Economy
Highlights Economy – We agree with the Fed’s judgment that sky-high inflation readings will not last: Used-car prices won’t go up forever and neither will airline fares or hotel accommodations. Supply bottlenecks affecting the prices of a wide range of goods will eventually ease. Markets – If growth is too strong for a recession but not so strong that it forces the Fed to induce a recession, equities and spread product will outperform Treasuries: Uncertainty surrounds the post-pandemic economy, but our base case is that the US will be able to grow well above trend in 2021 and 2022 without triggering uncomfortably high inflation. Strategy – Investors should remain at least equal weight risk assets in multi-asset portfolios: A strong-growth, easy-policy backdrop is good for equities and credit and investors should maintain exposure to them in balanced portfolios. Feature The unprecedented nature of the current economic backdrop, in which a global pandemic causes the US to idle large swaths of the economy, inject previously unimaginable amounts of aid to households and businesses to help them withstand its ravages, then attempt to restart the idled elements more than a year later, allows a lot of room for interpretation. One can see just about whatever one wants to see in the incoming flow of data as it is highly uncertain how long it will take the many individual engines to hum after their switches are flipped back to ON from OFF. Investors are charged with getting ahead of moves in forward-looking markets, however, and want to know now what awaits around the bend. Amidst the flow of often contradictory data points, we strive to maintain our focus on the broad overarching trend. We continue to find the Goldilocks-and-the-Two-Tails framework helpful in keeping our eye on the ball (Figure 1). Our base case remains that the just-right strong-growth/accommodative-monetary-policy backdrop will remain in place for the balance of our three-to-twelve-month cyclical investment time frame. COVID-19’s apparent retreat in the US1 leads us to believe that the too-cold left-tail outcome, characterized by disappointingly slow growth, is increasingly unlikely (Chart 1). Figure 1Goldilocks And The Two Tails Chart 1The Pace Has Slowed, But A Lot Of Americans Are Already Vaccinated Table 1Inflation Checklist The right-tail outcome in which the economy overheats looks more probable and it is our primary concern. Overheating would bring uncomfortably high rates of consumer price inflation and we devote this week’s report to a review of our inflation checklist (Table 1). The checklist is not meant to identify the moment that inflation becomes a mortal threat to the expansion. We will not sound the alarm and adjust our asset allocation recommendations the instant that a pre-determined number of boxes are checked; it is simply meant to provide us with a systematic framework for assessing its movements and their implications for financial markets and the economy. Labor Market Indicators Chart 2Wages Are Not Yet A Hot Spot The executive summary of last week’s examination of the labor market is that we expect the factors constraining supply will ease considerably by the fall as the services sector fully reopens, in-person learning resumes for all K through 12 students and federal supplements to unemployment insurance benefits expire. Demand for workers remains robust, with the JOLTS job openings rate and the NFIB survey’s unfilled job openings series making new highs. The combination of potent demand and constrained supply is not producing wage inflation, however. The Atlanta Fed’s wage tracker, which follows the same set of employees over time, has rolled over and is now nearly a full point below its post-GFC peak (Chart 2, middle panel); the employment cost index, which also adjusts for changes in labor force composition, is rising but remains near the bottom of its pre-GFC range (Chart 2, bottom panel); and the less-sophisticated average hourly earnings series has dipped below 2% (Chart 2, top panel). Price Indexes Checking the Marquee Indexes box was a no-brainer after the core CPI and core PCE price index made new multi-year highs in May. The question going forward is whether the surge in consumer prices is a one-off or a harbinger of a lasting change. We remain in the one-off camp with the Fed, figuring that the bottlenecks that have pushed month-over-month gains in the price indexes to multi-decade highs are a function of trying to ramp up production to more normal levels after a year-plus interruption. The trimmed-mean measures of core CPI and PCE send a much less worrisome message and suggest that once the bottlenecks driving outlier price increases are resolved, the marquee measures will settle down as well (Chart 3). Chart 3Trimmed-Mean Price Indexes Are Still Well Behaved Pipeline Pressures BCA’s pipeline inflation pressure index did not let up in May (Chart 4, top panel), indicating that components like the CRB Raw Industrials Index are still pushing higher, reinforcing our Commodity and Energy Strategy team’s view that several years of tepid investment have left base metals and energy markets with supply deficits that will push prices higher into the intermediate term. The DXY index tested multi-year support at 90 but is holding above it for now (Chart 4, bottom panel), staving off the increase in import prices that could result from a technical breakdown in the dollar. There is also little direct inflation pressure coming from overseas, as consumer prices in the Eurozone and China, the two biggest economies outside of the US, remain contained (Chart 5). Chart 4Pipeline Pressures Have Not Eased, But The Dollar Staved Off An Inflationary Breakdown Chart 5China And The Eurozone Aren't Exporting Inflation Pressures To The US