Economy
The next global economic downturn would probably be sparked by a surge in inflation which forces central banks to raise interest rates more aggressively than they would like. Given the absence of inflationary pressures today, and the still-ample spare…
Highlights Investors like to hear non-consensus views, … : Part of our role is to help clients think about all of the potential outcomes, including ones that may not be as improbable as commonly believed. … but it seems that our Fed/rates call is starting to strike them as a little too non-consensus: Clients are having a hard time seeing the potential for inflation after ten years of errant predictions that it’s just around the corner. From our perspective, the probability of higher-rate outcomes is considerably higher than the probability of lower-rate outcomes, … : An investor with a low-duration bias has a whole lot more ways to win than an investor with a high-duration bias. … so we’re staying the course: We continue to recommend underweighting Treasuries and maintaining below-benchmark duration exposure, which aligns with our constructive take on markets and the economy. It’s too early to get defensive if a recession is at least a year away. Feature BCA clients like to hear contrarian calls, and there is little that’s more deflating from a strategist’s perspective than to be told in a meeting that his/her views are the same as everyone else’s. Except for the handful of strategists who make their living from provocative views that have almost no chance of coming to fruition, however, the calls have to be plausible. For many investors, our inflation concerns seem to be straining the bounds of plausibility. Even if BCA has only lately begun to beat the inflation drums, investors have had enough of warnings about inflation and interest-rate spikes that have repeatedly failed to come to pass. Regular readers are familiar with our contention that the sizable injection of fiscal stimulus into an economy already operating at capacity is a sure-fire recipe for inflation. They are also familiar with our view that an extremely tight labor market will necessarily give rise to robust wage gains. We have repeatedly argued that the Fed will respond to the combination of inflation pressures by hiking the fed funds rate above its equilibrium level, bringing the curtain down on the expansion and the equity bull market. With a Special Report examining the links between wage gains, consumer price inflation, and the Fed’s reaction function on the way, we’re instead devoting this week’s report to several other reasons why an investor would want to maintain below-benchmark duration in a fixed-income portfolio. Oil Prices Will Rise There is a good reason for devising core price indexes that smooth out the volatility inherent in food and energy prices. Core indexes provide a better read on the underlying inflation trend, and are a better predictor of moves in headline inflation than the headline indexes themselves. Inflation-linked Treasuries (TIPS) are tied to headline CPI, however, leaving the long-run inflation break-evens at the mercy of swings in oil prices (Chart 1). As we have previously written, our commodity strategists view the October-November swoon as a one-off event disconnected from market fundamentals that will quickly be unwound1 (Chart 2). Chart 1As Oil Goes, So Go Inflation Expectations, ... Chart 2... And Oil Prices Are Poised To Rise One need not fear that a rise in oil prices, while giving a fillip to headline inflation, would slow the economy and thereby offset inflation’s upward pressure on rates. Now that the U.S. is the world’s largest oil producer, its economy and financial markets are no longer negatively correlated with oil prices (Chart 3). It is still true that falling oil prices amount to a tax cut for American businesses and households, but they now also amount to fewer high-paying jobs in the oil patch, reduced earnings in an important domestic industry, and tighter monetary conditions as fracking bond spreads widen. Chart 3No Longer A Contrary Indicator Bottom Line: Higher oil prices will push headline inflation and inflation expectations higher, while also boosting the economy at the margin. The combination promotes higher bond yields, all else equal. The Economy’s Improved. Yields Haven’t Budged. Though we attributed the bulk of the fourth-quarter selloff to misplaced fears that the Fed was pulling the rug out from under the expansion, the economy was finding it harder and harder to produce positive surprises. By late January, however, the expectations bar had been reset low enough that new releases began surpassing it, day in and day out (until the end of last week). So far, though, the 10-year Treasury yield has stubbornly failed to reflect the improvement (Chart 4). Chart 4Surprises Turned Around, But Yields Didn't Financial conditions tightened sharply upon the sudden widening in corporate bond spreads and the sudden drop in equity prices. We viewed the seize-up as equivalent to at least a quarter-point increase in the fed funds rate and thereby found pausing to be a perfectly logical course of action for the Fed. The swiftness of the subsequent bounce in risk assets – the S&P 500 has retraced more than two-thirds of its losses and high-yield bonds have retraced close to 60% of their spread widening – has gone a long way toward undoing last quarter’s tightening. With the recovery in financial conditions, all three components of