Fixed Income
HighlightsDuration: The Fed will probably signal a slowing of its +25 bps per quarter rate hike pace during the next few months. However, rate hikes will ramp up again after a brief pause, and the Fed will ultimately deliver more tightening than is currently priced. Maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration.Credit Spreads: Our checklist of global growth and monetary policy indicators does not yet signal a tactical buying opportunity in credit. A dovish message from the Fed tomorrow would bring us closer to meeting the criteria on our checklist.Fed Balance Sheet: It is likely that the Fed will continue running down its balance sheet throughout all of 2019. However, if it turns out that the amount of bank reserves demanded exceeds $1.1 trillion, it will force the Fed to halt the run-off next year. The timing will only become clear when the effective fed funds rate threatens to break above the upper-end of the Fed’s target band.FeatureThis will be the last U.S. Bond Strategy report of 2018. Publication will resume on January 8 with our Portfolio Allocation Summary for January 2019. Until then, we extend our best wishes for a wonderful holiday and a Happy New Year. With the stock market well off its highs and credit spreads in the midst of an uptrend, there is an uncommon amount of pressure on tomorrow’s FOMC meeting. For their part, interest rate curves have already moved to discount a substantial dovish shift in Fed policy. In fact, our 12-month fed funds discounter has fallen all the way down to 36 bps (Chart 1). Chart 1All Eyes On The Fed With the market even more focused on the Fed than usual, there is a chance that a dovish signal tomorrow could spark a rally in risk assets. Conversely, a more hawkish Fed could prolong the market’s pain. Against that back-drop, in this week’s report we discuss what we are likely to hear from the Fed tomorrow and over the course of 2019.The Fed’s RoadmapIn our view, a recent speech from Fed Governor Lael Brainard gives a good indication of the Fed’s current thinking:1Our goal now is to sustain the expansion by maintaining the economy around full employment and inflation around target. The gradual path of increases in the federal funds rate has served us well by giving us time to assess the effects of policy as we have proceeded. That approach remains appropriate in the near term, although the policy path increasingly will depend on how the outlook evolves.This passage strongly suggests that the Fed is committed to delivering one more 25 basis point rate hike this week. But starting next year, the Fed is likely to abandon the predictable +25 bps per quarter rate hike pace that has been in place since December 2016, and shift to a regime in which rate hikes at any given meeting are much more dependent on the incoming economic and financial market data.What To Look For TomorrowFirst off, the Fed is very likely to deliver a rate hike tomorrow, a move that is widely anticipated. Failure to do so would constitute a major dovish surprise that would lead to a bounce in risk assets. We agree with the market that a rate hike tomorrow is highly probable.The DotsBeyond the actual policy move, the most important thing to watch will be the changes to FOMC participants’ forecasts for where the fed funds rate will be at the end of 2019, aka the 2019 dots. This is the easiest place to look to get a sense for how the recent market turmoil and global growth weakness is impacting the Fed’s thinking. At present, the median 2019 dot is between 3% and 3.25%. This suggests that, after lifting rates once more this week, the median Fed member anticipates three more rate hikes in 2019. We expect that the median 2019 dot will shift lower tomorrow, and that the magnitude of the shift will determine the reaction in financial markets. If the downward revision is considered sufficiently dovish, then expect risk assets to rally. If not, then risk assets could sell off.As always, it will be interesting to see whether Fed members revise their longer run rate expectations, i.e. their estimates of the neutral fed funds rate. However, we expect very little movement in neutral rate estimates tomorrow. In any case, the market will be much more focused on the expected policy path for 2019.The StatementIn tomorrow’s post-meeting statement, the following passage will likely be edited:The Committee expects that further gradual increases in the target range for the federal funds rate will be consistent with sustained expansion of economic activity, strong labor market conditions, and inflation near the Committee’s symmetric 2 percent objective over the medium term.The minutes from November’s FOMC meeting suggest that the committee is increasingly uncomfortable with the phrase “further gradual increases”. The Fed will probably remove this phrase from tomorrow’s statement and replace it with guidance that is more consistent with the above excerpt from Governor Brainard’s speech. In general, the Fed wants to signal that it is transitioning away from a predictable +25 bps per quarter rate hike pace and toward a reaction function that is much more data dependent.The Press ConferenceSince the beginning of his tenure, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell has preached a message of uncertainty and data dependence.2 These themes will be stressed again tomorrow and we expect his forward guidance will be consistent with what we already heard from Governor Brainard. As such, we view any revisions to the 2019 dots as having more potential to move markets than what Powell says in the press conference.Other BusinessAs was the case in June, tomorrow’s rate hike will result in a 25 bps shift higher in the target range for the fed funds rate, from 2%-2.25% to 2.25%-2.5%, but only a 20 bps increase in the interest rate paid on excess reserves (IOER). This means that the IOER will rise to 2.4%, 10 bps below the upper-end of the Fed’s target range.The smaller IOER increase will occur because the Fed is trying to pressure the effective fed funds rate back toward the middle of its target range. The funds rate has been creeping higher in recent months and the Fed is taking steps to limit its rise. This will continue to be an operational issue for the Fed next year, which we discuss in more detail below.Investment ImplicationsWe think tomorrow’s Fed meeting could be more important for credit spreads than for Treasury yields. In recent reports we discussed why the combination of weakening global growth and relatively hawkish Fed policy is causing credit spreads to widen, and suggested that a significant dovish turn from the Fed could prompt a recovery in global growth and a near-term rally in credit.Our checklist of global growth and monetary policy indicators (Charts 2A & Chart 2B) does not yet decisively signal a tactical buying opportunity in corporate credit, but we have seen the 12-month discounter fall and the gold price rally in recent weeks. A dovish message from the Fed tomorrow would bring us closer to meeting the criteria on our checklist, and thus closer to a near-term peak in spreads. Chart 2AChecklist For Peak Spreads: Global Growth Chart 2BChecklist For Peak Spreads: Fed Capitulation On the duration front, with the market already priced for essentially no further rate hikes in 2019 (after a rate hike tomorrow), we view any potential dovish move as already in the price. Since we expect the economic environment will support further rate hikes in 2019, we are inclined to maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration while we look for an opportunity to tactically buy credit.What To Expect In 2019More important for portfolios than what to expect from tomorrow’s Fed meeting is what to expect from the Fed over the course of next year. As we have already mentioned, the path for rate hikes will be much less predictable in 2019. An increased focus on the incoming data will replace the Fed’s current predilection for consistent quarterly rate hikes.The Fed will also hold a press conference after all eight FOMC meetings in 2019. Until now, press conferences have only occurred four times per year – in March, June, September and December – and the Fed has shown a reluctance to change interest rates at meetings without a scheduled press conference. Next year, with press conferences after every meeting, the Fed will have more flexibility to vary the pattern of hikes.But what will determine the number of rate hikes in 2019? We focus on three main areas.1) Financial ConditionsBy tightening policy, the Fed is trying to both prevent a future overshoot of its inflation target and tighten financial conditions at the margin. The Fed also increasingly recognizes the importance of financial conditions relative to inflation. As Governor Brainard noted in her recent speech:The last several times resource utilization approached levels similar to today, signs of overheating showed up in financial-sector imbalances rather than in accelerating inflation.But overheating is not the only concern. Excessive tightening in financial conditions could also force the Fed to adopt a more dovish policy stance. In fact, this is exactly what we see happening in the next few months. Financial conditions are already tightening (Chart 3), and will continue to do so until the Fed moderates its pace of rate hikes. At that point, financial conditions will probably ease, and that will allow the Fed to speed up the pace of hikes in the back half of 2019. Chart 3Financial Conditions Are Tightening 2) InflationCore inflation remains relatively close to the Fed’s target. While year-over-year core PCE fell back to 1.78% in October, year-over-year core and trimmed mean CPI came in at 2.24% and 2.22%, respectively, in November (Chart 4). We expect that inflation will move higher in 2019, but will remain relatively close to the Fed’s target. Base effects will pose a high hurdle for year-over-year inflation during the next few months, but inflationary pressures in the economy continue to rise. Survey data on firms’ input prices (Chart 4, panel 3) and planned selling prices (Chart 4, bottom panel) remain very strong. Chart 4Expect Higher Inflation In 2019 Long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates are at odds with the economy’s inflationary backdrop. They remain below levels that have historically been consistent with the Fed’s inflation target (Chart 4, panel 2). Relatively low TIPS breakeven rates give the Fed cover to slow the pace of rate hikes during the next few months. However, long-maturity breakevens can also rise quickly, and we anticipate that they will return to our target 2.3%-2.5% range in 2019.3) Recession SignalsIn last week’s Key Views for 2019 report, we discussed in detail why we think the Fed’s rate hike cycle will continue throughout 2019, and also why it will probably slow down during the next few months.3 In summary, we see tighter financial conditions causing the Fed to slow the pace of hikes in the near