Yet Inflation Expectations Chart 6Markets Still Expect The Rate Of Inflation To Slow Over Time The inflation expectations curve as derived from market-based measures remains inverted, indicating that investors agree with the Fed’s transitory inflation assessment. The message is the same as it was last month when we showed the TIPS break-even and CPI swap rates for the 2-to-5- and 5-to-10-year periods, though there have been some adjustments across the segments. The 2-to-5-year segment has become more inverted (Chart 6, top and third panels), which is to say that investors expect a larger drop-off in inflation in years three, four and five versus years one and two, while the 5-to-10-year segment has become less inverted (Chart 6, second and bottom panels). The curves still point to declining long-term inflation after a near-term spike, however, as inflation is projected to fall in years 3 to 5 and then hold steady (TIPS) or rise slightly (CPI swaps) in years 6 to 10 (Table 2). We find market-based measures to be more insightful than survey measures, but we were encouraged to see the University of Michigan consumer survey data follow the same pattern. The median 1-year inflation expectation, at 4% (down 60 basis points (“bps”) from May), was 120 bps above the median 5-year inflation expectation of 2.8% (down 20 bps from May’s reading). The New York Fed’s April Survey of Market Participants had 5-year-on-5-year CPI inflation rising, albeit at a modest level that demonstrated market professionals’ inflation expectations remain well anchored. The respondents’ median forecast for the annual rate of inflation from April 2026 through March 2031 was 2.2%, slightly above their 2.1% median forecast from April 2021 through March 2026. Table 2Investors Agree That Inflation Will Be Transitory The Fed’s Reaction Function The June FOMC meeting accorded with our expectations. The post-meeting statement acknowledged the economy’s improvement as waning infections and an effective vaccination campaign have pushed the pandemic off of center stage. Meeting participants pulled their median liftoff date expectation into 2023 from 2024, aligning “the dots” more closely with financial markets and our own late-2022 view (Chart 7). They also significantly raised their 2021 inflation expectations from March, which had been trampled by the April and May CPI and PCE index releases. Chart 7Much Ado About A Modest Tweak We were therefore surprised that the meeting produced so much excitement in financial markets. Treasuries gyrated, with yields soaring across all maturities Wednesday afternoon before long-dated issues unwound most of their backup (the 10-year note) or made new multi-month lows (the 30-year bond) in Thursday’s session. Yields at the short end of the curve stayed higher as the bond market moved its liftoff date expectations forward, with the net result that the Treasury curve flattened. The dollar popped, precious metals were hammered, and the NASDAQ rose while banks took a hit. We included the Fed reaction function items in our inflation checklist as a way of highlighting that the high-inflation end game will proceed once fed funds rate hikes are directed at containing it. When we introduced the checklist last month, we wrote that we would only check the Fed boxes in the event that Fed speakers begin to telegraph a change of direction or if the dots indicated that the bias toward accommodative policy was shifting. We do not think last week’s recognition that the March Summary of Economic Projections (SEP) had gone stale in the wake of subsequent data releases constitutes a change in the Fed’s accommodative stance. As a Wall Street Journal editorial lamenting that bias (and the administration’s ambitious spending plans) put it,2 Which of the following doesn’t fit with the others? A) 7% GDP growth in 2021. B) 5% and 3.8% year-over-year increases in CPI and core CPI, respectively. C) 4.5% unemployment by year-end, on its way to 3.8% at year-end 2022. D) A near-zero fed funds rate for two more years. As long as the Fed finds a way for D) to coexist with A), C) and whatever B) turns out to be over the ensuing months as transitory inflation pressures abate, there will be no need to check our reaction function boxes. Investors won’t have any need to get overweight benchmark duration to position for a cyclical rally in Treasuries, either. Why Bother? Our US Bond Strategy colleagues have noted that the inflation-related criteria for hiking rates have been met. Year-over-year PCE inflation is above 2% and with the SEP’s median headline and core projections for 2021 PCE inflation at 3.4% and 3%, respectively, it is on track to exceed 2% for some time. If the Fed abides by the specific guidance it has repeatedly outlined, the beginning of the next rate-hiking cycle will depend on the state of the labor market. An investor who wants to position for the cyclical inflection in Treasury yields will be best served by anticipating the path of nonfarm payrolls. We will continue to keep tabs on our inflation checklist, however, because inflation is an important tail risk. We are asked about it in every meeting and it is a hot topic in the general media as well. If households, businesses and investors were to become convinced that a new worrisome inflation regime had begun, financial markets and the economy would be roiled. Even though such a scenario lies outside of our base case, we will track it and think about how to navigate it on the general principle that we would rather be ready than have to get ready. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The 7-day averages of new cases and deaths have fallen all the way to their late March 2020 levels. 2https://www.wsj.com/articles/no-inflation-worries-at-the-fed-11623883322 Accessed June 17, 2021.
