Monetary
Listen to a short summary of this report. Executive Summary Tighter Financial Conditions May Affect Growth It is still possible that equities can outperform bonds over the next 12 months, but the risks to this are rising. Inflation may surprise further to the upside, amid rising commodity prices, pushing the Fed to tighten aggressively. Tighter financial conditions augur badly for growth (see Chart). We cut our recommendation for global equities to neutral and increase our allocation to cash. We continue to prefer the lower-beta US stock market over the euro zone and Emerging Markets. We are overweight defensive and structural growth sectors: Healthcare, Consumer Staples, IT and Industrials. Government bond yields have limited upside from here to year-end. We are neutral duration. US high-yield bonds are attractive: They are pricing in a big rise in defaults this year, which we see as unlikely. Recommendation Changes Bottom Line: Rising uncertainty warrants a more defensive stance. Prudent investors should have only a benchmark weight in equities, and look for other hedges against downside risk. Overview Recommended Allocation Rather like Arnold Toynbee’s definition of history, markets in the past few months have been hit by “just one damned thing after another”. But, despite war in Ukraine, big upward surprises to inflation, and a swift aggressive turn by the Fed, global equities are only 6% off their all-time high. It is still possible that equities may outperform bonds over the next 12 months and that the global economy will avoid recession (Chart 1). But the risks to this are rising. We recommend, therefore, that prudent investors reduce their equity holdings to benchmark weight and generally have somewhat defensive portfolio positioning. We put the money raised from going neutral on equities into cash, not bonds. What are the risks? Inflation could surprise further to the upside. Inflation has spread beyond a few pandemic-related items to goods where prices are usually sticky (Chart 2). There are now clear signs that price rises are feeding through to wage increases in the US, UK and Canada – though not yet in the euro area, Japan or Australia (Chart 3). The supply response that we expected to see emerge later this year may be delayed because of Covid lockdowns in China and disruptions in supply from Russia and Ukraine (Chart 4). Consensus forecasts for US core PCE inflation see it coming down to 2.5% by next year. The risk is that it could exceed that. The Fed has got way behind the curve. In retrospect, it should have raised rates last summer – and it now understands its error. Its first hike this cycle came only when the economy had already overheated (Chart 5). The Fed may, therefore, be tempted to get rates up very quickly – something the futures market is now pricing in, since it implies that the year-end Fed Funds Rate will be 2.5%. An aggressive Fed cycle – propelled by inflation fears – is not a good environment for risk assets. Chart 1Can Stocks Keep On Outperforming Bonds? Chart 2Even Sticky Prices Are Now Rising Chart 3Price Rises Feeding Through To Wages In Some Regions Chart 4Supply Chains Remain Disrupted Financial conditions had already tightened before the Fed hiked because of higher long-term rates, widening credit spreads, and a strengthening dollar. The Goldman Sachs Financial Conditions Index points to the ISM Manufacturing Index falling below 50 later this year (Chart 6). That is the level that historically has been the dividing line between stocks outperforming bonds year-over-year (Chart 7). In particular, the sharp rise in long-term rates (the US 10-year Treasury yield has risen by 110 BPs, and the German yield by 93 BPs over the past seven months) could start to put some pressure on housing markets (Chart 8). Chart 5The Fed Hiked Too Late Chart 6Tighter Financial Conditions May Affect Growth Chart 7Will PMIs Fall Below 50? Chart 8Rising Rates Might Dampen The Housing Market The war in Ukraine is unlikely to be a risk in itself. BCA Research’s geopolitical strategists think it very improbable that the conflict will spill beyond the borders of Ukraine – though there remains tail risk of a mistake. But the war is having a big impact on energy prices, especially electricity prices in Europe (Chart 9). The oil price could remain high while Russian oil, which used to be consumed in Europe, is diverted elsewhere. Our Commodity & Energy Strategy service expects that increased supply from OPEC members will bring Brent crude down to around $90 a barrel by year-end. But, as our Client Question on page 14 details, that calculation relies on many assumptions, and the risk is that the oil price stays high. A doubling of the oil price year-on-year (which currently equates to $120/barrel) has historically often been followed by recession (Chart 10). Chart 9Europe's Electricity Prices Have Soared Chart 10Oil Price Is Close To The Risk Level China has been easing fiscal and monetary policy. But it is questionable how effective its stimulus will be this time. Confidence in the real estate market remains damaged. And the pick-up in credit growth has been limited to local government bond issuance; there is little sign that the private sector has appetite to borrow (Chart 11). Already some of these risks are affecting economic data. Consumer confidence has collapsed, presumably because of the rising cost of living (Chart 12). Although US activity indicators such as the manufacturing ISM remain elevated (see Chart 6 above), data in Europe is showing notable weakness (Chart 13). Chart 11China's Stimulus Not Helping The Private Sector Chart 12Consumer Confidence Has Been Hit The yield curve is also getting close to signaling recession. There has been much debate of late about which yield curve to use, with Fed Chair Jerome Powell arguing for the 3-month/3-month 18-month forward curve, rather than the more usual 2/10 year or 3 month/10 year curves (Chart 14). The 2/10 is close to inverting, while the others are still a long way away. All measures of the yield curve have historically given reliable recession signals; the difference is simply a matter of timing, with the 2/10 giving the longest lead time.1 If the Fed ends up tightening as much as it intends, all the yield curves will likely invert within the next year or so. Chart 13European Data Starting To Weaken Chart 14It Depends On Which Yield Curve You Look At And, despite all these warning signals, forecasts for economic and earnings growth have not been revised down much. Economists still expect 3.4-3.5% real GDP growth in the US and euro zone this year, well above trend (Chart 15). And, despite the drop in GDP forecasts, earnings forecasts have actually been revised up since the start of the year, with analysts now expecting 9.6% EPS growth in the US and 8.2% in the euro zone (Chart 16). Chart 15GDP Growth Is Still Expected To Be Above Trend... Chart 16...And Earnings Have Not Been Revised Down At All This all seems too much uncertainty for most asset allocators to want to stay fully risk-on. There are valid arguments that equities and other risk assets can continue to perform (which we outline in the following section, Risks To Our View). But the risks have shifted enough since the start of the year that a more defensive stance is now warranted. Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com Risks To Our View Chart 17Fed Feedback Loop Back In Action? Since our main scenario is somewhat cautious – and sentiment towards risk assets pretty pessimistic – we need to consider what could cause upside surprises to the economy and market. The most likely would be if the Fed were to turn more dovish. But the main trigger for this would be if the stock market fell sharply or growth showed clear signs of slowing – which would obviously be negative for stocks first. This scenario could produce the sort of Fed feedback loop we saw in 2015-17, when tightening financial conditions caused the Fed to ease back on rate hikes (Chart 17). More benign would be a gradual easing of inflation over the summer which would mean that the Fed could eventually hike a little less than the market currently expects. The economy may also not be as vulnerable to higher energy prices and higher rates as we fear. Food and energy are now a much smaller part of the consumption basket than they were in the 1970s (Chart 18). Rates may have a limited impact on the housing market, given the low inventory of new houses, strong household formation, and the fact that, in the US at least, some 90% of mortgages are 30-year fixed rate. Consumers continue to hold large amounts of excess savings – more than $2 trillion in the US alone. This should keep retail sales growth strong, though there might be some shift from spending on goods to spending on services as Covid fears recede (Chart 19). Chart 18Consumers Are Less Sensitive To Food And Energy Prices... Chart 19...And So May Keep On Spending Other upside risks include: A ceasefire and settlement in Ukraine (unlikely soon, since Russia will not withdraw without taking over Crimea and the Donbass, something Ukraine could not accept); more aggressive stimulus in China (possible, but only if Chinese growth weakened much further); and a sharp fall in the oil price caused by new supply coming onto the market from Saudi Arabia and North American shale fields, and possibly also Iran and Venezuela. What Our Clients Are Asking What Is The Risk Of Stagflation? Chart 20The Combination Of High Inflation And High Unemployment Was The Key Problem In The 1970s Several clients have asked about the risk of stagflation, and how the current episode compares to the 1970s. We can begin by dispelling some myths about the 1970s. There is a notion that this was a decade of poor growth for the US. That is simply not true. Real GDP grew by a solid 3.3% annual rate during the 1970s, higher than in any post-WW2 decade other than the 1990s and the 1960s (Chart 20, panel 1). The underlying problem during the 1970s was the combination of high inflation and a poor labor market. Despite solid growth, the unemployment rate kept grinding higher as inflation was increasing, never dropping below 4.5% even at the peaks of the expansions (Chart 20, panel 2). This situation went against the commonly held belief that it was not possible for both these variables to remain high at the same time for an extended period. With the economy plagued by both high inflation and high unemployment, the Fed faced a difficult dilemma: Keep interest rates too high and the already weak labor market would worsen; keep interest rates too low and inflation would spiral out of control. Throughout the decade, the Fed chose the latter option, causing inflation expectations to become unmoored. Chart 21Demographic Shocks And The Structure Of The Labor Force Led To A Weak Labor Market Why was there so much slack in the labor market? Demographics were one of the main culprits. The entrance of baby boomers into the workforce dramatically increased the pool of workers. At the same time, prime-age female participation rose at the fastest pace on record, adding additional supply to the labor force (Chart 21, panel 1). The structure of the labor market also played a key role. Almost a third of employees belonged to a union and most of their salaries were indexed to inflation (Chart 21, panels 2 & 3). This made for a rigid labor market where neither employment nor wages could adjust properly to the economic cycle. True, the oil shocks of 1974 and 1979 exacerbated inflationary pressures. But what made inflation truly pernicious during the 1970s was the inability of the Fed to fight it without compromising its employment mandate. Today the economic picture is very different. Union membership stands at only 10% and cost of living adjustments have essentially disappeared. There is also no labor supply shock on the horizon comparable to the baby boomers or women entering the labor force. This makes the calculus for the Fed easy. With its employment mandate already met, it will simply keep raising rates until inflation is back under control. As a result, the risk that it keeps policy too easy and unleashes further inflationary pressures is relatively low over the next 12 months. How Will The War In Ukraine Affect The World Economy? Chart 22The Ukrainian War Has Impacted The Global Economy Global growth, monetary policy, and employment were projected to return to pre-pandemic trends in 2023. In January, the IMF projected global growth of 4.4% in 2022, but now it is poised to cut its forecast due to the war in Ukraine. According to OECD estimates, global economic growth could be 1% lower than what was previously predicted (Chart 22, panel 1). The conflict is putting fresh strain on overstretched global supply chains, causing the price of many commodities to surge. Russia and Ukraine are relatively small in terms of economic output (together they comprise only 1.9% of global GDP in US dollar terms). But they are very big producers and exporters of energy, metals, and key food items. Russia, for example, produces 12% of global oil, one-third of palladium, and (with Belarus) 40% of potash (used in fertilizers). Ukraine is also a major producer of auto parts, such as wire harnesses. Some European car manufacturers have had to idle factories due to a lack of components. Global central banks have been increasing interest rates to battle inflation. But higher energy and food prices will require additional rate hikes to ensure price stability. The war in Ukraine could push up world inflation by around 2.5% this year, according to the OECD. Developing economies are in a particularly tight spot, being hit with high inflation in food and basic commodities. Their consumer price indices are very sensitive to these items. Russia and Ukraine are the main global exporters of several agricultural items (for example, they together account for a quarter of global wheat exports) which could cause global food insecurity to increase (Chart 22, panel 2). International sanctions on Russia create a risk for foreign companies with operations there. Withdrawal could have a meaningful effect on earnings. Most multinationals have only limited exposure to Russia, but a small number of prominent names make more than 5% of global revenues from the country (Chart 22, panel 3). Chart 23AOPEC Is Able To Cover Supply Shortages... Chart 23B...Unlike Other Countries...Chart 23CTo Restore A Balanced But Tight Market What Is The Risk That The Oil Price Stays High? Our Commodity & Energy strategists see 1.3mm b/d of supply from OPEC coming onto the market beginning in May. Because of this, they expect the price of Brent crude to fall back, to average $93 per barrel this year and next. OPEC core producers fear that low inventories and an oil price above $100 per barrel will lead to demand destruction. They will therefore aim to bring prices down. They have enough spare capacity (approximately 3.2mm b/d) to cover physical deficits in global markets (Chart 23A). However, the risk to this view is tilted to the upside. The key question is whether OPEC producers will in fact ramp up production. The OPEC meeting held on March 2, 2022 noted that current market volaility is a function of geopolitical developments and does not reflect changes in market fundamentals: This could imply a reluctance to increase production as quickly as we expect. Saudi Arabia’s interest in exploiting yuan-settled oil trades with China adds an element of uncertainty. With OPEC’s intention to increase production in question, and Russian oil sanctioned and unlikely to be rerouted easily and quickly, there remains little alternative supply: Countries such as Iraq and Venezuela are unlikely to make up for supply deficits (Chart 23B). The US-Iran talks also add downside uncertainty to our price outlook. Our commodity strategists have recently ended their forecast of a return of 1-1.3mm b/d of Iranian oil (Chart 23C). A no-deal scenario is likely to lead to an escalation in tensions and volatility, warranting higher oil prices in the short term. Nevertheless, there remains the possibility that the US administration will be keen on striking a deal with Iran to reduce the risk of a global oil supply shock. This would, in turn, reduce the risk of military conflict, at least in the short-term, and remove some risk premium from oil prices. It might also lead to further increases in production from the Gulf states to prevent Iran from stealing market share, putting further downward pressure on the oil price. Chart 24Is It Time To Favor EMU Equities? When Will Euro Area Stocks Rebound? Chinese policy makers have sounded more aggressive of late in terms of supporting the Chinese economy and stock market, especially property and tech shares. This is a positive development for euro area equities given the region’s strong reliance on the Chinese economy (Chart 24, panel 1). Euro area equities have been in a structural downtrend relative to US equities, but have historically staged occasional counter-trend rallies (Chart 24, panel 2). It’s possible that stocks in this region may stage another short-term rebound at some point because they are technically oversold, and valuation is extremely cheap (Chart 24, panel 3). Investors with a longer-term investment horizon, however, should remain underweight euro area stocks until there are more signs that the region is out of its stagflation state. As we argue in the Global Equities section on page 18, the key factor to watch over the next 9-12 months is profitability. Global earnings growth will slow significantly this year in response to higher input costs and lower revenue growth. As a net importer of energy and industrial metals, euro area earnings growth will continue to slow more than in the US (Chart 24, panel 4). In addition, in times of high uncertainty, we prefer to shelter in less volatile markets. The euro area has a much higher beta than the US (Chart 24, panel 5). Bottom Line: While there could be an opportunity to overweight euro area stocks versus the US tactically, long-term investors should continue to favor the US. Global Economy Chart 25Global Growth Remains Robust... Overview: Global growth has been strong. But this has triggered a surge in inflation, which is pushing central banks to tighten policy more quickly than was expected even three months ago. At the same time, higher prices – and falling real wages – have started to hurt consumer confidence. This raises the risk of stagflation, particularly if disruptions caused by the war in Ukraine push commodity prices up further. A recession is still unlikely over the next 12-18 months, but the risk of one has clearly risen. US economic growth has remained robust, led by consumption and capex. GDP growth in Q4 was 5.6% QoQ annualized. The ISMs remain strong, with manufacturing at 