term, but we also doubt that interest rates will get high enough next year to send the U.S. economy into recession.That said, in our Key Views report we flagged several economic indicators to watch that could force us to change our view. Specifically, if the 12-month moving averages in housing starts and new home sales turn down, or if the unemployment rate rises, then it would suggest that a recession is closer than we currently anticipate.Concerning the unemployment rate, it will also be important to watch the trend in initial jobless claims (Chart 5). Rising claims tend to precede increases in the unemployment rate and claims have bounced during the past few weeks. We expect the bounce will prove temporary, but are monitoring it closely. Chart 5Rising Claims A Risk Bottom Line: The Fed is likely to signal a slowing of its +25 bps per quarter rate hike pace during the next few months. This move will be in response to financial conditions that are tightening more quickly than is desirable. But after a pause, we see rate hikes resuming in the second half of 2019 and the Fed will ultimately deliver more rate hikes than are currently priced into the Treasury market.The Balance Sheet In 2019It is also possible that the Fed will have to take steps to deal with its balance sheet in 2019. Right now, the runoff of the balance sheet is proceeding quite smoothly, but as mentioned above, there is some concern that the effective fed funds rate has been creeping toward the upper-end of its target range.Table 1 shows the Fed’s balance sheet compared to just before it started to run down its assets. The table illustrates how the size of the Fed’s securities portfolio determines the amount of reserves supplied to the banking system. The concern is that for the Fed to maintain control of the funds rate using its current “floor system”, it needs to supply more reserves to the banking system than are demanded.4 If it fails to do so, then the fed funds rate will rise above the upper-end of its target range. Table 1A Simplified Federal Reserve Balance Sheet A further complication is that the strict post-crisis regulatory regime makes it difficult to know what level of reserves are currently in demand. In essence, the Fed does not know when it will be time to stop shrinking its balance sheet. The plan appears to be that it will wait for signs that the effective fed funds rate is breaking above the upper-end of its target range, and will then decide that balance sheet run-off needs to stop.Last September, we projected that the Fed would continue to run down its balance sheet until bank reserves reached a steady state of $650 billion. Using that same assumption today, the Fed would shrink its portfolio until March 2021 and would still have combined Treasury and MBS holdings of $3 trillion at that time (Chart 6A). Chart 6AFed Balance Sheet: $650 Billion Steady-State Reserves Chart 6BFed Balance Sheet: $1.1 Trillion Steady-State Reserves However, the fact that the effective fed funds rate has mostly been near the upper-end of its target range this year has caused many market participants to revise their estimates for the steady state of bank reserves higher. In fact, we infer from responses to the New York Fed’s most recent Survey of Primary Dealers that most dealers think that the steady state for bank reserves is above $1 trillion.5If we use an assumption of $1.1 trillion for steady state bank reserves, then we project that the Fed will stop running down its portfolio in March 2020 and will have combined Treasury and MBS holdings of $3.3 trillion at that time (Chart 6B).Bottom Line: It is likely that the Fed will continue running down its balance sheet throughout all of 2019. However, if it turns out that the amount of bank reserves demanded exceeds $1.1 trillion, it will force the Fed to halt the run-off next year. The timing will only become clear when the effective fed funds rate threatens to break above the upper-end of the Fed’s target band. Ryan Swift, Vice PresidentU.S. Bond Strategyrswift@bcaresearch.comFootnotes1 https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/brainard20181207a.htm2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Powell Doctrine Emerges”, dated September 4, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “2019 Key Views: Implications For U.S. Fixed Income”, dated December 11, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com4 For a detailed description of the floor system for controlling interest rates please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “Cleaning Up After The 100-Year Flood”, dated June 10, 2014, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com5 The survey shows that the median dealer thought that a reserve balance of $1 trillion would cause IOER to trade 5.5 bps below the effective fed funds rate. In other words, reserve balances would be sufficiently scarce for the effective fed funds rate to rise relative to the rates controlled directly by the Fed. https://www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/media/markets/survey/2018/nov-2018-spd-results.pdfFixed Income Sector PerformanceRecommended Portfolio Specification
Dear Client, This will be the last Global Investment Strategy report of 2018. Publication will resume on January 4th. On behalf of the entire Global Investment Strategy team, I would like to wish you a Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, and a Healthy New Year! Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Feature 1. Will the Fed raise rates more or less than what is priced into the futures curve? Answer: More. The fed funds futures curve is pricing in less than one rate hike in 2019 and rate cuts beyond then. In contrast, we think the Fed will raise rates three or four times next year and continue hiking into 2020. For all the worries about a slowdown, U.S. real GDP growth is still tracking at 3% in Q4 according to the Atlanta Fed, while consumption is set to rise by 4.1%. Ongoing fiscal stimulus, decent credit growth, rising wages, and a decline in the savings rate should continue to support the economy in 2019. Housing construction should also stabilize thanks to a low vacancy rate and a pickup in household formation. The fact that mortgage applications for purchase have rebounded swiftly in recent weeks is evidence that the housing market is not as weak as many people believe (Chart 1). Chart 1U.S. Housing: No Oversupply Problem, While Demand Is Firming 2. Will U.S. 10-year Treasury yields rise more or less than expected? Answer: More. Treasurys almost always underperform cash when the Fed delivers more rate hikes than the market is discounting (Chart 2). We expect a modest bear flattening of the yield curve in 2019, with rising bond yields nearly offsetting the increase in short-term rates. Most of the flattening is likely to come in the next six months, as slower global growth and the disinflationary effects of lower oil prices keep bond yields contained. As we enter the second half of next year, global growth should reaccelerate as the effects of Chinese stimulus measures fully kick in and the drag on global growth from the recent tightening in financial conditions dissipates. By that time, the U.S. unemployment rate will be in the low 3% range, a level that could trigger material inflationary pressures. Chart 2Treasurys Will Underperform If The Fed Hikes Rates By More Than Expected 3. Will the yield spreads between U.S. Treasurys and other developed economy bond markets widen? Answer: Yes, particularly at the short end of the curve. The Fed is still the one central bank that is most likely to hike rates multiple times in 2019, which will support wider differentials between Treasurys and non-U.S. bond yields. The greatest potential for spread widening will be for Treasurys versus JGBs. With Japanese inflation still stubbornly low and fiscal policy set to tighten from a hike in the sales tax, the BoJ will be in no position to abandon its yield curve control regime. The 10-year Treasury-gilt spread could also widen if the Bank of England is forced to stay on the sidelines until Brexit uncertainty is resolved. Likewise, the U.S.-New Zealand spread will widen as the RBNZ stays on hold due to underwhelming growth and inflation momentum. The U.S.-Canada spread will be range-bound, with the Bank of Canada coming close to matching, but not surpassing, Fed tightening in 2019. While the ECB will refrain from raising rates next year, the U.S. Treasury-German bund spread should narrow marginally if the end of ECB QE lifts bund yields via a recovery in the German term premium. There is more (albeit still modest) scope for a narrowing in the 10-year U.S.-Australia and U.S.-Sweden spreads, as both the RBA and Riksbank begin a tightening cycle. 4. What will happen to U.S. corporate credit spreads? Answer: They are likely to finish 2019 close to current levels. As a rule of thumb, corporate bond returns are highest when the yield curve is very steep, and lowest when it is inverted (Table 1). The former generally corresponds to the early stages of business-cycle expansions, while the latter encompasses the period directly preceding recessions. We are still in the intermediate phase, when excess corporate bond returns (relative to cash) are positive but low. This conclusion is consistent with the observation that corporate balance-sheet leverage has increased over the past four years, but not by enough to instigate a major wave of defaults. Table 1Corporate Bond Performance Given The Slope Of The Yield Curve (1975-Present) 5. Will the U.S. dollar continue to strengthen? Answer: The dollar will strengthen until the middle of 2019 and then begin to weaken. Three main factors determine the short-to-medium term direction of the dollar: 1) momentum; 2) interest rate spreads between the U.S. and its trading partners; and 3) global growth. In general, the dollar does well when it is trending higher, spreads relative to the rest of the world are wide and getting wider, and global growth is slowing (Chart 3). For the time being, momentum continues to work in the greenback’s favor. Spreads have narrowed a bit recently, but the dollar still looks cheap relative to what one would expect based on the current level of spreads (Chart 4). As in 2017, the direction of global growth will likely be the key driver of the dollar next year. If growth bottoms in mid-2019, as we expect, the dollar will probably put in a top. Chart 3Dollar Returns Driven By Momentum, Rate Differentials, And Global Growth Chart 4Wider Spreads Bode Well For The Dollar 6. Will global equities rise or fall? Answer: Rise. Our tactical MacroQuant stock market timing model finally moved back into neutral territory on Monday after having successfully flagged the correction that began in October (Chart 5). Having downgraded global equities this past summer, we will return to overweight if the ACWI ETF drops to $64, which is only 2.4% below yesterday’s close. The cyclical backdrop for stocks