our Fed monitor now point to a need for tighter monetary conditions (Chart 5). Chart 5The Fed Can Pause, But It Can't Stop Adaptive Expectations’ Sluggish Response Investors’ inflation outlooks adhere closely to an adaptive expectations framework in which future predictions are largely a function of inflation’s recent path (Chart 6). This is not unreasonable; one could do a lot worse than pick the Patriots to reach the Super Bowl or only South American and European (ex-England) teams to win the World Cup. Adaptive expectations can fall prey to the recency bias, however, in which individuals overemphasize the most recent data points to the exclusion of older, potentially more representative data when forming their future views. From a recency-bias perspective, adaptive expectations can trap investors like the mythical frog contentedly lingering in a pot of water that’s only slowly brought to a boil. Chart 6Inflation Forecasts Take Their Cue From The Past ... We are skeptical of the notion that there will be no more inflation because there’s been no inflation since the crisis. The trend may be your friend, but not once the output gap has closed and the unemployment gap is persistently negative. Using the 10-year CPI forecast from the Philly Fed’s Survey of Professional Forecasters as an inflation-expectations proxy, one could argue that the lion’s share of the outsized gains in the pre-crisis phase of the bond bull market resulted from excessively generous inflation compensation (Chart 7, bottom panel). Chart 7... Which Is Great For Investors When Inflation Trends Lower The excessive compensation was a by-product of adaptive expectations. After the experience of the mid-seventies and early eighties (Chart 8), investors and issuers both assumed inflation would be higher than it turned out to be. Today’s bond-market participants, conditioned by ten years of soggy post-crisis readings, could well assume that inflation will be lower than it ultimately turns out to be. That may leave long-maturity bondholders with insufficient compensation, just like their early-fifties forebears. Chart 8Long Stretches Of Low Inflation May Be Bad For Future Treasury Returns Reversal Of Globalization The apex of globalization has been a key theme of our Geopolitical Strategy service since its launch. We cannot go as far as they sometimes do, arguing that globalization did more to bring inflation to heel than Paul Volcker, but it surely has been an important factor in limiting wage gains for low- and semi-skilled workers (Chart 9), and has helped to stymie retail price increases. The imposition of new tariffs have exacerbated globalization’s reversal, but it had already begun before the 2016 presidential election. The Reagan-Thatcher-Koizumi policies that were ascendant after the fall of the Berlin Wall, boosting global growth while tamping down inflation, have been in retreat in the developed world ever since the crisis. Chart 9China Syndrome Decomposing Core CPI When assessing inflation’s future direction, our U.S. Bond Strategy colleagues decompose the core CPI series into its primary components: Shelter (42% of the index); Goods (25%); Services, excluding shelter and medical care (25%); and Medical Care (8%). They then look at the drivers for each of the largest three components for an advance read on their future direction. Home price appreciation and the rental vacancy rate power their shelter costs model. With home price appreciation decelerating but still positive, and the rental vacancy rate hovering around its all-time lows, the model projects that shelter costs will remain well above 3% (Chart 10, top panel). Chart 10Core Inflation Isn't About To Melt Core goods inflation lags non-oil import prices by about a year and a half. The path of import prices suggests that core goods inflation will have a tailwind for much of the rest of the year before facing a headwind next year that will push it back to its current levels (Chart 10, second panel). Wage growth is the best predictor of core services inflation, ex-shelter and medical care (Chart 10, third panel). We expect continued upward pressure on services inflation, as labor-market slack continues to be absorbed, keeping wage growth accelerating. The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing Simplicity is a virtue in investment recommendations, models, and rationales, and our U.S. Bond Strategy colleagues’ golden rule of bond investing is elegantly simple.2 If Fed rate hikes exceed market expectations over a given time horizon, overweight duration positions will underperform over that horizon, and if Fed hikes fail to meet market expectations, overweight duration positions will outperform. Now that the money market has entirely priced out any rate-hike prospects over the next two years (Chart 11), overweight duration positions face a challenging backdrop. How will the fed funds rate surprise to the downside from here? Chart 11The Money Market Is Calling For A Rate Cut It can’t unless the Fed carries out more than one 25-basis-point cut in the next year or so. Given the underlying strength of the economy, gathering inflation pressures, and the swift unwinding of much of the tightening in financial conditions, rate cuts are a stretch. Against the current backdrop, the golden rule is a stern warning away from the longer-maturity reaches of the Treasury curve. Investment Implications We continue to stay the course with our fixed-income recommendations. If the Fed’s pause will extend the expansion for a few more months, it will extend the shelf life of our underweight Treasuries and overweight spread product recommendations, as well. As outlined above, we see many more potential catalysts for higher interest rates than we do for lower rates. We reiterate our recommendation that investors maintain below-benchmark duration across fixed-income segments. The expansion, and the bull markets in risk assets, will eventually end, but it’s too soon to position portfolios for it. Doug Peta, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see the U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “What Does Oil’s Slide Mean?,” published November 26, 2018. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see the U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing,” published July 24, 2018. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights We would fade fears of an “earnings recession.” EPS growth should increase during the remainder of this year. While high debt burdens around the world may exacerbate deflationary pressures by restraining spending, they may also motivate policymakers to raise inflation in order to reduce the real value of outstanding debt. Ultimately, whether high debt levels turn out to be deflationary or inflationary depends on the extent to which policymakers have both an incentive and the means to increase inflation. The spread of political populism has made governments more inclined to boost nominal incomes by allowing economies to overheat. Central bankers have also become increasingly convinced that they should wait to see “the whites of inflation’s eyes” before tightening monetary policy any further. With inflation expectations still well anchored, it may take at least another 18 months for inflation in the U.S. to break out, and longer still elsewhere. Stay bullish on global stocks for now. However, be prepared to dial back equity exposure late next year, while shifting bond duration to a maximum underweight. Feature Fade Fears Of An “Earnings Recession” We upgraded global stocks in December following the post-FOMC meeting selloff. Our recommendation to go long the MSCI All-Country World Index has gained 9.0% since we initiated it. Although our enthusiasm for stocks has waned somewhat given the recent run-up, we continue to see upside for global bourses over the next 12-to-18 months. Admittedly, earnings growth has come down sharply from a year ago. To some extent, this reflects base effects (U.S. EPS rose by 23% in Q1 of 2018, thanks in part to the tax cuts). However, slower global growth and higher tariffs have also taken their toll. The good news is that the trade war is likely to stay on hiatus over the coming months. We also expect nominal GDP growth in the U.S. and the rest of the world to pick up by the middle of this year. Chart 1 shows that earnings growth tends to move in lock-step with nominal GDP growth. Chart 1Earnings And Nominal GDP Growth Move In Lock-Step Equity prices usually bottom when earnings growth bottoms (Chart 2). Analyst estimates based on IBES data foresee EPS growth troughing in Q1 and then accelerating modestly over the remainder of the year. If this happens, global equities will move higher over the coming months. What’s The Bigger Risk? Deflation Or Inflation? Last week, we argued that the next global economic downturn would probably be sparked by a surge in inflation which forces central banks to raise interest rates more aggressively than they would like.1 Given the absence of inflationary pressures today, and the still-ample spare capacity that exists in many economies, we noted that such an outcome is far from imminent. This implies that the global expansion still has plenty of room to run, thus justifying an overweight stance towards risk assets. One common objection to this thesis posits that deflation, rather than inflation, is the main risk to the global economy. And unlike its inflationary cousin, the next deflationary shock could be lurking just around the corner. Italy serves as a good example of the dangers of high debt levels. While many things can contribute to deflationary pressures, elevated debt levels are often cited as being the most important. An excessive debt burden can lead to a prolonged period of deleveraging. Since borrowers typically spend a larger share of their cash flows than lenders, overall spending could decline, leading to lower prices and wages. High debt levels can also make an economy vulnerable to interest-rate shocks. This is particularly the case when a country is reliant on external debt or issues debt in a currency it does not control. The Italian Lesson Italy serves as a good example of the dangers of high debt levels. Italy entered the euro area with one of the highest public debt ratios in the world. Private debt also soared in anticipation of euro membership as well as during the period leading up to the Global Financial Crisis, almost doubling as a share of GDP between 1998 and 2008 (Chart 3). Chart 3Italy's Debt Inferno Worries about high indebtedness, poor growth prospects, and contagion from Greece sent the 10-year Italian bond yield to nearly 7.5% on November 9, 2011. Yields tumbled after Mario Draghi pledged to do “whatever it takes” to preserve the common currency, but rose again last April after Italians brought an anti-austerity populist government into power. Today, the Italian government finds itself in the unenviable position of having to