58.5 and services 58.9 (Chart 25, panel 2). However, there are some early signs of slowdown. The Atlanta Fed Nowcast points to only 0.9% annualized growth in Q1. The effect of higher inflation (with headline CPI at 7.9% YoY) might hurt consumer confidence, since average hourly earnings growth lags behind inflation at only 5.1%. Higher rates could also dampen the housing market. With the average mortgage rate rising to 4.5%, from 3.3% at the end of last year, there are signs of a slowdown in house sales (which fell 9.5% YoY in January). Euro Area: Growth remains decent, with Q4 GDP 4.6% QoQ annualized, and robust PMIs (manufacturing at 57.0 and services at 54.8). However, wage growth lags that in the US (negotiated wages rose only 1.5% YoY in Q4), and the impact of a sharp jump in energy prices (exacerbated by the war in Ukraine) could dent consumption. Recent data have deteriorated noticeably: Consumer confidence collapsed to -18.7 in March, and the March ZEW survey (Chart 26, panel 1) fell to -38.7 (from +48.6 in February). With weak underlying growth, and core CPI inflation a relatively modest 2.7%, the ECB will not need to rush to raise rates. Chart 26...But Higher Inflation Is Starting To Damage Confidence Japan: Economic growth remains rather anemic. Manufacturing is supported by exports (which rose by 19.1% YoY in January), helping the manufacturing PMI to stay in positive territory at 53.2. But wage growth remains stagnant (0.9% YoY) and the rise in oil prices has pushed up headline inflation to 0.9%, leading to a weakening of consumer sentiment. The services PMI is a weak 48.7. There are hopes that this year’s shunto wage round will lead to strong wage rises (the government is lobbying businesses to raise wages by 3%) but this seems unlikely. With inflation ex food and energy languishing at -1.9% (even if that is distorted by cuts in mobile phone charges), there seems little need for the Bank of Japan to tighten policy. Emerging Markets: Chinese economic indicators remain depressed (Chart 26, panel 3), even though global demand for manufactured goods means exports are rising 16.4% YoY. The authorities have been easing policy, which has led to a mild uptick in credit growth. But there are questions on how effective stimulus will be, since the housing market has been damaged by the problems at Evergrande and other developers, and because China seems to be sticking to its zero-Covid policy. Some other EMs will be helped by the rise in commodity prices: South Africa, for example, saw 4.9% annualized GDP growth in Q4. But many developed countries were forced to raise rates sharply last year because of inflation and this may slow growth in 2022. Brazil’s policy rate, for example, has risen to 11.75% from 2% last April, and that has dampened activity: Brazilian industrial production is falling 7.2% YoY, and retail sales are -1.9% YoY. Interest Rates: Recorded inflation and inflation expectations (Chart 26, panel 4) have risen sharply everywhere. Slowing demand for manufactured goods and a supply-side response should allow monthly inflation to peak over the next few months – although the risks remain to the upside if commodity prices continue to rise. The surge in inflation has pushed up long-term rates, with the US 10-year Treasury yield rising by 82 BPs year-to-date and that in Germany by 73 BPs. However, the market is now pricing in very aggressive tightening by central banks through year-end: 214 BPs of further hikes by the Fed, and even 75 BPs by the ECB. The probability is that neither will do quite that much, and therefore the upside for long-term government bond yields is probably capped around its current level for the next 6-9 months. Global Equities Chart 27Watch Earnings Revisions Closely Watch Earnings Closely: Global equities suffered a loss of 4% in Q1/2022 despite strong earnings growth. Except for the Utilities sector, all other sectors have positive 12-month trailing and forward earnings growth. Consequently, overall equity valuation, based on forward PE, is no longer stretched (Chart 27). Going forward, however, the macro backdrop of rising inflation and a slowing economy does not bode well for earnings growth, with the profit margin in developed markets already at a historical high. Rising input costs from both materials and wages will put downward pressure on profit margins while revenue growth slows. BCA Research’s global earnings model suggests that earnings growth will slow significantly this year. As such, we downgrade equities to neutral from overweight at the asset class level (see Overview section on page 2). Within equities, we maintain our already cautious country allocation, which served us well in both 2021 and Q1/22. The out-of-consensus overweight on the US and underweight on the euro area panned out well in Q1 2022, as the US outperformed the euro area by 5.9%. After the more defensive adjustment between the UK and Canada in the March Monthly Update, our country allocation portfolio has been well positioned, with overweights in the US and UK, underweights in the euro area, Canada and emerging markets excluding China, while neutral Australia, Japan, and China. In line with the shift of our structural view on industrial commodities, we upgrade the Materials sector to neutral from underweight at the expense of Real Estate and Communication Services. After these adjustments and the added defensive tilt that we took in the February Monthly Update, our global sector portfolio has a tilt towards defensive and structural growth by being overweight Tech, Industrials, Healthcare and Consumer Staples, underweight Consumer Discretionary, Utilities, and Communication Services, while neutral Materials, Financials, Energy and Real Estate. Chart 28Sector Adjustments Sector Allocation: Upgrade Materials To Neutral, Downgrade Real Estate to Neutral, Downgrade Communication Services to Underweight. Russia’s war on Ukraine is a watershed moment for industrial metals. It has altered the dynamics of the metals market which used to be dominated by Chinese demand. We had a structural underweight in the Materials sector because China was undergoing a deleveraging process. Now the Russian-Ukrainian war has demonstrated how dangerous it is for Europe to rely on Russia for energy supply and how important it is for Europe to have a strong military defense system. Rebuilding Europe’s defense will compete with energy diversification initiatives to boost demand for metals. Such a structural shift no longer warrants an underweight in Materials (Chart 28, panel 1). In addition, relative valuation in the Materials sector is as low as it was in the early 2000s, right before the multi-year upcycle in Materials’ relative performance (Chart 28, panel 2). Why not go overweight then? The concern is that the sector is technically overbought due to the sharp rises in metal price. Covid lockdowns in China have disrupted the supply chain in metals, and the Russian-Ukrainian war has further intensified the rise in metals prices due to extremely low inventories. We will watch closely for a better entry point to upgrade this sector to overweight. To finance this upgrade, we downgrade Real Estate to neutral from overweight, and Communication Services to underweight from neutral. Both downgrades are driven by a deteriorating relative earnings growth outlook as shown in Chart 28, panels 4 and 5. Rising mortgage rates do not bode well for the Real Estate sector. “Reopening from Covid lockdowns” reduces the “work from home” tailwind for the Communication Services sector, where relative valuation is also stretched. Government Bonds Chart 29WILL INFLATION COME DOWN IN 2022? Maintain At-Benchmark Duration. The first quarter of 2022 had seen a steady rise in global bond yields even before the Russian-Ukrainian war, in response to a higher inflation outlook. The negative shock to bond yields from the war was quickly reversed and bond yields continued to march higher as the supply shortage in the commodity complex further pushed up commodity prices and inflation expectations. The US 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate has risen above the 2.3-2.5% range that is consistent with the Fed’s 2% PCE target. However, the 5-year/5-year forward breakeven inflation rate, the measure that the Fed pays more attention to, is only slightly above 2.3% (Chart 29, panel 2). The base case of BCA Research’s Fixed Income Strategists is that inflation will moderate in the coming months so that there should be limited upside for bond yields. We already upgraded duration to at-benchmark from below-benchmark, and government bonds to neutral from underweight within the bond asset class in the March Portfolio Update. These are still appropriate going forward with the US 10-year Treasury yield currently standing at 2.33%. Inflation-linked bonds are not cheap anymore. We maintain a neutral stance to hedge against the tail risk of a further rise in inflation. Corporate Bonds Chart 30Continue To Favor High-Yield Credit Since the beginning of the year, investment-grade bonds have underperformed duration-matched Treasurys by 191 basis points, while high-yield bonds have underperformed duration-marched Treasurys by 173 basis points. Even with spreads widening, we continue to underweight investment-grade credits within the fixed-income category. Spreads currently do not offer enough value to warrant a neutral shift. Moreover, investment-grade corporate bonds have been performing poorly compared to high-yield corporate bonds (Chart 30, panel 1). But shouldn’t one expect lower-rated bonds to perform worse in bear markets, and better in bull markets? Our US Bond Service believes that one explanation for the poor performance of investment-grade compared to high-yield bonds is that the industry composition of the two categories is quite different. High-yield has a large concentration in the Energy sector while investment-grade bonds have a larger weighting in Financials. And with the recent surge in oil prices, it’s possible that the strong performance of Energy credits is the reason behind that return divergence. We continue to overweight high-yield bonds, as there is likely to be no material increase in corporate default risk. The market currently implies that defaults will rise to 3.7% during the next 12 months, from 1.2% over the past 12 months (Chart 30, panel 2). That seems too high. What about European credit? The ECB’S hawkish turn and then the Ukranian crisis made yields almost double this year. The spreads for both investment-grade and high-yield corporate bonds have been widening since the beginning of the year (Chart 30, panel 3). Their valuations seem to offer an attractive entry point but investors should be cautious as spreads could continue to widen in response to the negative news from the Ukranian crisis. Commodities Chart 31Risks To Oil Price Are To The Upside Energy (Overweight): Oil prices surged to $120 – the highest level since 2013 – in the aftermath of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, pricing in sanctions against the nation’s oil producers and an estimated 3-5 mm b/d of supply disruptions (Chart 31, panel 1). While the actual hit to Russian production might end up being lower, Russia accounts for over 10% of global production, almost half of which is exported (Chart 31, panel 2). The price shock was slightly offset by a marginal demand weakness from China amid another outbreak of Covid-19. However, uncertainty regarding how quickly core OPEC producers will ramp up production to fill supply shortages – as well as the breakdown in the US-Iranian talks – continue to keep oil prices jittery. Our Commodity & Energy strategists see 1.3mm b/d of increased supply from OPEC coming onto the market beginning in May. This should bring the price of Brent crude down to average $93 per barrel this year and next. The risks to this view however remain tilted to the upside. For more details, see What Our Clients Are Asking on page 14. Industrial Metals (Neutral): Russia is a major player in the metals market, providing more than a third of the world’s palladium output; it is also the third biggest producer of nickel (Chart 31, panel 3). The prices of those metals, as well as the broad industrial metals complex, have shot up following the invasion: Industrial metals had the largest weekly price change since 1990 in the week following the invasion. The outlook for industrial metals prices is tilted to the upside. Inventories for some of the industrial metals required for the energy transition are low. Moreover, if China implements significant stimulus – and supply remains tight – prices are likely to stay elevated. Precious Metals (Neutral): Gold prices reacted in line with the moves in US real rates over the first quarter of this year, initially relatively flat, before rising in the past few weeks as real rates came down. The upward move in gold prices was further amplified by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which pushed the bullion’s price close to $2040, just shy of its all-time high in late 2020. This comes as no surprise: The metal is known (despite its volatility) for its safe-haven and inflation-hedging characteristics. We maintain our neutral exposure to gold. Real rates should start to rise as inflation pressures abate in the second half of the year. Gold is also somewhat expensively valued, with the price in inflation-adjusted terms close to its record high (Chart 31, panel 4). Currencies Chart 32Don't Turn Bearish On The Dollar Yet US Dollar: The DXY index has risen by 2.3% this quarter. We are maintaining our neutral stance on the US dollar. While the dollar is expensive by more than 20% according to purchasing power parity (PPP), positive momentum continues to be too strong to take an outright bearish position (Chart 32, panels 1 and 2). We will look to downgrade the dollar to underweight when momentum starts to weaken and when there is clear evidence that the Fed will have to back off from its tightening path. Japanese Yen: With stock markets rebounding and expectations of interest-rate hikes rising in the US, the yen has fallen by more than 18% since the beginning of the year. Still, we reiterate the overweight that we placed at the beginning of March. The yen should act as a hedge if global stock markets sell off anew. Moreover, we believe there is now limited upside for US yields, given that there are now more than 250 basis points of Fed hikes priced over the next 12 months. This should put a cap on USDJPY, as this cross is closely tied to the relative expectations of tightening between the US and Japan (Chart 32, panel 3). Canadian Dollar: We are currently underweight the Canadian dollar. Our Commodity and Energy Strategists believe that oil should come down to around $90/barrel by the end of the year. Additionally, the BoC won’t be able to follow along with the Fed in its tightening cycle, given that household debt is much higher in Canada than in the US. Both developments should put downward pressure on the CAD over the next 12 months. Alternatives Chart 33Prepare To Turn To Defensive Alternatives Return Enhancers: We previously suggested that private equity tends to outperform other alternative assets in the early years of expansions as it benefits from cheaper financing opportunities and attractive entry valuations. This view has been correct: Following the large drawdown in Q1 2020 due to Covid, PE returns have significantly outperformed those of hedge funds (Chart 33, panel 1). However, financing conditions are tightening and could weigh down on economic activity and PE returns going forward (Chart 33, panel 2). Preliminary results for Q3 2021 show PE funds returning only around 6% compared to an average quarterly return of 10% since the beginning of the pandemic. Given the time it takes to move allocations in the illiquid space, investors should prepare to pare back exposure from PE, and look for more defensive alternative assets, such as macro hedge funds. Inflation Hedges: We have been of the view that inflation will follow a “two steps up, one step down” trajectory: More likely than not, we are near the top of those two steps. Accordingly, we were positioned to favor real estate over commodities; real estate tends to outperform when inflation is more subdued (close to 2%-3%). Inflation, globally, however has turned out to be stickier than expected and recent economic and political developments have propelled another surge in commodity prices. Scarce inventories, lingering inflation, and a potential significant Chinese stimulus imply, at least in the short-term, that commodity prices have room to run (Chart 33, panel 3). Volatility Dampeners: Timberland and Farmland remain our long-time favorite assets within this bucket. We have previously shown that both assets outperform other traditional and alternative assets during recessions and equity bear markets. Farmland particularly continues to offer an attractive yield of approximately 2.8% (Chart 33, panel 4). Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Research Special Report, "The Yield Curve As An Indicator," for a detailed analysis of this. Recommended Asset Allocation Model Portfolio (USD Terms)