is reasonably constructive. We expect the MSCI All-Country World Index to rise by about 10%-to-15% in dollar terms from current levels by the end of 2019. The higher end of this range would leave it slightly below its January 2018 peak (Chart 6). The index is currently trading at 13.3-times forward earnings, similar to where it was in early-2016. The U.S. accounts for over 50% of global stock market capitalization (Chart 7). As such, the U.S. equity market tends to influence non-U.S. stocks more than the other way around. Sustained U.S. equity bear markets are rare outside of recessions (Chart 8). With another U.S. recession unlikely to occur at least until late-2020, that gives global stocks enough room to rally. Indeed, history suggests that the late stages of business-cycle expansions are often the juiciest for equity investors (Table 2). Chart 5The MacroQuant Equity Score* Improves To Neutral Chart 6Global Stocks Have Cheapened Chart 7The U.S. Is The Dominant Equity Market Chart 8Recessions And Bear Markets Usually Overlap Table 2Too Soon To Get Out 7. Will cyclical stocks outperform defensives? Answer: Yes, although this is likely to be more of a phenomenon for the second half of 2019. Cyclicals typically outperform defensives when bond yields are climbing (Chart 9). Rising bond yields are usually a sign of stronger growth — manna from heaven for capital goods and commodity producers. As long as global growth is under pressure, cyclicals will struggle. But once growth bottoms in the middle of next year, cyclical stocks will have their day in the sun. Chart 9Cyclicals Tend To Outperform When Yields Rise 8. Will U.S. equities continue to outperform other global stock markets? Answer: Yes, but probably only until mid-2019. The U.S. stock market has less exposure to cyclical sectors such as industrials, materials, energy, and financials than the rest of the world (Table 3). Therefore, it stands to reason that an inflection point for cyclicals versus defensives will correspond to an inflection point for U.S. versus non-U.S. stocks. If this were to happen, it would resemble the period between October 1998 and April 2000, a time when bond yields rose, the dollar rally stalled, cyclicals outperformed defensives, and non-U.S. equities outperformed (Chart 10). Table 3Tech And Health Care Stocks Are Heavily Weighted In The U.S., While Financials And Materials Are Overrepresented In Markets Outside The U.S. Chart 10Will The Late-1990s Pattern Be Repeated? 9. Will oil prices rise more than expected? Answer: Yes. The December-2019 Brent futures contract is currently trading at $61/bbl (Chart 11). Our energy strategists expect Saudi Arabia and Russia to cut production by enough to push prices to an average of $82/bbl in 2019. Looking further out, the outlook for oil prices is less favorable. As every first-year economics student learns, prices in a competitive market eventually converge to average costs. Shale companies are now the swing producers in the global petroleum market. Their breakeven costs are in the low-$50 range, a number that has been trending lower due to productivity gains. If that is the long-term anchor for oil prices, it means that any major rally in oil is unlikely to extend deep into the next decade. Chart 11Oil Prices Will Recover 10. Will gold prices finally rally? Answer: Yes, but only in the second half of 2019. Gold prices typically fall when the dollar is strengthening (Chart 12). Given our view that the dollar will rally into mid-2019, now is not the time to be loading up on bullion. However, once the dollar peaks and U.S. inflation moves decidedly higher late next year, gold should become a star performer. Chart 12Gold Will Shine Bright After The Dollar Peaks Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights Dear Client, This is the final Global Fixed Income Strategy report for 2018. We will return with our first report of the new year on January 8th, 2019. Our entire team wishes you a very happy holiday season and a prosperous new year. Best regards, Rob Robis, Chief Strategist 2019 Model Bond Portfolio Positioning: Translating our 2019 key global fixed income views into recommended overall positioning within our model bond portfolio yields the following: target a modest level of active portfolio risk, with below-benchmark duration and only neutral exposure to corporate credit. Country Allocation: Government bond allocation should continue to reflect relative expectations for monetary policy changes. That means an overweight in countries where central banks will have little scope to increase rates (core Europe, Japan, the U.K., Australia, New Zealand) and an underweight where central banks are likely to tighten more than markets currently discount (U.S., Canada, Sweden). Corporate Credit: We currently prefer U.S. corporate bonds to European and EM equivalents based on better U.S. profit prospects, which enhances debt serviceability. However, we will look to pare U.S. exposure as the Fed shifts to a more restrictive stance later in 2019. Feature Last week, we published our 2019 “Key Views” report, outlining the thematic implications of the 2019 BCA Outlook for global bond markets.1 In this follow-up report, we translate those themes into specific investment recommendations for next year. We also recommend changes to the allocations in the Global Fixed Income Strategy model bond portfolio to reflect our 2019 themes. The main takeaway is that 2019 will be another year of poor returns, with increased volatility, for most global fixed income markets. The greater pressures should come in the latter half of the year, after the U.S. Federal Reserve delivers additional rate hikes and decisive signs of a slowing U.S. economy unfold. Investors should maintain a defensive strategic posture on fixed income markets throughout the year, both for interest rate duration and credit exposure. Selling into market rallies, rather than chasing them, will prove to be the prudent strategy. Top-Down Bond Market Implications Of Our Key Views As a reminder, the main fixed income investment themes from last week’s Key Views report were the following: Late-cycle pressures will keep bond yields elevated. Global growth will remain above trend in 2019, keeping unemployment rates low and preventing central banks from turning dovish. The unwind of crisis-era global monetary policies will continue. Slowing central bank asset purchases will worsen the supply/demand balance for both government bonds, resulting in gentle upward pressure on yields via higher term premia. It is too early to worry about inverted yield curves. The time to be concerned about the recessionary implications of an inverted U.S. Treasury curve will come after the Fed has lifted real interest rates to above neutral (R*), which should occur in the latter half of 2019. Expect poor corporate bond returns from an aging credit cycle. While default risk is likely to stay modest in 2019, the greater risk for corporates could come from concerns over future credit downgrades, as well as diminished inflows in a “post-QE” world. We now present the specific fixed income investment recommendations that flow from those themes in the following categories: overall portfolio risk, overall duration exposure, country allocations within government bonds, yield curve allocations within countries, and corporate credit allocations by country and credit rating. Overall Portfolio Risk: DEFENSIVE Government bond yields enter 2019 at very low (i.e. expensive) levels across the major developed markets, even after the cumulative rise in U.S. Treasury yields seen over the past twelve months. Real yields remain below trend real GDP growth rates, a consequence of central banks keeping policy rates below neutral levels as measured by concepts like the Taylor Rule (Chart of the Week). In addition, credit spreads remain near the low end of long-run historical ranges in all markets. Without the initial starting point of cheap valuations, fixed income return expectations in 2019 should be severely tempered (Charts 2& 3). Chart 2Low Yields = Low Expected Returns For U.S. Corporates … Chart 3… And European Corporates Volatility measures like the VIX index will remain elevated until markets begin to sniff out a bottoming of global growth. Much will depend on developments in China, but our expectation is that policymakers there will only act to stabilize the economy rather than provide large, 2016-scale stimulus. That may be enough to create a tactical “risk-on” trading opportunity by mid-year but we recommend using any such rally to reduce credit exposure given the risk of a more lasting global economic downturn in 2020. Importantly, cross-asset correlations should continue to drift lower without broad support from coordinated global economic growth or expanding monetary liquidity via central bank asset purchases (Chart 4). Without those rising tides lifting all boats, more active security selection by country, sector and credit rating should help portfolio managers outperform their benchmarks in what is likely to be another down year for absolute returns. Chart 4High Volatilities With Low Correlations That combination of diminished return prospects and elevated volatility means investors should maintain a defensive bias in fixed income portfolios heading into 2019. Within our own GFIS recommended model bond portfolio, this means keeping our tracking error (the relative expected volatility versus our custom benchmark performance index) well below our maximum target level of 100bps (Chart 5). Chart 5Maintain Moderate Overall Portfolio Risk Overall Duration Stance: BELOW BENCHMARK We do not think that global bond yields have peaked for this business cycle. The current period of softening global economic momentum will not turn into a prolonged period of sub-trend growth that would push up unemployment rates in the major developed economies. With the global output gap nearly closed, and monetary policymakers firmly believing in the Phillips Curve framework (lower unemployment leads to higher inflation) to forecast inflation, a more dovish stance from the major central banks seems unlikely. As we discussed in last week’s report, global bond yields are in a process of normalization away from the depressed levels seen after the 2008-09 global financial crisis and recession (Chart 6). Term premia, inflation expectations and real yields all have upside potential as central banks slowly back away from quantitative easing and low interest rate policies. Thus, we continue to recommend a defensive, below-benchmark strategic stance on overall portfolio duration exposure (Chart 7). Chart 6Bond Yields Will Continue To Normalize In 2019 Chart 7Stay Below-Benchmark On Duration Risk Government Bond Country Allocation: Underweight U.S., Canada, Sweden, Italy. Overweight Germany, France, U.K., Japan, Australia, New Zealand At the country level, we recommend underweighting government bond markets where central banks will be more