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Equity markets had a hard time digesting the recent increase in interest rates. The 27 basis point rise in the 10-year Treasury yield in January caused the S&P 500 to selloff by 5.3%. Going forward, we expect the pace of increase in bond yields to…
BCA Research’s US Bond Strategy service remains overweight Asset-Backed Securities (ABS) within a US bond portfolio. Asset-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 20 basis points in January. Aaa-rated ABS outperformed by…
Highlights Chart 1Most Sectors Have Fully Recovered Last week’s January employment report shocked markets by showing much greater job gains than had been anticipated. More important than the headline number, however, were the revisions to prior months that reveal a much different picture of the post-COVID labor market. In overall terms, the revised data show that employment is still significantly below where it was prior to the pandemic. Specifically, the economy is still missing about 2.9 million jobs. However, the data now reveal that more than 60% of the missing jobs come from the Leisure & Hospitality sector and that the Health Care and State & Local Government sectors account for the rest. In other words, except for the few sectors that have been most impacted by the pandemic, the US labor market has made a full recovery (Chart 1). The new data justify the Fed’s recent push toward tightening. This is because there is no longer any evidence of labor market slack beyond what we see in the select few close-contact service industries that have been most impacted by COVID. Investors should maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration as the Fed moves toward rate hikes. Feature Table 1Recommended Portfolio Specification Table 2Fixed Income Sector Performance Investment Grade: Neutral Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview Investment grade corporate bonds underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 115 basis points in January. The index option-adjusted spread widened 14 bps on the month to reach 108 bps, and our quality-adjusted 12-month breakeven spread moved up to its 15th percentile since 1995 (Chart 2). This indicates that, despite the recent selloff, corporate bonds remain expensive. We discussed the intermediate-term outlook for corporate bonds in a recent report.1  Specifically, we analyzed the performance of both investment grade and high-yield corporate bonds during previous Fed tightening cycles. Our conclusion is that it will soon be appropriate to reduce our cyclical exposure to corporate credit. For investment grade corporates, this will mean reducing our recommended allocation from neutral (3 out of 5) to underweight (2 out of 5). Our analysis of past cycles suggests that the slope of the yield curve is a critical indicator of corporate bond performance. Excess corporate bond returns are generally strong when the 3-year/10-year Treasury slope is above 50 bps but take a step down when the slope shifts into a range of 0 – 50 bps. The 3/10 slope has just recently dipped below 50 bps (bottom panel). Though our fair value estimates can’t rule out a near-term bounce back above 50 bps, this will become less and less likely as Fed rate hikes approach. We maintain our current recommended allocation for now but expect to downgrade within the next few weeks. Table 3ACorporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation* Table 3BCorporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward* High-Yield: Overweight Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview High-Yield underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 158 basis points in January. The index option-adjusted spread widened 59 bps in January to reach 342 bps. The 12-month spread-implied default rate – the default rate that is priced into the junk index assuming a 40% recovery rate on defaulted debt and an excess spread of 100 bps – also moved up to 4% (Chart 3). The odds are good that defaults will come in below 4% during the next 12 months, which should coincide with the outperformance of high-yield bonds versus Treasuries. For context, the high-yield default rate came in at 1.24% in 2021 and we showed in a recent report that corporate balance sheets are in excellent shape.2 Specifically, we noted that the ratio of total debt to net worth for the nonfinancial corporate sector has fallen to 41%, the lowest ratio since 2010 (bottom panel). While high-yield valuations are more favorable than for investment grade, the bonds will still have to contend with a more challenging monetary environment this year as the Fed lifts rates and the yield curve flattens. For this reason, we expect to reduce our recommended allocation to high-yield corporates in the coming weeks – from overweight (4 out of 5) to neutral (3 out of 5) – though we will retain our preference for high-yield over investment grade. MBS: Underweight Chart 4MBS Market Overview Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 12 basis points in January. The zero-volatility spread for conventional 30-year agency MBS tightened 7 bps on the month, split between a 17 bps tightening of the option-adjusted spread (OAS) and a 10 bps increase in the compensation for prepayment risk (option cost) (Chart 4). We wrote in a recent report that MBS’ poor performance in 2021 was attributable to an option cost that was too low relative to the pace of mortgage refinancings, noting that the MBA Refinance Index was slow to fall in 2021 despite the back-up in yields.3 This valuation picture is starting to change. The option cost is now up to 36 bps, its highest level since March 2020, and refi activity is slowing as the Fed moves toward rate hikes. At 23 bps, the index OAS remains unattractive. However, the elevated option cost raises the possibility that the OAS may be over-estimating the pace of mortgage refinancings for the first time in a while. If these trends continue, it may soon make sense to increase exposure to agency MBS. We continue to recommend an up-in-coupon bias within an overall underweight allocation to MBS. Higher coupon MBS exhibit more attractive option-adjusted spreads and higher convexity than lower coupon MBS. This makes high-coupon MBS (4%, 4.5%) more likely to outperform low-coupon MBS (2%, 2.5%, 3%) in an environment where bond yields are flat or rising (bottom panel). Emerging Market Bonds (USD): Overweight Chart 5Emerging Markets Overview This week we officially initiate coverage of USD-denominated Emerging Market (EM) bonds. To start, we will focus on investment grade rated Sovereigns, Corporates and Quasi-Sovereigns. We plan to expand our coverage to include high-yield in the coming months. This EM section replaces the previous Government-Related section in our monthly summary. We will continue to cover Government-Related securities from time to time, but that sub-index will no longer be regularly included in our recommended portfolio allocation. Emerging Market bonds underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 88 basis points in January. EM Sovereigns underperformed the Treasury benchmark by 134 bps on the month and the EM Corporate & Quasi-Sovereign Index underperformed by 58 bps. After strong relative performance in the back-half of 2021, the EM Sovereign index eked out just 4 bps of outperformance versus the duration-equivalent US corporate bond index in January (Chart 5). Meanwhile, the EM Corporate & Quasi-Sovereign index outperformed the duration-matched US corporate index by 24 bps on the month. Yield differentials for EM sovereigns and corporates remain