devote 3.4% of GDP to interest payments, more than double the euro area average (Chart 4). Domestic investors own less than half of Italian government debt, so most of those interest payments do little to stimulate domestic spending. Chart 4The Italian Government's Interest Payments Are Higher Than Elsewhere In The Euro Area The Inflation Solution When debt reaches elevated levels, faster nominal growth via higher inflation becomes an increasingly appealing solution for reducing debt ratios. A one percentage-point increase in nominal GDP will cut debt-to-GDP by half a percentage point when it stands at 50%, but by three full percentage points when it stands at 300%. Given the attractiveness of inflating away debt burdens, why don’t more governments pursue this strategy? Part of the answer is politics. The long history of hyperinflation in Europe and many other economies has cast a long shadow over how central banks operate. Unanticipated inflation also redistributes wealth from creditors to debtors. While the latter usually outnumber the former, the former typically have more political sway. Means And Opportunities Political will is a necessary condition for generating inflation, but it is not a sufficient one. Policymakers also need to possess the ability to accomplish their goal. What determines whether they will succeed? The answer, to a large extent, is the level of the neutral rate of interest. The neutral rate of interest is the long-term interest rate that is appropriate for the economy. When interest rates are above the neutral rate, growth will tend to fall below trend, while inflation will decline. Conversely, when rates are below their neutral level, the economy will grow at an above-trend pace and inflation will accelerate. Many things can influence the neutral rate of interest. These include: Trend GDP growth: Faster growth will incentivize firms to expand capacity in anticipation of rising demand. This will push up the neutral rate of interest. National savings: Lower taxes and increased government spending will drain national savings, while stimulating aggregate demand. This will push up the neutral rate of interest. Likewise, a decrease in private-sector savings — whether it be the result of easier access to credit or greater optimism about future income growth — will raise the neutral rate. The capital intensity of the economy: Economies that require a lot of physical capital will tend to have a higher neutral rate of interest. By the same token, economies where the capital stock needs to be replenished quickly in order to offset depreciation will have a higher neutral rate of interest. The exchange rate: A weaker exchange rate will boost net exports. This resulting increase in aggregate demand will translate into a higher neutral rate of interest. With the exception of the currency effect, all of the factors listed above are captured by the canonical Solow growth model which undergraduate economics students usually encounter in their studies (See Appendix 1 for a derivation of the neutral rate of interest in this model). Inflation And The Neutral Rate Economists tend to define the neutral rate in real terms. However, when thinking about inflation, it is useful to consider the neutral rate’s nominal counterpart. Conceptually, the nominal neutral rate of interest can be either negative or positive. When the nominal neutral rate is negative, even a policy rate of zero will be insufficient to allow the economy to overheat. One might call this outcome the “strong form” version of the secular stagnation thesis. In contrast, when the neutral rate is low, but still positive, an interest rate of close to zero will be low enough to allow the economy to overheat, which will eventually generate inflation. One may refer to this as the “weak form” version of the secular stagnation thesis. Political will is a necessary condition for generating inflation, but it is not a sufficient one. The Danger Of Strong-Form Secular Stagnation In situations where the strong form version of secular stagnation prevails, deflationary pressures will feed on themselves. If an economy suffers from a chronic shortfall of aggregate demand, inflation is liable to drift lower. A lower inflation rate will push down the nominal interest rate that is consistent with any given real rate. For example, if the economy requires a real rate of -1% in order to grow at trend and inflation is 2%, a 1% nominal rate will suffice. But if inflation is 0%, then the policy rate would need to be -1%, which may be difficult to achieve. Japan serves as a case study for how this vicious circle can unfold. Following the simultaneous bursting of the property and stock market bubbles in the early 1990s, the Japanese private sector entered a prolonged deleveraging cycle. Inflation drifted steadily lower, ultimately falling into negative territory during the 1997-98 Asian Crisis (Chart 5). High debt levels in Japan were deflationary because the nominal neutral rate of interest was negative. Even if the Bank of Japan wanted to, it was greatly constrained in its ability to raise inflation. Chart 5Japan: A Case Study In Strong-Form Secular Stagnation Europe Is Not Japan… Yet Next to Japan, the euro area comes the closest to meeting the criteria for strong form secular stagnation. The euro area has low trend growth, owing to its slow population growth rate, as well as a banking system that is still focused on deleveraging. There is a silver lining, however: Despite the many woes the euro area has experienced, long-term inflation expectations are still over 100 basis points higher than in Japan (Chart 6). Fiscal policy is also turning somewhat more accommodative. Our base case is that the ECB will be slow to unwind its balance sheet and will only raise rates if the economy is showing more verve. This should be enough to move inflation towards target over the next two years. Chart 6Long-Term Inflation Expectations In The Euro Area Are Still Well Above Japanese Levels Inflation In The U.S. When inflation does break out early next decade, it will probably happen first in the United States. A large structural budget deficit and the revival of credit growth to the household sector following an intense period of deleveraging have boosted the neutral rate of interest. An overheated labor market is driving up real wages, which will lead to more consumer spending. December’s weaker-than-expected retail sales report will prove to be a fluke. Not only was it influenced by the sharp drop in the stock market and worries about a pending government shutdown (both of which have reversed), but the report itself was probably compromised by delays in the collection of data, which may have pushed some responses into January (historically, the weakest month for retail sales). This interpretation is consistent with strong holiday sales reported by online retailers and solid growth in the Johnson Redbook index of same-store sales. The latter captures over 80% of the sales surveyed by the Department of Commerce in its retail sales report, and featured a 9.3% year-over-year increase in sales in the final week of December, the fastest since the start of this series in 1997 (Chart 7). Chart 7The December Retail Sales Report Was Probably A Fluke Yes, corporate debt in the U.S. is high, but it is not particularly elevated relative to most other countries (Chart 8). Despite the collapse in equity prices and the spike in credit spreads late last year, U.S. corporations are still eager to expand capacity (Chart 9). This is not an economy teetering on the brink of recession. Chart 8U.S. Corporate Debt Is Not Extreme By Global Standards Chart 9U.S. Capex Plans Have Come Off Their Highs, But Remain Solid Policymakers in the U.S., and in much of the world, have grown more comfortable in letting economies overheat. Whether it be Trump’s unfunded tax cuts or the “Green New Deal” championed by the more liberal members of the Democratic Party, fiscal stimulus is in, austerity is out. Policymakers in the U.S., and in much of the world, have grown more comfortable in letting economies overheat. Even mainstream voices have given their nod of approval. Just this week, former IMF Chief Economist Olivier Blanchard argued that the U.S. could safely increase public debt without endangering economic stability.2 Meanwhile, central banks have increasingly bought into the mantra, famously espoused by Larry Summers, that they should wait to see the “the whites of inflation’s eyes” before tightening monetary policy.3 What this mantra overlooks is that inflation is a highly lagging indicator. By the time you see the whites of a tiger’s eyes, you are already destined to be its dinner. Investment Conclusions The spread of populist economic policies offers a one-two punch to inflation. Not only are populist prescriptions apt to stimulate demand, but that stimulus will raise the neutral rate of interest, thereby giving central banks greater traction to further boost spending by keeping rates below their neutral level. For investors, this implies a dichotomy between the medium-term and longer-term asset market outlook. Easy money policies are a boon to risk assets when they are first introduced, as they typically combine low interest rates with fast nominal GDP growth. But the path to higher rates is lined with lower rates, meaning that the longer central banks keep rates below their neutral level, the more economies will overheat, and the larger the eventual inflation overshoot will be. As growth outside the U.S. begins to accelerate in the second half of 2019, the dollar will come under downward pressure. As such, investors should overweight global equities and high-yield credit for the next 12 months. However, be prepared to dial back equity exposure late next year, while shifting bond duration to a maximum underweight. In terms of regional equity allocation, we continue to see global growth bottoming by the middle of this year. As growth outside the U.S. begins to accelerate in the second half of 2019, the dollar will come under downward pressure. The resulting reflationary impulse will be manna from heaven for the more cyclically-sensitive sectors of the stock market, as well as Europe and EM. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com Laura Gu Research Associate Footnotes 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Minsky’s Corollary,” dated February 8, 2019. 2 Olivier Blanchard, “Public Debt and Low Interest Rates,” Peterson Institute for International Economics and MIT American Economic Association (AEA) Presidential Address, (January 2019); Noah Smith, “The U.S. Can Take on a Lot More Debt Within Limits,” Bloomberg Opinion, (February 2019). 3 Lawrence Summers, “Only raise US rates when whites of inflation’s eyes are visible,” Financial Times, (February 2015). Strategy & Market Trends MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
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