that it will also be possible for other countries to contain the virus, but right now it is unclear how long that will take. Chart 4AYields Will Bottom When New Cases Reach Zero
Yields Will Bottom When New Cases Reach Zero
Yields Will Bottom When New Cases Reach Zero
Chart 4BNew COVID-19 Cases Still ##br##Rising
New COVID-19 Cases Still Rising
New COVID-19 Cases Still Rising
In sum, we will keep tracking the global daily number of new cases and will shift to a below-benchmark duration recommendation as it approaches zero. 2. Global Economic Data Improve (Especially China) Chart 5Waiting For A Global Growth Rebound
Waiting For A Global Growth Rebound
Waiting For A Global Growth Rebound
China is where the COVID-19 outbreak started and it is also where we are now seeing the impact in the economic data. The Global Manufacturing PMI dropped from 50.4 to 47.2 in February, due in large part to the plunge in China’s index from 51.1 to 40.3 (Chart 5). In order to call the bottom in US bond yields we will need to see evidence that China can come out the other side of the economic downturn. This means seeing an improvement in the Chinese and Global Manufacturing PMIs. We would also like to see improvement in other global growth indicators such as the CRB Raw Industrials index (Chart 5, panel 2) and the relative performance of cyclical versus defensive equity sectors (Chart 5, bottom panel). Aggressive Chinese stimulus (both monetary and fiscal) might help speed this process along. China’s credit impulse is on the rise (Chart 5, panel 2), and our China Investment Strategy service observed that recently announced policy initiatives related to infrastructure, housing and the automobile sector resemble those that led to a V-shaped Chinese economic recovery in 2016.1 We will be inclined to shift back to below-benchmark portfolio duration when the Global Manufacturing PMI, CRB Raw Industrials index and the relative performance of cyclical versus defensive equities move higher. 3. The US Economic Data Worsen Chart 6Waiting For Weaker US Data
Waiting For Weaker US Data
Waiting For Weaker US Data
While the Global and Chinese economic data are currently in the doldrums, we still haven’t seen COVID’s impact on the US economy. The US ISM Manufacturing PMI is in expansionary territory and the Services PMI is at a healthy 57.3 (Chart 6). Meanwhile, US employment growth has averaged +200k during the past 12 months (Chart 6, panel 2) and the US Economic Surprise Index is above 60 (Chart 6, bottom panel)! Until the US economic data take a hit, another downleg in US bond yields is likely. Looking ahead, if the Global and Chinese economic data are improving as the US data are weakening, financial markets will extrapolate from the Chinese experience and start to price-in an eventual US recovery. Therefore, bond yields will probably start to move higher while the US economic data are still weak. For this reason, one catalyst for us to re-initiate below-benchmark portfolio duration will be when the US economic data weaken. 4. Technical Signals Table 2The 3-Month Golden Rule
When And Where Will Bond Yields Trough?
When And Where Will Bond Yields Trough?
We don’t recommend relying on technical trading rules when forming a 12-month investment view, but technical signals can help add discipline to investment strategies, especially when calling tops and bottoms. One framework with a decent track record is our Golden Rule of Bond Investing applied to a shorter 3-month investment horizon.2 While this 3-month rule doesn’t work as well as when it is applied to a 12-month horizon, we still find that if you correctly predict whether the Fed will deliver a hawkish or dovish surprise relative to market expectations during the next three months, you will make the right duration call 63% of the time (Table 2). The 3-month Golden Rule worked better for dovish surprises than for hawkish surprises in our sample but delivered solid results in both cases. The median 3-month excess Treasury index return versus cash was -1.09% (annualized) when there was a hawkish Fed surprise, compared to +2.56% (annualized) when there was a dovish Fed surprise. For context, the median annualized 3-month excess Treasury index return versus cash during our sample period was +1.79%. Until the US economic data take a hit, another downleg in US bond yields is likely. The overnight index swap curve is currently priced for 94 bps of rate cuts during the next three months, which would essentially take the funds rate back to the zero bound. As of now, we cannot rule out this possibility and are therefore not inclined to look for higher yields during the next 3 months. Momentum, Positioning & Sentiment Other technical signals can also help call tops and bottoms in bond yields. One such signal comes from our Composite Technical Indicator, an indicator that is based on yield changes, investor sentiment surveys and positioning in bond futures markets. Right now, the indicator is sending a strong “overbought” signal with a reading below -1 (Chart 7). Chart 7Technical Treasury Signals
Technical Treasury Signals
Technical Treasury Signals
In isolation, an overbought signal from our Composite Technical Indicator is not a strong reason to call for higher yields. We found that, historically, a reading below -1 from our indicator precedes a 3-month move higher in the 10-year Treasury yield only 53% of the time (Table 3). Table 3Technical Treasury Indicator Performance (1995 – Present)
When And Where Will Bond Yields Trough?