attractive relative to US corporates (panel 4). Additionally, EM currencies are hanging in there versus the dollar even as the Fed moves toward tightening (bottom panel). We recommend an overweight allocation to USD-denominated EM bonds in US bond portfolios, and we maintain our preference for EM sovereign and corporate bonds relative to US corporates with the same credit rating and duration. Municipal Bonds: Maximum  Overweight Chart 6Municipal Market Overview Municipal bonds underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 121 basis points in January (before adjusting for the tax advantage). The economic and policy back-drop remains favorable for municipal bond performance. Trailing 4-quarter net state & local government savings are incredibly high (Chart 6) and 2021’s federal spending splurge will support state & local government coffers for some time. A recent report showed that the average duration of municipal bond indexes has fallen significantly during the past few decades, a trend that has implications for how we should perceive municipal bond valuations.4 Specifically, the trend makes municipal bonds more attractive relative to both Treasury securities and investment grade corporates. Long-maturity bonds are especially compelling. We calculate that 12-17 year maturity Revenue munis offer a breakeven tax rate of 14% relative to credit rating and duration matched US corporate bonds. 12-17 year General Obligation Munis offer a breakeven tax rate of 19% versus corporates (panel 2). High-yield muni spreads are reasonably attractive compared to high-yield corporates (panel 4), but we recommend only a neutral allocation to high-yield munis versus high-yield corporates. The deep negative convexity of high-yield munis makes them susceptible to extension risk as bond yields rise. Treasury Curve: Buy 2-Year Bullet Versus Cash/10 Barbell Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview The Treasury curve bear-flattened dramatically in January, and yields continued their sharp rise through the first week of February – though in a more parallel fashion. All in all, the 2-year/10-year Treasury slope has flattened 17 bps since the end of December, bringing it to 62 bps. The 5-year/30-year slope has flattened 19 bps since the end of December, bringing it to 45 bps. The aggressive flattening of the curve has occurred alongside the Fed’s increased near-term hawkishness. Our 12-month discounter has risen from 77 bps at the end of last year to 149 bps today (Chart 7). In other words, the market has gone from anticipating just over three 25 basis point rate hikes during the next 12 months to nearly six! Last week’s report argued that the most recent move to discount more than four 25 basis point rate hikes in 2022 is overdone.5  We contend that tightening financial conditions and falling inflation expectations will cause the Fed to moderate its pace of rate hikes in the second half of this year. We still see the Fed lifting rates three or four times in 2022, but this is now significantly below what’s priced in the market. Given our view, we recommend a position long the 2-year Treasury note versus a barbell consisting of cash and the 10-year note. This trade will profit as a more moderate expected pace of near-term rate hikes limits the upward pressure on the 2-year yield. TIPS: Neutral Chart 8TIPS Market Overview TIPS underperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 23 basis points in January. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate has declined by 16 bps since the end of December while the 2-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate has fallen by 1 bp. The 10-year and 2-year rates currently sit at 2.43% and 3.21%, respectively. The Fed’s preferred 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate is down 22 bps since the end of December. It currently sits at 2.05%, below the Fed’s 2.3% - 2.5% target range. Our valuation indicator shows that 10-year TIPS are slightly expensive compared to 10-year nominal Treasuries (Chart 8), and we retain a neutral allocation to TIPS versus nominals at the long-end of the curve. We acknowledge the risk that a prolonged period of high inflation could lead to a break-out in long-dated TIPS breakevens, but this now looks less likely given how the market has reacted to the Fed’s increasing hawkishness. We see better trading opportunities at the front-end of the TIPS curve where the 2-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate remains well above the Fed’s target range (panel 4). Short-maturity breakevens are more sensitive to swings in CPI than those at the long end. Therefore, the 2-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate has considerable downside during the next 6-12 months, assuming inflation moderates as we expect. We recommend an underweight allocation to TIPS versus nominals at the front-end of the curve. Given our view that CPI inflation will be lower in 6-12 months, we recommend shorting 2-year TIPS outright, positioning in 2/10 TIPS breakeven inflation curve steepeners (bottom panel) and 2/10 TIPS (real) yield curve flatteners. ABS: Overweight Chart 9ABS Market Overview Asset-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 20 basis points in January. Aaa-rated ABS outperformed by 19 bps on the month and non-Aaa ABS outperformed by 20 bps. During the past two years, substantial federal government support for household incomes has caused US households to build up an extremely large buffer of excess savings. During this period, many households have used their windfalls to pay down consumer debt and credit card debt levels have fallen to well below pre-COVID levels (Chart 9). Though consumer credit growth has rebounded, debt levels are still low. This indicates that the collateral quality backing consumer ABS remains exceptionally strong. Investors should remain overweight consumer ABS and should take advantage of the high quality of household balance sheets by moving down the quality spectrum, favoring non-Aaa rated securities over Aaa-rated ones.       Non-Agency CMBS: Neutral Chart 10CMBS Market Overview Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 3 basis points in January. Aaa Non-Agency CMBS underperformed Treasuries by 3 bps in January, but non-Aaa Non-Agency CMBS outperformed by 2 bps (Chart 10). Though returns have been strong and spreads remain relatively wide, particularly for lower-rated CMBS, we continue to recommend only a neutral allocation to the sector because of the structurally challenging environment for commercial real estate. Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 3 basis points in January. The average index option-adjusted spread tightened 1 bp on the month. It currently sits at 36 bps (bottom panel). Though Agency CMBS spreads have recovered to well below their pre-COVID levels, they still look attractive compared to other similarly risky spread products. Stay overweight.     