Highlights Tactically downgrade cyclical equities from overweight in Europe. The shift in global growth drivers, the beginning of the global liquidity withdrawal, and lingering COVID worries create headwinds for the cyclicals-to-defensives ratio this summer. Weaker global inflation expectations, commodity prices, and a dollar rebound will accompany this period of turbulence. The relative technical and valuation backdrop will also contribute to this period. Short consumer discretionary / long telecommunication is a high-octane version of the trade. Short technology / long healthcare is its lower-risk / lower-reward cousin. This temporary portfolio shift is a risk management move to capitalize on our positive 18- to 24- month view on cyclicals. Feature Last week, we recommended investors adopt a more defensive tactical posture. They should raise cash and shift into defensive quality names in order to weather a summer replete with potential downside risk. This will place investors in a good position to shift back into a more aggressive stance this fall, when cyclical sectors should resume their outperformance. This week, we explore this idea in more detail. The combination of a Chinese credit slowdown, a potential transition in the driver of growth away from goods into services, and a shift in tone from global central banks will feed the expected market volatility this summer. European defensive stocks are set to outperform during this period. Buying telecommunication equities / selling consumer discretionary stocks is a high octane bet on this trend, while going long healthcare / short technology shares is its low-risk incarnation. Summer Storms This summer, three forces will feed some downside risk in the market and, more specifically, an underperformance of cyclical sectors relative to defensive ones: a transition in global growth, preliminary signs that global central banks will begin to take away the punch bowl, and disappointments caused by COVID variants. Growth Transition The global economy is set to cool down as we transition away from the first stage of the post-pandemic recovery. As we showed last week, China’s deteriorating credit impulse is consistent with global industrial activity receding from its extremely robust pace of expansion (Chart 1). The continued decline in China’s banking system excess reserve ratio suggests that total social financing flows will slow further. Consequently, China’s intake of raw materials and industrial goods will decelerate, which will impact global industrial activity negatively. Already, the New Orders component of China’s Manufacturing PMI has rolled over. The disappointment of Chinese retail sales last week further indicates that China will act as a drag on global growth in the coming quarters. We have also highlighted that the combined effect of higher yields and oil prices has become strong enough to alter negatively the path of global industrial activity going forward. Our Global Growth Tax indicator, which includes both variables, shows that the US ISM Manufacturing survey and the global manufacturing PMI have reached their apex and will moderate this summer (Chart 2). Chart 1The China Drag Chart 2Rising Costs Bite The problem for global growth is one of changing leadership. Global economic activity is not about to collapse, but the extraordinary surge in goods consumption that started in 2020 will make room for a catch-up in the service sector. As an example, US retail sales stand 15% above their pre-pandemic trends; however, services spending still lies 7% below its pre-pandemic tendency (Chart 3). Thus, as summer progresses, the recent deceleration in consumer spending on goods will continue and services will progressively pick up the slack. The change in growth leadership will cause some temporary trepidation in global economic activity, because it is happening when the effect of both the Chinese credit slowdown and the previous increase in yields and oil will be most potent. As a result, we expect the G-10 Economic Surprises Index to follow that of China and experience an air pocket this summer (Chart 4). Chart 3From Goods To Services Chart 4Where China Goes, So Will The G-10 The Chaperone Is On The Way More than 65 years ago, former Fed Chair William McChesney Martin noted that the job of central bankers was to be “the chaperone who has ordered the punch bowl removed just as the party was really warming up.” Chart 5The Chaperone Is Waking Up Today, the party is a rager, and central bankers are indicating that they will remove the punch bowl soon. Real estate speculation is worrying the Bank of Canada, and its balance sheet has already shrunk by C$99 billion, to C$476 billion. The Norges Bank has indicted that it will lift interest rates twice this year. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand is set to lift the Official Cash Rate soon. The Bank of England has begun to adjust its asset purchases and could begin a full-fledge tapering this year. The 800-pound gorilla is the Fed, which telegraphed more clearly last week its intention to raise rates twice in 2023, and therefore moved closer to the pricing of the OIS curve (Chart 5). Implied in this forecast, the Fed will start tapering its asset purchase in early 2022 at the latest. This change in tone by global central banks is not a major problem for the business cycle – global rates are still far below any reasonable estimates of the neutral rate of interest, but periods of transition in monetary policy are often associated with transitory market turbulences. This time will not be an exception, especially because it is happening when global growth is downshifting. Delta, Gamma, Epsilon, etc? Chart 6Depressed Macro Volatility With the rapid progress of vaccination, the worst of the COVID tragedy is behind us. Nonetheless, the pandemic is not yet fully in the rear-view mirror, not even in the Western nations that lead the global inoculation campaign. SARS-CoV-2 continues to evolve and will therefore produce new variants over time, some of which will be problematic. The UK illustrates this phenomenon. The government has postponed the so-called Freedom Day, when life returns to normal, by five weeks despite the country’s high vaccination rate. The Delta variant is significantly increasing among the unvaccinated and not fully inoculated Britons. Many countries will also face this problem. These delays will be minor and will not threaten national recoveries. However, they will feed market tensions in a context where global macro volatility is low (Chart 6), global growth is already peaking, and monetary accommodation is receding. Global Market Implications… The confluence of the change in global economic growth leadership, the upcoming liquidity removal, and the potential for short-lived delays to the global economic re-opening point toward a decline in global inflation expectations, a rebound in the US dollar, weaker commodity prices, and an underperformance of global cyclical relative to defensive equities. Over the coming months, inflation breakeven rates are likely to soften, while real yields will rise modestly. In May, US inflation breakeven rates peaked near 2.6%, their highest level in ten years. A weaker global growth impulse in combination with a Fed that is more willing to remove some monetary accommodation will cool inflationary fears among investors and cause inflation expectations to decline further. However, the specter of tighter policy will also support TIPS yields. Bond yields are likely to correct somewhat more over the summer. Bond prices have not yet fully purged their oversold conditions (Chart 7); thus, a decrease in inflation expectations will temporarily support Treasury prices, even if real yields do not fall. Recent market action is moving in this direction. Last week, by Thursday evening, 10-year Treasury yields had already lost their 9 bps rise that followed Wednesday’s FOMC meeting. 30-year Treasury yields have plunged to a four-month low. Bund yields are unable to hang on to their gains either. The dollar has more upside this summer. Higher real US yields offer a potent backing for a DXY that still refuses to drop below 89. Moreover, the greenback is a highly counter-cyclical currency and is particularly sensitive to the gyrations in the global industrial cycle. Thus, the deceleration in the global manufacturing cycle will create a temporary tailwind for the greenback. Over the past three years, the gap between US TIPS yields and the Chinese Economic Surprise index explained the fluctuation of the DXY; it currently points toward a continued rebound in the USD (Chart 8). Even if this move is ephemeral, it will have implications for investors this summer. Chart 7Technical Backdrop For Bonds Chart 8Near-Term Upside For The DXY Commodities will also suffer. Natural resource prices have rallied in a parabolic fashion and our Composite Technical Indicator is massively overbought (Chart 9). Meanwhile, Chinese authorities are verbally jawboning industrial metal prices and have begun to release copper, zinc, aluminum, and nickel from their stockpiles. In this context, the Chinese credit slowdown and the imminent removal of monetary accommodation in various corners of the globe will catalyze a correction in commodities, even if a new supercycle has begun. The recent travails of lumber prices, which have collapsed 47% since May 7 (while they still remain in technical bull market!), may constitute a canary in the coalmine for the wider commodity complex. Global cyclical equities have greater downside against their defensive counterparts. US markets are global trendsetters; while the S&P cyclicals have lost some altitude compared to defensives, they have yet to purge their oversold state and remain very expensive (Chart 10). This backdrop makes them vulnerable to slowing Chinese import growth, a stronger dollar, and weaker commodity prices. Chart 9Will The GSCI Follow Lumber? Chart 10Vulnerable Global Cyclicals … And European Investment Implications Chart 11European Cyclicals Are Also At Risk The European cyclicals-to-defensives ratio is vulnerable, like it is in the US. Hence, a more defensive