likely to raise interest rates (because of firm domestic economic growth and building inflation pressures), but where too few rate hikes are currently discounted in money market yield curves. The U.S., Canada and Sweden fit that description (Chart 8). The U.K. would also be part of this group, but the Brexit uncertainty leads us to maintain an overweight stance on U.K. Gilts entering 2019. Chart 8Monetary Policy Expectations Drive Country Allocations By the same token, we are recommending overweights in countries where rate hikes are unlikely to occur in 2019 because of underwhelming inflation, like core Europe, Japan and New Zealand. We are currently overweight Australian government bonds, but we expect to cut that exposure in 2019 as pressure builds for a rate hike in the latter half of the year as inflation picks up. Italian government bonds represent a special case of a developed market trading off sovereign credit risk rather than interest rate or inflation risk. We continue to treat Italian government bonds the same way we view corporate debt, as a growth-sensitive asset. On that basis, we will remain underweight Italian government bonds until Italy’s leading economic indicator bottoms out, mollifying concerns about debt sustainability. The Fed is still the one central bank that is most likely to hike rates multiple times in 2019, which will sustain wide differentials between Treasuries and non-U.S. bond yields (Chart 9). Chart 9ECB, BoE, BoJ Resisting Pressure From Tight Labor Markets The greatest potential for spread widening will be for Treasuries versus JGBs, with no changes in the Bank of Japan’s monetary policy expected due to stubbornly low inflation. The 10-year Treasury-Gilt spread could also widen if the Bank of England stays on the sidelines for longer until Brexit uncertainty is resolved. The 10-year U.S.-New Zealand spread should also widen with the Reserve Bank of New Zealand staying on hold for a while due to underwhelming growth and inflation momentum. The U.S.-Canada spread will be rangebound, with the Bank of Canada likely to match, but not exceed, Fed tightening in 2019. There are some markets, though, where yields could rise a bit more than Treasury yields due to shifting monetary policies. While the ECB will refrain from raising rates next year, there is a potential for the U.S. Treasury-German Bund spread to narrow marginally if the end of ECB new asset purchases lifts Bund yields via a recovery in the German term premium. There is more (albeit still modest) scope for a narrowing in the 10-year U.S.-Australia and U.S.-Sweden spreads. After keeping monetary policy very loose for a long time, the beginning of rate hikes next year by the Reserve Bank of Australia and Riksbank could put meaningful upward pressure on deeply depressed longer-maturity Australian and Swedish yields. Yield Curve Positioning: Favor Bearish Steepeners Everywhere In The First Half Of 2019, Then Switch To Bearish Flatteners In The U.S., Canada, Australia And Sweden We expect some bearish steepening pressures to appear in most countries in the first quarter of 2019 with inflation breakevens likely to rebound if the bullish oil forecast of BCA’s Commodity & Energy Strategy team comes to fruition (Charts 10 & 11). The end of the net new buying phase of the ECB’s Asset Purchase Program in January will also put upward pressure on longer-dated European yields through a worsening supply/demand balance for European government bonds and a wider term premium, helping keep European yield curves steep. Chart 10Inflation Expectations & Bond Yields Will Rebound In 2019 … Chart 11… As BCA’s Bullish Oil View Comes To Fruition Importantly, it is too soon to worry about an inversion of the U.S. Treasury curve, as we discussed in last week’s report, with the fed funds rate not yet at a restrictive level (i.e. real rates above measures of neutral like R-star). That outcome should occur by the end of 2019, when we expect the Treasury curve to move towards a true monetary policy-induced inversion. Similar patterns – steepening first from rising inflation expectations, flattening later from more hawkish central banks delivering rate hikes – should unfold in Canada, Australia and Sweden. Applying Our Global Golden Rule To Government Bond Allocations Back in September, we published a Special Report introducing a government bond return forecasting methodology called the “Global Golden Rule.”2 This is an extension of a framework introduced by our sister service, U.S. Bond Strategy, that links U.S. Treasury returns to changes in the fed funds rate that are not discounted in money markets (using our 12-month Discounters derived from Overnight Index Swap curves). In Table 1, we show the expected returns generated by the Global Golden Rule (shown hedged into U.S. dollars) for the countries in our model bond portfolio custom benchmark, based on monetary policy scenarios that we deem to be most plausible for 2019. In Table 2, we show the returns on a duration-adjusted basis (expected total return divided by duration). We then rank the return scenarios for overall country indices, aggregating the returns of the individual yield curve maturity buckets shown in those two tables, in Table 3. Table 1Global Golden Rule Return Forecasts For 2019 Table 2Global Golden Rule Duration-Adjusted Return Forecasts For 2019 The shaded cells in Table 3 represent our base case forecasts for policy rate changes in each country. On this basis, the better return prospects for 2019 will be in markets where central banks will stand pat throughout the year (Germany, Japan). Conversely, the weaker returns will occur where we expect more rate hikes than currently discounted by markets (U.S., Canada). These returns fit with our recommended country allocation outlined above. Table 3Ranking The 2019 Return Scenarios Corporate Credit Allocation: Neutral Overall, But Overweight In U.S. Investment Grade And High-Yield Relative To European And Emerging Market Equivalents. Look To Cut The U.S. To Underweight In The Latter Half Of 2019. We enter 2019 maintaining our recommended overall neutral exposure to corporate debt. As discussed earlier, we expect to see some stabilization of global growth in the first half of 2019. This will create a playable “risk-on” rally for growth sensitive assets like corporates, but we anticipate selling into that rally by downgrading our recommended U.S. credit allocations to underweight. Within U.S. credit markets, we are recommending a less aggressive medium-term stance, staying up in quality within investment grade debt (single-B and single-A rated names versus BBBs) and high-yield (BB-rated vs CCC-rated). With 50% of the investment grade benchmark index now rated just above junk, there is a growing risk of “fallen angel” downgrades to junk status in the event of a material slowing of U.S. economic growth. At the same time, default-adjusted spreads on U.S. high-yield debt only appear attractive if the current exceptionally low default rate backdrop persists (Chart 12). In other words, both U.S. investment grade and high-yield corporate debt are vulnerable to any major slowing of U.S. economic growth and slump in corporate profits. Chart 12U.S. Corporates Vulnerable To Slower Growth The confluence of above-trend U.S. growth and still pro-cyclical Fed policy will support U.S. credit in the near-term, but that will all change later in 2019. We expect the Fed to deliver at least 75bps of rate hikes in 2019 – perhaps only pausing from the current 25bps per quarter pace at the March meeting – which will push the funds rate into restrictive territory and invert the Treasury curve sometime in the 4th quarter of the year. This will cause investors to start to discount a deep growth slowdown in 2020, which will trigger systemic credit spread widening (Chart 13). We expect our next move on U.S. corporate debt to be a downgrade to underweight, likely sometime around mid-year. Chart 13Growth Differentials Continue To Favor U.S. We still prefer U.S. corporates to European or Emerging Market (EM) equivalents, however, thanks to the likelihood of better near-term growth prospects in the U.S. We are concerned about how the European corporate bond market will perform without the support of ECB asset purchases, which leads us to underweight both investment grade and high-yield European corporates (Chart 14).3 Chart 14Stay Overweight U.S. Corporates Vs European Corporates EM corporates will continue to suffer from the toxic combination of rising U.S. interest rates, a stronger dollar and global growth concerns. Our political strategists remain skeptical on the prospects for a permanent deal on thorny U.S.-China trade issues, leaving EM assets exposed to slowing momentum in China’s economy. We continue to prefer owning U.S. credit, given how the relative performance of EM and U.S. credit has not yet converged to levels implied by U.S./EM growth differentials (Chart 15). Chart 15Stay Overweight U.S. Corporates Vs EM Corporates Model Portfolio Adjustments To Begin 2019 In terms of our model bond portfolio, we recommend a few changes to our current allocations to reflect our 2019 outlook and key views (see the table below). We make a few adjustments to our individual country duration allocations, given our expectations of some re-steepening of global yield curves. We also bump up our allocation to core European debt given our expectation that the ECB will keep policy rates on hold throughout 2019. We fund that increase in European exposure from U.S. Treasuries, where too few Fed rate hikes are now discounted. Finally, we make a modest adjustment to our U.S. high-yield allocations, cutting CCC-rated exposure and upgrading B-rated credit. Robert Robis, CFA, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, “2019 Key Views: Normalization Is The “New Normal””, dated December 12th 2018, available at gfis.bcarsearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, “The Global Golden Rule Of Bond Investing”, dated September 25th 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, “Stubbornly Resilient Bond Yields”, dated November 13th 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Differences of opinion are what make a market, and we’ve got a big one when it comes to the Fed: The money market says the fed funds rate goes no higher than 2.75%; BCA says 3.5% by the end of 2019, and possibly 4% sometime in 2020. We are confident in our assessment of the economy’s underlying strength, … : Fiscal stimulus will keep the economy growing above trend in 2019, and the unemployment rate will almost certainly continue to grind lower. ... even if many commentators are accentuating the negative: The experts quoted in Barron’s found abundant fault with the November employment situation report, and the yield curve is out-trending all of the Kardashians combined. Amidst all the uncertainty, we’re sticking with an investment strategy that is more cautious than our outlook: The monetary backdrop is still too