When And Where Will Bond Yields Trough?
One reason for the Composite Technical Indicator’s mediocre performance is that, even at low levels, the market can always become more overbought. But we can partially control for this by combining the overbought signal from our indicator with simple momentum measures that might signal a trend reversal. For example, a reading below -1 from our Composite Technical Indicator combined with a 1-week increase in the 10-year yield precedes a higher 10-year yield during the next three months 58% of the time. If we wait for a 2-week increase in the 10-year yield the rule’s success rate rises to 60%, and it rises to 71% if we wait for the 10-year yield to break above its 4-week moving average. At present, our Composite Technical Indicator shows that Treasuries are extremely overbought, but momentum measures are sending no signals about an imminent trend change (Chart 7, bottom 3 panels). Bottom Line: It is too soon to call the bottom in bond yields. To help make that call we will be looking for when: daily new COVID-19 infections reach zero, global growth indicators improve, US economic indicators worsen, technical indicators signal a reversal. Some Quick Notes On TIPS, MBS And Spread Product Allocations Along with raising recommended portfolio duration to benchmark on a 12-month horizon, we also recommend neutralizing exposure to spread product in US bond portfolios. This includes reducing exposure to high-yield corporate bonds. High-yield remains attractively valued but will continue to sell off as long as risk-off market sentiment prevails. The looming oil price war will also weigh heavily on the sector, which is highly exposed to the US shale energy space. Once again using the SARS epidemic as a comparable, we see that – like Treasury yields – junk excess returns bottomed when the number of daily new cases approached zero (Chart 8). We could still be relatively far from this point, so taking risk off the table makes sense. New all-time lows in Treasury yields will drag mortgage rates lower and lead to a spike in refinancing activity. We also recommend moving MBS allocations to underweight. New all-time lows in Treasury yields will drag mortgage rates lower and lead to a spike in refinancing activity. This spike is not yet fully reflected in MBS spreads, which remain relatively tight (Chart 9) Chart 8Too Soon To Call For Peak Junk Spreads
Too Soon To Call For Peak Junk Spreads
Too Soon To Call For Peak Junk Spreads
Chart 9Downgrade MBS
Downgrade MBS
Downgrade MBS
. Going forward, even after the economic fallout from COVID-19 has passed and it is time to increase exposure to spread product, we will likely continue to recommend an underweight allocation to MBS because better opportunities will be available in investment grade and high-yield corporate bonds where spreads will be much more attractive. On TIPS, last weekend’s oil supply shock – combined with the demand shock from COVID-19 – will conspire to keep long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates well below their “fundamental fair value” for some time yet. But for investors with longer time horizons we see exceptional value in TIPS relative to nominal Treasuries. Even before yesterday’s big drop in oil, the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate was 52 bps cheap relative to the fair value reading from our Adaptive Expectations Model (Chart 10).3 Chart 10TIPS Offer A Ton Of Long-Run Value
TIPS Offer A Ton Of Long-Run Value
TIPS Offer A Ton Of Long-Run Value
Investors with 12-month investment horizons should continue to favor TIPS over nominal Treasuries, but those with shorter horizons may be advised to stand aside and wait for the daily number of new COVID-19 cases to reach zero before re-initiating the position. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “China: Back To Its Old Economic Playbook?”, dated February 26, 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 2 For more details on our Golden Rule of Bond Investing please see US Bond Strategy Special Report, “The Golden Rule of Bond Investing", dated July 24, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 For more details on our Adaptive Expectations Model please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “How Are Inflation Expectations Adapting?”, dated February 11, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Financial markets have experienced two weeks of wild swings: Following the negative 5-standard-deviation weekly move in the S&P 500 two weeks ago, the index moved at least 2.8% in each of last week’s first four sessions. 10- and 30-year Treasury yields made one all-time low after another. The coronavirus has arrived in the United States: It would appear inevitable that the coronavirus is going to spread across the US; the unknowns are how long it will spread, how deadly it will be, and how much it will impact the economy. Confronted with these unknowns, markets shot first and left asking questions for later. The selling may have gone a little far. The Fed and the Democratic candidates for president were in the news last week, … : The Fed made its first intra-meeting rate cut since the financial crisis was raging, cutting the fed funds rate by 50 basis points instead of waiting for its regularly scheduled March 17-18 gathering. Super Tuesday upended the chase for the Democratic presidential nomination, as our geopolitical strategists foresaw. … and we offer our quick read on their market impact: We expect that the Fed’s rate cut will be modestly positive for markets and the economy, while Joe Biden’s move to the head of the Democratic pack greatly diminished a risk that would otherwise have troubled investors all the way to November 3rd. Feature US equities have endured a rollercoaster ride over the last two-and-a-half weeks. From its all-time intraday high of 3,393.52 on February 19th, to the February 28th intraday low of 2,855.84, the S&P 500 corrected by 15.8% in just seven sessions. The brunt of the decline occurred two weeks ago, when the index lost 11.5% in its fourth worst week in the last six decades. The decline amounted to more than a negative 5-standard-deviation event, and took its place among what we now consider to be landmark episodes in US stock market history (Table 1). Table 1Socialism + Pandemic = History (But Not The Good Kind)
