Global
This month's Special Report reviews the main factors driving the "lower for longer" bond yield view. A key finding is that the demographically-driven portion of the expansion in world capital spending has come to a virtual standstill, representing a major hit to underlying demand growth.
The deeply negative momentum in oil prices is fading, setting up the possibility of a counter-trend rebound in global inflation expectations and perhaps even the beaten-up U.S. High-Yield bond market.
Markets see long-term global growth prospects as having deteriorated materially, with policymakers unwilling or unable to do much about it. Meanwhile, recent economic data - U.S. notably - hasn't been that bad. A divergence between what matters to Wall Street versus Main Street explains the disconnect. Accelerating wage growth, lower commodity prices, and cheaper rates are positives for households - but not for many Wall Street sectors. Stay neutral global equities. T-bonds are a "hold" for now. The dollar's selloff is overdone.
Reduce portfolio duration to neutral, while also cutting exposure to European bonds (both in the core and Periphery) and Canadian government bonds.
Plunging commodities have been driven by increased supply and falling investor demand, not a major downshift in physical demand. Stay neutral global equities. The earnings outlook remains uninspiring, but bottoming oil prices and continued monetary stimulus support valuations. The selloff in global bank shares reflects NIRP-related "income statement worries", not "balance sheet concerns" linked to deteriorating credit quality. Downgrade Treasury notes to neutral. The rally in bonds has brought 10-year yields near our long-standing, out-of-consensus target of 1.5%.
Rebalancing in the oil market later this year will arrest the negative feed-back loop driving markets' inflation, interest-rate and FX expectations, particularly for non-OPEC oil-exporting countries.