Appendix A: Butterfly Strategy Valuations The following tables present the current read-outs from our butterfly spread models. We use these models to identify opportunities to take duration-neutral positions across the Treasury curve. The following two Special Reports explain the models in more detail: US Bond Strategy Special Report, “Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated July 25, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com US Bond Strategy Special Report, “More Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated May 15, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Table 4 shows the raw residuals from each model. A positive value indicates that the bullet is cheap relative to the duration-matched barbell. A negative value indicates that the barbell is cheap relative to the bullet. Table 4Butterfly Strategy Valuation: Raw Residuals In Basis Points (As Of January 31, 2022) Table 5 scales the raw residuals in Table 4 by their historical means and standard deviations. This facilitates comparison between the different butterfly spreads. Table 5Butterfly Strategy Valuation: Standardized Residuals (As Of January 31, 2022) Table 6 flips the models on their heads. It shows the change in the slope between the two barbell maturities that must be realized during the next six months to make returns between the bullet and barbell equal. For example, a reading of -53 bps in the 5 over 2/10 cell means that we would expect the 5-year to outperform the 2/10 if the 2/10 slope flattens by less than 53 bps during the next six months. Otherwise, we would expect the 2/10 barbell to outperform the 5-year bullet. Table 6Discounted Slope Change During Next 6 Months (BPs) Appendix B: Excess Return Bond Map The Excess Return Bond Map is used to assess the relative risk/reward trade-off between different sectors of the US bond market. It is a purely computational exercise and does not impose any macroeconomic view. The Map’s vertical axis shows 12-month expected excess returns. These are proxied by each sector’s option-adjusted spread. Sectors plotting further toward the top of the Map have higher expected returns and vice-versa. Our novel risk measure called the “Risk Of Losing 100 bps” is shown on the Map’s horizontal axis. To calculate it, we first compute the spread widening required on a 12-month horizon for each sector to lose 100 bps or more relative to a duration-matched position in Treasury securities. Then, we divide that amount of spread widening by each sector’s historical spread volatility. The end result is the number of standard deviations of 12-month spread widening required for each sector to lose 100 bps or more versus a position in Treasuries. Lower risk sectors plot further to the right of the Map, and higher risk sectors plot further to the left. Chart 11Excess Return Bond Map (As Of January 31, 2022) Recommended Portfolio Specification Other Recommendations Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com    Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Positioning For Rate Hikes In The Corporate Bond Market”, dated January 25, 2022. 2 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Fed’s Inflation Problem”, dated November 23, 2021. 3 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Omicron Impact”, dated November 30, 2021. 4 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Best & Worst Spots On The Yield Curve”, dated October 26, 2021. 5 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Best Laid Plans”, dated February 1, 2022.
The Sentix Economic Index is sending a positive signal about investor morale in the Eurozone. The overall index increased by 1.7 points to 16.6 – above expectations of a more muted increase to 15.2. The higher headline index reflects a 0.5 point increase in…
A dominant market theme this year is rising global government bond yields as central banks exit ultra-accommodative monetary policy and attempt to stymie inflationary pressures. The equity market implication of rising bond yields is to favor sectors and…
According to BCA Research’s European Investment Strategy service, the €STR curve is pricing in the potential path of the ECB this year too aggressively. First, inflationary dynamics in Europe are much tamer than those in the US, especially in terms of…
Executive Summary Macroeconomic Backdrop Favors Defensive Consumer Staples Markets now expect five-to-six rate hikes in 2022  The rate of change in rates as opposed to their level has triggered the fast and furious repricing of long-duration assets.  However, rising rates are a temporary headwind to equities The repricing of the equity market came through the P/E as opposed to the “E” Demand is clearly shifting from goods to services. Supply disruptions are clearing Earnings were strong, but investors expected more We are upgrading Consumer Staples, which is a “deep” defensive sector that offers downside protection in an environment of heightened volatility and slowing economic growth   Bottom Line: While it is impossible to time the market, we believe that the worst is behind us. US equities are outright oversold, and valuations are much more reasonable. However, we recommend investors be cautious in sector selection: For now, stay away from Tech, and add to Consumer Staples to reduce portfolio volatility. Feature Performance Hit Undo 2021 January had a nasty shock in store for equity investors: At the lowest point, the S&P 500 was down 12% from its peak, and NASDAQ was down 20%, officially entering correction territory. January market moves were a partial reversal of the 2021 gains (Chart 1A), with some of the hottest investment themes, such as clean energy, fintech, and Cathie Wood's innovation ETFs hit the hardest (Chart 1B). Investors were rushing to monetize their super-charged gains before the Fed starts draining liquidity off the market. Chart 1APerformance: Sectors And Styles Chart 1BPerformance: Investment Themes Post-Mortem A post-mortem of the sell-off shows that the stocks that have pulled back most, were trading at extended valuations and had long duration, i.e., companies that are not very profitable now but expect to grow earnings at a robust pace far into the future. These companies are akin to lottery tickets – a small payment now may result in a low-probability event of a high gain in the future. Small-cap growth stocks are down 30% from their peak. Over time, the sell-off of small-cap growth has spread to other areas of the market and has hit all sectors but Energy, almost indiscriminately. Overall, the S&P 500's multiple has contracted by over 10% (Chart 1C). Chart 1CJanuary Correction Was Down To Multiple Contraction Valuations And Technicals Pullbacks are responsible for equity market hygiene, cleansing the market of overextended valuations, taking the froth off the names that got ahead of themselves, and offering a reset for a new leg of upward moves, fueled by inflows into oversold names and cash deployed by new market entrants. Forward multiples of the S&P 500 have come down from 21.7x to a more reasonable 19.5x (Chart 2A). Now, 8 out of the 11 sectors have a forward PE below 20x (Chart 2B). Chart 2AMultiples Have Come Down A lot From The Peak Chart 2BValuations Moderated Across All Sectors But Energy By many technical metrics, such as the bull/bear ratio (Chart 2C), market breadth, and RSI, the market appears oversold. Many investors may consider this a good entry point. Chart 2CRetail Investors Have Capitulated Macroeconomic Backdrop Six Is The New Four This correction was triggered by a market surprised by the grave tone of Fed officials, acknowledging their concern about the intransigent, as opposed to transient, inflation. While monetary tightening has been on the cards for a while now, what a difference a month makes! In December, the market was pricing in three rate hikes in 2022, while currently, the probability of five rate hikes stands at over 90%, and of six rate hikes at over 80% (Chart 3A). The 10-year Treasury yield moved from 1.5% at the end of December to 1.87% at its January peak. It is important to note that monetary policy is still easy and it was the rate of change in rates as opposed to their level that triggered the fast and furious repricing of long-duration assets. Chart 3AInvestors Expect Five-To-Six