portfolio bias makes sense for the summer, which should allow investors to regain maximum cyclical exposure later this year. Short consumer discretionary / long telecommunications and short technology / long healthcare are pair trades with particularly attractive risk profiles. The cyclicals-to-defensives ratio is technically unattractive. The relative share prices stand toward the top of their 16-year trading range (Chart 11). Moreover, their 52-week momentum measure is rolling over at a highly elevated level, while the 13-week rate of change is deteriorating. Meanwhile, the Combined Mechanical Valuation Indicator1 (CMVI) of the cyclicals towers far above that of the defensives and is consistent with a corrective episode (Chart 11, bottom panel). The drivers of the performance of Eurozone cyclical relative to defensive sectors confirm that cyclicals could suffer a turbulent summer. For instance: The potential for further declines in global yields does not bode well for the European cyclicals-to-defensives ratio (Chart 12). Weaknesses in market-based inflation expectations would prove particularly threatening (Chart 12, bottom panel). The deceleration in China’s total social financing flows anticipates an underperformance of European cyclicals (Chart 13). As China’s credit decelerates, so will the earnings revisions of cyclical equities. Moreover, a weaker Chinese TSF is consistent with falling Treasury yields. Chart 12Lower Inflation Expectations Equals Underperforming Cyclicals Chart 13Cyclicals Listen To China The potential for weaker commodity prices is another problem for European cyclical equities (Chart 14). Commodities capture the ebb and flow of global growth sentiment, which is also a driver of the earnings revisions of cyclicals relative to defensives. Moreover, commodity prices greatly affect the earnings of cyclical equities. Unsurprisingly, the momentum of the European cyclicals-to-defensives ratio correlates closely with the BCA Commodity Composite Technical Indicator (Chart 14, bottom panel). Cyclicals perform poorly when the dollar appreciates. The Eurozone’s cyclicals-to-defensives ratio moves in lock-step with the euro and high-beta cyclical currencies (Chart 15). These relationships reflect the counter-cyclicality of the dollar, as well as the negative effect on global financial conditions of its rallies, and thus, on the earnings outlook for cyclicals. Chart 14Beware The Impact Of Weaker Commodities Chart 15A Strong Dollar Hurts European Cyclicals Chart 16Short Consumer Discretionary And Long Telecommunication Based on these observations, we are tactically downgrading cyclicals from our overweight stance for the summer, despite our conviction that cyclicals have upside on an 18- to 24-month basis. We look at this move as risk management. For investors looking to bet on a potential underperformance of cyclical equities in Europe, we recommend two positions: a high-octane pair trade and a lower-risk one. The high-octane version is to sell consumer discretionary stocks and buy telecommunications ones (Chart 16). This pair trade is exposed to lower yields, lower inflation expectations, and the shift in growth drivers from China and goods consumption to services expenditures. Additionally, the relative 52-week momentum measure is overextended, while the 13-week rate of change is already sagging. The CMVI of the consumer discretionary sector is extremely elevated, while that of telecommunication stocks is the most depressed of any Eurozone sector. Consequently, the gap between the two sectors’ CMVI stands at nearly three-sigma, which is concerning because the RoE of consumer discretionary shares lies 7% below that of the telecoms industry (Chart 16, third and fourth panel). Because higher RoEs should justify higher valuations, consumer discretionary and telecommunication stand out as the greatest outliers among European sectors (Chart 17). As an added benefit, this trade enjoys a positive dividend carry of more than 2.5%. Chart 17Spot The Outliers Chart 18Short Technology And Long Healthcare The low octane pair trade is to sell technology stocks and buy healthcare names instead. This position offers lower expected returns but also a lower risk, because both sectors are growth stocks and they will benefit from falling yields and inflation expectations. However, based on their respective CMVI, tech equities are much more expensive than healthcare ones (Chart 18), while they are also extremely overbought. Thus, healthcare should benefit more from falling yields and inflation expectations than tech. Moreover, technology is a more cyclical sector than healthcare; it will therefore be more sensitive to the evolution of global growth. Bottom Line: We remain positive on the outlook for cyclical equities on an 18- to 24-month horizon, but the changing global growth leadership, the imminent removal of global monetary accommodation, and the demanding valuation and technical backdrop of the European cyclicals-to-defensives ratio suggest that a period of turbulence will materialize this summer. Thus, we are tactically downgrading cyclicals. Investors should consider going long telecommunications / short consumer discretionary as a high-octane tactical bet on this portfolio stance. Buying healthcare / selling technology would constitute a lower risk / lower return play. Mathieu Savary, Chief European Investment Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 For a detailed explanation of the Combined Mechanical Valuation Indicator, see Special Report, “Valuation – A Mechanical Approach,” dated May 31, 2021. Currency Performance Fixed Income Performance Government Bonds Corporate Bonds Equity Performance Major Stock Indices Geographic Performance Sector Performance