Executive Summary The Dollar And The Yield Curve The dollar has tended to decline 3-to-6 months after the Fed starts hiking interest rates. This has been true since the mid-1990s. Beyond that timeframe, the path of the dollar has depended on what other central banks are doing, and/or which stage of the business cycle we are in. The flattening yield curve in the US is coinciding with a strong dollar (Feature chart), but the historical evidence is that this relationship is very fickle. While the dollar tends to rise during recessions, the average business cycle over the last 40 years has also lasted 90 months, making a recession in the next year possible, but not probable. The dollar has usually followed a long boom/bust cycle of 10 years. If the Fed stays behind the inflation curve, we could be entering a period of weakness akin to the pre-Volcker years in the 70s. The greenback has also tended to be seasonally strong in H1 and weaker in H2. The yen has generally been the best-performing currency shortly after a Fed rate hike. Go short USD/JPY if it touches 124. RECOMMENDATION INCEPTION LEVEL inception date RETURN Short USD/JPY 124 2022-04-01 - Bottom Line: Our bias remains that the DXY index does not have much upside above 100. Our 12-month target remains 90. Feature Chart I-1Dollar Action Before Curve Inversions Is Mixed Rudi Dornbusch was one of the pioneers behind the theory that currency markets tend to overreact. His observation was as simple as it was brilliant. Currency markets are fluid, while prices tend to be sticky. Therefore, a monetary response to an inflation overshoot will initially cause a knee-jerk reaction in the currency before it settles back towards equilibrium. While we have oversimplified Dornbusch’s overshooting model, it is hard to ignore the fact that today’s currency and bond markets could potentially be overreacting. The 10-year/2-year US Treasury spread briefly turned negative this week, as the short end catapulted higher. Historically, that has been a precursor to an impending recession. This is important because the dollar has usually done well during recessions, even though its performance ahead of doomsday has been mixed over a 40-year period (Chart I-1). Given this backdrop, this report attempts to answer a few questions. How has the dollar performed over prior Federal Reserve tightening cycles? What drives the relationship between the dollar and the yield curve? Are the Fed rate hikes currently priced in the short end of the curve credible? Which currencies have historically excelled or suffered once the Fed begins to tighten policy? And finally, what is the roadmap investors should use to gauge the path of the dollar going forward? The Dollar And The Yield Curve Chart I-2A Rising Dollar Has Tracked A Flattening Curve The relationship between the dollar and the yield curve has been tight over the last three years. A flattening curve throughout most of 2018 signaled US policy was getting too restrictive relative to underlying economic conditions. The dollar was also rising (Chart I-2). The Federal Reserve eventually responded by cutting rates, which allowed the curve to steepen again, eventually putting a top in the greenback. Our Chief US Bond Strategist, Ryan Swift, has characterized this cycle as the dollar/bond feedback loop (Chart I-3). Chart I-3The Dollar/Bond Feedback Loop In retrospect, this feedback loop works through two channels. First, almost 90% of global transactions are conducted in US dollars, which means the cost of doing business (paying for imports, reconciling accounts payables, servicing debt, and so on) rises for foreigners as the dollar appreciates. This puts a break on economic activity abroad. Second, as a counter-cyclical currency, the dollar tends to attract capital when growth in the rest of the world is slowing, reinforcing this loop. Eventually, a strong dollar and rising domestic bond yields put a break on US economic activity, which causes the Fed to back off. Investors with a high-conviction view that we are close to a recession should be buying the dollar on weakness. In our view, many central banks are becoming too hawkish at the exact moment global growth is set to slow. That said, not unlike the Dornbusch analogy at the start of this text, currency markets have overreacted. Specifically: Over the last 40 years, the average business cycle has lasted 90 months. An inverted yield curve does not corroborate this fact, considering the recession in 2020. It is well known that there are previous episodes of the yield curve inverting, without an impending recession. This time around, rate hike expectations have been heavily priced at the front end of the curve, while being underpriced at the long end. The inference is that the market thinks the Fed is about to make a policy mistake. With policy rates in the US still at 25-50 bps, those near-term rate expectations will turn out to be wrong if US economic growth does indeed slow, forcing the Fed to pivot. The term premium in the US (and globally) is very low, and could rise as quantitative easing is wound down, and yield-curve control is relaxed in bond markets such as Japan. That could help lift longer-term bond yields. Global yield curves have tended to move in unison, with the UK curve historically being the first to invert ahead of a recession. That has not yet happened. Elsewhere, Japanese, and German yield curves are steep (Chart I-4). Chart I-4Global Yield Curves Tend To Move In Unison Historically, the relationship between the yield curve and the dollar has not been consistent (Chart I-5). In the early 80s, the dollar initially rose with a steepening yield curve. In retrospect, rising real rates at the long end of the Treasury curve drove the initial dollar rally. The backdrop was Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker’s resolve to crack down on inflation. Thereafter, rising trade imbalances on the back of a strong dollar eventually led to the Plaza Accord in 1985, which weakened the dollar despite a curve that remained steep. In the 1990s, the dollar rose along with a flattening curve and a productivity boom in the US. In both the latter half of the 2000s and 2010s, the curve flattened, but the performances of the dollar in each case were opposites - weakness in the 2000s, but strength over the last decade. Chart I-5No Consistent Relationship Between The Dollar And The Yield Curve The bottom line is that the dollar tends to do well during recessions, which historically has happened after the yield curve inverts. Prior to that, the performance of the dollar is mixed. Dollar Performance Over Prior Tightening Cycles Chart I-6The Dollar Falls After The First Fed Rate Hike The dollar has tended to decline 3-to-6 months after the Fed starts hiking interest rates. This has been true since the mid-1990s (Chart I-6). The average decline after six months has been 5.3%. This will pin the DXY at around 95 or so by late summer. As the Appendix shows, while this relationship has been consistent for the dollar, it has been inconclusive for the hiking cycles of other central banks. The exceptions are the CAD, GBP, and SEK which tend to rally three months after their respective central banks raise rates. The AUD initially stalls but performs well one year after the Reserve Bank of Australia lifts interest rates. There is a rationale as to why the dollar performs well ahead of interest rate increases by the Fed, and falters shortly after. Historically, the Fed has usually been the first to start the process of hiking interest rates globally. It has also been the central bank that has lifted rates by the most (Chart I-7). This history of credibility has nudged forward markets to grow accustomed to anticipating the Federal Reserve to be ahead of the curve. As of now, US policy rates stand at 0.25% but the two-year yield is at 2.4%. This divergence could be viewed as vote of credibility akin to during the Volcker years (Chart I-8). Chart I-7The Fed Has Usually Led The Hiking Cycle Chart I-8The 2-Year/3-Month Treasury Spread Is Very Wide Beyond a 3-to-6-month timeframe, the path of the dollar has depended on what other central banks are doing (Table I-1). The BoE, BoC, Norges Bank, and RBNZ all raised rates before the Fed. The Riksbank and RBA ended QE ahead of the Fed. The BoJ’s balance sheet has been flat-to-shrinking since 2021. The US dollar has tended to do well when US interest rates are in the top decile amongst the G10 countries (Chart I-9). While that was true before the Covid-19 crisis, it is no longer the case today. This suggests the onus is on the Fed to meet market expectations and keep the dollar strong. Table I-1The Performance Of Currencies Is Mixed When Their Resident Central Bank Hikes Rates Chart I-9The Fed Is Lagging Other G10 Central Banks Interestingly, the yen has generally done very well around Fed rate hikes (Chart I-10), followed by commodity currencies (Table I-2). It also happens to be incredibly cheap today (Chart I-11). Our bias is that should inflation pick up faster in Japan, the yen will rally ahead of any anticipated changes to monetary policy. Chart I-10G10 Currencies Around The First Fed ##br##Rate Hike Table 2Most Currencies Appreciate Shortly After The First Fed Rate Hike Chart I-11The Yen Is Very Cheap Are Fed Rate Hikes Sustainable? There is a case to be made that the Federal Reserve could indeed hike interest rates faster than other economies. The 3-month rate-of-change in the dollar has closely followed the mini-growth oscillations between the US and other G10 economies (Chart I-12). US growth is now relatively strong (as measured by relative PMIs or relative economic surprise indices). Barring a global recession, the Fed has more scope to raise interest rates. Related Report Foreign Exchange StrategyThe Yen In 2022 On the flip side, financial conditions in the US are tightening quickly as mortgage rates rise, and the dollar soars. This is happening at a time when growth is weak in China and the PBoC is on an easing path. Chinese long bond yields (a proxy for Chinese growth) tend to rise when the PBoC stimulates growth. (Chart I-13). When the number of Covid-19 cases in China rolls over, there will be a case for growth to firmly bottom. Chart I-12Economic Growth Is Relatively Strong In The US Chart I-13The Chinese Economy Is Soft This is important since most Asian economies are very dependent on China to close their output gaps and reach escape velocity in economic growth. Take the example of Japan. Tourist arrivals (mainly from Asia) generally represent 25% of the overall Japanese population but today, that number remains near zero. As a result, consumption outlays in Japan are well below the pre-pandemic trend (Chart I-14). As growth recovers, the Japanese economy should be one of the best candidates for generating non-inflationary growth. This is a bullish backdrop for the currency. Chart I-14Japanese Consumption Is Well Below Trend Finally, real interest rates in the US remain very low. Empirically, currencies react more to the path of relative real rates (Chart I-15). Chart I-15US Real Rates Are Very Low Seasonality: Friend Or Foe? Coincidentally, the dollar also usually weakens in the second half of the year (Chart I-16). This dovetails with our bias that the dollar also underperforms after the first Fed interest rate hike. This has been especially true over the last decade (Chart I-17). Chart I-16The Dollar Is Seasonally Weak In H2 Chart I-17The Dollar Is Seasonally Weak In H2 The dollar has already priced in that the Fed will lead the interest rate hiking cycle. However, as we have been highlighting in recent reports, rising inflation is a global problem and not one that is exclusive to the US. The hawks in the ECB are very uncomfortable with this week’s HICP (harmonized index of consumer prices) release of 9.8% in Spain, 7.3% in Germany, and 7% in Italy. As a comparison, headline inflation in the US is 7.9%. A weak euro will only fan the inflationary flame in the eurozone. The Japanese economy could be next in unleashing inflationary surprises, especially on the back of a very cheap yen (Chart I-11). This will raise the probability that the Bank of Japan eases yield curve control. In short, the potential for upside surprises in interest rates is highest outside the US. Concluding Thoughts The academic evidence suggests that short-term interest rates matter more for currencies, especially when policy is close to the zero bound. The BIS report on the topic concludes that short maturity bonds have had the strongest FX impact.1 Moreover, near the effective lower bound, the foreign-exchange impact is greater as the adjustment burden falls onto the exchange rate. As FX becomes the axle of adjustment at lower interest rates, a strong dollar and weaker euro and yen are likely to grease the wheels of an economic rebound in these latter economies. For now, economic momentum in the US is stronger, which indicates that the Fed will initially deliver the bulk of rate hikes priced in the OIS curve this year. Beyond then, if growth picks up faster outside the US, especially in the euro area and Japan, then the USD could enter a consolidation phase. Finally, the yen has tended to be the best-performing currency after a Fed rate hike. Go short USD/JPY if it touches 124. Appendix: Currency Performance Around Interest Rate Hikes United States United States Euro Area Japan United Kingdom Canada Australia New Zealand Switzerland Norway Sweden Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Ferrari, Massimo, Kearns, Jonathan and Schrimpf, Andreas, “Monetary policy’s rising FX impact in the era of ultra-low rates,” Bank of International Settlements, April 2017. Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
Executive Summary Refreshing Our Tactical Trade List Our current list of tactical trade recommendations centers around two broad themes that predate the Ukraine conflict – rising global inflation expectations and relatively stronger upward pressure on US interest rates. Both themes have been strengthened by the spillovers from the war in Eastern Europe, most notably the link between soaring commodity prices and rising inflation. We still see value in holding our recommended cross-country spread trades that will benefit from continued US bond underperformance (short US Treasuries versus government bonds in Germany, Canada and New Zealand, all at the 10-year maturity). We also maintain our bias to lean against the yield curve flattening trend in the US, but we now prefer to do it solely via our existing SOFR futures calendar spread position. Finding attractively valued inflation breakeven spread trades is more difficult after the latest oil-fueled run-up in developed market inflation expectations. Canadian breakevens, however, stand out as having the greatest upside potential according to our Comprehensive Breakeven Indicators. Bottom Line: Remain in US-Germany, US-Canada an US-New Zealand 10-year government bond yield spread widening trades. Maintain our recommended position in the US SOFR futures curve (long Dec/22 futures, short Dec/24 futures). Add a new inflation-linked bond trade, going long 10-year Canadian breakevens. Feature One month has passed since Russia invaded Ukraine, and investors are still struggling to sort out the financial market implications. Equity markets in the US and Europe have recovered the losses incurred immediately after the conflict began. Equity market volatility has also fallen back to pre-invasion levels according to the VIX index (and its European counterpart, the VStoxx index). That decline in equity volatility has also coincided with a narrowing of corporate credit spreads in both the US and Europe, with the former now fully back to pre-invasion levels. Yet while credit spread volatility has calmed down, government bond yield volatility remains elevated thanks to rising commodity prices putting upward pressure on expectations for inflation and monetary policy (Chart 1). Chart 1Global Bond Yields Are Above Pre-Invasion Levels Table 1Refreshing Our Tactical Trade List We have already made some “wartime” adjustments to our global bond market cyclical recommendations, with those changes reflected in our model bond portfolio. This week, we review our shorter-term tactical trade recommendations. Our current list of tactical trades revolves around two broad themes that predate the Ukraine conflict – rising global inflation expectations and relatively stronger cyclical upward pressure on US interest rates. Both themes have been strengthened by the spillovers from the war in Eastern Europe, most notably the link between soaring commodity prices and rising inflation. We continue to see the value in holding on to most of our existing tactical trades, with only a couple of adjustments to be made to our US yield curve and global inflation-linked bond positions (Table 1). US Yield Curve Tactical Trades: Shift Focus To SOFR Steepeners We have recommended trades that lean against the aggressive flattening of the US Treasury curve discounted in forward rates since late 2021. Our view has been that markets were discounting too rapid a pace of Fed rate increases in 2022. With the Fed likely delivering fewer hikes than expected, Treasury curve steepening trades would benefit as the spot Treasury curve would flatten by less than implied by the forwards. Related Report Global Fixed Income StrategyFive Reasons To Tactically Increase US Duration Exposure Now Needless to say, that view has not panned out as we anticipated. The spread between 10-year and 2-year US Treasury yields now sits at a mere +13bps, down from +104bps when we initiated our 2-year/10-year steepener trade last November. The forwards now discount an inversion of that curve starting in June of this year, which would be an extraordinary outcome by historical standards. Typically, the US Treasury curve inverts only after the Fed has delivered an extended monetary tightening cycle that delivers multiple rate hikes over at least a 1-2 year period (Chart 2). Today, the curve has nearly inverted with the Fed having only delivered only a single 25bp rate increase earlier this month. Chart 2The UST Curve Is Unusually Flat Right Now Of course, the Fed’s reaction function in the current cycle is different compared to the past. The Fed now follows an average inflation targeting framework that tolerates temporary inflation overshoots after periods when US inflation ran below the Fed’s 2% target. Now, however, the Fed has no choice but to respond to surging US inflation, which has been accelerating since September and is now at levels last seen in 1982. Chart 3Our SOFR Trade Is Similar To Our UST Curve Trade We still see the market pricing in too much Fed tightening this year and too few rate hikes in 2023/24. The US overnight index swap (OIS) curve now discounts 218bps of rate hikes in 2022, but 44bps of rate cuts between June 2023 and December 2024. We think a more likely scenario is the Fed doing less than discounted this year, as US inflation should show some deceleration in the latter half of 2022, but then continuing to raise rates in 2023 into 2024. We have expressed this view more specifically through an additional tactical trade that was initiated last month, going long the December 2022 3-month SOFR futures contract versus shorting the December 2024 3-month SOFR futures contract. This new trade is essentially a calendar spread trade between two futures contracts, but with a return profile that has looked quite similar to our 2-year/10-year US Treasury curve flattening trade (Chart 3). Having two tactical trades that are highly correlated, and which both are driven by the same theme of the Fed doing less this year and more over the next two years, is inefficient. We see the SOFR calendar spread trade as a more precise expression of our Fed policy view compared to the 2-year/10-year Treasury curve steepener. In addition, the SOFR trade now offers slightly better value after it has lagged the performance of the Treasury curve trade over the past couple of weeks. Thus, we are keeping this trade in our Tactical Overlay portfolio (see the table on page 15), while closing out our 2-year/10-year steepener at a loss of -92bps.1 Cross-Country Spread Trades: Keeping Betting On Relatively Higher US Yields In our Tactical Overlay portfolio, we currently have three recommended cross-country government bond spread trades that all have one thing in common – a sale of 10-year US Treasuries. The long side of the three trades are different (Germany, New Zealand and Canada), but the logic underlying all three trades is the same. The Fed will deliver more rate hikes than the central banks in the other countries. 