accommodative to spell the end of the equity bull market, but we are waiting for a better entry point to put our cash overweight to work. Feature Dear Client, This is our last report of 2018. Our regular publishing schedule will resume on Monday, January 7th. We wish you a happy, healthy and prosperous new year. Best regards, Doug Peta, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy We have often remarked how we feel that we are watching a different game than the money market when it comes to the gap in our respective terminal fed funds rate expectations. Both we and the market expect a 25-basis-point (“bps”) hike to 2.5% at the conclusion of the FOMC’s two-day meeting on Wednesday, but from there our paths diverge sharply. The market grudgingly allows that one more hike, to 2.75%, is possible, though it is by no means certain. It sees about a 60% chance that the Fed will make that additional rate hike toward the end of 2019, but then proceeds to price that hike out by the end of 2020 (Chart 1). Chart 1Mind The Gap The terminal rate’s ultimate destination, and the path it follows along the way, is not just an academic matter. Once the fed funds rate crosses above the equilibrium fed funds rate (r-star, in economics-speak), monetary policy will become restrictive for the first time since the crisis began to break. We expect the shift to a restrictive policy setting will herald the end of the expansion. Most importantly for investors, it will mark the point when asset allocation should become considerably more defensive. Getting the Fed right, then, is of the utmost importance, and we need to get to the bottom of our differences with the market. We suspect they come down to disparate assessments of the state of the economy and the state of policy. The money market seems to believe that the economy is weaker than we perceive, and that the fed funds rate is currently much closer to equilibrium than we realize. In both cases, we are vulnerable if it is later in the cycle than we think, because we are not positioned for an imminent inflection. Is The Business Cycle Closer To Ending Than We Think? Real GDP growth will slow in 2019, just as one would expect when 60 bps of fiscal thrust is taken away from an economy that was already operating at its full 2-2.25% capacity (Chart 2). Per the IMF’s fiscal estimates, 2020 shapes up as the real challenge for the economy, especially once the Fed crosses the equilibrium-rate Rubicon. In October and November, however, financial markets acted as if they feared the beginning of the recession was considerably nearer (Chart 3). Our clients’ concerns seemed to coalesce around the implications of a slowdown in housing. Chart 2Lessened Thrust, Lessened Growth Chart 3Growth Scare We do not worry about residential investment pulling down the economy,1 but we do pay close attention to nonfarm payrolls. Employment may be a coincident indicator, but it is powerfully self-reinforcing, and the sub-NAIRU2 unemployment rate looms large in the Fed’s policy calculus. Payrolls growth is robust, and our model projects that it will continue to be over the near term (Chart 4, top panel), as all of its components are in fine fettle, especially initial jobless claims (Chart 4, second panel), and small businesses’ hiring intentions (Chart 4, bottom panel). Chart 4Payrolls Should Keep Growing, ... As we have noted before, it only takes about 110,000 net new jobs every month to keep unemployment at a steady state. Even if our model turns out to be overly optimistic, the unemployment rate appears to be several months away from bottoming, unless the participation rate rises enough to materially increase the size of the labor force. Demographics argue against that, as the baby boomers, ages 54 to 72, exit the work world in a nearly interminable conga line. The participation rate has done well to stabilize in the face of the boomer headwind (Chart 5), but there’s a limit to how much more it can close the gap when businesses are already lamenting the difficulty of finding qualified workers (Chart 6). Chart 5... But The Part Rate Probably Won't Chart 6Good Help Is Hard To Find A robust labor market suggests that households in the aggregate will have the means to support consumption. Now that payrolls have expanded for a record 98 straight months, the lowest-income households are finally in line to capture some of the benefits. Those households have the highest marginal propensity to consume, which may provide spending with an additional fillip. With the savings rate now back to its late-‘90s levels, better-heeled households are also in a position to do their part to keep consumption humming (Chart 7). Chart 7Plenty Of Dry Powder For Spending The near-term consumption outlook is additionally supported by the expectations component of the Conference Board’s consumer confidence survey, which has been a reliable coincident indicator throughout its entire history (Chart 8). The unusual divergence between the two series suggests that consumers may have more of an appetite to spend than they’ve demonstrated so far. Employment gains and real consumption also have a well-established history of traveling together (Chart 9). Chart 8Consumers' Optimism Points To More Spending ...\ Chart 9... And So Do Solid Employment Gains Bottom Line: We find it hard to believe the economy is set to weaken in a worrisome way when the labor market still has plenty of momentum, and consumption is well supported on multiple fronts. Is The Fed Funds Rate Cycle Further Along Than We Realize? The Real Economy Our equilibrium fed funds rate model continues to suggest that the target fed funds rate is well below its equilibrium level and will not exceed it until late next year.3 Equilibrium is only a concept, however, so we actively seek out objective data that may confirm or disprove our assessment. Our approach is to trust our modeled estimate of a concept, but verify it with as much real-time evidence as we can muster. Based on the current level of activity, housing seems to be the only major segment that is experiencing some indigestion from higher rates. Corporate investment may not have lived up to the most optimistic post-tax-cut estimates, but there is no evidence that corporations are holding back because of higher rates. A back-of-the-envelope proxy, calculating the difference between the S&P 500’s return on capital and the after-tax interest rate on BBB-rated corporate bonds, suggests that prospective returns to borrowing are near their best level in 30 years, even with the reduction in the debt tax shield4 (Chart 10). Through December 14th, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model was projecting an increase of 3.8% in fourth-quarter final domestic demand, forcefully pushing back against the notion that r-star is at hand. Chart 10Higher Rates Aren't Biting Yet The ongoing application of fiscal thrust to an economy already operating at capacity argues for a higher equilibrium rate than would otherwise apply. The equilibrium rate is also higher because the unemployment rate is well below NAIRU (4.5%, per the dots), suggesting that the Fed will have to push harder against the economy than it otherwise would to keep it from overheating. Tepid post-crisis investment, mixed with unnecessary fiscal stimulus, and combined with a red-hot labor market, is a recipe for inflation pressures that can only be neutralized by a higher r-star. Financial Conditions As last week’s Google Trends chart of yield-curve searches made clear, investors have developed something of an obsession with an inverted yield curve. The yield curve’s ability to flag overly tight monetary policy in real time has made it a reliable leading indicator of recessions, and it is a key input into our simple recession indicator. The curve has flattened over the last five-plus weeks as the 10-year Treasury yield has melted, stoking recession fears. Before they get too worked up, however, investors should bear in mind that the depressed term premium has the potential to distort its signal in this cycle. The term premium is the yield differential between a Treasury note or bond, and a strip of T-bills, laddered to match the note or bond’s maturity. In line with its name, the term premium is typically positive, as investors have typically demanded compensation for bearing the increased interest-rate volatility embedded in longer-maturity instruments. That volatility may well have been restrained by the Fed’s large-scale asset purchase program, along with long yields themselves, though the entire matter of QE’s impact is subject to spirited debate. Whatever the mechanism, the term premium is considerably lower than it has been across the five decades that the yield curve has had a nearly perfect record of calling recessions (Chart 11). If the term premium were in line with its historical mean value, the yield curve would be nowhere near inverting. We continue to trust in the yield curve’s propensity to sense danger, but concede that the anomalously low term premium may render it somewhat less timely now. Given the preponderance of evidence to the contrary, we are not concerned that it is signaling that r-star is materially closer than our equilibrium fed funds rate model estimates. Chart 11The Bar For Inversion Is A Lot Lower In This Cycle QE raises one more issue for our equilibrium fed funds rate model, which does not account for any tightening of monetary conditions occasioned by the unwinding of the Fed’s balance sheet. We assume that such tightening occurs only at the margin, but it could delay our recognition that policy has shifted from accommodative to restrictive. Attempting to isolate the impact of balance sheet reduction on monetary conditions would be more trouble than it’s worth, however, and we simply assume that it will cause the confidence interval around our equilibrium estimate to widen a little. Bottom Line: Our equilibrium fed funds rate model projects that policy is not nearing restrictive territory, and our interpretation of the whole of the real-time data supports that view. We think that the Fed is still several hikes away from reaching r-star. Investment Implications As we noted in last week’s 2019 outlook, the view that the economy is strong enough to overheat undergirds all of our recommendations. The potential for overheating is what will impel the Fed to hike aggressively through 2019 and possibly beyond. Investors should therefore underweight Treasuries in balanced portfolios, while maintaining below-benchmark duration. The idea that the economy will gather more momentum on its way to overheating keeps us constructive on equities. We do not believe the bull market is over, and are therefore keeping an eye out for an opportunity to overweight the S&P 500 before it makes new highs. We are confident that the unemployment rate will continue to decline, but must concede that the key outcome for Fed policy – higher wages – has been slow to materialize. Several investors have become impatient with waiting for the Phillips Curve to assert itself, and we cannot blame them. Shorn of its fancy trappings, though, the Phillips Curve is just a supply-and-demand story, and we have always found it hard to argue against supply-and-demand stories’ plain logic. The action in the 10-year Treasury nonetheless has us reviewing our call closely in search of anything that we may be missing. It appears that the decline in yields is better explained by the unwinding of lopsided positioning and sentiment (Chart 12), than by anything connected to economic growth. We are acutely conscious of how a worsening of U.S.