Gov Sovereigns/Treasurys
This week, we present five of the more interesting yield curve trades in the Developed Markets for the latter half of 2016.
Tougher Fed talk warns that the Goldilocks combination of higher stock and bond prices in place since February is not sustainable.
Australia's equities and currency are driven largely by industrial commodities prices, Canada's by the oil price. Given our more positive view on oil, we prefer Canadian assets, though both markets face risk from stretched property prices and household debt.
There is a considerable dichotomy between the EM equity universe and EM corporate credit markets. EM credit markets remain mispriced. EM currencies are at risk of renewed depreciation. This will push sovereign and corporate spreads, as well as high-yielding domestic bond yields, higher. Continue underweighting Indonesian stocks, sovereign credit and domestic bonds within their respective benchmarks.
Within an overweight allocation to Euro Area corporates versus U.S. corporates, favor single-B rated Euro Area High-Yield and Euro Area Investment Grade sectors that offer higher duration-adjusted spreads.
The next rate hike is unlikely before September, despite the rebound in April retail sales. The dollar could suffer for a time, but the long-term bull market is intact.
Preliminary results from the Philippine elections suggest that policy uncertainty and discontinuity will challenge the reform trajectory of a country with one of the best macroeconomic backdrops in the emerging market universe.
The U.S. dollar has fallen to almost 5% below its 2016 peak. In this <i>Special Report</i> we explore the impact of a weaker dollar on key U.S. fixed income markets.
To cheaply hedge against a "Leave" vote, go long U.K. inflation protection, reduce exposure to U.K. corporate debt, and position for a steepening of the Gilt curve.
We discuss the technical and political problems with helicopter money, plus the near-term outlook for the euro area economy and markets.