10-year US Treasury-German Bund spread Chart 4UST-Bund Spread Is Too Low Expecting a wider US Treasury-German Bund spread remains our highest conviction view in G-10 government bond markets. This is a trade we have described as a more efficient way to position for rising US bond yields than a pure below-benchmark US duration stance. We have maintained that recommendation in both our model bond portfolio and our Tactical Overlay portfolio. For the latter, that trade was implemented using 10-year bond futures in both markets and is up 3.9% since initiation back in October 2021. The case for expecting even more Treasury-Bund spread widening remains strong, for several reasons: Underlying inflation remains higher in the US, particularly when looking at domestic sources of inflation like wages and service sector prices. Europe, which relies more heavily on Russia for its energy supplies than the US, is more at risk of a negative growth shock from the Ukraine conflict. Our fundamental model of the 10-year Treasury-Bund spread shows that the current level of the spread (+197bps) is about one full standard deviation below fair value, which itself is rising due to stronger US economic growth, faster US inflation and a more aggressive path for monetary tightening from the Fed relative to the ECB (Chart 4). The spread between our 24-month discounters in the US and Europe, which measure the amount of rate hikes priced into OIS curves for the two regions over the next two years, has proven to be good leading indicator of the 10-year Treasury-Bund spread. That discounter spread is currently at 99bps, levels last seen when the 10-year Treasury-Bund spread climbed to the 250-300bps range in 2017/18 (Chart 5). With the relative forward curves now discounting a slight narrowing of the US-German 10-year spread over the next year, betting on a wider spread does not suffer from negative carry. We are maintaining this trade in our Tactical Overlay portfolio with great conviction. 10-year US Treasury-Canada government bond spread We entered another cross-country spread trade involving a US Treasury short position earlier this month, in this case versus 10-year Canadian government bonds. This trade is a bet on relative monetary policy moves between the Fed and the Bank of Canada (BoC). Like the Fed, the BoC is facing a problem of high inflation and tight labor markets. Canadian core CPI inflation hit a 19-year high of 3.9% in January, while the Canadian unemployment rate is at a 3-year low of 5.5%. The US is facing even higher inflation and even lower unemployment, but one major difference between the two nations is the degree of household sector debt loads. Canada’s household debt/income ratio now stands at 180%, 55 percentage points higher than the equivalent US ratio, thanks to greater residential mortgage borrowing in Canada (Chart 6). Chart 5Stay Positioned For More UST-Bund Spread Widening The Canadian OIS curve is now discounting a peak policy rate of 3.1% in 2023, which is at the high end of the BoC’s estimated 1.75-2.75% range for the neutral policy rate. Chart 6The BoC Will Have Trouble Matching Fed Hawkishness Elevated household debt will limit the BoC’s ability to lift rates that high, as this would trigger a major retrenchment of housing demand and a significant cooling of house prices. While the US is also facing issues with robust housing demand and high house prices, this is less of a factor that would limit Fed tightening relative to the BoC because US household balance sheets are not as levered as their Canadian counterparts. We are keeping our short US/long Canada spread trade (implemented using bond futures) in our Tactical Overlay portfolio, with the BoC unlikely to keep pace with the expected Fed rate increases over the next year (Chart 7). Chart 7Stay Positioned For A Narrower Canada-US Spread 10-year US Treasury-New Zealand government bond spread The third cross-country trade in our Tactical Overlay is 10-year New Zealand-US spread widening trade. Chart 8A Big Gap In NZ-US Relative Interest Rate Expectations Like the Germany and Canada spread trades, we expect the Fed to deliver more rate hikes than the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) which should push up US Treasury yields versus New Zealand equivalents. In the case of this trade, however, interest rate expectations in New Zealand are far more aggressive. Chart 9Stay Positioned For NZ-US Spread Tightening The RBNZ has already lifted its Official Cash Rate (OCR) by 75bps since starting the tightening cycle in mid-2021. The New Zealand OIS curve is now discounting an additional 253bps of rate hikes in this cycle, eventually reaching a peak OCR of 3.5% in June 2023. This would put the OCR into slightly restrictive territory based on the range of neutral rate estimates from the RBNZ’s various quantitative models (Chart 8). This contrasts to the pricing in the US OIS curve that places the peak in the fed funds rate at 2.8% next year before falling back to the low end of the FOMC’s 2.0-3.0% range of neutral estimates in 2024. Both the US and New Zealand are suffering from similarly high rates of inflation, with New Zealand headline inflation reaching 5.9% in the last available data from Q4/2021. However, while markets are already pricing in restrictive monetary settings in New Zealand, markets are yet to price in a similarly restrictive move in the fed funds rate. We continue to see scope for a narrowing of the New Zealand-US 10-year bond yield spread over at least the next six months. There has already been meaningful compression of the 2-year yield spread as US rate expectations have converged towards New Zealand levels (Chart 9) – we expect the 10-year spread to follow suit. Inflation Breakeven Trades: Swap Canada For Australia We currently have one inflation-linked bond (ILB) trade in our Tactical Overlay portfolio, betting on higher inflation breakevens in Australia. We initiated this trade last October, largely based on the signal from our suite of Comprehensive Breakeven Indicators (CBI) for the major developed economy ILB markets. The CBIs contain three components: the deviation from fair value from our 10-year breakeven spread models, the distance between realized headline inflation and the central bank target, and the gap between the 10-year breakeven and survey-based measures of longer-term inflation expectations. Those three measures are standardized and aggregated to form the CBI. Countries with lower CBIs have more upside potential for breakevens, and their ILBs should be favored over those from nations with higher CBIs. Chart 10Breaking Down Our Comprehensive Breakeven Inflation Indicators Chart 11Favor Canadian Inflation-Linked Bonds Vs. Australia Given the latest run-up in global inflation breakevens on the back of soaring oil prices, there are now no countries in our CBI universe that have a negative CBI (Chart 10). Canada has the lowest CBI, and thus the highest upside potential for breakeven spread widening. We are taking a modest profit of +40bps in our Australian breakeven trade, as we are approaching the self-imposed six-month holding period limit on our tactical trades and our Australian CBI is not indicating major upside for Australian breakevens.2 Based on the message from our indicators, we see a better case for entering a new tactical spread widening position in 10-year Canadian ILBs. A comparison of the CBIs between Canada and Australia shows that the Canadian 10-year inflation breakeven is well below our model-implied fair value, which incorporates both oil prices and currency levels (Chart 11). This contrasts to the Australian breakeven which is now well above fair value. A similar divergence appears when comparing breakeven spreads to survey-based measures of inflation expectations, with Canadian breakevens looking too “undervalued” compared to Australia. While realized headline inflation is above the respective central bank targets, especially in Canada, the valuation cushion makes the ILBs of the latter the better bargain of the two. The details of our new Canadian 10-year breakeven trade, where we go long the cash ILB and sell 10-year Canadian bond futures against it, are shown in our Tactical Overlay table on page 15. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The Treasury curve trade is actually a “butterfly” trade, where we have included an allocation to US 3-month Treasury bills (cash) to make the curve steepener duration-neutral. Thus, the trade is more specifically a position where we are long a 2-year US Treasury bullet and short a cash/10-year US Treasury barbell with a duration equal to that of the 2-year. 2 We have recently discovered an error in our how we have calculated the returns on the 10-year Australian futures leg of our Australian 10-year inflation breakeven widening trade. The final total return for our trade shown in the Tactical Overlay table on page 15 corrects for our error, and fortunately shows a significantly higher return than we have published in past reports. GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Recommended Positioning Active Duration Contribution: GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. Custom Performance Benchmark The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Global Fixed Income - Strategic Recommendations* Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months) Tactical Overlay Trades
Executive Summary Tracking Inflation In 2022 Our base case view is that inflation will moderate in the coming months, allowing the Fed to deliver a steady pace of tightening (25 bps per meeting). A 50 bps rate hike is possible at some point this year, but only if long-maturity inflation expectations become un-anchored or core PCE inflation prints consistently above 0.30%-0.35% per month. Historical evidence suggests that Treasury securities perform best when the yield curve is very steep or very flat. All else equal, an inversion of the 2-year/10-year Treasury slope would make us more bullish on bonds. High-yield corporates have performed better than investment grade corporates during the recent sell-off. Investors should continue to favor high-yield corporates over investment grade. Bottom Line: Investors should maintain “at benchmark” portfolio duration and buy Treasury curve steepeners. We also maintain an overweight allocation to high-yield corporate bonds and a neutral allocation to investment grade corporates. We Have Liftoff The Fed followed through on its earlier promise and lifted the funds rate by 25 basis points last week. FOMC participants also sharply revised up their expectations for the future pace of tightening, though this revision mostly just made the Fed’s forecast more consistent with what was already priced in the yield curve. Market rate hike expectations, as inferred from the overnight index swap curve, shifted up only slightly after the Fed’s announcement (Chart 1). Chart 1Rate Expectations As of Monday morning, the bond market is priced for 208 bps of tightening during the next 12 months and 174 bps between now and the end of the year. This is close to the median FOMC forecast which calls for 150 bps of further tightening this year followed by an additional 92 bps in 2023. Last week’s report highlighted the tricky situation faced by the Fed.1 On the one hand, the Fed must tighten quickly enough to keep long-dated inflation expectations anchored. On the other hand, the Fed wants to avoid tightening so quickly that it causes a recession. For investors, we think it makes sense to assume that the Fed will try to split the difference by lifting rates at a pace of 25 bps per meeting for at least the next 12 months. However, there are significant risks to both the upside and downside of this projection. The Odds Of A 50 bps Hike The upside risk is that inflation is sufficiently sticky that the Fed will feel the need to deliver a 50 bps rate hike at some point this year. Last week’s Fed interest rate projections show that 7 out of 16 FOMC participants think that at least one 50 bps rate hike will be necessary. Meanwhile, market prices are consistent with one 50 basis point rate hike and five 25 basis point rate hikes at this year’s six remaining FOMC meetings. We think the Fed will only deliver a 50 bps rate hike if inflation looks to be tracking above the committee’s 2022 forecast or if long-maturity inflation expectations become un-anchored to the upside. Related Report Global Investment StrategyIs A Higher Neutral Rate Good Or Bad For Stocks? On the inflation front, the FOMC’s central tendency forecast calls for core PCE inflation of between 3.9% and 4.4% in 2022, with a median of 4.1%. To match this forecast, core PCE will have to average a monthly growth rate of between 0.30% and 0.35% in each of this year’s eleven remaining months (Chart 2).2 Every monthly inflation print above that range increases the odds of a 50 bps Fed move, every print below that range brings the odds down. As for long-maturity inflation expectations, the Fed likely views them as “well anchored” for the time being. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate has broken meaningfully above the Fed’s target range but the 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate remains consistent with the Fed’s goals (Chart 3). The University of Michigan’s survey measure of 5-10 year household inflation expectations has risen sharply, but it has not yet broken meaningfully above recent historical levels (Chart 3, bottom panel). Chart 2Tracking Inflation In 2022 Chart 3Inflation Expectations Our sense is that inflation is very close to peaking and that lower inflation in the back half of the year will apply downward pressure to inflation expectations and prevent the Fed from delivering a 50 bps hike at any single FOMC meeting. However, we will be closely tracking the evolution of Charts 2 and 3 to see if this situation changes. The Odds Of Skipping A Meeting Chart 4Financial Conditions The downside risk to the Fed’s expected rate hike path results from the fact that financial conditions have already responded aggressively to the Fed’s actions and communications. While it’s certainly true that financial conditions remain extremely accommodative in level terms (Chart 4), we must also acknowledge that, historically, the sort of rapid tightening of financial conditions that we have already seen is almost always followed by a significant slowdown in economic activity (Chart 4, panel 2). On top of all that, the yield curve is now completely flat beyond the 5-year maturity point and the 2-year/10-year Treasury slope is a mere 22 bps away from inversion (Chart 4, bottom panel). The Fed’s new interest rate projections show the median expected interest rate moving above estimates of the long-run neutral rate in 2023 and 2024. This sort of rate hike path is consistent with a mild inversion of the yield curve, and the Fed will likely downplay the yield curve’s recession signal during the next few months. That said, a deepening inversion of the yield curve will only increase market worries about an over-tightening of monetary policy. This could lead to a sell-off in risk assets that would accelerate the tightening of financial conditions and lead to expectations of even slower economic growth. The next section of this report explores what an inverted 2-year/10-year yield curve has historically meant for Treasury returns. Investment Implications Our base case view is that inflation will moderate in the coming months, allowing the Fed to deliver a steady pace of tightening (25 bps per meeting). We also see economic growth slowing but remaining solid enough to prevent a significant sell-off in risk assets and a deep inversion of the yield curve. We also acknowledge, however, that the risks to this view (in both directions) are unusually high. Given all that, our recommended investment strategy is to keep portfolio duration close to benchmark. The market is already well priced for a steady 25 bps per meeting pace of tightening and bond yields will merely keep pace with forwards if that pace is delivered. We also see yield curve steepeners profiting during the next 6-12 months as the yield curve’s flattening trend takes a pause now that market expectations have fully adjusted to the likely path of Fed rate increases. We remain neutral TIPS versus nominal Treasuries at the long-end of the curve, but underweight TIPS versus nominal Treasuries at the front-end. Short-maturity TIPS will underperform as inflation moderates in H2 2022. The Yield Curve And Treasury Returns The historical relationship between the slope of the yield curve and Treasury returns is very interesting. To examine it, we first looked at historical data on excess Treasury index returns versus cash since 1989 (Table 1). Table 112-Month Treasury Excess Returns* Given Different Starting Points For 2-Year / 10-Year Treasury Slope Specifically, we show 12-month excess Treasury returns given different starting points for the 2-year/10-year Treasury slope. For example, when the 2-year/10-year Treasury slope has been between 0 bps and 25 bps, the Bloomberg Barclays Treasury Index has historically outperformed a position in cash by an average of 2.75% during the next 12 months. A 90% confidence interval places expected returns between 1.75% and 3.73%, and excess Treasury returns were positive in 73% of historical observations. The first big conclusion that jumps out from Table 1 is that Treasuries perform best when the yield curve is either very steep or very flat. The worst periods for Treasury returns have tended to occur when the slope is between 25 bps and 100 bps. It’s easy to understand why a very steep yield curve would lead to strong Treasury returns. A steep curve means that Treasuries offer a large yield advantage versus cash, or put differently, an extremely rapid pace of rate hikes would be necessary for cash returns to overcome the carry advantage in bonds. It’s more difficult to understand why Treasury returns have been strong after instances of curve inversion. The most likely reason is that market participants have tended to overestimate the odds of the Fed achieving a “soft landing” and have underestimated the odds of an upcoming recession and rate cuts. The data used in Table 1 are limited in that observations only begin in 1989. As such, the table misses the Paul Volcker period of the early 1980s when Treasuries continued to sell off well after the curve inverted. Chart 5 extends the historical period back to the mid-1970s and uses shading to indicate periods of 2-year/10-year yield curve inversion. Chart 5Yields Tend To Peak Shortly After Curve Inversion Chart 5 reveals