Market Returns
Monetary policy at systematically important central banks will determine the winners and losers in global ag export markets going forward. The evolution of fundamentals - supply, demand, and inventories - will remain essential drivers. Mother Nature is the wild card.
How big a problem are the non-performing loans in Italy and Greece? And what is the solution?
The near-term (next month or two) market dynamics in EM risk assets remain a coin toss. Beyond that the outlook for EM risk assets remains downbeat. EM financial markets are complacent and there are many potential negative EM/China developments that could derail the current EM rally. A new trade: go long the KOSPI / short EM overall equity index.
Most financial assets are trading within the confines of the feedback loop between markets and Fed policy. Investors should avoid expensive assets such as spread product, and hold positions with attractive long-term value such as U.S. TIPS over nominal Treasuries and U.S. Treasuries over German bunds.
Most financial assets are trading within the confines of the feedback loop between markets and Fed policy. Investors should avoid expensive assets such as spread product, and hold positions with attractive long-term value such as U.S. TIPS over nominal Treasuries and U.S. Treasuries over German bunds.
Like the economy, banks show no major imbalances. But the "glide path" for credit is slower than in previous cycles.
Sell the bounce in banks, which face a triple whammy of earnings threats. This will reduce our financials sector allocation to underweight, making room for last week's energy upgrade.
The dollar countertrend move has more downside, but beyond the next few months, the dollar remains in a cyclical bull market. Improvements in global growth, even if temporary, are likely to lift non-U.S. rates more than U.S. ones. The euro will benefit from that move as investors still have deep negative feelings toward EUR/USD, exactly as economic momentum has moved in favor of Europe. The SEK should outperform.
The reflation trade will continue for a few more months on Chinese fiscal/monetary stimulus and a more dovish Fed. Despite a slightly better-than-expected start to the earnings season, Q1 S&P 500 profits are set to fall for a fourth consecutive yoy decline. Ex-energy, things aren't so bleak. Domestically-focused companies will experience flat earnings and modestly-positive revenue growth in Q1. Although margins have almost certainly peaked, their decline will be drawn-out. Remain overweight Europe/Japan/China versus the S&P 500 (currency-hedged).
Saudi oil policy, like its defense policy, will be more aggressive and less predictable, following Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's apparent nullification of a production "freeze" deal at Doha.