Hikes In 2022 Is Monetary Tightening A Death Knell For US Equities? Historically, equities wobbled two-to-three months prior to the first rate hike, and then took a breather for another couple of months for the dust to settle (Chart 3B). January and now February volatility and pullbacks are textbook behavior of equities at the cusp of a new monetary regime. However, in three of the four tightening cycles since 1990, the stock market was higher a year later. The same is true for long-term rates: In all but one of the episodes of a sharp rise in the 10-year Treasury yield since 1990, the stock market rose (Table 1). Chart 3BEquities Wobble Around The First Rate Hike Table 1Equity Performance Around Periods Of Rising Treasury Yields Economic Growth: Supply (Finally) Meets Demand Of course, the best antidote to higher rates is strong economic growth. So far, everything is in order on that front, with economists projecting solid 2022 nominal GDP growth of around 7.6%. Economic growth is slowing but off high levels. At last, global supply chains are gradually unclogging, and shipping bottlenecks are starting to clear. Even automakers are now saying that auto chips are becoming more readily available. However, part of the reason that supply and demand are getting closer to each other is that demand for goods is waning, dampened by both saturation and higher costs. The latest ISM PMI reading shows that both new orders and the backlog of orders are falling (Chart 4, top panel). Prices paid have also turned, heralding that the worst of price increases may be behind us (Chart 4, bottom panel). Will this contain inflation enough to appease the Fed? Possible, but not highly likely. Chart 4Demand Is Weakening Earnings: Good But Not Good Enough With economic growth slowing, earnings and sales growth are also rolling over (Chart 5A). As investors are trying to decipher the state of the American economy, they are increasingly focused on corporate guidance. So far 12 companies offered positive guidance vs 28 with negative guidance. The Negative/Positive ratio for Q4-2021 currently stands at 2.3, compared to 0.8 in the prior four quarters. Price action in response to projected lower growth has been brutal. And while 78% of companies have beaten earnings expectations, this is a smaller share than during the other pandemic recovery quarters. The magnitude of the earnings surprise has also fallen (Chart 5B). Chart 5AEarnings And Sales Growth Are Slowing Chart 5BThe Magnitude Of Earnings Surprises Has Fallen This earnings season has also seen some of the largest moves on the back of companies’ reports. Positive surprises by Google, Microsoft, and Amazon have soothed investors' fears and led to broad-based next-day rallies, while skimpy results from PayPal and Meta, not only have sent these companies down more than 20%, erasing billions in market capitalization, but also have dragged down their nearest competitors (Square, Snap, etc.). Also, many companies are complaining about rising input and labor costs cutting into their profitability. This is hardly a surprise. According to our analysis of the NIPA accounts, in the US labor costs constitute 55% of sales. With wages rising at the fastest pace in years, their effect on corporate profitability can be meaningful (Chart 6A). To make things worse, input costs are also soaring – the latest PPI reading is 9.7%. Chart 6AMargins Are Contracting As... However, companies are more and more constrained in their ability to pass on their cost increases to customers, although the elasticity of demand varies across industries. Many companies can no longer afford to raise prices without suppressing demand for their products. Corporate pricing power has turned decisively lower (Chart 6B). As a result, profit margins have contracted across all sectors, except Energy. Bottom-line – earnings are good so far, but they have failed to allay investor fears of waning profitability. Chart 6B...Corporate Pricing Power Is Declining Sector Positioning Revenge Of The Nerds – Be Granular While we believe that equities are poised for another leg up, as economic growth remains strong and corporate earnings are decent, we recommend that investors be granular in their sector selection: Avoid areas most adversely affected by a tighter monetary regime and slowing growth. Per our previous analysis, we recommend underweighting the Technology sector on a tactical basis, but within Tech, stay overweight more defensive Software and IT Services. We also like Banks and Insurers that benefit from rising rates and prefer Value and Small over Growth. We are also constructive on Industrials, which are the primary beneficiaries of the new Capex cycle and the US industrial renaissance. Consumer Services Are Finally Rebounding In the meantime, with Omicron finally receding, consumer spending is shifting from consumer goods to services (Chart 7A). Consumers are flush with cash, and still have $2.2 trillion in their coffers. We have been overweight the Travel complex (Hotels, Restaurants, Cruises) since October. However, performance was derailed in the late fall as many consumers chose to stay at home and wait for the variant to pass. Also, many of the industries in the Travel complex have been challenged by the sheer number of staff quarantining or on sick leave. We upgraded Airlines at the beginning of January and remain optimistic about the outperformance of the Consumer Services sector. Upgrading Consumer Staples We are also upgrading Consumer Staples, which is a “deep” defensive that offers downside protection in an environment of heightened volatility and slowing economic growth (Chart 7B). Moreover, consumer confidence is down as Americans are disheartened by prices in the supermarket and at the gas station. However, demand for consumer staples is inelastic and should be inflation-proof. The sector is trading at 21x forward multiples and is expected to grow earnings at 6% over the next 12 months, bettering the S&P 500. Chart 7AWaning Demand For Goods Is Replaced By Demand For Services Chart 7BMacroeconomic Backdrop Favors Defensive Consumer Staples Investment Implications The market correction is still running its course, and while it is impossible to time the market, we believe that the worst is behind us. US equities are outright oversold, and valuations are much more reasonable. Rising rates are a temporary headwind. However, we recommend investors be cautious in sector selection: For now, stay away from Tech, and add to Consumer Staples to reduce portfolio volatility.   Irene Tunkel Chief Strategist, US Equity Strategy irene.tunkel@bcaresearch.com     S&P 500  Chart 8Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 9Profitability Chart 10Valuations And Technicals Chart 11Uses Of Cash Communication Services Chart 12Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 13Profitability Chart 14Valuations And Technicals Chart 15Uses Of Cash Consumer Discretionary Chart 16Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 17Profitability Chart 18Valuations And Technicals Chart 19Uses Of Cash Consumer Staples Chart 20Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 21Profitability Chart 22Valuations And Technicals Chart 23Uses Of Cash Energy Chart 24Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 25Profitability Chart 26Valuations And Technicals Chart 27Uses Of Cash Financials Chart 28Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 29Profitability Chart 30Valuations And Technicals Chart 31Uses Of Cash Health Care Chart 32Sector vs Industry Groups Chart 33Profitability Chart 34Valuations And Technicals Chart 35Uses Of Cash Industrials Chart 36Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 37Profitability Chart 38Valuations And Technicals Chart 39Uses Of Cash Information Technology Chart 40Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 41Profitability Chart 42Valuations And Technicals Chart 43Uses Of Cash Materials Chart 44Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 45Profitability Chart 46Valuations And Technicals Chart 47Uses Of Cash Real Estate Chart 48Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 49Profitability Chart 50Valuations And Technicals Chart 51Uses Of Cash Utilities Chart 52Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 53Profitability Chart 54Valuations And Technicals Chart 55Uses Of Cash Recommended Allocation Footnotes