a pretty clear pattern. With the exception of the late-1970s/early-1980s episode, the 10-year Treasury yield tends to peak right around the time of 2-year/10-year yield curve inversion, or shortly after in the case of 1989. What can we take away from this analysis? First, the evidence suggests that we should have a bias toward taking more duration risk in our portfolio if and when the yield curve inverts. A more deeply inverted yield curve should also be viewed as a stronger bond-bullish signal than a modestly inverted yield curve. Second, we must acknowledge the major risk to this strategy. Specifically, the risk that inflation will be so high that the Fed will continue to tighten aggressively even after the yield curve inverts, as Paul Volcker did in the early-1980s. Our sense is that the odds of a repeat “Volcker moment” are low. Inflation will naturally fall as the pandemic’s impact wanes and the Fed won’t be forced to deliver another hawkish shock to market expectations. Therefore, we maintain our “at benchmark” recommendation for portfolio duration for now, but we may turn more bullish on bonds if the yield curve inverts. The Poor Performance Of Investment Grade Bonds Chart 6IG Has Lagged HY One notable aspect of recent bond market moves has been that the performance of investment grade corporate bonds has significantly lagged the performance of high-yield corporate bonds during the recent period of spread widening (Chart 6). This is highly unusual. Typically, we expect bonds with more credit risk to behave like “higher beta” securities. That is, we expect lower-rated bonds to perform better in bull markets and worse in bear markets.3 The typical relationships held earlier in the cycle. Chart 7A shows that high-yield corporate bonds delivered stronger excess returns than investment grade corporate bonds from the March 2020 peak in spreads through the end of that year. Chart 7B shows that high-yield continued to outperform investment grade throughout the bull market for spreads in 2021. Chart 7ACorporate Bond Excess Returns* Versus DTS: March 2020 To December 2020 Chart 7BCorporate Bond Excess Returns* Versus DTS: January 2021 To September 2021 Chart 7CCorporate Bond Excess Returns* Versus DTS: September 2021 To Present Based on that relationship, we would expect high-yield to perform worse than investment grade since spreads troughed in September 2021, but that has not been the case (Chart 7C). How do we explain the relatively weak performance of investment grade corporates relative to high-yield? One possible explanation is that the industry composition of the investment grade and high-yield bond universes is different. High-yield has a large concentration in the Energy sector while investment grade is more geared toward Financials. Given the recent surge in oil prices, it’s possible that the strong performance of Energy credits is driving the return divergence between investment grade and high-yield. Chart 8 shows the performance of each individual industry group within both investment grade and high-yield since the September 2021 trough in spreads. It shows that Energy bond returns have indeed been stronger than for other sectors. In fact, high-yield Energy excess returns have been positive! Chart 8Corporate Bond Excess Returns* Versus DTS: September 2021 To Present However, Chart 8 mainly reveals that industry composition only explains part of the divergence between investment grade and high-yield returns. Notice that every single high-yield industry group has outperformed its investment grade counterpart since September 2021. This suggests that there is a more fundamental reason for the divergence between investment grade and high-yield performance. Chart 9Following The 2018 Roadmap Our own sense is that the corporate bond market is following the roadmap from early 2018 (Chart 9). At that time, Fed tightening pushed the Treasury slope below 50 bps and investment grade corporates started to perform poorly, presumably because the removal of monetary accommodation justified somewhat wider corporate bond spreads. However, high-yield performed well in early 2018 as there was no material increase in corporate default risk, even though the Fed was tightening. A similar market narrative could easily be applied to today. Back in 2018, the market narrative shifted late in the year when investors suddenly decided that Fed tightening had gone too far. High-Yield sold off sharply and caught up with investment grade. The Fed was then forced to end its tightening cycle and corporate bonds rallied in early 2019. We see this 2018 roadmap as a significant risk, but not destiny. While there’s a chance that the market will soon decide that the Fed has over-tightened, leading to a sharp sell-off in high-yield. There’s also a chance that gradual Fed rate hikes will continue for much longer than the market anticipates without meaningfully slowing the economy. In that case, high-yield returns would remain solid for some time and the recent spread widening in investment grade would probably abate. For the time being, we find ourselves more inclined toward the latter scenario. Bottom Line: Investors should maintain an overweight allocation to high-yield and a neutral allocation to investment grade corporate bonds within a US bond portfolio. We may soon get a chance to upgrade our corporate bond allocation if inflationary pressures abate and the war in Ukraine shows signs of de-escalation. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “A Soft Landing Is Still Possible”, dated March 15, 2022. 2 PCE data is so far only updated to January 2022. 3 In this report we use Duration-Times-Spread (DTS) as a simple measure of a bond index’s credit risk. A higher DTS means that a bond has greater credit risk and vice-versa. Treasury Index Returns Spread Product Returns Recommended Portfolio Specification Other Recommendations
Executive Summary Fed Chair Powell is attempting to steer the US economy between the Scylla of a recession and the Charybdis of entrenched high inflation. In the benign soft-landing outcome, the economy will continue to grow well above trend while inflation abates as spending transitions from goods to services, supply chains are untangled and base effects offer arithmetic relief. Entrenched high inflation would yield the most bearish outcome as it would leave the Fed with no choice but to squash the economy to stuff the inflation genie back into the bottle. We expect that rate hikes will eventually short-circuit the expansion and the equity bull market, but not for at least another year. Disruptions from the Ukraine conflict and China’s COVID surge place the most bullish case out of reach but the bearish end of the continuum is overly defeatist. The biggest threats to our constructive view are worsening Russia-Ukraine shortages, a conflict with Russia beyond Ukraine, new COVID obstacles and a consumer retreat. The Rates Market Thinks The Fed's Overly Ambitious Bottom Line: We continue to recommend overweighting equities and credit over our cyclical 6-12-month timeframe, but risks are heightened and we will change course if conditions dictate. Feature As telegraphed, the Fed began its rate hiking campaign at last week’s FOMC meeting. It lifted its target range for the fed funds rate 25 basis points (bps) from 0 – 0.25% to 0.25 – 0.5%. In addition to making the nearly unanimously expected 25-bps hike, it indicated that the median FOMC participant expects the funds rate to rise by 25 bps at each of the year’s six remaining meetings and by 87.5 bps in 2023, though Chair Powell stressed the projections are merely a baseline expectation subject to change as economic conditions evolve. Both projections slightly exceeded market expectations going into the meeting. After it ended, the fed funds rate implied by the December 2022 futures contract rose 15 bps to align with the median FOMC voter and the rate implied by the December 2023 fed funds contract rose 18 bps, though it remains about a quarter-point hike shy of the median FOMC projection (Chart 1). Chart 1It Looks Like The Fed Can Only Surprise Hawkishly Chart 2The Dots Turn More Hawkish Widening the lens to consider the entire distribution of projected rate hikes (the Fed’s dots), and considering the mean value instead of the median, the dots get slightly more ambitious, revealing that disappointingly high inflation readings would prod the committee to ramp up the pace of its 2022 hikes. Seven of the sixteen FOMC participants expect at least 200 bps of hikes in 2022, with the mean funds rate projection nudging up to 2.05% (Chart 2, top panel). The rates market has the funds rate topping out between 2½ and 2⅝%, about one 25-bps hike below the average participant’s 2.81% and 2.75% year-end 2023 (Chart 2, middle panel) and 2024 (Chart 2, bottom panel) projections. With five FOMC voters expecting a terminal rate of 3% or above, there is scope for an upside surprise if inflation comes in hotter or lasts longer than anticipated. The other changes in the Summary of Economic Projections related to the committee’s GDP and inflation outlook. Participants marked down their median real 2022 GDP growth projection to 2.8% from 4% while increasing their headline and core PCE price index projections about one-and-a-half percentage points to 4.3% and 4.1%, respectively. 2023 and 2024 real GDP growth forecasts were unchanged while inflation expectations were bumped a little higher. The FOMC’s outlook has dimmed slightly, though it is still calling for a soft landing with the economy growing at an above-trend rate and supporting full employment while inflation eases to near its target level. You Can’t Get There From Here Any central bank’s long-run projections will show the economy moving toward its desired target conditions. One probably wouldn’t toil as a central banker if s/he didn’t think the bank’s tools would work and couldn’t say it out loud (even when voting anonymously) if s/he doubted that they might. An investor should therefore never place too much stock in the FOMC’s projections for key economic indicators two and three years out. “[A]ppropriate[ly] firming … monetary policy” is easier said than done, even in the best of times. Related Report US Investment StrategyThe Last Line Of Inflation Defense (Is Holding Fast) The combination of monetary and fiscal largesse almost certainly staved off a COVID recession, at the cost of fostering some asset-market excesses while quite possibly overstimulating aggregate demand over the intermediate term. The Fed is now left to confront the aftermath with blunt policy tools that work with long and variable lags. It is always a tall order to steer an economy smoothly through the ups and downs of the business cycle; sticking the landing after the pandemic’s emergency monetary and fiscal routines involves a much higher degree of difficulty. Chair Powell put on a brave face in his post-meeting press conference, but he and his colleagues are embarking on this rate hiking cycle under less-than-ideal conditions. “In hindsight, yes, it would have been appropriate to move [to hike rates] earlier. … No one wants to have to put really restrictive monetary policy on in order to get inflation back down. So, frankly, [we] need … [to] … get rates back up to more neutral levels as quickly as we practicably can and then mov[e] beyond [neutral], if [it] turns out to be appropriate.” Bottom Line: Having to move as quickly as is practicable implies that the committee and financial markets might be in for some white-knuckle moments in the months ahead. Soft landings are more common in theory than in practice and it will be especially hard to pull one off now. A Recession Is Not Likely … A narrow margin for error does not mean the Fed is walking a tightrope over two negative extremes, however, and we believe the risks of a growth shortfall are modest. We share Powell’s view that “the probability of a recession within the next year is not particularly elevated.” Aggregate demand is strong and will be supported by households’ and businesses’ fortified balance sheets while the labor market has strength to burn. We think the chair had it just right when he said, “all signs are that this is a strong economy and, indeed, one that will be able to flourish … in the face of less accommodative monetary policy.” Our simple recession indicator, built from components that have reliably provided advance warning, reinforces Powell’s conclusion. The 3-month/10-year segment of the yield curve is not yet close to inverting1 (Chart 3). The year-over-year change in the Conference Board’s Leading Economic Index is way above the zero line that has signaled past recessions (Chart 4). The fed funds rate is nowhere near its equilibrium/neutral level, which we judge to be north of 3%, and it is highly unlikely to get there by the end of the year (Chart 5). Ex-the pandemic, recessions over the last 50-plus years have only occurred when all three components sound the alarm; not one is flashing red now and not one is likely to do so during 2022. Chart 3Recessions Occur When The Yield Curve Inverts, ... Chart 4... The Year-Over-Year Change In The LEI Turns Negative ... Chart 5... And The Target Fed Funds Rate Is Above Its Equilibrium Level … But Inflation Is A Pressing Concern The Fed is right to take action to try to stem inflation, which has found especially fertile soil. Extraordinary monetary and fiscal stimulus have given demand a persistent tailwind; social distancing funneled spending to goods while rolling global COVID surges slowed production and hampered transport, crimping supply; and domestic COVID infections limited labor force participation, tightening the labor market and exerting upward pressure on wages. Just when COVID was finally relaxing its grip, Russia invaded Ukraine, taking major sources of crude oil, natural gas, wheat, corn and several base metals offline while creating new cargo and shipping bottlenecks. The Omicron variant’s emergence in China could bring new supply disruptions. The upshot is that the Ukraine invasion and COVID’s Asian revival could keep inflation elevated, obscuring mitigating factors like a consumption shift from goods to services (Chart 6), diminishing shipping backlogs (Chart 7), increasing labor force participation and more forgiving year-over-year comparisons (base effects). Upside inflation surprises could open the door to a faster pace of rate hikes than markets have already discounted, especially if stubbornly high inflation begins to push up longer-run inflation expectations. Despite their recent rise, long-run expectations remain well anchored for now (Chart 8), while households’ sizable savings cushion better positions them to withstand higher prices. Chart 6A Transitory Inflation Catalyst Chart 7Shipping Bottlenecks Had Been Easing Chart 8Long-Run Inflation Expectations Are Still Manageable Financial Market Impacts Equities took heart from Powell’s talk of the Fed’s commitment to prevent high inflation from becoming entrenched, but his comments were not uniformly reassuring. He specifically called out the red-hot labor market, a key pillar of the favorable growth outlook, as a source of concern. “[I]f you take a look … at today’s labor market, what you have is 1.7-plus job openings for every unemployed person (Chart 9). So that’s a very, very tight labor market, tight to an unhealthy level, I would say.” The Phillips Curve trade-off between growth and inflation still applies after all, but after a dozen years when policymakers and investors were able to ignore it, equity multiples, credit spreads and Treasury yields may no longer account for it. They seem to still be discounting a have-your-cake-and-eat-it-too environment in which growth, even when it’s above trend, is continuously goosed by accommodative policy. Chart 9Too Tight For The Fed Chair There’s also the issue that the Fed’s tools are not suited to fine-tuning economic outcomes. One does not have to be a card-carrying Austrian to harbor some skepticism about central bankers' ability to make targeted tweaks. “[I]n principle, … the idea is we’re trying to better align demand and supply[.] [I]n the labor market, … if you were just moving down the number of job openings so that they were more like one to one, you would have less upward pressure on wages. You would have a lot less of a labor shortage. … And basically across the economy, we’d like to slow demand so that it’s better aligned with supply. … Of course, the plan is to restore price stability while also sustaining a strong labor market. That is our intention, and we believe we can do that. But we have to restore price stability.” It’s a happy circumstance when attaining a goal doesn’t involve a sacrifice, but no pain, no gain is adulthood’s default condition. To paraphrase Powell’s press conference guidance, price stability with full employment would be really nice, but if push comes to shove, price stability has to take precedence. The tight monetary policy needed to restore lost price stability would constitute a major headwind for risk assets and the economy. It would spell the end of the equity and credit bull markets while ushering in the next recession. It is our view that the perception that price stability sacrifices are inevitable is still far away enough that risk assets have roughly nine to twelve good months ahead of them, although we hold it with less conviction than we did before Russia attacked Ukraine and Omicron reached China. Both events have the potential to hasten the end of monetary accommodation and drive investors to reconsider their terminal (peak) fed funds rate expectations. We do not expect that investors will revisit their terminal rate expectations until they can glean some empirical evidence of how the economy behaves when the funds rate exceeds 2.25%. If it takes the FOMC at least a year to get to that level, we expect that any major repricing of longer-term Treasury yields is over a year away. The bottom line is that we remain constructive on financial markets and the US economy over our six-to-twelve-month cyclical timeframe, but the clock is ticking and European fighting and Asian COVID infections are threats to our view. We believe that the decline in equity prices and the widening of high-yield credit spreads adequately compensate investors for the increased potential pitfalls, but we remain vigilant and are maintaining our tactically cautious ETF portfolio positioning until some of the clouds lift. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 We use the 3-month/10-year segment instead of the more common 2-year/10-year because the 3-month bill is a cleaner proxy for short rates than the 2-year note, which embeds estimates of the Fed’s future actions. 2s/10s also fail to measure up empirically, inverting even earlier than the habitually premature 3-month/10-year.