-China trade tensions could impair global growth and subvert our constructive take on risk assets. U.S. equities may shine on a relative basis in the worst-case scenario, but absolute losses would be assured. We remain in wait-and-see mode, open to deploying our cash overweight if the opportunity presents itself, but happy to have it for ballast and insurance in the meantime. Chart 12Stretched Rubber Bands Snap Back Doug Peta, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see the U.S. Investment Strategy Special Reports, “Housing: Past, Present And (Near) Future,” and “Housing Seminar,” published November 19 and December 3, 2018, respectively, at usis.bcaresearch.com. 2 NAIRU, the non-accelerating-inflation rate of unemployment (also known as the natural rate of unemployment), is the unemployment rate that can be sustained over time without causing the economy to overheat. 3 Our model estimates that equilibrium fed funds is currently around 3%, will be around 3.25% by the middle of 2019, and will settle near 3⅜% at year end. 4 Before the 2017 tax reform act, corporations faced a top marginal rate of 35%, and could deduct interest expense without limit. After-tax interest expense for large corporations amounted to (1-.35), or 65% of the pre-tax expense. Now that the top marginal rate is 21%, after-tax interest expense is (1-.21), or 79% of pre-tax expense.
Highlights Late-cycle pressures will keep pushing bond yields higher. Global growth will remain above trend in 2019, keeping unemployment rates low and preventing central banks from turning dovish. The unwind of crisis-era global monetary policies will continue. Slowing central bank asset purchases will worsen the supply/demand balance for government bonds, resulting in gentle upward pressure on yields via higher term premia. It is too early to worry about inverted yield curves. The time to be concerned about the recessionary implications of an inverted U.S. Treasury curve will come after the Fed has lifted real interest rates to above neutral (R*), which should occur in the latter half of 2019. Expect poor corporate bond returns from an aging credit cycle. While default risk is likely to stay benign through 2019, the greater risk for corporates could come from concerns over future credit downgrades, as well as diminished inflows in a “post-QE” world. Feature BCA’s annual Outlook report, outlining the main investment themes that will drive global asset markets in 2019, was sent to all clients in late November.1 In this Weekly Report, we discuss the four broad implications of those themes for global fixed income. In a follow-up report to be published next week, we will translate those themes into strategic investment recommendations and allocations within our model bond portfolio framework. Key View #1: Late-Cycle Inflation Pressures Will Keep Pushing Bond Yield Higher The main theme from last year’s BCA Outlook was that markets and policy would collide in 2018. This year’s Outlook concluded that those same frictions would persist in 2019, and for similar reasons. The global economy is likely to see another year of above trend growth, after the current deceleration phase bottoms out in the first half of the year. Tight labor markets will continue to force developed market central banks, who still strongly believe in the Phillips Curve relationship as the best way to forecast inflation, to move toward less dovish monetary policies, putting steady upward pressure on global bond yields. Our own Central Bank Monitors signal a need for tighter monetary policy (Chart of the Week), most notably in the U.S. That may sound strange given the recent softening of global growth momentum and plunge in oil prices. Yet economic survey data (like the global ZEW index) show a huge divergence between actual and expected growth, with real bond yields responding more to the former than the latter (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekStill A Bearish Bond Backdrop Chart 2Global Yields Will Remain Resilient In 2019 The fear of a global economic downturn appears greater than the current reality - a trend likely magnified by the ongoing U.S.-China trade tensions and the sharp fall in oil prices which some are interpreting to be a sign of weaker demand. BCA’s commodity strategists view the oil decline as purely supply driven, and expect that a tighter demand/supply balance will result in oil prices recovering recent losses and rising smartly in 2019. This should lead to a rebound in the inflation expectations component of global bond yields later next year (bottom panel). As was argued in the 2019 BCA Outlook, the conditions for a deep pullback in global growth are not yet in place, especially in the U.S. where consumer fundamentals remain solid (strong income growth, booming net worth and a low debt service ratio). China, where growth is currently slowing, remains the biggest wild card for the world economy, especially given the degree to which emerging market economies are levered to Chinese growth. Yet the most likely outcome is that Chinese authorities will make enough policy adjustments to stabilize the economy in the first half of 2019, which will help put a floor under global growth. With over 80% of OECD economies now with an unemployment rate below estimates of “full employment”, the backdrop today is more conducive to sustained higher inflation than at any point since the 2008 Global Financial Crisis (Chart 3). This means that actual inflation readings are likely to be stickier to the upside, especially for domestically focused measures like wages and services which are accelerating in many countries. Chart 3Tight Labor Markets Will Prevent A Sharp Drop In Inflation From the point of view of global central bankers, this means that as long as global growth does not slow sustainably below trend, then unemployment rates are unlikely to begin to rise. For policymakers who slavishly follow the Phillips Curve when forecasting inflation, that will make it difficult to shift to a more dovish policy bias, even if inflation remains below target for a time thanks to the recent pullback in oil prices (Chart 4). Chart 4Central Banks Who Believe In The Phillips Curve Can’t Turn Dovish The degree of policy bias in 2019 will not be uniform, though, which was also the case in 2018. Central banks in countries with core inflation rates closer to policymaker targets (the U.S., Canada, the U.K. if the Brexit uncertainty fades, Sweden) will be more likely to raise rates than those where inflation is still well below target (Japan, the euro area, Australia). Relative government bond market performance over the course of 2019 should reflect those trends. U.S. Treasury yields will still most likely to see the largest increase from current levels as the Fed will lift rates over the full 2019 calendar by more than markets are currently discounting (only 33bps are currently priced in the U.S. Overnight Index Swap curve – a low hurdle to beat). Key View #2: The Unwind Of Crisis-Era Global Monetary Policies Will Continue Quantitative easing (QE) – central banks buying huge amounts of bonds to help keep yields low enough to sustain economic growth amid weak inflation expectations – has been a dominant feature of global bond markets since the 2009 recession. Policymakers have been forced to engage in such unusual activities to try and boost weak inflation expectations even after policy interest rates have been cut to 0% (and even lower in some cases). Now, a decade later, inflation expectations are more stable and much closer to central bank targets in most countries (except, as always, Japan). That means government bond returns are no longer negatively correlated to equity returns (Chart 5), reducing the value of bonds as a hedge to stocks. Chart 5Bonds Are A Less-Effective Hedge For Equities With More Stable Inflation In the 2019 BCA Outlook, several other reasons were given as to why that correlation has been weakening, including a shift towards more consumption and less savings from aging populations entering their retirement years. The biggest change, however, has been the move from QE to “QT” (quantitative tightening) as central banks buy fewer bonds or, in the case of the U.S. Fed, actually letting bonds run of its massive balance sheet. The new year will bring an end to the net new buying phase of the European Central Bank (ECB) Asset Purchase Program. That represents a loss of €180 billion of liquidity into European bond markets compared to 2018 (twelve months at €15bn per month), both for government debt and investment grade corporates which are also part of the ECB’s program. This will come on top of reduced purchases from the Bank of Japan (BoJ), who will likely buy at a reduced ¥30 trillion pace in 2019 (down from around ¥40 trillion in 2018), and from the Fed who will let $600bn of maturing bonds run off its balance sheet ($360bn of which will be Treasuries). That slowing pace of central bank asset accumulation means that private investors must absorb an even greater supply of government bonds next year. The BCA Outlook estimated that the change in the supply of government bonds available to private investors would equal $1.2 trillion in 2019, a huge increase from the $400bn seen in 2018 (Chart 6). This will come at a time when new government bond issuance is set to increase once again thanks to wider U.S. budget deficits, further worsening the global supply/demand balance for government debt from the major developed economies. Chart 6Private Sector To Absorb More Bonds The reduction in the pace of central bank bond buying will continue to put gentle upward pressure on government bond yields, as has been the case since the pace of ECB purchases peaked in 2016 (Chart 7). More importantly, the diminished central bank liquidity expansion means there will be less money going into risky assets via the portfolio balance channel (i.e. private investors taking the funds earned from selling bonds to central banks and placing that in equity and credit markets). Chart 7Upward Pressure On Yields & Vol From 'QT' This creates a backdrop where volatility spikes will be more frequent, as has been the case in 2018 (bottom panel). Risky asset valuations will also be impacted from reduced inflows from yield-seeking investors who have sold government bonds to central banks. This