Hot Takes
Hot Takes
The epic rout followed a weekend of distressing news. First, the coronavirus (COVID-19) slipped its Asian bonds, popping up fully formed in Italy and Iran in a sobering demonstration of its global reach. Second, Bernie Sanders had seemingly solidified his grip on the Democratic presidential nomination by trouncing the rest of the crowded field in the Nevada caucuses with nearly twice the share of the vote that he captured in his Iowa and New Hampshire wins. We therefore characterize the February 28th intraday low as the coronavirus/Sanders bottom. The former is still running around freely, but the latter has been largely contained. COVID-19 will surely be with us for a while longer, and may yet push the S&P 500 below its February 28th low, but it will have to do so without help from Bernie Sanders. Joe Biden reclaimed front-runner status following his tremendous Super Tuesday performance, and support for him coalesced with remarkable speed, relieving investors’ acute concern about a Sanders presidency. The primary campaign is still in its early stages, and the gaffe-prone Biden is capable of multiple stumbles between now and the nominating convention, but a general election without a self-declared socialist bent on ending health insurance as we know it will provoke considerably less market anxiety. The Rate Cut Equities had been pining for a rate cut, beginning last week’s surge upon the news that central bankers would be joining the G-7 Finance Ministers on their hastily arranged Tuesday morning conference call. After an immediate 2.5% pop upon the announcement of the intra-meeting cut, however, the S&P 500 sagged and wound up ending Tuesday’s session nearly 2% lower than its pre-cut level. The dismal market reception, and Powell’s own halting, tepid responses to questions at the press conference to discuss the rationale for the move left investors wondering if the Fed had made a mistake. We neither know nor care if it will turn out to be good policy, but we expect that the rate cut will lend support to risk assets over our 12-month investment horizon. Why would the Fed use monetary policy to try to combat a public health crisis, or any supply shock? Monetary policy tools were not made to fight public health crises. They will not speed the development of an antidote, make medical care more widely available, or make up for a lack of preparedness at the public health agencies leading the effort to blunt COVID-19’s spread. They also are not particularly well-suited to combat supply shocks. They cannot resolve global supply bottlenecks, put more people back to work in China, South Korea and Italy, or create and distribute all the test kits and protective clothing that medical professionals sorely need. It is within the Fed’s power, however, to try to keep COVID-19’s second-order economic consequences from taking root. Negative headlines, deserted shopping districts and runs on products like hand sanitizer and face masks can drag down business and consumer confidence. Falling confidence can weigh on consumption and investment, hobbling output, stifling employment growth, and raising the specter of a negatively self-reinforcing dynamic in which layoffs lead to less consumption, which feeds more layoffs, and less investment, etcetera. If the Fed can bolster the spirits of consumers and businesses, it can help to contain COVID-19’s adverse economic impact. Won’t this move leave the Fed with less ammunition down the road? Yes, it surely will, especially if the Fed would prefer to stick to conventional policy tools to combat the next recession. Last week’s cut may postpone the start date of that recession, however, affording the Fed a chance to execute a series of rate hikes before it arrives. For an investor with a timeframe that doesn’t exceed twelve months, it may not matter, provided the increased accommodation successfully reduces near-term recession risk. Do you think this move will be effective? At the margin, yes, we think it will. First of all, it will contribute to the mortgage-refinancing wave that has been building since the beginning of the year (Chart 1). With an average 3.45% 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rate, data provider Black Knight estimates 11 million borrowers could save at least 75 basis points by refinancing their existing loans.1 If the average rate were to fall to 3%, as it would if the spread between mortgage rates and Treasury yields simply eases back to the 2% neighborhood (Chart 2), the pool of potential refinancers would expand to 19 million. Reduced mortgage payments put more money in homeowners’ pockets and will help support consumption at the margin. Chart 1Mortgage Refis Were Already Ramping Up, ...