UK retail sales declined unexpectedly in May. The headline number fell 1.4% m/m following a 9.2% m/m jump in April, disappointing expectations of a deceleration to 1.5%. Similarly, sales excluding auto fuel were down 2.1% m/m from 9.1% m/m, versus an…
According to BCA Research’s Geopolitical Strategy service, the macro and geopolitical outlook is darkening for China’s communist party. The “East Asian miracle” phase of Chinese growth has ended. Potential GDP growth is slowing and it will be harder for…
Dear Client, Next week, instead of our regular report, we will be sending you a Special Report from BCA Research’s MacroQuant tactical global asset allocation team. Titled “MacroQuant: A Quantitative Solution For Forecasting Macro-Driven Financial Trends,” this white paper will discuss the purpose, coverage, and methodology of the MacroQuant model. I hope you will find the report insightful. We will be back the following week with the GIS Quarterly Strategy Outlook, where we will explore the major trends that are set to drive financial markets for the rest of 2021 and beyond. We will also be holding a webcast on Thursday, July 8 at 10:00 AM EDT (3:00 PM BST, 4:00 PM CEST, 10:00 PM HKT) to discuss the outlook. Best regards, Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist Highlights Although the Fed delivered a hawkish surprise on Wednesday, monetary policy is likely to remain highly accommodative for the foreseeable future. We continue to see high US inflation as a long-term risk rather than a short-term problem. Outside of a few industries, wage inflation remains well contained. In those industries suffering from labor shortages, the expiration of emergency unemployment benefits, increased immigration, and the opening up of schools should replenish labor supply. Bottlenecks in the global supply chain are starting to ease. Many key input prices have already rolled over, suggesting that producer price inflation has peaked and is heading down. A slowdown in Chinese credit growth could weigh on metals prices during the summer months, which would further temper inflationary pressures. We are downgrading our view on US TIPS from overweight to neutral. Owning bank shares is a cheaper inflation hedge. Look Who’s Talking The Fed jolted markets on Wednesday after the FOMC signaled it may raise rates twice in 2023. Back in March, the Fed projected no hikes until 2024 (Chart 1). Chart 1Fed Forecasts Converge Toward Market Expectations Seven of 18 committee members expected lift-off as early as 2022, up from four in March. Only five participants expected the Fed to start raising rates in 2024 or later, down from 11 previously. The Fed acknowledged recent upward inflation surprises by lifting its forecast of core PCE inflation to 3.4% for 2021 compared with the March projection of 2.4%. These forecast revisions bring the Fed closer to market expectations, although the latter are proving to be a moving target. Going into the FOMC meeting, the OIS curve was pricing in 85 bps of rate tightening by the end of 2023. At present, the market is pricing in about 105 bps of tightening. At his press conference, Chair Powell acknowledged that FOMC members had discussed scaling back asset purchases. “You can think of this meeting as the ‘talking about talking about’ meeting,” he said. A rate hike in 2023 would imply the start of tapering early next year. The key question for investors is whether this week’s FOMC meeting marks the first of many hawkish surprises from the Fed. We do not think it does. As Chair Powell himself noted, the dot-plot is “not a great forecaster of future rate moves,” before adding that “Lift-off is well into the future.” Ultimately, a major monetary tightening cycle would require that inflation remain stubbornly high. As we discuss below, while there are good reasons to think that the US economy will eventually overheat, the current bout of inflation is indeed likely to be “transitory.” This implies that bond yields are unlikely to rise into restrictive territory anytime soon, which should provide continued support to stocks. Inflation: A Long-Term Risk Rather Than A Short-Term Problem Chart 2Globalization Plateaued More Than A Decade Ago There are plenty of reasons to worry that US inflation will eventually move persistently higher. As we discussed in a recent report, many of the structural factors that have suppressed inflation over the past 40 years are reversing