suggests wider credit spreads and lower equity price/earnings multiples, all else equal (Chart 8). Chart 8Risk Asset Valuations Will Continue To Suffer From QT In 2019 Of course, all is not equal. A rebound in global growth could trigger a new wave of inflows into global equity and credit markets with valuations having cheapened in recent months. The important point is that, without central bank liquidity propping up asset prices, global risk assets will trade more off fundamentals in 2019 than has been the case during the past couple of years. Key View #3: Too Soon To Worry About Inverted Yield Curves “Yield curve inversions lead to recessions” is a well-known (if not well understood) relationship that has gained almost mythical status among investors. As the widely-watched spread between 2-year and 10-year U.S. Treasury yields (the 2/10 curve) has melted away during the course of 2018 – now sitting at a mere 13bps – the prognosticating power of the curve has many worried that a U.S. recession could be just around the corner. Especially after the Fed has raised the fed funds rate by 200 basis points over the past three years. Those fears are misguided, for several reasons: 1. The Treasury curve segment with the most successful track record in heralding U.S. recessions is the spread between the 10-year U.S. Treasury bond yield and the 3-month U.S. Treasury bill rate (Chart 9). That spread is still a firmly positive 42bps. We showed in a Special Report published last July that, on average, the length of time between the inversion of the 3-month/10-year Treasury curve and the beginning of a recession is seventeen months.2 Chart 9UST Curve Not Close To A True Recessionary Inversion Signal 2. The slope of the Treasury curve is unusually flat given the level of the fed funds rate measured in real (inflation-adjusted) terms. The previous three episodes where the 2-year/10-year Treasury curve has inverted over the past thirty years have occurred when the real fed funds rate was between 300-400bps (Chart 10). The current level of the real funds rate (deflated by headline CPI inflation) is near zero which, in the past, has occurred alongside a 2-year/10-year Treasury curve that had a positive slope between 150-200bps. Chart 10Global Yield Curves Look Too Flat Vs Real Policy Rates... 3. The depressed level of bond term premia is weighing on longer-dated Treasury yields and dampening the slope of the curve. This is happening not only in the U.S., but also in other major bond markets in Germany, the U.K. and Japan (Chart 11). The impact of global QE programs is the most likely common factor. Chart 11...With Global Term Premia Depressed 4. The 2-year/10-year U.S. Treasury curve has never been inverted without the real fed funds rate being above the neutral real rate, also known as R-star (Chart 12). Chart 12No 2/10 UST Inversion Before Real Rates Exceed R* The implication for fixed income investing for 2019 is that it is too soon in the Fed’s monetary tightening cycle to expect an inverted yield curve driven by an overly tight monetary policy. That outcome is more likely by late 2019 after inflation expectations pick up and the Fed delivers at least another 75bps over the course of the year, pushing the funds rate into restrictive territory. Key View #4: Poor Corporate Returns From The Aging Credit Cycle The other major fixed income implication of the 2019 BCA Outlook is that global corporate bond markets are likely to see another year of poor returns (both in absolute terms and relative to government bonds). Spreads remain near historically tight levels across most spread product sectors, suggesting that credit risk premia will need to be repriced higher as the endgame of the multi-year credit cycle draws nearer (Chart 13). Both investors and policymakers have grown increasingly worried about the risks to the U.S. corporate bond market from high corporate leverage. However, as was discussed in the Outlook, U.S. corporate interest coverage remains well above levels that have preceded the end of previous credit cycles and BCA’s models suggest U.S. corporate profit growth will remain solid (albeit much slower than the rapid +20% growth seen in 2018). Chart 13Fading Support For Corporate Bonds From Growth & Policy That does not mean that corporate bonds are without risk. With 50% of global investment grade bond indices now rated BBB (one notch above junk), the greater threat to corporates may come from downgrades. While those are less likely in a growing economy, investors in lower-rated investment grade bonds may require higher yields and spreads to compensate for the future risk of losses as those bonds could become “fallen angel” high-yield debt in the next economic downturn. This impact would be magnified as how many large fixed income managers have mandates that forbid investment in bonds rated below investment grade, thus creating forced selling in the event of downgrades. More fundamentally, the outlook for global corporate bonds, with spreads still much closer to historical tights than long-run averages, remains reliant on strong economic growth momentum and supportive monetary policy. On the former, we do not anticipate a move to sub-trend global growth, as discussed earlier, and corporate bond returns could stabilize once the current downtrend in the world economy subsides (Chart 14). This would likely represent a final period of calm, however. Tightening global monetary policies – both Fed hikes and diminished asset purchases – will create a more bearish backdrop for credit in the latter half of 2019 as markets begin to discount slower economic growth in 2020. Chart 14Fading Support For Corporate Bonds From Growth & Policy Robert Robis, CFA, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see the December 2018 edition of The Bank Credit Analyst, “Outlook 2019 – Late Cycle Turbulence”, available at bca.bcaresearch.com and gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, “Three Frequently Asked Questions About Global Yield Curves”, dated July 31st 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Academic studies have highlighted the importance of the yield curve as a leading indicator of recessions. In fact, every U.S. recession since the mid-1960s has been preceded by an inverted yield curve (see chart). There has only been one time in the past 50…
The yield curve tends to flatten during rate hike cycles. Most of the flattening comes from the upward pressure on yields at the front-end of the curve (i.e., short rates) as the Fed steadily pushes rates up. In the current business cycle, the 2-10 year…
The yield curve is a powerful forecasting tool of recession and associated bear markets because it reflects the bond market’s thinking on whether the economy in the future can tolerate current short rates. Policy rates above long-term yields implies that…
Highlights Our take on the key macro drivers of financial markets hasn’t evolved much since we laid it out this summer, … : Monetary policy is still accommodative; lenders are ready, willing and able; and the expansion remains intact. ... but the inflection points are getting nearer: The good times won’t last forever, though. The Fed is resolutely tightening policy, BBB-heavy investment-grade issuance has the corporate bond market flirting with a plague of fallen angels, and the global economy is slowing. Our strategy remains more cautious than our outlook for now, … : Although we think the equity bull market has another year to run, and the expansion will stretch into 2020, we are only equal-weight equities, while underweighting bonds and overweighting cash. … but we’re alert to opportunities to get more aggressive: Investment-grade and high-yield bonds are unlikely to offer an attractive risk-reward profile, but the S&P 500 shouldn’t decline much more if the economy holds up. Feature Mr. and Ms. X’s annual visit is an occasion for every BCA service to look toward the coming year, mindful of how it could improve on the one just past. The theme we settled on in last year’s discussion, Policy and Markets on a Collision Course, began asserting itself in earnest in October, and appears as it will be with us throughout 2019. The Fed is nearing its fourth rate hike this year, on the heels of three in 2017, and markets are warily contemplating the tipping point at which higher interest rates begin to interfere with activity. The yield curve has become a constant worry (Chart 1), with short rates moving in step with the fed funds rate while yields at the long end have been just one-half as sensitive (Chart 2). Chart 1Yield Curve Anxiety Has Exploded ... Chart 2... As The Curve Has Steadily Flattened Trade tensions are an even thornier policy challenge. After flitting on and off investors’ radar earlier in the year, trade barriers have been a major source of angst in recent months as central banks, investor polls and company managements increasingly cite them among their foremost concerns. Unfortunately, our geopolitical strategists do not expect relief any time soon. They see trade as just one aspect of an extended contest for supremacy between China and the U.S. Late-Cycle Turbulence, our 2019 house theme, pairs nicely with Policy-Market Collision. The gap between our terminal fed funds rate expectation and the money market’s is huge, and leaves ample room for a repricing of the entire yield curve. Trade has been a roller coaster, capable of inducing whiplash in 140 characters or less, and it may already have brought global manufacturing to the brink of a recession. Oil lost 30% in two months at the stroke of a pen; its immediate fate is in the hands of OPEC, but the caprice with which Iranian sanctions may or may not be re-imposed is likely to feed uncertainty. As we advised Mr. and Ms. X a few weeks ago, investors should stay nimble; there is no point to committing to a twelve-month strategy right now.1 The Fed Funds Rate Cycle Our equilibrium fed funds rate model estimates that the equilibrium fed funds rate, the rate that neither encourages nor discourages economic activity, is currently around 3%. It projects that the equilibrium rate will approach 3¼% by the middle of 2019, and 3⅜% by year end. The implication is that policy is comfortably accommodative now, and will not cross into restrictive territory for another 12 months – assuming that the Fed hikes four times next year, in line with our ambitious expectation. If the Fed steps back from its gradual pace, and only hikes three times in 2019 (as per the dots), or just once (as per the money market), the day when the economy and markets will have to confront tight monetary conditions will be pushed even further into the future. Stretching monetary accommodation until late next year would seem to forestall the arrival of the next recession until at least the first half of 2020. Tight policy is a necessary, if not sufficient, condition for a recession, as recessions have only occurred when the policy rate has exceeded our estimate of