Mortgage Refis Were Already Ramping Up, ...
Mortgage Refis Were Already Ramping Up, ...
Chart 2... And There Will Be Even More Activity Once Mortgage Spreads Normalize
... And There Will Be Even More Activity Once Mortgage Spreads Normalize
... And There Will Be Even More Activity Once Mortgage Spreads Normalize
Lower rates will also increase demand for new-home purchases, which have positive multiplier effects, and other big-ticket consumer goods. They will also support investment at the margin, as hurdle rates fall, and more opportunities are projected to generate a positive net present value. Potential homebuyers may be less prone to attend open houses or conduct home searches if COVID-19 spreads, and skittish managers may be less prone to invest, but easier monetary conditions do promote economic activity. Finally, a Fed that is demonstrably committed to easing monetary conditions to mitigate COVID-19’s potential negative impacts may help shore up business and consumer confidence. It will take confidence to keep gloomy virus headlines from becoming a self-fulfilling recession prophecy. As Figure 1 illustrates, the Fed does have the means to boost demand in financial markets and the real economy. Figure 1Monetary Policy And The Economy
Hot Takes
Hot Takes
What will it mean for markets? It may encourage investors to pay more for each dollar of a corporation’s earnings, helping to cushion equities from falling earnings projections (the Confidence/Risk Taking channel in Figure 1), though we think a surer outcome is that it will keep the search for yield at a fever pitch. Life insurers, pension funds and endowments can no longer rely on highly-rated sovereign bonds to deliver the income to meet their fixed obligations, but have very little leeway to allocate away from fixed income. They have therefore been forced to venture further and further out the risk curve (Figure 1’s Portfolio Balance Effect), which has had the effect of providing an ample supply of funds for less-than-pristine borrowers. Under zero- and negative-interest-rate policy (ZIRP and NIRP, respectively) just about any borrower aside from brick-and-mortar retailers and thinly capitalized oil drillers can attract a line of would-be lenders out the door and around the corner simply by offering an incremental 50-75 bps of yield. Since no borrower defaults, or goes bankrupt, as long as there is a lender willing to roll over its maturing obligations, extraordinarily accommodative monetary policy has had the effect of limiting default rates. We expect that the Fed’s move back in the direction of ZIRP will continue to squeeze spreads and ease financial conditions. That’s far from an ideal fundamental basis for owning spread product, and it won’t keep credit outperforming forever, but we expect it will allow spread product to continue to generate positive excess returns over Treasuries and cash over the next twelve months. Recession Prospects There is no doubt that the probability of a recession is rising. COVID-19 is already exerting intense pressure on the airline and hotel industries, and strapped small businesses will find themselves in its crosshairs soon. It is certainly possible that a recession could sneak up on us while we focus on our assessment of the monetary policy backdrop. But just as COVID-19 survival rates are heavily influenced by a patient’s intrinsic condition, the economy’s prognosis may be a function of its pre-outbreak status. To assess the economy’s vital signs, we begin with housing, the major economic segment with the greatest interest-rate sensitivity. If monetary policy is less accommodative than we’ve estimated, the housing market might be gasping for air, but it appears to be as fit as a fiddle. Permits and starts turned sharply higher in the middle of last year (Chart 3, top panel), following the sales component of the NAHB survey (Chart 3, bottom panel) and purchase mortgage applications (Chart 3, middle panel). Homes are already quite affordable, relative to history (Chart 4, top panel), and they’re bound to get even more affordable as mortgage rates fall. Chart 3Housing Charts Are Up And To The Right Across The Board
Housing Charts Are Up And To The Right Across The Board
Housing Charts Are Up And To The Right Across The Board
Chart 4Homes Are Amply Affordable
Homes Are Amply Affordable
Homes Are Amply Affordable
Nothing in the available data indicates that housing is running too hot. Residential investment’s contribution to GDP has flipped from barely negative to modestly positive (Chart 5), and there are no signs that its current course is unsustainable. Unsold inventories and the share of vacant homes are at 25-year lows (Chart 6), and starts and permits are only just catching up with the multi-year average of household formations, suggesting that the market has been undersupplied since the crisis excesses were worked off. The overall takeaway is that the housing market is in the early days of an overdue recovery that has plenty of room to run. Chart 5Residential Investment's Current Pace Is Easily Sustainable, ...
Residential Investment's Current Pace Is Easily Sustainable, ...
Residential Investment's Current Pace Is Easily Sustainable, ...