Executive Summary Investors Think The Fed Will Not Be Able To Raise Rates Much Above 2% The neutral rate of interest is 3%-to-4% in the United States. This is substantially higher than the market estimate of around 2%. It is also higher than the central tendency range for the Fed’s terminal interest rate dot, which remained at 2.3%-to-2.5% following this week’s FOMC meeting. If the neutral rate turns out to be higher than expected, this is arguably good news for stocks over the short-to-medium term because it lowers the risk that the Fed will accidentally induce a recession this year by bringing rates into restrictive territory. Over a longer-term horizon of 2-to-5 years, however, a higher neutral rate is bad news for stocks because it means that investors will eventually need to value equities using a higher discount rate. It also means that the Fed could find itself woefully behind the curve in normalizing monetary policy. Bottom Line: Global equities will rise over the next 12 months as the situation in Ukraine stabilizes, commodity prices recede, and inflation temporarily declines. Stocks will peak in the second half of 2023 in advance of a second, and currently unexpected, round of Fed tightening beginning in late-2023 or 2024. Dear Client, Instead of our regular report next week, we will be sending you a Special Report written by Matt Gertken, BCA Research’s Chief Geopolitical Strategist, discussing the geopolitical implications of the war in Ukraine. 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 in the rest of 2022 and beyond. As always, I will hold a webcast discussing the outlook the week after, on Thursday, April 7th. Best regards, Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist https://www.linkedin.com/in/peter-berezin-1289b87/ https://twitter.com/BerezinPeter A Two-Stage Fed Tightening Cycle The FOMC raised rates by 25 basis points this week, the first of seven rate hikes that the Federal Reserve has telegraphed in its Summary of Economic Projections for the remainder of 2022. We expect the Fed to follow through on its planned rate hikes this year, but then go on pause in early-2023, as inflation temporarily comes down. However, the Fed will resume raising rates in late-2023 or 2024 once inflation begins to reaccelerate and it becomes clear that monetary policy is still too easy. This second round of monetary tightening is currently not anticipated by market participants. If anything, investors think the Fed is more likely to cut rates than raise rates towards the end of next year (Chart 1). The Fed’s own views are not that different from the markets’: The central tendency range for the Fed’s terminal interest rate dot remained at 2.3%-to-2.5% following this week’s FOMC meeting, with the median dot actually ticking lower to 2.4% from 2.5% (Chart 2). Chart 2The Fed Is Still In The Secular Stagnation Camp A Higher Neutral Rate Our higher-than-consensus view of where US rates will eventually end up reflects our conviction that the neutral rate of interest is somewhere between 3% and 4%. One can think of the neutral rate as the interest rate that equates the amount of investment a country wants to undertake at full employment with the amount of savings that it has at its disposal.1 Anything that reduces savings or increases investment would raise the neutral rate (Chart 3). As we discussed last month, a number of factors are likely to lower desired savings in the US over the next few years: Households will spend down their accumulated pandemic savings. US households are sitting on $2.3 trillion (10% of GDP) in excess savings, the result of both decreased spending on services during the pandemic and the receipt of generous government transfer payments (Chart 4). Household wealth has soared since the start of the pandemic (Chart 5). Conservatively assuming that households spend three cents of every additional dollar in wealth, the resulting wealth effect could boost consumption by nearly 4% of GDP. Chart 5Net Worth Has Soared Since The Pandemic The household deleveraging cycle has ended (Chart 6). Household balance sheets are in good shape. After falling during the initial stages of the pandemic, consumer credit has begun to rebound. Banks are easing lending standards on consumer loans across the board. Baby boomers are retiring. They hold over half of US household wealth, considerably more than younger generations (Chart 7). As baby boomers transition from savers to dissavers, national savings will decline. Chart 6US Household Deleveraging Pressures Have Abated Chart 7Baby Boomers Have Amassed A Lot Of Wealth Government budget deficits will stay elevated. Fiscal deficits subtract from national savings. While the US budget deficit will come down over the next few years, the IMF estimates that the structural budget deficit will still average 4.9% of GDP between 2022 and 2026 compared to 2.0% of GDP between 2014 and 2019 (Chart 8). On the investment front: The deceleration in trend GDP growth, which depressed investment spending, has largely run its course.2 According to the Congressional Budget Office, real potential GDP growth fell from over 3% in the early 1980s to about 1.9% today. The CBO expects potential growth to edge down only slightly to 1.7% over the next few decades (Chart 9). Chart 8Fiscal Policy: Tighter But Not Tight Chart 9Much Of The Deceleration In Potential Growth Has Already Happened After moving broadly sideways for two decades, core capital goods orders – a leading indicator for capital spending – have broken out to the upside (Chart 10). Capex intention surveys remain upbeat (Chart 11). The average age of the nonresidential capital stock currently stands at 16.3 years, the highest since 1965 (Chart 12). Chart 10Positive Signs For Capex (I) Similar to nonresidential investment, the US has been underinvesting in residential real estate (Chart 13). The average age of the housing stock has risen to a 71-year high of 31 years. The homeowner vacancy rate has plunged to the lowest level on record. The number of newly finished homes for sale is half of what it was prior to the pandemic. Chart 11Positive Signs For Capex (II) Chart 12An Aging Capital Stock Chart 13Housing Is In Short Supply The New ESG: Energy Security and Guns The war in Ukraine will put further pressure on the neutral rate, especially outside of the United States. Chart 14European Capex Should Recover After staging a plodding recovery following the euro debt crisis, European capital spending received a sizable boost from the launch of the NextGenerationEU Recovery Fund (Chart 14). Capital spending will rise further in the years ahead as European governments accelerate efforts to make their economies less reliant on Russian energy. Meanwhile, European governments are trying to ease the burden from rising energy costs. France has introduced a rebate on fuel starting on April 1st. It is part of a EUR 20 billion package aimed at cutting heating and electricity bills. Other countries are considering similar measures. European military spending will also rise. Germany has already announced that it will spend EUR 100 billion more on defense. European governments will also need to boost spending to accommodate potentially several million Ukrainian refugees. A Smaller Chinese Current Account Surplus? Chart 15Will China Be A Source Of Excess Savings? The difference between what a country saves and invests equals its current account balance. Historically, China has been a major exporter of savings, which has helped depress interest rates abroad. While China’s current account surplus has declined as a share of its own GDP, it has remained very large as a share of global ex-China GDP, reflecting China’s growing weight in the global economy (Chart 15). Many analysts assume that China will double down on efforts to boost exports in order to offset the drag from falling property investment. However, there is a major geopolitical snag with that thesis: A country that runs a current account surplus must, by definition, accumulate assets from the rest of the world. As the freezing of Russia’s foreign exchange reserves demonstrates, that is a risky proposition for a country such as China. Rather than increasing its current account surplus, China may seek to bolster its economy by raising domestic demand. This could be achieved by either boosting domestic investment on infrastructure and/or consumption. Notably, the IMF’s latest projections foresee China’s current account surplus falling by more than half between 2021 and 2026 as a share of global ex-China GDP. If this were to happen, the neutral rate in China and elsewhere would rise. The Path to Neutral: The Role of Inflation If one accepts the premise that the neutral rate in the US is higher than widely believed, what will the path to this higher rate look like? The answer hinges critically on the trajectory of inflation. If inflation remains stubbornly high, the Fed will be forced to hike rates by more than expected over the next 12 months. In contrast, if inflation comes down rapidly, then the Fed will be able to raise rates at a more leisurely pace. As late as early February, one could have made a strong case that US inflation was set to fall. The demand for goods was beginning to moderate as spending shifted back towards services. On the supply side, the bottlenecks that had impaired goods production were starting to ease. Chart 16 shows that the number of ships anchored off the coast of Los Angeles and Long Beach has been trending lower while the supplier delivery components of both the ISM manufacturing and nonmanufacturing indices had come off their highs. Since then, the outlook for inflation has become a lot murkier. As we discussed last week, the war in Ukraine is putting upward pressure on commodity prices, ranging from energy, to metals, to agriculture. BCA’s geopolitical team, led by Matt Gertken, expects the war to worsen before a truce of sorts is reached in a month or two. Meanwhile, a new Covid wave is gaining momentum. New daily cases are rising across Europe and have exploded higher in parts of Asia (Chart 17). In China, the number of new cases has reached a two-year high. The government has already locked down parts of the country encompassing 37 million people, including Shenzhen, a major high-tech hub adjoining Hong Kong. Chart 17Covid Cases Are On The Rise Again In Some Countries Most new cases in China and elsewhere stem from the BA.2 subvariant of Omicron, which appears to be at least 50% more contagious than Omicron Classic. Given its extreme contagiousness, China may be forced to rely on massive nationwide lockdowns in order to maintain its zero-Covid strategy. While such lockdowns may provide some relief in the form of lower oil prices, the overall effect will be to worsen supply-chain disruptions. Watch For Signs of a Wage-Price Spiral As the experience of the 1960s demonstrates, the relationship between inflation and unemployment is inherently non-linear: The labor market can tighten for a long time with little impact on prices and wages, only for a wage-price spiral to suddenly develop once unemployment falls below a certain threshold (Chart 18). Chart 18A Wage-Price Spiral Was Ignited By Very Low Unemployment Levels In The 1960s Chart 19Wage Growth Has Picked Up, But Mostly At The Bottom End Of The Income Distribution For the time being, a wage-price spiral does not appear imminent. While wage growth has picked up, most of the increase in wages has occurred at the bottom end of the income distribution (Chart 19). Chart 20More Low-Wage Employees Should Return To Work Low-wage workers have not returned to the labor force to the same extent as higher-wage workers (Chart 20). However, now that extended unemployment benefits have lapsed and savings deposits are being drawn down, the incentive to resume work will strengthen. An influx of workers back into the labor market will cap wage growth, at least for this year. Long-Term Inflation Expectations Still Contained A sudden increase in long-term inflation expectations can be a precursor to a wage-price spiral because the expectation of higher prices can induce consumers to shop now before prices rise further, while also incentivizing workers to demand higher wages. Reassuringly, long-term inflation expectations have not risen that much. Expected inflation 5-to-10 years out in the University of Michigan survey registered 3.0% in March, down a notch from 3.1% in February (Chart 21). While the widely followed 5-year, 5-year forward TIPS inflation breakeven rate has climbed to 2.32%, it is still at the bottom of the Fed’s comfort zone of 2.3%-to-2.5% (Chart 22).3 Chart 21Long-Term Inflation Expectations Remain Contained (I) Chart 22Long-Term Inflation Expectations Remain Contained (II) Chart 23The Magnitude Of Damage Depends On How Long The Commodity Price Shock Lasts Moreover, the jump in market-based inflation expectations since the start of the war in Ukraine has been fueled by rising oil prices. The forwards are pointing to a fairly pronounced decline in the price of crude and most other commodity prices over the next 12 months (Chart 23). If that happens, inflation expectations will dip anew. Investment Implications The neutral rate of interest is higher in the United States than widely believed. A higher neutral rate is arguably good for stocks over the short-to-medium term because it lowers the risk that the Fed will accidentally induce a recession this year by bringing rates into restrictive territory. Over a longer-term horizon of 2-to-5 years, however, a higher neutral rate is bad news for stocks because it means that investors will eventually need to value stocks using a higher discount rate. It also means that the Fed could find itself woefully behind the curve in normalizing monetary policy. While the war in Ukraine and yet another Covid wave could continue to unsettle markets for the next month or two, global equities will be higher in 12 months than they are now. With inflation in the US likely to temporarily come down in the second half of the year, bond yields probably will not rise much more this year. However, yields will start moving higher in the second half of next year as it becomes clear that policy rates still have further to rise. The bull market in stocks will end at that point. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 These savings can either by generated domestically or imported from abroad via a current account deficit. 2 Theoretically, there is a close relationship between trend growth and the equilibrium investment-to-GDP ratio. For example, if real trend growth is 3% and the capital stock-to-GDP ratio is 200%, a country would need to invest 6% of GDP net of depreciation to maintain the existing capital stock-to-GDP ratio. In contrast, if trend growth were to fall to 2%, the country would only need to invest 4% of GDP. 3 The Federal Reserve targets an average inflation rate of 2% for the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) index. The TIPS breakeven is based on the CPI index. Due to compositional differences between the two indices, CPI inflation has historically averaged 30-to-50 basis points higher than PCE inflation. This is why the Fed effectively targets a CPI inflation rate of about 2.3%-to-2.5%. View Matrix Special Trade Recommendations Current MacroQuant Model Scores
Executive Summary The Market Has Priced An Aggressive Path For US Rate Hikes The Federal Reserve has joined other G10 central banks in increasing interest rates this week. However, this has been well priced by both the dollar and short rates in the US (Feature Chart). The key call for currencies therefore is whether the Fed delivers more or less hikes than is currently priced by markets over the course of the next few months. More aggressive rate hikes will boost US bond yields, and send the dollar higher. But it will also undermine US equity multiples, given the tight correlation between the price-to-earnings ratio in the US and the real bond yield. More importantly, US equity market leadership has been an important driver of portfolio inflows into the dollar. Should the Fed deliver less hikes than the aggressive path currently priced by markets, currency investors will also be caught offside. This conundrum puts the DXY at risk. The caveat is that if the US economy is genuinely stronger than the rest of the world, and more insulated from the Russo-Ukrainian conflict, this will warrant higher real US interest rates. We went short NOK/SEK last week given our bias that oil prices had overshot. Tighten stops to protect profits. Bottom Line: Being long the dollar is a consensus trade. While in the near term, this could prove to be the right call, the dollar is also expensive and overbought, which is bearish from a contrarian perspective. Feature The 25 basis point interest rate hike by the Federal Reserve this week has probably been one of the most telegraphed macro events. Interest rate expectations in the US have risen sharply compared to last year (Chart 1). More importantly, as Chart 2 shows, two-year bond yields (a proxy for short rates) have climbed in the US relative to pretty much every other G10 country. Correspondingly, rising interest rate expectations in the US have led to substantial speculative flows into the US dollar. Chart 2The Market Expects The Fed To Hike Faster Than Other Central Banks This Year Chart 1The Market Has Priced An Aggressive Path For US Rate Hikes On the flipside, the outperformance of the US equity market is being threatened by rising interest rates. If rates rise substantially, that could derate US equity multiples, as portfolio inflows are curtailed. US profits also tend to underperform when rates rise. However, if US rates rise by less than what the market expects, net long speculative positioning in the dollar will surely reverse. Non-US Markets Benefit More When Bond Yields Rise Profits tend to drive the equity market over the short run, with valuation starting to matter over longer horizons. When it comes to the US, it is also true that profits tend to underperform the rest of the world as bond yields rise. Why it matters for the dollar is because a better profit picture in the US helps drive portfolio flows into US equities, buffeting the exchange rate (Chart 3). Related Report Global Investment StrategyA Two-Stage Fed Tightening Cycle Chart 4 shows that US profits lag the rest of the world when bond yields are in an uptrend. This is because of the composition of the US equity market. Specifically, the US equity market is underweight financials, energy, materials, and industrials, while overweight information technology, health care, and communication services. Rising inflation benefits commodity-linked sectors, the income statements of which are directly juiced by rising prices. Similarly, banks tend to do better as interest rates rise because net interest margins improve. In a nutshell, rising rates and inflation tend to be better for the profits of value stocks and cyclicals, sectors that are underrepresented in the US. Chart 3The Dollar And US Equities Chart 4Bond Yields And US Profits There is also a valuation angle to higher rates. Because the US market is more overweight sectors with cash flows that backwardated, higher rates will undermine the valuation premium currently commanded by these sectors. This is true both in absolute terms and relative to other markets (Chart 5A and 5B). Chart 5AThe S&P 500 P/E Ratio And Real ##br##Yields Chart 5BThe Valuation Premium In The US Is Inversely Correlated To Bond Yields The key point is that the US equity market is at risk relatively from higher global yields that could undermine relative profit growth and its valuation premium. The US trade deficit currently runs at $90 billion. In 2021, at least 45% of that was financed via foreign equity purchases. A reversal in these flows could undermine the dollar. The Dollar And Relative Interest Rates While portfolio flows into US equities have been reversing, bond inflows have improved (Chart 6). Over the long term, bond flows tend to be the key driver of the US dollar. As Chart 2 shows, most market participants expect the Fed to be among the most hawkish central banks in 2022 and beyond. In fact, December Eurodollar contracts are pricing the Fed to hike interest rates by 218 bps more than the ECB, and 235 bps more than the Bank of Japan (allowing for a small risk premium in this pricing) (Chart 7). Chart 7Investors Are Very Bullish On US Rate Expectations Chart 6Investors Have Been Aggressively Purchasing US Treasurys There are two key risks to a hawkish Fed view, relative to other central banks: First, the Fed is already behind the curve relative to its G10 counterparts. The BoE, RBNZ, BoC, and the Norges Bank have already increased rates. Even the rhetoric at the ECB is shifiting. Relative bond yields do not reflect this reality. Second, and related, rising inflation is a global phenomenon and not specific to the US. Almost every central bank is acknowledging that inflation is a key risk to their mandate, compared to the transitory narrative last year. Chart 8 plots headline inflation across G10 countries. On this basis, it becomes difficult to justify why two-year yields in the UK, for example, are much lower, compared to the US. Chart 8Rising Inflation Is Not A US-Centric Problem If inflation does indeed prove to be sticky, other central banks will have to keep hiking interest rates along with the Fed. If inflation subsides, the Fed might not be as aggressive in tightening policy as the market expects. On a relative basis, this suggests there is a mispricing of how the market views Fed action, relative to other central banks. The key risk to this view is that the US economy can actually withstand much higher rates compared to the rest of the world. While this could be the case, higher rates in Norway and New Zealand are not yet hurting domestic conditions. In fact, it can be argued that weakness in their currencies has unwound a lot of the tightening in financial conditions from higher interest rates. A commodity boom also suggests that these currencies will benefit from rising terms of trade. Conclusion Bond markets have priced higher relative rates in the US, but the Fed could actually lag market expectations, especially relative to commodity-linked currencies (Chart 9). Chart 9Commodity Currencies Have Been Tracking Rate Expectations With A Lag Specifically, higher rates than the market expects in the US will undermine US equity market leadership, reversing substantial portfolio inflows in recent years. This is already occurring at the margin. On the other hand, fewer rate hikes will severely unwind speculative inflows into the US dollar. Housekeeping We went short NOK/SEK on the expectation that oil prices had overshot, especially relative to forward markets (Chart 10). We are tightening the stop loss on this trade to 1.09. Finally, the Bank of England met this week and its transcript reinforced our stance that the BoE will be cornered as it attempts to raise rates amidst a slowing economy. Stay long EUR/GBP. Chart 10Stay Short NOK/SEK But Tighten Stops Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