Executive Summary The European Central Bank (ECB) has engaged in a decisive pivot toward higher policy rates. Markets are pricing in a first interest-rate hike in July and three more increases thereafter in 2022. This is too much for one year. Limited domestic inflationary pressures, weakness in long-term inflation expectations, economic slack, and vulnerability in the periphery will limit the ECB to one hike in December. Nonetheless, the ECB will increase interest rates more than the market anticipates beyond 2022. The UK is setting up for a dangerous latter half of 2022. Too Much Now, Not Enough Later Bottom Line: Bet on a steepening of the euro short-term rate (€STR) curve. Current pricing for 2022 is too aggressive; however, it is too timid beyond the yearend. European financials will be the prime beneficiary of this tilt. Feature On Thursday, February 3, ECB President Christine Lagarde announced a decidedly hawkish pivot at the ECB press conference. The Frankfurt-based institution, worried by higher-than-anticipated inflation, no longer excludes rate hikes for 2022. In a context in which the BoE is resolutely hiking rates and the Fed is ready to initiate a sustained tightening campaign, investors are pricing in a 10bp ECB rate hike as early as July 2022. They also foresee three additional increases by the end of the year. We agree that the ECB will start lifting the deposit rate this year; however, we expect the tightening to begin in December. Nonetheless, we expect the ECB to lift policy rates more aggressively than the €STR prices in subsequent years. European Inflation Is Different Chart 1Surprise! The knee-jerk reaction of investors to price in a sudden, sustained campaign of ECB rate hikes this year similar to that of the Fed is natural in light of elevated Eurozone inflation and inflation surprises (Chart 1). However, we continue to view European inflation as distinct from US inflation. European inflation remains dominated by dynamics in the energy market. While headline inflation increased from 5% to 5.1% in January, the core Consumer Price Index (CPI) declined modestly to 2.3% from 2.6%. Crucially, the variance of headline CPI is still almost fully explained by the variance of its energy component (Chart 2, top panel). However, it is concerning that there is also evident pass-through from energy prices to core CPI taking place today (Chart 2, bottom panel). Naturally, natural gas prices play a particularly important role in this energy-driven inflation spike (Chart 3). Chart 2Energy Still Drives Inflation Chart 3Natural Gas Remains Key Imported inflation is another key driver of European inflation. Chart 4 highlights that there is a robust relationship between the level of headline Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) across EU nations and their import prices. This confirms that a large proportion of the European inflationary outburst has taken root outside of the continent’s borders. Chart 4Imported Inflation? Despite this energy-driven, imported inflation, domestic pressures are still much more muted than those in the US. VAT increases played an important role in pushing core CPI higher. Without this contribution, CPI excluding food and energy would be 50 bps lower (Chart 5). Meanwhile, rent inflation remains a modest 1.1%, which is significantly lower than that in the US (Chart 6, top panel), whereas used car CPI is not nearly as extreme as across the Atlantic (Chart 6, bottom panel). Chart 5Elevated Contribution From Taxes Chart 6Comparatively Muted Domestic Inflation Drivers Wage dynamics too are not yet as concerning in the Eurozone as they are in the US. Negotiated wages remain near a record low of 1.4%, and unit labor costs at 0.9% are still inconsistent with strong underlying inflationary pressures (Chart 7, top and second panel). The labor market is tightening and the Euro Area unemployment rate fell to a new low at 7%. However, the total hours worked have not yet reached their pre-pandemic levels (Chart 7, third panel), which suggests that it could take a few more months before the dislocation caused by the pandemic has been fully absorbed and wages become a risk. That being said, it is only a matter of time, as job vacancies are skyrocketing (Chart 7, bottom panel). Chart 8Plentiful Slack Chart 7The Labor Market Will Heat Up... Later The European output gap also limits a repetition of the wage-price spiral taking hold in the US. The OECD’s Weekly Tracker of GDP, a proxy for the overall Eurozone comprised of Germany, France, Italy, and Spain, reveals that, as of mid-January, aggregate output was still 4.9% below its pre-pandemic trend (Chart 8, top panel). Looking at the actual GDP of European countries individually, only France stands above its pre-pandemic trend, whereas Germany, Italy, and Spain still linger well below the average economic path that prevailed from 2012 to 2019 (Chart 8, bottom panels). Chart 9The Inflationary Role Of Bottlenecks Bottlenecks have also played an important role in relation to higher inflation. Goods inflation is much more elevated than services inflation (Chart 9, top panel), and industrial companies rank the ability to procure equipment and materials as their most important production constraint (Chart 9, second panel). However, production bottlenecks are dissipating. A recent Ifo survey highlights that the proportion of retailers with procurement issues declined from 82% in December 2021 to 57% in January 2022. Moreover, the supplier deliveries indexes of the PMIs are improving across the world. In fact, our simple Supply Disruption Index has begun to rollover, which points toward an imminent end to the wave of inflation surprises (Chart 9, bottom panel). European inflation expectations bear the imprint of those more modest domestic inflationary pressures, which explains the comparatively more limited wage-price spiral on the continent. The inflation expectations of Eurozone households are rising, but they are still within the norm of the past 20 years. In the US, they are breaking out. Moreover, our Index of Common Inflation Expectations, designed to mimic the New York Fed’s measure, remains well contained and is tentatively rolling over (Chart 10). Collectively, these forces explain the radically different inflation profiles of the Euro Area and the US. On the western shore of the Atlantic, the two-year annualized rate of change of the core CPI has completely shattered its highs of the past 20 years, indicating that more than simple base-effects are contributing to inflation (Chart 11, top panel). Meanwhile, the two-year annualized rate of change of the European core CPI is higher than the past deflationary eight years, but it is still low compared to the rates that prevailed prior to the European sovereign debt crisis (Chart 11, bottom panel). Chart 10Inflation Expectations: Unlike The US Chart 11Realized Inflation: Unlike The US Chart 12The Coming CPI Peak? Going forward, there remains a high likelihood that Eurozone inflation will soon peak. The impact of the German VAT increases will soon dissipate from the data, energy inflation will diminish as the annual rate of change of oil and natural gas prices peaks, and the growth in monetary aggregates has normalized sharply. Most importantly, in the absence of significant domestic inflationary pressures, the sharp decline in the ZEW Inflation Expectations components point toward a deceleration in headline HICP (Chart 12). Nonetheless, we cannot be too sanguine. The European output gap is likely to close this year and wages pressures will emerge before the end of 2022. As a result, inflation will not fall below 2% anytime soon. Moreover, as we wrote last week, any long-lasting crisis in Ukraine will prevent energy inflation from declining, and thus, there remains significant upside risk to our inflation view in the coming months.  