direction: Globalization is in retreat: The ratio of global trade-to-manufacturing output has been flat for over a decade (Chart 2). Looking out, the ratio could even decline as more companies shift production back home in order to gain greater control over unruly global supply chains. Baby boomers are leaving the labor force en masse. As a group, baby boomers control more than half of US wealth (Chart 3). They will continue to run down their wealth once they retire. However, since they will no longer be working, they will no longer contribute to national output. Continued spending against a backdrop of diminished production could be inflationary. Chart 3Baby Boomers Have Accumulated A Lot Of Wealth Despite a pandemic-induced bounce, underlying productivity growth remains disappointing (Chart 4). Slow productivity growth could cause aggregate supply to fall short of aggregate demand. Social stability is in peril, as exemplified by the recent dramatic increase in the US homicide rate. In the past, social instability and higher inflation have gone hand in hand (Chart 5). Chart 4Trend Productivity Growth Has Been Disappointing Chart 5Historically, Social Unrest And Higher Inflation Move In Lock-Step Perhaps most importantly, policymakers are aiming to run the economy hot. A tight labor market will lift wage growth (Chart 6). Not only could higher wage growth push up inflation through the usual “cost-push” channel, but by boosting labor’s share of income, a tight labor market could spur aggregate demand. Despite these structural inflationary forces, history suggests that it will take a while – perhaps another two-to-four years – for the US economy to overheat to the point that persistently higher inflation becomes a serious risk. Consider the case of the 1960s. While the labor market reached its full employment level in 1962, it was not until 1966 – when the unemployment rate was a full two percentage points below NAIRU – that inflation finally took off (Chart 7). Chart 6A Tight Labor Market Eventually Bolsters Wages Chart 7Inflation Started Accelerating Quickly Only When Unemployment Reached Very Low Levels In The 1960s In May, 4.4% fewer Americans were employed than in January 2020 (Chart 8). The employment-to-population ratio for prime-aged workers stood at 77.1%, 3.4 percentage points below its pre-pandemic level (Chart 9). Chart 8US Employment Still More Than 4% Below Pre-Pandemic Levels Chart 9Prime-Age Employment-To-Population Ratio Remains Below Pre-Pandemic Levels A Labor Market Puzzle Admittedly, if one were to ask most companies if they were finding it easy to hire suitable workers, one would hear a resounding “no.” According to the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), 48% of firms reported difficulty in filling vacant positions in May, the highest share in the 46-year history of the survey (Chart 10). Chart 10US Labor Market Shortages (I) Chart 11US Labor Market Shortages (II) Nationwide, the job openings rate reached a record high of 6% in April, up from 4.5% in January 2020. The share of workers quitting their jobs voluntarily – a measure of worker confidence – also hit a record of 2.7% (Chart 11). How can we reconcile the apparent tightness in the labor market with the fact that employment is still well below where it was at the outset of the pandemic? Four explanations stand out. First, unemployment benefits remain extremely generous. For most low-wage workers, benefits exceed the pay they received while employed. It is not surprising that labor shortages have been most pronounced in sectors such as leisure and hospitality where average wages are relatively low (Chart 12). The good news for struggling firms is that the disincentive to working will largely evaporate by September when enhanced unemployment benefits expire. Chart 12Labor Scarcity Prevalent In Low-Wage Sectors Chart 13School Closures Have Curbed Labor Supply Second, lingering fears of the virus and ongoing school closures continue to depress labor force participation. Chart 13 shows that participation rates have recovered less for mothers with young children than for other demographic groups. This problem will also fade away by the fall when schools reopen. Third, the number of foreign workers coming to the US fell dramatically during the pandemic. State Department data show that visas dropped by 88% in the nine months between April and December of last year compared to the same period in 2019 (Chart 14). President Biden revoked President Trump’s visa ban in February, which should pave the way for renewed migration to the US. Chart 14US Migrant Worker Supply Is Depressed Chart 15The Pandemic Accelerated Early Retirement Fourth, about 1.5 million more workers retired during the pandemic than one would have expected based on the pre-pandemic trend (Chart 15). Most of these workers were near retirement age anyway. Thus, there will likely be a decline in new retirements over the next couple of years before the baby boomer exodus described earlier in this report resumes in earnest. Other Input Prices Set To Ease Just as labor