Executive Summary For the Fed, maintaining its credibility with a long sequence of rate hikes that does not crash the economy, real estate market, and stock market is akin to the ‘Hail Mary’ move of (American) football. The likelihood that the Fed completes the straight sequence of eight rate hikes which the market is now pricing seems very low. Hence, today we are opening a new trade. Go long the September 2023 Eurodollar futures contract. Additionally, stay underweight Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS) versus T-bonds. And on a 12-month horizon, underweight the commodity complex, whose elevated prices are highly vulnerable to a near-certain upcoming demand destruction. Fractal trading watchlist: US interest rate futures, 3-year T-bond, Canada versus Japan, AUD/KRW, and EUR/CHF. Spending On Goods Looks Like An Earthquake On A Seismograph Bottom Line: The likelihood that the Fed completes the straight sequence of eight rate hikes which the market is now pricing seems very low. Feature Amid the uncertainties of the Ukraine crisis, there is one certainty. The latest surge in energy and grain prices is a classic supply shock. Prices have spiked because vital supplies of Russian and Ukrainian energy and grains have been cut. This matters for central banks, because to the extent that they can bring down inflation, they can do so by depressing demand. They can do nothing to boost supply. In fact, depressing demand during a supply shock is a sure way to start a recession. But what about the inflation that came before the Ukraine crisis, wasn’t that due to excess demand? No, that inflation came not from a demand shock, but from a displacement of demand shock – as consumers displaced their firepower from services to goods on a massive scale. This matters because central banks are also ill placed to fix such a misallocation of demand. Chart I-1 looks like a seismograph after a huge earthquake, and in a sense that is exactly what it is. The chart shows the growth in spending on durable goods, which has just suffered an earthquake unlike any in history. Zooming in, we can see the clear causality between the surges in spending on durables and the surges in core inflation. The important corollary being that when the binge on durables ends – as it surely must – or worse, when durable spending goes into recession, inflation will plummet (Chart I-2). Chart I-1Spending On Goods Looks Like An Earthquake On A Seismograph Chart I-2The Goods Binges Caused The Core Inflation Spikes But, argue the detractors, what about the uncomfortably high price inflation in services? What about the uncomfortably high inflation expectations? Most worrying, what about the recent surge in wage inflation? Let’s address these questions. Underlying US Inflation Is Running At Around 3 Percent In the US, the dominant component of services inflation is housing rent, which comprises 40 percent of the core consumer price index. Housing rent combines actual rent for those that rent their home, with the near-identically behaving owners’ equivalent rent (OER) for those that own their home. Given the state of the jobs market, there is nothing unusual in the current level of rent inflation. Housing rent inflation closely tracks the tightness of the jobs market, because you need a job to pay the rent. With the unemployment rate today at the same low as it was in 2006, rent inflation is at the same high as it was in 2006: 4.3 percent. In other words, given the state of the jobs market, there is nothing unusual in the current level of rent inflation (Chart I-3). Chart I-3Given The Jobs Market, Rent Inflation Is Where It Should Be Given its dominance in core inflation, rent inflation running at 4.3 percent would usually be associated with core inflation running at around 3 percent – modestly above the Fed’s target, rather than the current 6.5 percent (Chart I-4). Confirming that it is the outsized displacement of spending into goods, and its associated inflation, that is giving the Fed and other central banks a massive headache. Yet, to repeat, monetary policy is ill placed to fix such a misallocation of demand. Chart I-4Given Rent Inflation, Core Inflation Should Be 3 Percent Still, what about the surging expectations for inflation? Many people believe that these are an independent and forward-looking assessment of how inflation will evolve. Yet nothing could be further from the truth. The bond market’s expected inflation is just the result of an algorithm that uses historic inflation. And at that, an extremely short period of historic inflation, just six months.1 The upshot is that when the backward-looking six month inflation rate is low, like it was in the depths of the global financial crisis in late 2008 or the pandemic recession in early 2020, the market assumes that the forward-looking ten year inflation rate will be low. And when the backward-looking six-month inflation rate is high, like early-2008 or now, the bond market assumes that the forward-looking ten year inflation rate will be high. In other words: Inflation expectations are nothing more than a reflection of the last six months’ inflation rate (Chart I-5). Chart I-5Inflation Expectations Are Just A Reflection Of The Last Six Months' Inflation Rate Turning to wage inflation, with US average hourly earnings inflation running close to 6 percent, it would appear to be game, set, and match to ‘Team Inflation.’ Except that this is a flawed argument. To the extent that wages contribute to inflation, it must come from the inflation in unit labour costs, meaning the ratio of hourly compensation to labour productivity. After all, if you get paid 6 percent more but produce 6 percent more, then it is not inflationary (Chart I-6). Chart I-6If You Get Paid 6 Percent More But Produce 6 Percent More, Then It Is Not Inflationary In this regard, US unit labour costs increased by 3.5 percent through 2021, and slowed to just a 0.9 percent (annualised) increase in the fourth quarter.2 Still, 3.5 percent, and slowing, is modestly above the Fed’s inflation target, and could justify a slight nudging up of the Fed funds rate. But it could not justify the straight sequence of eight rate hikes which the market is now pricing. The Fed Is Praying For A ‘Hail Mary’ Fortunately, the bond market understands all of this. How else could you say 7 percent inflation and 2 percent long bond yield in the same breath?! This is crucial, because it is the long bond yield that drives rate-sensitive parts of the economy, such as housing and construction. And it is the long bond yield that sets the level of all asset prices, including real estate and stocks. Although the Fed cannot admit it, the central bank also understands all of this and hopes that the bond market continues to ‘get it.’ Meaning that it hopes that the long end of the interest rate curve does not lift too far and crash the economy, real estate market, and stock market. So why is the Fed hiking the policy interest rate? The answer is that there will be a time in the future when it does need to lift the entire interest rate curve, and for that it will need its credibility intact. Not hiking now could potentially shred the credibility that is the lifeblood of any central bank. Still, to maintain its credibility without crashing the economy the Fed will have to make the ‘Hail Mary’ move of (American) football. For our non-American readers, the Hail Mary is a high-risk desperate move with little hope of completion. Go long the September 2023 Eurodollar futures contract. To sum up, the likelihood that the Fed completes the straight sequence of eight rate hikes which the market is now pricing seems very low. Hence, today we are opening a new trade. Go long the September 2023 Eurodollar futures contract (Chart I-7). Chart I-7The Likelihood That The Fed Completes A Straight Sequence Of Eight Rate Hikes Seems Low Additionally, stay underweight Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS) versus T-bonds (Chart I-8). Chart I-8Underweight TIPS Versus T-Bonds And on a 12-month horizon, underweight the commodity complex, whose elevated prices are highly vulnerable to a near-certain upcoming demand destruction. Fractal Trading Watchlist Confirming the fundamental analysis in the preceding sections, the strong trend in both the 18 month out US interest rate future and the equivalent 3 year T-bond has reached the point of fragility that has identified previous turning-points in 2018 and 2021 (Chart I-9 and Chart I-10). This week we are also adding to our watchlist the commodity plays Canada versus Japan and AUD/KRW, whose outperformances are vulnerable to reversal. From next week you will be able to see the full watchlist of investments that are vulnerable to reversal on our website. Stay tuned. Finally, the underperformance of EUR/CHF has reached the point of fragility on its 260-day fractal structure that has identified the previous major turning-points in 2018 and 2020 (Chart I-11). Accordingly, this week’s recommended trade is long EUR/CHF, setting a profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 3.6 percent. Chart I-9The Strong Trend In The 18-Month-Out US Interest Rate Future Is Fragile Chart I-10The Strong Trend In The 3 Year T-Bond Is Fragile Chart I-11Go Long EUR/CHF Canada Versus Japan Is Vulnerable To Reversal AUD/KRW Is Vulnerable To Reversal Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The expected 10-year inflation rate = (deviation of 6-month annualized inflation from 1.6)*0.2 + 1.6. 2 Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics Fractal Trading System Fractal Trades 6-Month Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Executive Summary The Fed is in a tough spot. On the one hand, rising long-dated inflation expectations will incentivize it to tighten more quickly. On the other hand, the flat yield curve and poor risky asset performance point to a heightened risk of recession if it tightens too aggressively. The Fed will try to split the difference by lifting rates at a steady pace of 25 bps per meeting, starting this week. Though upside risks have increased, it remains likely that core inflation will peak within the next couple of months. This will allow the Fed to continue tightening at a steady pace, one that is already well discounted in the market. Monthly Core Inflation By Major Component Bottom Line: Investors should keep portfolio duration close to benchmark and favor yield curve steepeners. Corporate bond spreads will continue to widen in the near-term, but a buying opportunity will soon emerge. A Tough Spot For The Fed A lot has happened since we shifted our portfolio duration recommendation from “below benchmark” to “at benchmark” on February 15. The Russian invasion of Ukraine sent bond yields sharply lower the following week but yields have since recovered and are now close to where they were when we upgraded our duration view (Chart 1). That said, the round-trip in nominal yields masks some significant moves in the real and inflation components. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is currently 2.98%, up from 2.45% on February 15, and the 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate has moved up to 2.38% from 2.05% (Chart 2). In the past two weeks we’ve also seen a further flattening of the yield curve (Chart 2, panel 3) and widening of credit spreads (Chart 2, bottom panel). Chart 2A Stagflationary Shock Chart 1Round-Trip Taken together, recent market moves are consistent with a stagflationary shock. Long-dated inflation expectations are higher, but the yield curve is flatter and risk assets have sold off. This sort of environment is a complicated one for Fed policy. On the one hand, rising long-dated inflation expectations give the Fed a greater incentive to tighten quickly. On the other hand, rapidly tightening financial conditions increase the risk that the Fed may move too aggressively and push the economy into recession. So what’s the Fed to do? For now, it will try to split the difference. In practice, this means that the Fed will start tightening policy this week and proceed with a steady rate hike pace of 25 basis points per meeting. Once this process starts, we see two possible scenarios. The first possible scenario is that the Fed achieves its “soft landing”. A steady hike pace of 25 bps per meeting proves to be slow enough that financial conditions tighten only gradually, the yield curve retains its positive slope and inflation peaks within the next couple of months, halting the upward trend in long-dated inflation expectations. This benign scenario is still more likely than many people appreciate. For starters, the bond market is already priced for close to seven 25 basis point rate hikes this year, the equivalent of one 25 bps hike per meeting (Chart 3). This means a 50 bps hike at some point this year is required for the Fed to deliver a hawkish surprise to near-term expectations. In our view, a 50 bps hike is unlikely unless long-dated inflation expectations continue to move higher and become obviously “un-anchored”. If inflation peaks within the next couple of months, in line with our base case outlook, then so will long-dated expectations. Chart 3Rate Expectations The second possible scenario is that we see no near-term relief on the inflation front. Global supply chains remain disrupted by the war in Ukraine and surging COVID cases in China, and commodity prices continue their upward march. This would initially lead to even higher long-dated inflation expectations and an even faster pace of expected Fed tightening. It could even lead to a 50 bps Fed rate hike at some point, though we think it’s more likely that it would lead to an inverted yield curve and a severe tightening of financial conditions (i.e. sell off in equities and credit markets) before the Fed even gets the chance to deliver a 50 bps hike. Investment Implications The “soft landing” scenario remains our base case view. The Fed will start tightening in line with current market expectations and core inflation will peak within the next couple of months, keeping long-dated inflation expectations in check. Related Report US Investment StrategyQ&A On Ukraine, Financial Markets And The Economy The correct investment strategy for this outcome is to keep portfolio duration close to benchmark and to favor a 2/10 yield curve steepener (buy the 2-year note versus a duration-matched barbell consisting of cash and the 10-year note). Not only is the front-end of the bond market fully priced for a steady hike pace of 25 bps per meeting, but the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield is close to median survey estimates of the long-run neutral fed funds rate. This suggests that the upside in long-dated bond yields is limited (Chart 4). As for the yield curve, assuming that the Fed’s well-discounted steady pace of tightening is unlikely to invert the curve, then it makes sense to grab the extremely attractive yield pick-up available in the 2-year note versus a duration-matched cash/10 barbell (Chart 5). Chart 4Close to Fair Value Chart 5A Huge Yield Pick-Up In Steepeners The investment implications of our second “un-anchored inflation expectations scenario” are more difficult to game out. However, we think the most likely outcome is that bond yields would rise initially, driven by inflation expectations, and then plunge once the yield curve inverts and it becomes clear that the Fed will be forced to tighten the economy into recession. This is not our base case scenario, but investors with a 6-12 month investment horizon who wish to position for this outcome should probably extend portfolio duration rather than shorten it. The 2022 Inflation Outlook A key pillar of the “soft landing” scenario described above is that core inflation peaks within the next couple of months and starts to head lower in H2 2022. Today, we’ll assess the likelihood of that occurring by looking at the three main components of core CPI inflation: goods, shelter, and services (excluding shelter). The first fact to consider is that month-over-month core CPI has printed between 0.5% and 0.6% in each of the past five months, almost matching the extreme inflation readings seen between April and June 2021 (Chart 6). If month-over-month core inflation continues to print at 0.5%, then year-over-year core CPI will drop between March and June before rising again to reach 6.3% by the end of the year (Chart 7). Conversely, if month-over-month core inflation declines to 0.3%, then year-over-year core inflation will fall steadily to 4.2% by the end of 2022. Chart 6Monthly Core Inflation By Major Component Chart 7Annual Inflation These two outcomes likely have different implications for policy and markets. The world where core inflation remains sticky above 6% probably coincides with expectations of rapid Fed tightening, a near-term inversion of the yield curve and rising expectations of recession. Conversely, the world where core inflation falls to 4.2% by the end of 2022 and appears to be on a downward trend probably coincides with well-contained inflation expectations and a steady pace of Fed tightening. We therefore want to know which of these outcomes is more likely. To do that we consider the outlooks for core inflation’s three main components. 1. Core Goods Chart 8Goods Inflation Goods have been the main driver of elevated inflation during the past year, especially the new and used car segments (Chart 8). Prior to the pandemic, core goods inflation tended to fluctuate around 0%. Currently, the year-over-year rate is up around 12%. We view a significant decline in core goods inflation as highly likely this year. First off, used car prices – as measured by the Manheim Used Vehicle Index – have already moderated (Chart 8, panel 2), while other measures of supply bottleneck pressures like the ISM manufacturing supplier deliveries and prices paid indexes are rolling over, albeit from high levels (Chart 8, panel 3). Reduced demand should also ease some of the upward pressure on goods prices this year. Consumer spending on goods dramatically overshot its pre-COVID trend during the past two years (Chart 8, bottom panel) as spending on services was often not possible. With US COVID restrictions on the verge of being completely lifted, some spending is likely to shift away from goods and towards services in 2022. The recent news of a surging omicron COVID wave in China and renewed lockdown measures already in place in Shenzhen province may delay the re-normalization of supply chains. As of yet, we think it’s premature for this to alter our view. The omicron experience of other countries suggests that the wave will be quick and that restrictions will not be as severe as in past COVID waves. 