Developed Countries
Neutral While in the previous Insight we highlighted a number of firming beverage industry operating metrics, soft drinks industrial production is still waving a yellow flag. In fact, relative output is contracting at the steepest pace in two decades (middle panel). A quick inventory check explains part of this softness. Beverage inventories continue to expand and this supply overhang will continue to weigh on output until inventory clears all channels (not shown). Finally, soft drinks stocks are trading at a 37% premium to the broad market and near the top end of the historical range. While this frothy valuation backdrop is worrisome, should earnings continue to surprise to the upside as we expect in the coming quarters then soft drink equities will grow into their pricey valuations. Bottom Line: Upgrade the S&P soft drinks index from underweight to neutral and lock profits of 5.5% since inception. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5SOFD - PEP, KO, MNST.
Neutral As we continue shifting our portfolio away from cyclical and toward defensive exposure, we are upgrading the S&P soft drinks index from underweight to neutral, locking in a relative gain of 5.5% since inception. This defensive pure-play consumer goods sub-sector sparkles during economic slumps and heightened policy uncertainty (ISM shown inverted, second panel). Despite the broad-based slowing inflation data, both the soft drinks industry’s CPI and PPI measures continue growing at a healthy pace (bottom panel). PEP and KO results reflected this rising pricing power backdrop, as both companies had success in passing these price hikes down the supply chain. Moreover, relative beverage shipments have likely troughed, and similar to overall non-discretionary sales outshining discretionary retail sales (not shown), signal that a brighter demand backdrop looms. Importantly, our beverage industry activity proxy corroborates this message pointing to a recovery in relative profit growth (third panel). However, there are a couple of thorny issues that are still keeping us at bay and preventing us from lifting exposure all the way to overweight (please see the next Insight).
This morning’s release of the manufacturing flash PMIs for July shows that the industrial sector remains under duress. Flash manufacturing PMIs in the euro area fell 1.2 to 46.4, underwhelming expectations of 47.7. In Germany, they fell 1.9 to 43.1,…
Our U.S. Bond Strategy Service also continues to observe a wide divergence between year-over-year core and trimmed mean PCE measures. If recent history repeats itself, core PCE should gradually move higher, eventually re-converging with the trimmed mean. …
The speech focused on how, when interest rates are close to the zero bound, the Fed should “act quickly to lower rates at the first sign of economic distress”. Investors interpreted this dovish speech as a signal that the Fed might be gearing up for a 50…
The EUR/CAD has reached an important technical level, and either a major breakdown or a powerful bounce will follow. With Canadian data firing on all cylinders and the euro area in the depths of a manufacturing slowdown, the cross has rightly responded to…
Overweight-Downgrade Alert Airline stocks bounced off a critical support level on the back of encouraging profit results (top panel). Lower kerosene prices especially for the non-hedged carriers are flowing straight to the bottom line and a busy travel season signals additional gains in the coming months (jet fuel shown inverted, second panel). Not only domestic, but also international airfares are rebounding smartly and signal more revenue growth for airline stocks despite the grounding of the 737 MAX jet likely into 2020 (third panel). Sell side analysts have taken notice and the industry’s net EPS revisions ratio is on a slingshot recovery. While we continue to avoid rails (see the recent Insight) and remain neutral on airfreight & logistics, airlines are a positive exception within transports. Bottom Line: Stick with an above benchmark allocation in the S&P airlines index, but stay tuned. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5AIRL - DAL, LUV, UAL, AAL and ALK.
Most of the major progressive candidates are electable – they have a popular and electoral path to the White House – as revealed by their successful head-to-head polling against Trump in battleground state opinion polling. But these pathways are narrower than…
The risks are to the downside because the market is at all-time highs and Democratic proposals include raising taxes on corporations and re-regulating the economy. Whether you accept our 55% odds of Trump reelection, the race will be a continual source of…
Highlights Monetary Policy: The Fed’s message to markets is “lower for longer” until inflation expectations are re-anchored. But that guiding principle will manifest itself in only a 25 bps rate cut this month. Beyond that, we see a good chance that July’s 25 bps rate cut could be one and done. Stay short the February 2020 fed funds futures contract. TIPS: Stay overweight TIPS versus nominal Treasury securities. Our model shows that the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is 12 bps too low, and core inflation should gradually move higher in the second half of the year. Municipal Bonds: We downgrade our recommended allocation to municipal bonds from overweight to neutral, based on valuations that have become historically expensive. We continue to recommend an overweight allocation to 20-year and 30-year Aaa munis, where yields are more reasonable. Feature Chart 1Is “Lower For Longer” Working? If nothing else, the Fed is definitely staying on message. That message being that monetary policy will remain accommodative until the “re-anchoring” of inflation expectations is complete. Case in point, from the June FOMC minutes:1 Many participants further noted that longer-term inflation expectations could be somewhat below levels consistent with the Committee’s 2 percent inflation objective, or that continued weakness in inflation could prompt expectations to slip further. These developments might make it more difficult to achieve their inflation objective on a