Bottom Line: European inflation remains dominated by energy prices and imported price pressures. For now, domestic inflation dynamics are still mild, which explains why Europe’s inflation profile is much shallower than that of the US. Moreover, the near-term picture suggests that the imported inflation will peak, giving a respite to the HICP. Nonetheless, toward the yearend, domestic inflationary forces will pick up as wages gain traction. ECB Pricing: Too Much And Too Little ECB President Christine Lagarde delivered a message that was loud and clear: The ECB is abandoning its ultra-dovish stance. Despite this policy pivot, investors are pricing in too many hikes this year, whereas we only expect one rate increase toward yearend. True, if energy prices spike anew, risks to this forecast will be skewed to the upside. Nonetheless, we are inclined to fade the number of rate hikes priced in for 2022 and bet for more hikes in 2023 and 2024 (Chart 13). Chart 13Too Much Now, Not Enough Later Why does our base case only include one rate hike in December? First, we are considering the entirety of the inflation picture. As we argued above, inflationary dynamics in Europe are much tamer than those in the US, especially in terms of domestic inflation, which the ECB can influence. Moreover, the ECB is still reeling from its infamous 2011 policy mistake, which accentuated underlying deflationary pressures and caused the ECB to undershoot its mandate for eight years in a row (Chart 14). Inflation expectations also offer some leeway to the ECB. Predictions by professional forecasters continue to track below two percent for the medium term. Importantly, market-based inflation expectations remain consistent with a temporary inflation shock, and do not meet yet the ECB’s criteria of being above the 2% target durably. 10-year CPI swaps hover around 2%, driven by the jump in 2-year CPI swaps to 2.7%. Long-dated expectations approximated by the 5-year/5-year forward CPI swap remain below 2% and the inflation curve is its most inverted on record (Chart 15). Chart 15Inflation Swaps Don't Fit The ECB's Criteria Chart 14The Legacy Of The 2011 Mistake In the end, President Lagarde did mention in the press conference that inflation is finally moving toward its target after years of undershoot. In the context described above, it is likely that the ECB will continue to tolerate some higher inflation in the near term if it represses the deflationary mentality that had engulfed the Eurozone last decade and caused a progressive Japanification of the region. This is a small price to pay to exit at last the lower bound of interest rates on a durable basis. Second comes the sequencing of policy. President Lagarde reiterated the importance of the order of events. First, the ECB will have to bring asset purchases to a net zero before lifting rates. It has yet to curtail purchases. The March meeting will be of paramount importance, since it will feature the tapering schedule of the central bank. We continue to see a progressive pace of declining assets purchases that will likely end in September 2022. Moreover, the ECB will want to see how the European economy and markets will absorb the TLTRO cliff this June, when EUR1.3 trillion of facility expire. Chart 16The Italian Constraint Third, the ECB remains hamstrung by financial dynamics in the periphery. On Thursday, as Bund yields rose 10 basis points, BTP yields rose 21 basis points, bringing the Italian-German spread to 150bps, its highest level since September 2020 (Chart 16). Simply put, the periphery remains fragile because Italy and Spain sport some of the most negative output gaps in the region. Waiting for a stronger position out of those countries would let the ECB increase rates further down the road, allowing for a cleaner exit from negative policy rates in Europe. While these factors continue to favor a cautious posture by the ECB in 2022 and, therefore, support our base view of only one 10bps hike in December to be flagged when net purchases end in September, they will evolve and allow for many more hikes in 2023 and 2024. We expect the following developments to unfold: The output gaps across the region will close this year, which will put the economy in a position of strength and generate stronger domestic inflationary pressures down the road. Salaries will begin to accelerate meaningfully by the summer. This force will accentuate domestic inflationary pressures in late 2022 and 2023, and will contribute to higher household inflation expectations. The periphery will grow increasingly stronger as the Next Generation EU (NGEU) disbursements accelerate in 2022 and 2023. These disbursements are primarily geared toward infrastructure/capex spending (Chart 17) and will therefore sport elevated fiscal multipliers. The resulting strength will provide more resilience to the periphery and limit the tightening of financial conditions caused by higher interest rates. Chart 17The NGEU Will Matter… A Lot Chart 18Terminal Rates Are Too Low In the longer term, we also believe that markets still understate the ability of the ECB to lift rates. The market-derived terminal rate proxy for Europe is in the vicinity of the levels recorded in the wake of the European sovereign debt crisis last decade (Chart 18). Fiscal policy is more generous, however, and thus domestic demand is stronger. As a corollary, the accelerator model implies that capex will be more robust than it was last decade. Finally, the European Union is not as politically divided as it once was, which creates a stronger block. Together, these developments suggest that the r-star or the neutral rate of interest in the Euro Area is higher than last decade. Bottom Line: The €STR curve is pricing in the potential path of the ECB this year too aggressively. The ECB is likely to start raising rates in December, not in July. Domestic inflation and inflation expectations remain too modest, while the periphery remains fragile. Moreover, the ECB will stick to the previously decided sequence that calls for an end to net asset purchases ahead of hikes. Beyond 2022, we expect the ECB to increase rates more than what is priced into the €STR curve. Investment Implications The first implication of our view is that the European yield curve is likely to steepen further in the coming year. This is true in absolute terms but also relative to the US. We remain long European steepeners relative to US ones. Second, we continue to favor European financials. European banks are a direct equity play on higher yields and on a steeper yield curve (Chart 19). Moreover, European financials