shortages in a number of industries will ease later this year, some of the bottlenecks gripping the global supply chain should also diminish. The prices of various key inputs – ranging from lumber, steel, soybeans, corn, to DRAM prices – have rolled over (Chart 16). This suggests that producer price inflation for manufactured goods, which hit a multi-decade high of 13.5% in May – has peaked and is heading lower. Chart 16Input Prices Have Rolled Over The jump in prices largely reflected one-off pandemic effects. For example, rental car companies, desperate to raise cash at the start of the pandemic, liquidated part of their fleets. Now that the US economy is reopening, they have found themselves short of vehicles. With fewer rental vehicles hitting the used car market, households flush with cash, and new vehicle production constrained by the global semiconductor shortage, both new and used car prices have soared. Vehicle prices have essentially moved sideways since the mid-1990s (Chart 17). Thus, it is doubtful that the recent surge in prices represents a structural break. More likely, prices will come down as supply increases. According to a recent report from Goldman Sachs, auto production schedules already imply an almost complete return to January output levels in June. Chart 17Vehicle Prices Have Essentially Moved Sideways Since The Mid-1990s Chart 18Rebounding Pandemic-Affected Services Prices Are Pushing Up Overall CPI As Chart 18 shows, more than half of the increase in consumer prices in April and May can be explained by higher vehicle prices, along with a rebound in pandemic-affected service prices (airfares, hotels, and event admissions). Outside those sectors, the level of the CPI remains below its pre-pandemic trend (Chart 19). Chart 19Unwinding Of "Base Effects" Chart 20"Supercore" Inflation Measures Remain Well Contained More refined measures of underlying inflation such as the trimmed-mean CPI, median CPI, and sticky price CPI are all running well below their official core CPI counterpart (Chart 20). While certain components of the CPI basket, such as residential rental payments, are likely to exhibit higher inflation in the months ahead, others such as vehicle and food prices will see lower inflation, and perhaps even outright deflation. Slower Chinese Credit Growth Should Temper Commodity Inflation Chart 21Chinese Credit Growth And Metal Prices Move Together Chinese credit growth and base metals prices are strongly correlated (Chart 21). We do not expect the Chinese authorities to embark on a new deleveraging campaign. Credit growth has already fallen back to 11%, which is close to the prior bottom reached in late-2018. Nevertheless, to the extent that changes in Chinese credit growth affect commodity prices with a lag of about six months, metals prices could struggle to maintain altitude over the summer months. China’s plan to release metal reserves into the market could further dampen prices. We remain short the global copper ETF (COPX) relative to the global energy ETF (IXC) in our trade recommendations. The trade is up 18.4% since we initiated on May 27, 2021. We will close this trade if it reaches our profit target of 30%. Bank Shares Are A Better Hedge Against Inflation Than TIPS We have been overweight TIPS in our view matrix. However, with 5-year/5-year forward breakevens trading near pre-pandemic levels, any near-term upside for inflation expectations is limited (Chart 22). As such, we are downgrading TIPS from overweight to neutral in our fixed-income recommendations. Investors looking to hedge inflation risk should consider bank shares. Our baseline view is that the 10-year Treasury yield will rise to about 1.9% by the end of the year. If inflation fails to come down as fast as we anticipate, bond yields would increase even more than that. Chart 23 shows that banks almost always outperform the S&P 500 when bond yields are rising. Chart 22Limited Near-Term Upside For Inflation Expectations Chart 23Bank Shares Thrive in A Rising Yield Environment Banks are also cheap. US banks trade at 12.2-times forward earnings compared with 21.9-times for the S&P 500. Non-US banks trade at 10-times forward earnings compared to 16.4-times for the MSCI ACW ex-US index. Finally, we like gold as a long-term inflation hedge. We would go long gold in our structural trade recommendations if the price were to fall to $1700/ounce. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist pberezin@bcaresearch.com Global Investment Strategy View Matrix Special Trade Recommendations Current MacroQuant Model Scores
Singapore trade data is flagging a small warning about the state of the global manufacturing cycle. The country’s non-oil domestic exports (NODX) declined 0.1% m/m in May, disappointing expectations of a 4.5% m/m increase. On a year-over-year basis, NODX is…
Based on the reaction of financial markets, Wednesday’s FOMC meeting produced an unquestionably hawkish surprise for financial markets. US Treasuries sold off, the US dollar strengthened, and gold fell. However, equity moves were significantly more muted. The…