sustained basis. And last week, from a speech delivered by New York Fed President John Williams:2 Investors are increasingly viewing these low inflation readings not as an aberration, but rather a new normal. This is evidenced by a broad-based decline in market-based measures of longer-run inflation expectations … According to Williams, the solution to the low inflation expectations problem is: First, take swift action when faced with adverse economic conditions. Second, keep interest rates lower for longer. And third, adapt monetary policy strategies to succeed in the context of low r-star and the ZLB (zero-lower bound). “Lower for longer” until inflation expectations are re-anchored. That’s the Fed’s message to markets and policymakers are going out of their way to deliver it aggressively – sometimes too aggressively (see Box on page 3). The upshot is that there is some indication it might be working. BOX July Rate Cut Will Be 25 bps, And Could Be One And Done Chart B1Short The February 2020 Fed Funds Futures Contract An interesting series of events unfolded last Thursday when New York Fed President John Williams delivered a speech titled “Living Life Near the ZLB”. The speech focused on how, when interest rates are close to the zero bound, the Fed should “act quickly to lower rates at the first sign of economic distress”. Investors interpreted this dovish speech as a signal that the Fed might be gearing up for a 50 bps rate cut this month, and prices of interest rate futures rose sharply. But within a couple hours, the New York Fed released a statement saying that Williams’ comments were made in the context of an academic speech, and had nothing to do with upcoming policy actions. The New York Fed’s clarification almost certainly means that the Fed intends to cut rates by only 25 bps in July. In fact, based on the June Summary of Economic Projections where 9 out of 17 participants saw no need for rate cuts this year and nobody called for more than 50 bps of cuts in 2019, it seems unlikely that the board could achieve consensus on more than a 25 bps cut this month. Beyond this month, if global growth improves in the second half of this year as we expect, we see high odds that the Fed might only deliver a single 25 bps rate cut in July. With that in mind we continue to recommend a short position in the February 2020 fed funds futures contract (Chart B1). That position will earn 52 bps in the event of only one rate cut over the next five FOMC meetings, 26 bps in the event of two rate cuts, and 1 bp in the event of three rate cuts. Chart 1 on page 1 shows that the 10-year Treasury yield’s recent jump was driven entirely by the compensation for inflation protection. The 10-year real yield, meanwhile, is barely off its lows. The divergence makes perfect sense. A recent spate of stronger-than-expected inflation data has lifted inflation expectations, but the Fed is signaling that it will not respond by running a tighter monetary policy. That dovish forward guidance is capping the upside in real yields. If recent history repeats itself, core PCE should gradually move higher, eventually re-converging with the trimmed mean. In this week’s report we consider the outlooks for inflation and TIPS over the remainder of the year. Inflation: Modest Upside In H2 2019 As noted above, core inflation has rebounded from the extremely low readings seen earlier in the year. In fact, month-over-month core PCE came in above the Fed’s 2% target in both April and May (Chart 2). We also continue to observe a wide divergence between year-over-year core and trimmed mean PCE measures (Chart 2, top panel). If recent history repeats itself, core PCE should gradually move higher, eventually re-converging with the trimmed mean. While we only have PCE inflation data up to May, the June core CPI print was also strong (Chart 2, bottom panel). However, a closer look reveals that the bulk of June’s increase was driven by the core good component (Chart 3). We should not expect core goods to be a major driver of U.S. inflation going forward. Imports make up a large portion of consumer goods, and import prices tend to lead fluctuations in the core goods CPI. Despite the federal government’s push toward protectionism, import prices are currently contracting. This means that any strength in the core goods CPI will be transitory. Chart 2A Rebound In Core Inflation Chart 3Core CPI Components Chart 4Shelter CPI Still Has Upside On the flipside, shelter – the largest component of core CPI – also increased in June (Chart 3, top panel), and we expect further acceleration in the second half of the year. The apartment rental vacancy rate is the main driver of shelter inflation, and it remains at a very low level despite the fact that a lot of multi-family units have been built during the past few years (Chart 4). The depressed vacancy rate suggests that the rental market is still not oversupplied, a message confirmed by the most recent reading from the National Multifamily Housing Council’s Apartment Market Tightness index (Chart 4, panel 2). This index has been above 50 for the past two months. Readings above 50 usually coincide with a falling vacancy rate. Overall, we conclude that core inflation will rise modestly in the second half of the year and that core PCE will eventually re-converge with the trimmed mean. Stronger inflation will be driven by the shelter and core services components. Any near-term strength in core goods inflation should be faded. Stay Overweight TIPS Versus Nominals We noted above that 10-year nominal yield’s recent jump was driven by the cost of inflation protection, rather than the real component. We can gain a broader perspective on the breakdown between the real and inflation components of Treasury yields by looking at the TIPS beta (Chart 5). The 10-year TIPS beta is calculated by regressing monthly changes in the 10-year TIPS yield on monthly changes in the 10-year nominal yield. It has been close to 0.6 for the past few years, meaning that a 1% move in the 10-year nominal yield can be roughly split between a 60 bps move in the real yield and a 40 bps move in the cost of inflation protection. The 10-year TIPS beta has been close