have upside relative to their US competitors. They are cheap, and they will benefit from the relative steepening in the European yield curve (Chart 20). Additionally, European monetary conditions will remain easier this year than US ones, whereas European growth will continue to catch up to the US. Chart 20Roll Over XLF Chart 19Banks Will Shine More Chart 21A Bit More Stress Third, the equity market correction might have a little more to run. In the near term, equities had become very oversold. This week’s bounce makes sense after the S&P 500’s RSI plunged below 30. However, hedge funds are not shorting the market as violently as they did in 2018, yet all the major global central banks (apart from the BoJ) are abandoning their pandemic-driven policy. As a result of the prospect of a global decline in liquidity, a retest of the 2018-lows in net exposure is likely as we approach the March Fed meeting, especially as credit spreads are still too low to cause a meaningful change in tone by the Fed (Chart 21). Thus, European stocks could experience another wave of selling in the coming weeks, especially when the risks surrounding Ukraine have yet to clear. Keep some protections in place. Finally, the euro has surged this week. With looming Ukrainian risk, the potential for a repricing downward of the near-term European policy rates and the risk of a last sell-off in equities, the euro could give up some of its recent gains and remain in a churning pattern, in place since December 2021. The uncertainty is therefore elevated for near-term traders. However, considering last week’s ECB pivot and the likelihood of an upward revision of the €STR curve for 2024 rates, long-term investors should use a pull back in the euro in the coming weeks to gain exposure to long EUR/USD. What About The BoE? Last week, the Bank of England increased rates by 25bps to 0.5%, which was a widely expected move. The BoE is naturally ahead of the ECB because inflation swaps stand at 4.3% and are even higher than those in the US. The BoE is forced to be more aggressive because inflation expectations are becoming unmoored, which raises the risk of a wage-price spiral north of the Channel. This is a legacy of years of higher inflation and of the labor-supply problems created by Brexit. Additionally, the UK is exiting Omicron lockdowns faster than the Euro Area, which accentuates its near-term economic strength. The UK is not, however, out of the woods. A perfect storm is brewing for the remainder of the year. Interest rates are set to rise sharply, energy price caps will disappear in two months, and the budget is anticipating a significant tightening in the coming quarters after taxes rise in April. This will hurt economic activity in the latter half of the year and will cause tensions in the domestic market. The tax hikes are not guaranteed and a reversal is still possible. PM Boris Johnson is currently embroiled in the so-called “Partygate” scandal and Rishi Sunak, Chancellor of the Exchequer, is seen as the most likely candidate within the Conservative Party to replace Johnson if he were to be pushed out of power by the 1922 Committee. As a colleague observed, it remains to be seen whether Sunak’s political ambitions will scuttle his fiscal rectitude. Nonetheless, the threats to UK small-cap stocks are increasing, warranting a cautious stance if the tax increases are not revoked in the coming weeks.   Mathieu Savary, Chief European Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Tactical Recommendations Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Trades
Executive Summary Inflation has broken out to 40-plus-year highs in the US and is rapidly becoming a pressing issue for major central banks around the world. Financial markets are vulnerable to upside inflation surprises, which could induce the Fed and its peers to pursue markedly less friendly monetary policy. Despite the ongoing surge in consumer and producer prices, longer-term inflation expectations remain firmly anchored at low levels. Surveys and market prices betray no concern about a lasting inflection. We have ticked a majority of the boxes on our inflation checklist, but we will remain constructive on risk assets as long as inflation expectations remain well-behaved. Long-Run Inflation Expectations Are Well Anchored Bottom Line: The Fed will only slam on the brakes if long-run inflation expectations break out, opening the door to a vicious circle in which inflation begets inflation. Risk assets will outperform this year unless expectations become unmoored. Feature We will be holding our quarterly webcasts next Monday, February 14, for clients in EMEA and the Americas and Tuesday, February 15, for Asia-Pacific clients in lieu of publishing a Weekly Report. Please join us with your questions to make it a fully interactive event. We will resume our regular publication schedule on the 21. Chart 1Inflation And The Fed Have Markets On Edge When we assembled our inflation checklist last May, the future path of consumer prices was still quite uncertain. At the time, the drivers of elevated inflation readings were concentrated in categories that had suffered the worst pandemic disruptions, like air fares, hotels, new cars, used cars, rental cars and auto insurance, and it was unclear how much upward price pressures would spread more broadly across the economy. Delta and Omicron had yet to worsen existing supply chain tangles. While inflation was sure to exceed its post-crisis levels for an extended period, it was not at all clear that it would do so by a significant margin. Now that inflation has broken out to Volcker-era highs, investors’ focus is squarely on the Fed’s response. Fears that inflation would prompt the Fed to tighten policy more and faster than previously expected underpinned the selling spasm that stretched across the last two full weeks of January (Chart 1). The equity market had moved on from the Fed outlook before Friday’s employment report pushed the 10-year yield to a new pandemic high, but it promises to be a recurring theme until the impending rate hike cycle is complete. Turning to our checklist, we contend that inflation expectations hold the key to the Fed’s reaction and that they continue to hold fast as a bulwark against the Fed adopting a war footing that would torpedo financial markets and the economy. Making A List (And Checking It Seven Times) It doesn’t take a certified market technician to confirm that inflation has broken out (Chart 2). It doesn’t take our checklist, either, though we’ve now checked seven of its twelve boxes (Table 1). Its purpose wasn’t to replace what investors could see with their own eyes but rather to augment it with a framework for assessing future inflation moves and their impact on monetary policy settings. We do not expect that the FOMC will bring the party to an abrupt end while investors, businesses and consumers remain untroubled about long-run inflation. Chart 2Breakout Table 1Inflation Checklist Though we think the Inflation Expectations boxes are the key, we make a full tour through the checklist to spotlight the data behind each line. We have ticked the Labor Supply/Utilization box, despite the still-low labor force participation rate (Chart 3, top panel) because the evidence suggests it is not going to return to its pre-pandemic level any time soon. The prime age employment-to-population ratio has made much more steady progress and is back within the range of the last three expansions, suggesting that the economy has returned to full employment with the exception of industries hit hardest by the pandemic1 (Chart 3, bottom panel). Chart 3The Economy Is Closing In On Full Employment ... Labor demand continues to soar, with nearly half of all respondents to the NFIB survey indicating that they have unfilled job openings and the Department of Labor’s job openings rate routinely setting new records (Chart 4). The combination of roaring demand and limited supply would seem to be a recipe for salary and wage growth, but it still hasn't come to pass. Though the main wage series have all picked up in nominal terms (Chart 5), the supply/demand imbalance has yet to produce compensation increases that can outpace inflation (Chart 6). Rampant concerns that wage gains will drag on corporate profit margins have yet to materialize and we leave the wage box unchecked. Chart 4... And Demand For Workers Is Still Exploding Chart 5Nominal Wage Gains Look Large, ...