Chart 6... And The Housing Market Still Looks Undersupplied
... And The Housing Market Still Looks Undersupplied
... And The Housing Market Still Looks Undersupplied
Chart 7The Labor Market Is Strong
The Labor Market Is Strong
The Labor Market Is Strong
Table 2No Sign Of Recession Here
Hot Takes
Hot Takes
February’s employment situation report, ignored by markets in the throes of Friday's selloff, suggests that the labor market, and by extension the economy, was in fighting trim before COVID-19 took root in American soil (Chart 7). February’s net job additions far surpassed consensus estimates, and the figures for January and December were revised appreciably higher (Table 2). With the three-month moving average of net additions coming in one-third higher than expected, the report was nothing short of tremendous. The March release is sure to be worse, and the all-time record streak of expanding monthly payrolls may well come to an end, but the patient was in an awfully robust state before it encountered the virus, and that bodes well for its immediate future. The Democratic Primaries Super Tuesday turned out to be super for US financial markets. With all of the Democratic party’s machinery now at the service of Joe Biden, the probability that frightening left-tail outcomes might emerge from the general election has been dramatically reduced. Markets can live with a Biden-Trump contest no matter how it turns out. Although we thought that markets were exaggerating the potentially negative conditions that would ensue under President Sanders, they would have been subject to rolling bouts of angst every time his general election prospects rose. Though our geopolitical strategists unwaveringly saw the former vice president as the Democratic frontrunner, theirs was a decidedly minority view. Following the Nevada caucus, Sanders was viewed far and wide as the presumptive nominee. Although a Biden administration would presumably be less market-friendly than the current administration, he himself is a card-carrying member of the establishment and wouldn’t do anything that would upset the apple cart. From an investment perspective, Biden is the candidate that would Make America Predictable Again, and even if re-election is markets’ preferred outcome, the prospect of a Biden presidency is hardly frightening. Investment Implications Although our conviction level has fallen in the face of COVID-19 uncertainties, we hold to our view that a soft patch is more likely than a recession, and a correction is more likely than a bear market. We remain constructive on risk assets because we think the selling has gotten overdone. There may well be more of it, and the S&P 500 could reach its 2,708.92 bear-market level before we can publish again next Monday, but we will be buying it in our own account all the way there. We think the most plausible worst-case scenario is a sharp but short recession, produced by a nasty supply shock that frightens households and businesses enough that they cease to consume or invest. The demand strike would imperil indebted businesses that suffered the biggest revenue declines: airlines, hotels, restaurants, retailers, thinly capitalized oil producers and a range of small businesses. They would shrink their workforces and many would default on their loans. That would be bad, as all recessions are bad, but it wouldn’t be a replay of the crisis. Credit extended to the sorts of borrowers listed above, ex-small businesses, is well-dispersed throughout the economy via corporate bonds and securitizations. The exposures the SIFI banks and their large- and mid-cap regional bank cousins have retained will be easily absorbed by the layers of additional capital mandated by Dodd-Frank and Basel 3. It seems to us that markets are pricing in a significant probability of something much worse than a run-of-the-mill recession, and we think that sets up an attractive risk-reward profile for investors in risk assets. We reiterate our risk-friendly recommendations, though we now recommend that fixed-income investors maintain benchmark duration positioning. We failed to appreciate the potential scope for a decline in long yields and are correcting course now. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Boston, Claire and Raimonde, Olivia, “A 30-Year Mortgage Below 3%? Treasury Rally Offers Bargain Loans,” Bloomberg, March 5, 2020.
The Fed’s inter meeting cut this week signals that the FOMC is panicky and has now acted a mere two days after the SPX fell 16% from the February 19 all-time highs. As a reminder, following the last 20% SPX correction in late 2018 it took the Fed seven months to cut rates! As the WSJ recently reported “Since 1998, the Fed has cut interest rates six other times between regularly scheduled meetings. Following each of those moves, the Fed has lowered rates again at its next policy meeting.” Thus, the fed funds rate is on the path to hitting the zero lower bound sooner rather than later, likely pulling longer term yields down with it. Tack on the safe haven flows the US Treasury market enjoys and the Treasury/Bund spread is also headed south. This spread has been an excellent leading indicator for the SPX over the past decades, as we have highlighted1 in the past, and warns that the S&P 500 will be lower in 9-12 months. Bottom Line: Stay cautious on the cyclical prospects of the broad equity market.
The Road to Zero
The Road to Zero
1 Please see U.S. Equity Strategy Insight Report, “Treasury/Bund Spread And The SPX,” dated April 18, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.