2. Shelter Shelter is the largest component of core CPI and it is also the most tightly correlated with the economic cycle. That is, it tends to accelerate when economic growth is trending up and the unemployment rate is falling, and vice-versa. Shelter faces two-way risk in 2022. The upside risk comes from private measures of asking rents and home prices that have already surged. The Zillow Rent Index is up 15% during the past 12 months and the Zillow Home Price Index is up 20% (Chart 9A). Recent research has shown that these private measures tend to feed into core CPI with a lag of about one year.1 The downside risk to shelter inflation this year comes from the economic cycle itself. Chart 9B shows that there is a tight correlation between shelter inflation and the unemployment rate, and between shelter inflation and aggregate weekly payrolls (employment x hours x wages). The unemployment rate’s rapid 2021 decline will not persist this year. The labor market is nearing full employment and last year’s fiscal impulse has faded. Chart 9BShelter Inflation II Chart 9AShelter Inflation I Netting it all out, we think shelter inflation will continue to trend higher for the next few months but will eventually level-off near the end of this year as economic growth slows. 3. Core Services (excluding Shelter) Services inflation printed an extremely strong 0.55% month-over-month in February, though a large portion of that increase was driven by pandemic-related services like airfares and admission to events, increases that will moderate now that the omicron wave has passed. More fundamentally, wage growth is the key driver of services inflation, and it has been extremely strong. The Atlanta Fed’s Wage Growth Tracker is up to 4.3% year-over-year, its highest since 2002, and it is showing signs of broadening out to wage earners of all levels (Chart 10). Though we see wage growth remaining strong, its acceleration is also likely to moderate in the coming months. The Census Bureau’s most recent Household Pulse Survey showed that almost 8 million people were absent from work in February because they were either sick with COVID themselves or caring for someone with COVID symptoms (Chart 11). Near-term wage demands will moderate during the next few months as the pandemic ebbs and these people return to work. Chart 10Wage Growth Is Strong Chart 11Covid Still Weighing On Labor Supply We also must grapple with the possible deflationary fall-out from the recent energy and gasoline price shock. Real household incomes are declining (Chart 12A), and while consumers have ample room to either tap their savings or increase debt to support spending (Chart 12B, top panel), the recent plunge in consumer sentiment suggests that they may behave more cautiously (Chart 12B, bottom panel). Chart 12AReal Incomes Are Falling Chart 12BConsumer Confidence Is Low Putting It Together We could see core goods inflation falling all the way back to a monthly rate of 0% this year. This would be consistent with its pre-pandemic level, but also wouldn’t incorporate any outright price declines – which are also possible. If we additionally assume some further acceleration in Owner’s Equivalent Rent and Rent of Primary Residence, to 0.6% per month, and a slight pullback in services inflation to a still-strong 0.3% per month, then overall core CPI inflation would hit a monthly rate of 0.34%, consistent with annual core CPI inflation of 4.2%. We think this is a reasonable forecast though we see risks to the upside driven by another bout of supply chain pressures in manufactured goods. In general, we expect year-over-year core CPI inflation to reach a range of 4% to 5% by the end of this year. That would be consistent with the “soft landing” scenario described earlier in this report. Corporate Bonds: Waiting For A Buying Opportunity To Emerge Chart 13Corporate Bond Valuation Finally, a quick update on our corporate bond allocation. Corporate bonds have sold off sharply versus Treasuries since February 15. The investment grade corporate bond index has underperformed a duration-equivalent position in Treasury securities by 217 bps while High-Yield has underperformed by a less dramatic 120 bps. With economic risks high and the Fed on the cusp of a tightening cycle, we think further spread widening is likely in the near-term. However, if the “soft landing” scenario described earlier in this report pans out, then we will soon see a buying opportunity in corporate bonds. The 12-month quality-adjusted breakeven spread for the investment grade corporate index has risen close to its historical median, from near all-time expensive levels only a few months ago (Chart 13). While a flat yield curve poses a risk to corporate bond returns, wide spreads may soon become too attractive to ignore. Table 1A shows average historical 12-month investment grade corporate bond excess returns given different starting points for the 3-year/10-year Treasury slope and the 12-month corporate breakeven spread. Table 1B shows 90% confidence intervals for those average returns and Table 1C shows the percentage of instances in which excess returns were above 0%. Table 1AAverage 12-Month Future Investment Grade Corporate ##br##Bond Excess Returns* (BPs) Table 1B90 Percent Confidence Interval Of 12-Month Investment Grade Corporate Bond Excess Returns* (BPs) Table 1CPercentage Of Episodes With Positive 12-Month Investment Grade Corporate Bond Excess Returns* At present, the 3-year/10-year Treasury slope is +9 bps and the 12-month breakeven spread is 18 bps. Historically, this sort of environment is consistent with positive excess corporate bond returns 59% of the time, but with a negative average return overall. That said, if the yield curve retains its positive slope, then a further 18 bps of corporate index spread widening would push the 12-month breakeven spread above the 20 bps threshold. The historical record suggests that this would be an unambiguous buy signal. Bottom Line: We are sticking with our recommended 6-12 month corporate bond allocations for now. We are neutral (3 out of 5) on investment grade and overweight (4 out of 5) on high-yield. A yield curve inversion and heightened risk of recession would cause us to turn more cautious, but we think it’s more likely that widening spreads present us with an opportunity to upgrade our corporate bond allocations within the next few months. Stay tuned. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 https://www.frbsf.org/economic-research/publications/economic-letter/2022/february/will-rising-rents-push-up-future-inflation/ Treasury Index Returns Spread Product Returns Recommended Portfolio Specification Other Recommendations
Dear client, This week we are sending you a joint Special Report with my colleague Chester Ntonifor, Foreign Exchange Strategist. The Special Report provides our outlook on the RMB. I trust that you will find the report very insightful. Best regards, Jing Sima China Strategist Executive Summary The RMB And Real Interest Rates The RMB has overshot and will likely consolidate gains in the coming months. That said, the yuan remains underpinned by a current account surplus, positive real rates, and a valuation cushion. This will support modest appreciation over the next 12-18 months (Feature Chart). The dollar is likely to enter a period of weakness beyond the Russo-Ukrainian crisis, underpinning a firm RMB. Yield spreads between China and the US will narrow across the bond curve, slowing the pace of any RMB appreciation. In its quest to dominate Asian trade flows, China will also seek a stable yuan which can be an anchor for regional currencies. Low volatility in the Chinese bond and currency market will increasingly make it an attractive hedge for global portfolio managers. This will encourage RMB inflows. The financial sanctions on Russia from the ongoing Ukrainian conflict will accelerate Chinese diversification from US assets. It will also boost the use of RMB in global trade, lifting its share in global FX reserves. Bottom Line: In the near term, USD/CNY is due for a bounce and could retrace to 6.5. It is also the case that a lot of the gains in the Chinese RMB have been frontloaded, suggesting a flattish path ahead. Beyond the near term, we expect the DXY to hit 90 in the next 12-18 months, which will boost the RMB towards 6.0. Feature The RMB has been strong across the board versus most major currencies (Chart 1). Year-to-date, the DXY dollar index is up 2% while the CFETS basket is up 3%. This places the Chinese yuan as one of the best performing major currencies this year. Such a configuration where USD/CNY diverges from the broad dollar trend has been very rare in recent history (Chart 2). More importantly, this has occurred amidst very low volatility. Chart 1A Bull Market In Yuans Chart 2USD/CNY And The Dollar Diverge In this Special Report, we try to understand the driving forces behind a rising RMB, to gauge its likely path going forward. In our view, while the yuan is vulnerable tactically, it is underpinned by strong structural forces that support modest appreciation over the next 12-18 months. The Chinese Economy, Interest Rates, And The RMB An exchange rate is simply a mechanism to equalize rates of returns across countries. For most currencies, the key determinants of this arbitrage window are real interest rate differentials. In China, while nominal interest rates vis-à-vis the US have been collapsing, real interest rate differentials are near a record high. This has been the key driver of a rising RMB (Chart 3). Real interest rates tend to matter because high and rising inflation destroys the purchasing power of any currency. Our bias is that higher real rates in China versus the US will persist and keep the RMB firm. Five key reasons underpin this view: The Chinese economy is expected to accelerate this year relative to the US. The IMF expects 4.8% GDP growth in China, versus 4% in the US. Bloomberg consensus estimates corroborate this view – 5.2% growth is expected for China this year, versus 3.6% for the US. Even the Chinese government’s GDP growth target this year is 5.5%, much higher than street estimates. US interest rates are likely to rise over the medium term, but so will those in China. The Chinese credit impulse has bottomed, and it is usually a good precursor to both stronger economic activity and higher relative government bond yields (Chart 4). Chart 3The RMB And Real Versus Nominal Rates Chart 4Interest Rate Differentials And The Credit Impulse While Chinese productivity growth is slowing, it remains structurally higher compared to that in the US or Europe. Stronger productivity growth suggests the neutral rate of interest in China will remain higher than in Western economies for years to come. This will continue to attract further fixed-income inflows. The RMB is a procyclical currency and tends to benefit when flows into emerging market assets in general, and Chinese stocks in particular, are fervent. While the Chinese authorities have cracked down on the property and information technology/communication service sectors, they have done so without causing widespread capital flight and hurting the RMB (Chart 5). Going forward, odds are that the interest from foreign bargain hunters will rise as these sectors reset from lower and much cheaper levels. It is well known that the Chinese economy has excess capacity, which is inherently deflationary (and positive for real rates). Like Japan, China has excess savings and deficient demand (Chart 6). However, in an inflationary world, this excess capacity can easily be exported, especially to the US, which is on the verge of overheating. A healthy trade balance in China suggests there is little reason for the RMB to depreciate meaningfully. Chart 6Excess Savings In China And Low Inflation Chart 5The RMB And Chinese Equities It is remarkable that despite being the largest commodity importer in the world, terms of trade in China is picking up. Rising terms of trade is usually synonymous with a stronger currency. On the flip side, a stronger currency will also temper inflationary pressures in China (Chart 7). Chart 7The RMB, Terms Of Trade And Inflation The bottom line is that real interest rates will remain relatively high in China, even as the US begins to tighten monetary policy while China eases. The reason is that the US economy is much more inflationary, and Chinese bond yields tend to rise when the PBoC stimulates growth. Market Liberalization And Portfolio Flows With attractive real yields, Chinese bonds have been gaining widespread investor appeal. Their inclusion in the world’s three major bond indices has been a seminal milestone in the process of liberalizing the Chinese fixed-income market. Chinese bonds have also acted as perfect portfolio hedges, moving inversely to US and global equities (Chart 8). The result has been significant portfolio inflows into Chinese bonds. As a reminder, Chinese bonds were initially included in the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index (BBGA) in April 2019. Following that, they were added to the JP Morgan Government Bond - Emerging Market Index (GBI-EM) in February 2020. Finally, FTSE Russell announced their inclusion of in the FTSE World Government Bond Index (WGBI) as of October 2021. Since their inclusion, a net US$350 billion has flowed into Chinese bonds. We estimate that about 35% of that has been due to index inclusion. The amount of Chinese onshore bonds held by overseas investors has breached US$600 billion, a record high (Chart 9). Chart 9A Healthy Appetite From Foreign Investors Chart 8RMB Bonds As A Portfolio Hedge In a nutshell, the path of the RMB in the short term will follow relative growth dynamics between China and the rest of the world, but structural factors such the inclusion of RMB bonds in global portfolios will underpin strong inflows into the Chinese fixed-income market. The Dollar, Trade, And Lessons From The Ukrainian Conflict Chart 10China Is Destocking USDs Another factor to consider vis-à-vis the RMB is the dollar’s reserve status, and the overreach that it commands. Quite simply, transactions conducted in US dollars anywhere fall under US law. This means that if a company in any country buys energy from Iran and the transaction is done in US dollars, the Treasury has powers to sanction the parties involved. Russian holdings of US Treasurys peaked during the Georgian war and have since fallen to near 0% of total reserves. Even so, the world has witnessed how vulnerable the Russian economy has been to a cut-off from the Society For Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) messaging system. China is the largest holder of US Treasurys and what it decides to do with this war chest of savings is of critical importance. At a minimum, a few trends that have been underway in recent years are likely to accelerate. China will continue to destock its holding of Treasurys into gold and other currencies (Chart 10). This will put downward pressure on the dollar and boost the RMB. In fact, ever since China started destocking Treasurys in earnest in 2015, the DXY has been unable to sustainably punch through the 100 level. Trade flows in Asia remain rather buoyant, even as globalization has peaked (Chart 11A and 11B). With most Asian countries having China as a large trading partner, the logical step will be more and more invoicing in RMB. Most global trade hubs in history (such as Hong Kong for example) have always sought a stable currency with low volatility to instill confidence in trade. China is likely to also favor a stable RMB. Chart 11AChina Could Dominate Asian Trade Chart 11BAsian Trade Is Booming As Asian trade continues to expand, the PBoC can step in as the regional central bank and lender of last resort. It is notable that China is already engaging in this role. Since the global financial crisis, the number of bilateral swap lines offered to foreign central banks by the PBoC has ballooned (Chart 12). According to the most recent data (from the PBoC), the Chinese central bank had bilateral local currency swap agreements with central banks or monetary authorities in 40 countries and regions, with a total amount of around 4 trillion yuan. The People’s Bank of China has massive foreign exchange reserves, worth about US$3.2 trillion. This means it can provide swap agreements that will almost cover the totality of EM foreign dollar debt. The Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS) already allows the transfer and clearing of yuan-denominated payments. In 2021, the system processed US$12.7 trillion, a 75% increase in turnover from the previous year.1 While the system still largely relies on SWIFT messaging for most cross-border transactions, progress towards independence is moving fast. The key point is that as China continues to rise as an economic power and increases the share of RMB trade within its sphere of influence, the yuan will naturally become the de facto Asian currency. This will allow the RMB to continue to gain international appeal (Chart 13). Chart 12The People's Bank Of Asia? Chart 13The RMB And International Appeal Valuation Concerns Most of the discussion above has focused on the cyclical outlook for the Chinese economy and bond yields, as well as the geopolitical ramifications from the Russo-Ukrainian conflict. While the macro environment is by far the most important driver of currencies, valuation and sentiment tend to matter as well. On this note: Our productivity model suggests the RMB is at fair value. Productivity in China remains higher than among its western trading partners, but the gap has been closing. This has flattened the slope of the fair-value model (Chart 14). That said, the US and Europe are generating much higher inflation than China, suggesting there is higher pressure for unit labor costs to rise in these countries. This will improve the competitive profile of the RMB. Our PPP model for the RMB, using an apples-to-apples consumer basket vis-à-vis the US suggests the RMB is undervalued by 11% (Chart 15). Historically, such levels of undervaluation have seen the RMB appreciate by 2% per year over the next 4 years (Chart 16). Chart 14The RMB Is At Fair Value Based On Productivity Trends Chart 15The RMB Is Cheap Based On Relative Prices Chart 16Potential RMB Returns For Foreign Investors Valuation tends to be important because it is usually the trigger for imbalances to manifest themselves. Back in 2015-20162 when Chinese capital outflows (especially illicit flows) were rampant amongst global and Chinese concerns, the RMB also happened to be very overvalued. Today, such a risk is much limited. Concluding Thoughts The RMB and the dollar tend to move in harmony, and so a discussion of one entails talking about the other. We have characterized the dollar this year as caught in a tug of war. Specifically, aggressive rate hikes by the Federal Reserve will boost interest rate differentials in favor of the US but undermine the equity market via a derating in stocks. This will tighten financial conditions, nudging the Fed to pivot. On the other hand, less accommodation by the Fed will significantly unwind the rate-driven rally that has nudged the DXY close to 100. On the other hand, the Chinese credit impulse has bottomed meaning bond investors will benefit from rising bond yields in China. Equity investors will also benefit from a cheaper market, as well as exposure to sectors that are primed to benefit as the global economy reopens. This combination could sustain the pace of foreign capital inflows. In the near term, USD/CNY is due for a bounce and could retrace to 6.5. It is also the case that a lot of the gains in the Chinese RMB have been front loaded, suggesting a flattish path ahead. Beyond the near term, we expect the DXY to hit 90 in the next 12-18 months, which will boost the RMB towards 6.0. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/markets/europe/what-is-chinas-onshore-yuan-clearing-settlement-system-cips-2022-02-28/ 2 Please see Chinese Investment Strategy Special Report, titled “Monitoring Chinese Capital Outflows,” dated March 20, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Strategic Themes Cyclical Recommendations Tactical Recommendations