​​​​​​ Chart 6... But They're Lagging Inflation​​​​​​ The breakouts in the marquee core CPI (Chart 7, top panel) and PCE (Chart 7, bottom panel) indexes have captured a lot of attention, but their trimmed-mean measures have quietly overtopped their longstanding ranges as well. The trimmed-mean series, which throw out the outliers at both ends of the distribution, supported the transitory view last summer but are now confirming that the underlying pace of consumer price increases has materially quickened. Chart 7It's Not Just About The Outliers Anymore As for future inflation, our pipeline inflation indicator has eased over the last few months (Chart 8, top panel), but remains elevated and the preponderance of other cost pressure evidence keeps us from unchecking its box. Dollar strength has helped to guard against imported inflation pressures (Chart 8, bottom panel). They have been tame so far, but with inflation breaking out in Europe (Chart 9, top panel) and just about every major economy except China (Chart 9, bottom panel), rising import costs are likely to add some inflation momentum at the margin. Chart 8The Dollar's Tailwind Has Been An Inflation Headwind, ... Chart 9... But Inflation's Become A Problem Everywhere But China The Levees Are Holding Firm Although we checked six of the first eight boxes, we maintain a sanguine view about inflation’s impact on monetary policy and financial markets. Some of the boxes are more equal than others, and if we had to pick just one indicator to determine whether inflation will compel the Fed to take stern action, it would be the shape of the inflation expectations curve. Inflation begins to beget inflation when economic actors – workers, businesses, consumers and lenders – begin to expect it will linger into the future and change their behavior to align with their expectations. When inflation is expected to remain persistently high over the long term, individual workers or their unions insist on higher wages to maintain purchasing power, businesses at all points of the supply chain demand higher prices to protect their margins, consumers accelerate their big-ticket purchase decisions to get the most bang for their buck and lenders require higher nominal pro forma returns. The resulting feedback loops help inflation become entrenched in the same way that expectations of falling prices have paved the way for a deflationary mindset to grip Japan. Despite all the attention that rising prices have drawn, investors (Table 2) and households (Chart 10) continue to expect inflation to decelerate from the short term to the intermediate term, and again from the intermediate term to the long term. As long as economic actors are unconcerned about the longer-term picture, the Fed will be able to remove accommodation at a deliberate pace that will not pull the rug out from under financial markets. Table 2These Inverted Curves ... Chart 10... Are Good Omens To that end, the FOMC has heretofore limited itself to open mouth operations. Chair Powell may have talked tough at last month’s post-meeting press conference, but the committee passed on the chance to terminate the asset purchase program early. A rate hike is all but assured at the next meeting in mid-March and Powell indicated that investors should expect the Fed to move faster than the 25-basis-points(bps)-every-other-meeting pace of the last tightening cycle, but our US Bond Strategy team is inclined to bet the under on the money market’s 125-bps full-year expectation. We have checked the commentary box but are not going to check the dots box ahead of the March meeting’s update. It is further possible that the Fed’s expressed concerns about inflation will reduce the need for it to take action to combat it. We have previously cited our Global Fixed Income Strategy colleagues’ view that investors need only worry about inflation when central banks don't. One-year inflation expectations have come down considerably and intermediate- and long-term expectations have eased since late November (Chart 11), when Omicron’s emergence and the Fed’s hawkish pivot stirred concern. Omicron caused less supply-side disruption than initially feared and markets have relaxed a little now that the inflation cop is once again walking the beat. Chart 11Long-Term Expectations Stay Put, No Matter What Happens At The Short End Investment Implications Ever since the year began, we have stressed the point that tighter policy is not necessarily tight policy. Economic and market inflection points are conditioned upon the level of the fed funds rate, not its direction. Restrictive monetary policy settings are not yet in sight and we doubt that they will emerge in time to shadow risk assets’ 2022 prospects. We like the tighter-does-not-equal-tight formulation, but it obscures an important nuance. Strictly speaking, the Fed is not tightening monetary policy when it tapers its monthly asset purchases – it’s merely dialing down the level of monetary accommodation. Similarly, raising the target fed funds rate from an emergency range of 0 to ¼% two years after COVID reached the US and several months after it ceased to be an acute threat merely reduces the level of monetary stimulus. Even if the FOMC does deliver 125 bps of hikes by year end, lifting the funds rate to 1⅜%, it will still be egging on the economy because no one believes the neutral rate is 1⅜% or lower. Removing accommodation is more like easing up on the gas than squeezing the brakes. As long as inflation doesn’t scare economic participants, causing their longer-run inflation expectations to become unmoored, the Fed will be able to reduce monetary stimulus in an incremental fashion akin to applying less pressure to the gas pedal. That does not mean investors can forget about the Fed; we expect policy scares will roil financial markets off and on throughout the rest of the year. Ultimately, though, we think the elevated volatility will prove unfounded as our base case is that the Fed will not have to slam on the brakes. The steeply downward sloping inflation expectations curve suggests that it will take a lot for expectations to reset but we will be keeping an eye on it nonetheless, because uncomfortably high inflation, and the Fed’s eagerness to counter it, remains the biggest risk to our view.   Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1      Per the January Employment Situation Report, Leisure and Hospitality now accounts for nearly 60% of nonfarm payroll and 97% of private sector service employment losses since February 2020.
The January US employment report produced a massive positive surprise. Nonfarm payroll employment increased by 467 thousand – significantly above consensus estimates of 125 thousand. Average hourly earnings accelerated from 4.7% y/y to 5.7% y/y – more than…