equilibrium over the six decades covered by our model. A longer stretch of accommodation would also continue to nourish the equity bull market and discourage allocations to Treasuries. Over the last 60 years, the S&P 500 has accrued all of its real returns when policy was easy (Table 1), while Treasuries have wilted, especially in the current phase of the fed funds rate cycle (Table 2). Table 1Equities Flourish When Policy’s Easy ... Table 2... While Treasuries Stumble The Business Cycle The state of policy is one of the three components in our simple recession indicator. Neither of the other two is sounding the alarm, either. Our preferred 3-month-to-10-year segment of the Treasury yield curve is still comfortably upward sloping, even if it has been steadily flattening and we expect it to invert late next year (Chart 3). Year-over-year growth in leading economic indicators decelerated slightly last month, but remains well above the zero line that has reliably preceded past recessions. Chart 3Flattening, But Not Yet Flat The Credit Cycle Anyone following the credit cycle would do well to start with the axiom that bad loans are made in good times. Its converse is just as true: good loans are made in bad times. Loan officers are every bit as susceptible to the recency bias as other human beings, and they tend to extrapolate from the freshest observations when assessing a borrower’s prospects. When things are good, lenders assume they will continue to be good, and let their guard down by lending to marginal borrowers and/or relaxing the terms on which they will lend. When things are bad, on the other hand, loans have to be underwritten so tightly that they squeak. The upshot is that lending standards and loan performance are tightly bound up with one another. In the near term, standards and performance are joined at the hip; over a five-year period, standards lead performance as a contrary indicator. Defaults almost certainly bottomed for the cycle in 2014, to judge by speculative-grade bonds (Chart 4, top panel), and loans (Chart 4, bottom panel). Standards reliably followed, and the proportion of lenders easing standards for corporate borrowers, as per the Fed’s senior loan officer survey, spiked (Chart 5). Chart 4Weakening, But Not Yet Weak Chart 5Standards Follow Performance In Real Time ... The 2012 and 2014 peaks in willingness suggest that performance is due to erode (Chart 6). We do not foresee a step-function move higher in defaults, or a sudden collapse in loan availability, but we do expect some fraying at the edges. Given how tight spreads remain, any weakness at the margin could go a long way to wiping out much, if not all, of spread product’s excess return. The bottom line is that the credit cycle is well advanced, and investors should expect borrower performance and lender willingness to weaken from their current levels. Chart 6... And Lead Them Over The Intermediate Term Bonds We have written at length on our bearish view on rates and Treasuries.2 The key pillar supporting our rationale is the gap between our terminal fed funds rate estimate, 3.5-4%, and the market’s view that the Fed will not go beyond 2.75%, if indeed it gets to that level at all (Chart 7). The gap is big enough to drive a truck through, and leaves a lot of room for yields to shift higher all along the curve, even if the Fed were to slow its 25-bps-a-quarter tempo, as the Wall Street Journal suggested it might in a report last Thursday. We continue to believe that inflation is the inevitable outcome once surging aggregate demand collides with limited spare capacity, and that the Fed will be forced to push the fed funds rate to 3.5% and beyond. Chart 7Something's Gotta Give Our view that the credit cycle has already passed its peak drives our view on spread product. Though we remain constructive on the economy and the outlook for corporate earnings, we are not enamored of the risk-reward offered by corporate bonds. Although high-yield spreads blew out by nearly 125 bps from early October to late November, high yield still does not look cheap (Chart 8, bottom panel). The same holds for investment-grade spreads, which remain near the bottom of their long-term range despite widening by over 50 bps (Chart 8, top panel). Chart 8Spreads Are Still Tight Bottom Line: We recommend that investors underweight fixed income within balanced portfolios, while underweighting Treasuries and maintaining below-benchmark duration. We recommend benchmark holdings in spread product, but we expect to downgrade it to underweight before the end of the first half. Equities With monetary policy still accommodative, and the expansion still intact, the cyclical backdrop is equity-friendly. If we’re correct that policy won’t turn restrictive for another twelve months or so, the bull market should have about another year to go. We downgraded equities to equal weight as a firm in mid-June nonetheless, on signs of global deceleration and the potentially malign effects of tariffs and other impediments to global trade. U.S. Investment Strategy fully supported that decision, but we are alert to opportunities to upgrade equities to overweight within U.S. portfolios if prices decline enough to make the prospect of a new cycle high attractive on a risk-reward basis. The risk-reward requirement implies that the fall in price would have to occur without a material weakening of the fundamental backdrop. For now, we think the fundamental supports remain stable, as per the equity downgrade checklist we constructed to keep tabs on them. The checklist monitors recession indicators, none of which betray any concern now; factors that may weigh on corporate earnings; inflation measures, because higher inflation could motivate the Fed to hike more quickly than planned, with adverse consequences for the bull market; and signs of overexuberance (Table 3). Table 3Equity Downgrade Checklist The earnings-pressure section focuses on the key factors that might signal margin contraction – wage growth, dollar strength and rising bond yields – but none of them look especially problematic now. While we think compensation gains will eventually push the Fed to go beyond its own terminal rate estimates, they have not yet picked up enough to cause concern. The dollar has paused in its advance, mostly marking time since the end of October. Only BBB corporate yields have gotten closer to checking the box (Chart 9). BCA’s preferred margin proxies remain in good shape, on balance (Chart 10), and our EPS profit model is calling for robust profit growth across all of next year (Chart 11). Chart 9Higher Rates Will Exert Some Margin Pressure Chart 10In The Absence Of Margin Pressures, ... Chart 11... 2019 Earnings Could Hold Up Nicely Oil’s plunge has pulled both headline CPI and longer-run inflation expectations lower. Although we think that the inflation respite is merely a head fake, and that oil will soon regain its footing (please see below), the run of harmless inflation data has the potential to soothe some market concerns about the Fed. If the Fed itself takes the data at face value, it may signal that the current 25-bps-a-quarter gradual pace could be slowed. As for exuberance, the de-rating the S&P 500 has endured since its forward multiple peaked at 18.5 in January suggests that it’s not a problem. We are not living through anything remotely resembling an equity mania. Bottom Line: BCA’s mid-June downgrade of global equities from overweight to equal-weight was timely. We remain equal-weight in balanced U.S. portfolios, but are more likely to upgrade U.S. equities than downgrade them, given the supportive cyclical backdrop. Oil We devoted our report two weeks ago to the oil outlook and its implications for the economy. Our Commodity & Energy Strategy service’s bullish 2019 view has not changed: it still sees a market in a tight supply/demand balance with high potential for supply disruptions and a smaller-than-usual inventory reserve to make up the slack. The unexpected release of over a million barrels a day of Iranian output has played havoc with oil prices, but does not provoke the growth concerns that declining demand would. Provided OPEC is able to agree on production cuts, and abide by them going forward, our strategists see Brent and WTI averaging $82 and $76/barrel across 2019. The Dollar We remain bullish on the dollar, though it will find the going rougher than it did in 2018. Traders have built up sizable net long positions, so it will take more for the greenback to extend its advance than it did to begin it. Ultimately, we think desynchronization between the U.S. and the rest of the major DM economies will keep the dollar moving higher. If the U.S. does not continue to outgrow the currency-major economies by a healthy margin, and/or the Fed does not respond to that growth by hiking rates to prevent overheating, the dollar’s advance may be nearly played out. Putting It All Together Three major assumptions underpin our views: The U.S. economy is at risk of overheating in its second year of markedly above-trend growth fueled by fiscal stimulus, and the Fed will respond to that risk by decisively raising rates. There will be a noticeable global slowdown, but it will not go far enough to turn into a recession. The U.S. will remain mostly immune to the global slump. We will be positioned well if all of these assumptions are validated by events, though timing is always uncertain. Financial-market volatility often increases late in the cycle, and we expect the backdrop to remain fluid. We are trying to maintain a fluid mindset in kind, monitoring the incoming data to make sure our cyclical assessments still apply, while remaining alert to opportunities created by significant price swings. Although we are neither traders nor tacticians, we want to retain some flexibility, and are trying to resist mentally locking in our positioning for the entire year. We are particularly focused on the monetary policy backdrop and the transition from accommodative to restrictive policy, which has historically been critically important for asset allocation. Our main goal is to anticipate the approach of inflection points in the key cycles – business, credit and monetary – as adeptly as we can. We are also resolved to look through the noise of one-off price swings and the blather that has already been clogging the airwaves. We seek to help our clients formulate a strategy for navigating the turbulence without being swept up in it. Doug Peta, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see the December 2018 Bank Credit Analyst, “Outlook 2019: Late-Cycle Turbulence,” available at www.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see the July 30, 2018 U.S. Investment Strategy, “The Rates Outlook,” the September 17, 2018; U.S. Investment Strategy, “What Would It Take To Change Our Bearish Rates View?” and the November 5, 2018; U.S. Investment Strategy, “Checking In On Our Rates View,” available at usis.bcaresearch.com.