to 0.6 for the past few years, meaning that a 1% move in the 10-year nominal yield can be roughly split between a 60 bps move in the real yield and a 40 bps move in the cost of inflation protection. We expect the TIPS beta to remain at or below current levels for the next few months. The TIPS beta tends to be low when long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates are well below target. This is because the Fed will usually deploy dovish forward guidance during these periods in an attempt to goose inflation. Dovish Fed guidance makes the market less likely to price-in future monetary tightening in response to better economic data. This means that a greater proportion of the change in nominal yields will be driven by inflation expectations. Eventually, once long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates move back into a “well-anchored” range between 2.3% and 2.5% (Chart 5, bottom two panels), the Fed will turn increasingly hawkish and the TIPS beta will rise. It will be some time before the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate returns to its 2.3% - 2.5% range. However, our Adaptive Expectations model suggests that the rate will move higher during the next few months (Chart 6).3 Our model considers the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate relative to the trailing 10-year rate of change in core CPI, the trailing 12-month rate of change in headline CPI and the New York Fed’s Underlying Inflation Gauge, with the trailing 10-year rate of change in core CPI being the most important variable. At present, our model pegs fair value for the 10-year breakeven at 1.93%, 12 bps above the current level. Chart 5Fed Guidance Keeps TIPS Beta Low Chart 6Adaptive Expectations Model Chart 7Inflation & Commodities Further, every monthly core CPI print that comes in above 1.83% - the current trailing 10-year rate of change – puts slight upward pressure on our model’s fair value reading. In light of current inflation trends, further upside in the 10-year breakeven rate seems likely in the second half of the year. Finally, the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate has also taken cues from oil and commodity markets in recent years (Chart 7). Our preferred broad commodity index – the CRB Raw Industrials index – remains in a tailspin, but should recover in the second half of the year alongside global growth (see section titled “Monitoring The Manufacturing Recession” below). As for oil, our commodity strategists also see upside in the second half of the year, and hold a $70/bbl price target for Brent crude.4 Bottom Line: Stay overweight TIPS versus nominal Treasury securities. Our model shows that the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is 12 bps too low, and core inflation should gradually move higher in the second half of the year. Cut Municipal Bonds To Neutral Municipal / Treasury yield ratios have tightened dramatically during the past few weeks, and municipal debt now looks quite expensive. 2-year, 5-year and 10-year Aaa-rated Municipal / Treasury yield ratios are all more than one standard deviation below average pre-crisis levels (Chart 8). Only 20-year and 30-year Aaa munis still look cheap, with yield ratios above average pre-crisis levels (Chart 8, bottom two panels). 2-year, 5-year and 10-year Aaa-rated Municipal / Treasury yield ratios are all more than one standard deviation below average pre-crisis levels. Municipal debt looks even more expensive relative to corporate credit. Chart 9 shows the average yield from the Bloomberg Barclays Investment Grade Corporate index and the yield of a Aaa muni bond with the same duration. The Muni / Corporate yield ratio is extremely stretched, and is actually close to levels that have preceded periods of strong corporate bond performance in the past. Chart 8Munis Look Expensive Chart 9Favor Corporate Credit Over Municipals Bottom Line: We downgrade our recommended allocation to municipal bonds from overweight to neutral, based on valuations that have become historically expensive. We continue to recommend an overweight allocation to 20-year and 30-year Aaa munis, where yields are more reasonable. We may be seeing the first signs that manufacturing is rebounding as we head into the third quarter. We prefer corporate credit over municipals in this environment, and note that corporate bonds tend to perform well when they are as attractively valued relative to munis as they are now. Monitoring The Manufacturing Recession Chart 10Early Signs Of A Manufacturing Rebound? Much like in 2015/16, the ongoing global growth slowdown has taken its toll on the U.S. manufacturing sector. In fact, the National ISM Manufacturing PMI fell to 51.7 in June, from a 2018 peak of 60.7. We’ve noted in prior research that, as was the case in 2016, the global manufacturing data will likely rebound now that the Fed has adopted a more dovish policy stance and China has stepped up its rate of credit growth.5 In fact, as the Regional Fed Manufacturing PMIs have come in during the past two weeks, we may be seeing the first signs that manufacturing is rebounding as we head into the third quarter (Chart 10). The New York Fed’s PMI, released July 15, rose from -8.6 to 4.3, and three days later the Philadelphia Fed’s PMI jumped from 0.3 to 21.8. Release dates for the remaining four regional Fed surveys are shown in parentheses in Chart 10, and we will be monitoring these releases closely to see if the tentative rebound observed in the New York and Philadelphia manufacturing surveys is confirmed. Stay tuned. Ryan Swift, U.S. Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomcminutes20190619.pdf 2 https://www.newyorkfed.org/newsevents/speeches/2019/wil190718 3 For more details on our Adaptive Expectations Model please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Adaptive Expectations In The TIPS Market”, dated November 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, “Weak 1H19 Oil Demand Data Fuels Market Uncertainty”, dated July 18, 2019, available at ces.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Fed’s Got Your Back”, dated June 25, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification