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Executive Summary Upgrade Global Duration Exposure To Neutral The Russian invasion of Ukraine is a stagflationary shock that comes at a difficult time for developed market central banks that have been laying the groundwork for a tightening cycle. We tactically upgraded our recommended duration exposure in the US to neutral last week, as the market was pricing in too much Fed tightening in 2022. We are doing similar upgrades in non-US government bonds this week for the same reason. We are maintaining our cyclical country allocations, however, as those remain in line with interest rate pricing beyond 2022. We are underweight markets where terminal rate expectations remain too low (the US, UK & Canada) and overweight countries where markets are discounting too many rate hikes in 2023/24 (Germany, Japan, Australia). In light of the instability caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, we are reducing weightings in our model bond portfolio to credit sectors highly exposed to the war - European high-yield and emerging market hard currency debt. Bottom Line: The Ukraine war comes at a time when global growth momentum was already starting to roll over and with global inflation momentum set to peak soon. Upgrade duration exposure to neutral from underweight in global bond portfolios. Feature Among the tail risks that investors contemplated in their planning for 2022, World War III was likely not ranked too highly on the list. The horrific images of the Russian invasion of Ukraine – and the sharp response of the West to isolate Russia through unprecedented economic and financial sanctions - have shocked global financial markets that had been focused on relatively mundane concerns like the timing of interest rate hikes. BCA sent a short note to all clients late last week that discussed the investment implications of the invasion for several asset classes. In this report, we consider the bond market ramifications of war in Eastern Europe. Our main conclusion is that the Ukraine situation will produce a brief “stagflationary” shock that will boost global inflation and slow global growth, on the margin. High energy prices will be the main driver of that stagflation, given the uncertainties over the availability of Russian oil and natural gas supplies (Chart 1). Tighter financial conditions - beyond what has already occurred so far this year as global equity and credit markets have sold off (Chart 2) – will also contribute to the moderation of the pace of global growth. Chart 1A Mild Inflationary Shock From The Russian Invasion​​​​​​ Chart 2The Ukraine War Is Adding To 2022 Risk-Off Trends​​​​​​ The stagflation shock should be relatively short, perhaps 3-6 months. BCA’s Commodity & Energy Strategy service expects OPEC to eventually supply more oil to the global market – a move that was already likely before the Russian invasion – helping to reduce the Russian supply premium in oil prices. Putin will likely have to be satisfied with claiming eastern Ukraine rather than being stuck in a protracted battle with fierce Ukrainian resistance while Russia suffers under crippling sanctions. BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy service does not expect the conflict to spread beyond Ukraine’s borders, as neither Russia nor NATO have an interest in war with each other (despite the nuclear saber-rattling by Russian President Putin in response to Western sanctions). A mild bout of stagflation will only delay, and not derail, the cyclical move towards tighter global monetary policies in response to elevated inflation and tightening labor markets, particularly in the US. This will take some of the upward pressure off global bond yields as central banks will be less hawkish than expected in 2022, but does not change the outlook for higher bond yields in 2023 and 2024. In terms of changes to our fixed income investment recommendations, and the allocations to our Model Bond Portfolio, we come to the following three conclusions. Upgrade Tactical Non-US Duration Exposure To Neutral We recently upgraded our recommended tactical duration exposure in the US to neutral, with the Fed likely to deliver fewer rate hikes this year than what is discounted by markets. The Ukraine situation makes it even more likely that the Fed will underwhelm expectations. A 50bp rate hike at the March FOMC meeting is now off the table, as the equity and credit market selloffs in response to the conflict have tightened US (and global) financial conditions on the margin. However, the war is not enough of a negative shock to US growth to derail the Fed from starting a gradual tightening process this month with a 25bp hike. Our decision to change our US duration stance was largely predicated on a view that US inflation will soon peak and slow significantly over the rest of 2022. However, there is a strong case to increase non-US duration exposure, as well. Our Global Duration Indicator - comprised of leading cyclical growth indicators and which itself leads the year-over-year change in our “Major Countries” GDP-weighted aggregate of 10-year government bond yields by around six months - peaked back in February 2021 (Chart 3). The Global Duration Indicator is now at a “neutral” level consistent with more stable bond yield momentum. Declines in the ZEW economic expectations survey in the US and Europe, and in our global leading economic indicator, are the main culprits behind the fall in the Global Duration Indicator (Chart 4). Chart 3Upgrade Global Duration Exposure To Neutral​​​​​​ Chart 4Growth Expectations Have Turned Less Bond Bearish ... For Now​​​​​ While the ZEW series have rebounded in the first two months of 2022, which could set the stage for a move back to higher yields later this year, the Ukraine situation will likely hurt economic expectations (particularly in Europe) in the near-term. We expect our Global Duration Indicator to continue signaling a more neutral backdrop for global bond yields over the next few months. In our Model Bond Portfolio on pages 13-14, we are expressing our view change by increasing the duration for all countries such that the overall duration of the portfolio is in line with the custom benchmark index (7.5 years). Importantly, we view this as only a tactical view change for the next few months, as developed economy interest rate markets are still discounting too few rate hikes – and in some countries like the UK and US, actual rate cuts – in 2023/24 (Chart 5). Chart 5Priced For Short, Shallow Hiking Cycles Maintain Cyclical Government Bond Country Allocations That Favor Lower Inflation Regions Chart 6Oil Is Inflationary Now, Will Be Disinflationary Later While we are neutralizing our global duration stance over a tactical time horizon (0-6 months), we are sticking with our current recommended cyclical (6-18 months) government bond country allocations. These are based on underlying inflation trends and the expected monetary policy response over the next couple of years. As noted earlier, BCA’s commodity strategists expect oil prices to fall from current war-elevated levels in response to increased supply from OPEC. The benchmark Brent oil price is forecasted to reach $88/bbl at the end of this year and $87/bbl and the end of 2023. The result will be a sharp decline in the year-over-year growth rate of oil prices that will help bring down headline inflation in all countries (Chart 6). Lower energy inflation, however, will not be the only factor reducing overall inflation across the developed world. Goods price inflation should also slow from current elevated levels over the next 6-12 months, as consumer spending patterns shift away from goods towards services with fewer pandemic-related restrictions on activity. Less goods spending will help ease some of the severe supply chain disruptions that have fueled the surge in global goods price inflation over the past year. That process has likely already begun – indices of global shipping costs have peaked and supplier delivery times have been shortening according to global manufacturing PMI surveys. The shift from less goods spending towards more services spending will lead to trends in overall inflation being determined more by services prices than goods prices. The central banks in countries that have higher underlying inflation, as evidenced by faster services inflation, will be under more pressure to tighten policy over the next couple of years. Therefore, our current cyclical recommended country allocations (and our Model Bond Portfolio weightings) within developed market government bonds reflect the relative trends in services inflation. We are currently recommending underweights in the US, UK and Canada where services inflation is currently close to 4%, well above the central bank 2% inflation targets (Chart 7). At the same time, we are recommending overweights in core Europe (Germany and France) and Australia, where services inflation is around 2.5%, and Japan where services prices are deflating (Chart 8). Chart 7Higher Underlying Inflation In Our Recommended Underweights​​​​​​ Chart 8Lower Underlying Inflation In Our Recommended Overweights​​​​​​ Chart 9Faster Wage Growth In Our Recommended Underweights The trends in services inflation are also reflected in wage growth in those same groups of countries – much higher in the US, UK and Canada compared to Australia, the euro area and Japan (Chart 9). We expect these relative trends to continue over the next 12-24 months, with higher underlying inflation pressures forcing the Fed, the Bank of England (BoE) and the Bank of Canada (BoC) to be much more hawkish, on a relative basis, than the European Central Bank (ECB), the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and the Bank of Japan (BoJ). Our current bond allocations not only fit with underlying inflation trends, but also with market-based interest rate expectations. In Table 1, we show the pricing of interest rate expectations over the next few years, taken from Overnight Index Swap (OIS) forwards. We show the OIS projection for 1-month interest rates 12 months from now and 24 months from now. We also include 5-year/5-year forward OIS rates as a measure of market expectations of the terminal rate, a.k.a. the peak central bank policy rate over the next tightening cycle. In the table, we also added neutral policy rate estimates taken from central bank sources.1 Table 1Medium-Term Interest Rate Expectations Still Too Low In The US & UK In the US and UK, the OIS rate projections two years out, as well as the 5-year/5-year forward rate, are below the range of neutral rate estimates. This justifies an underweight stance on both US Treasuries and UK Gilts with both the Fed and BoE now in tightening cycles. In Japan and Australia, the OIS projections are already within the range of neutral rate estimates, but the RBA and, especially, the BoJ are not yet signaling a need to begin normalizing the level of policy rates. This justifies an overweight stance on Australian government bonds and Japanese government bonds. In the euro area, OIS projections are below the range of neutral rate estimates, but the ECB is now signaling that any monetary tightening actions will need to be delayed because of the growth uncertainties stemming from the Ukraine conflict and high energy prices. Thus, an overweight stance on core European government debt is still warranted. In Canada, the OIS projections are within the range of neutral rate estimates, but the BoC has been preparing markets for a series of rate hikes. This makes our underweight stance on Canadian government bonds a more “mixed” call, although we remain confident that Canadian bonds will underperform in a global bond portfolio context versus European and Japanese government bonds. In sum, we see our recommended country allocations as the most efficient way to express our cyclical (medium-term) central bank views, given the strong link between forward interest rate expectations and longer-term bond yields (Chart 10). This is why we are not making changes to our country allocation recommendations alongside our move to tactically upgrade our global duration stance to neutral. Chart 10Too Much Tightening Priced Over The Next Year​​​​​ Chart 11Bond Markets Not Priced For A Relatively More Hawkish Fed​​​​​ Given our high-conviction view that markets are underestimating how high the Fed will need to lift interest rates in the upcoming tightening cycle – likely more than any other major developed economy central bank - positioning for US Treasury market underperformance on a 1-2 year horizon still looks like an attractive bet with forward rates priced for little change in US/non-US bond spreads (Chart 11). A wider US Treasury-German Bund spread remains our highest conviction cross-country spread recommendation. Reduce Spread Product Exposure In Europe & Emerging Markets Chart 12Cut EM & European High-Yield Exposure, But Stay O/W Italian BTPs The geopolitical uncertainty stemming from the Ukraine war and the stagflationary near-term impact of high energy prices are negatives for all risk assets, on the margin. That leads us to tactically reduce the allocation to spread product to neutral versus government debt in our Model Bond Portfolio. We are implementing this by cutting allocations to riskier fixed income sectors that are most impacted by the Russia/Ukraine conflict – European high-yield corporate debt and emerging market (EM) USD-denominated hard currency debt (Chart 12). We had already been cautious on EM debt before the Russian invasion, with an underweight allocation to both USD-denominated sovereigns and corporates, so the latest moves just increase the size of the underweight. European high-yield, on the other hand, had been one of our highest conviction overweight positions – particularly versus US high-yield - entering 2022. However the Ukraine war is likely to have a bigger negative impact on the European economy than the US economy, thus we are cutting our recommended exposure to European high-yield only. The uncertainty of a war on European soil, combined with the spike in energy prices (especially natural gas), is negative for European growth momentum, reducing 2022 euro area real GDP growth by as much as 0.4 percentage points according to ECB estimates. This raises the hurdle for any ECB monetary tightening this year. An early taper of bond buying in the ECB’s Asset Purchase Program, an outcome that ECB officials claim is a required precursor to rate hikes, is now highly unlikely. Fears of reduced ECB bond buying had weighed on the relative performance of Italian government bonds last month, but a more dovish ECB policy stance should lead to lower Italian yields and a narrowing of the BTP-Bund spread (bottom panel). We continue to recommend a cyclical overweight stance on Italian government debt. A Final Thought We need to reiterate that the recommended changes made in this report – increasing global duration exposure to neutral and cutting EM and European high-yield – are over a tactical time horizon, largely in response to the Ukraine conflict. This is more of a “risk management” exercise, rather than a change in our fundamental cyclical views. We still believe global growth will remain above trend in 2022 and likely 2023, which will prevent a complete unwind of last year’s inflation surge, particularly in the US. We expect global bond yields to begin climbing again later this year and into 2023, and we envision an eventual return to a below-benchmark duration stance.   Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1      The sources of the neutral rate estimates are listed in the footnotes of Table 1. GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Recommended Positioning     Active Duration Contribution: GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. Custom Performance Benchmark The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Global Fixed Income - Strategic Recommendations* Tactical Overlay Trades
Dear client, In addition to this weekly report, we sent you a Special Report from our Geopolitical Strategy service, highlighting the risk from the Russo-Ukrainian conflict. Kind regards, Chester Executive Summary The Ukraine crisis will lead to a period of strength for the DXY. Countries requiring foreign capital will be most at risk from an escalation in tensions. Portfolio flows have reaccelerated into the US, on the back of a rise in Treasury yields. This will be sustained in the near term. The euro area on the other hand has already witnessed significant portfolio outflows, on the back of Russo-Ukrainian tensions and an energy crisis. Countries with balance of payment surpluses like Switzerland and Australia are good havens amidst the carnage. Oil-producing countries such as Norway and Canada have also seen an improvement in their balance of payments, on the back of a strong terms-of-trade tailwind. This will be sustained in the near term. Balance Of Payments Across The G10 Bottom Line: The dollar is king in a risk-off environment. That said, the US and the UK sport the worst balance of payments backdrops, while Norway, Switzerland, and Sweden have the best. This underpins our long-term preference for Scandinavian currencies in an FX portfolio. In the near term, we think the DXY will peak near 98-100, but volatility will swamp fundamental biases. Feature Chart 1The US Runs A Sizeable Deficit The Russia-Ukraine conflict continues to dictate near-term FX movements. With Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the risk of escalation and/or a miscalculation has risen. FX volatility is increasing sharply, and with it, the risk of a further selloff in currencies dependent on foreign capital inflows. As a reserve currency, the dollar has also been strong. It is difficult to ascertain how this imbroglio will end. However, in this week’s report, we look at which currencies are most vulnerable (and likely to stay vulnerable) from a balance of payments standpoint. Chart 1 plots the basic balance – the sum of the current account balance and foreign investment – across G10 countries. It shows that at first blush, Norway, Switzerland, Sweden, and Australia are the most resilient from a funding standpoint, while New Zealand, the UK, and the US are the most vulnerable. In Chart 2, we rank G10 currencies on eight different criteria: The basic balance, which we highlighted above. Real interest rate differentials, using the 10-year tenor and headline inflation. Relative growth fundamentals, as measured by the Markit manufacturing PMI. Three fair value models which we use in-house. The first is our Purchasing Power Parity model, which adjusts consumption basket weights across the G10 to reflect a more apples-to-apples comparison. The second is our long-term fair value model (LTFV), which adjusts for productivity differentials between countries; and the final is our intermediate-term timing model (ITTM), which separates procyclical from safe-haven currencies by including a risk factor such as corporate spreads. All three models are equally weighted in our rankings. The net international investment position (NIIP), which highlights currencies that are most likely to witness either repatriation flows or a positive income balance in the current account. Finally, net speculative positioning, which tells us which currencies have crowded long positions, and which ones sport a consensus sell. Chart 2The Scandinavian Currencies Are Attractive The conclusions from this chart are similar to our basic balance scenario – NOK, SEK, AUD, CHF, and JPY stand out as winners while GBP, NZD, and USD are the least attractive. The US dollar is a special case given its reserve currency status, with a persistent balance of payments deficit. The rise in the greenback amidst market volatility is a case in point. However, portfolio flows into the dollar also tend to be cyclical, so a resolution in the Ukraine/Russia conflict will put a cap on inflows. Equity portfolio flows had dominated financing of the US current account deficit but are relapsing (Chart 3). Bond portfolio flows have rebounded on the back of rising US yields, but US TIPS yields remain very low by historical standards (Chart 4). If they do not improve much further, specifically relative to other developed markets, it will be tough to justify further inflows into US Treasurys. Chart 3Equity Portfolio Flows Into The US Are Relapsing Chart 4Bond Portfolio Flows Into The US Are Strong In this week’s report, we look at the key drivers of balance of payments dynamics across the G10, starting with the US, especially amidst a scenario where the forfeit of foreign capital could come to the fore. United States Chart 5US Balance Of Payments The US trade deficit continues to hit record lows at -$80.7 billion for the month of December. Over the last few years, it has become increasingly difficult to fund this widening trade deficit via foreign purchases of US Treasurys. A positive net income balance has allowed a slower deterioration in the US current account balance, though at -$214.8 billion for Q3, it remains close to record lows. The overall picture for both the trade and current account balance is more benign as a share of GDP, given robust GDP growth (Chart 5). That said, as a share of GDP, the trade balance stands at -3.5%, the worst in over a decade. Foreign direct investment into the US has been improving of late. This probably reflects an onshoring of manufacturing, triggered by the Covid-19 crisis. That said, despite this improvement, the US still sports a negative net FDI backdrop. In a nutshell, the basic balance in the US (the sum of the current account and foreign direct investment) is still deteriorating. The dollar tends to decline on a multi-year basis when the basic balance peaks and starts worsening.       Euro Area Chart 6Euro Area Balance Of Payments The trade balance in the euro area has significantly deteriorated in recent quarters, on the back of an escalating energy crisis. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine marks the cherry on top. On a rolling 12-month basis, the trade surplus has fallen to 1% of GDP (Chart 6). This is particularly telling since for the month of December, the trade balance came in at €-4.6 billion, the worst since the euro area debt crisis. The current account continues to post a surplus of 2.6% of GDP, on the back of a positive income balance. However, FDI inflows are relapsing. After about two decades of underinvestment in the euro area, FDI inflows were at their highest level, to the tune of about 2% of GDP in 2021. Those have now completely reversed on the back of uncertainty. The combination of an energy crisis and dwindling FDI is crushing the euro area’s basic balance surplus. A rising basic balance surplus has been one of the key pillars underpinning a bullish euro thesis. Should the deterioration continue, it will undermine our longer-term bullish stance on the euro. It is encouraging that portfolio investments have turned less negative in recent quarters, as bond yields in the euro area are rising. Should this continue, it will be a good offset to the deterioration in FDI.   Japan Chart 7Japan Balance Of Payments Like the euro area, the trade balance in Japan continues to be severely hampered by rising energy imports. The trade deficit in January deteriorated to a near record of ¥2.2 trillion, even though export growth remained very robust. Income receipts from Japan’s large investment positions abroad continue to buffer the current account, but a resolution to the energy crisis will be necessary to stem Japan’s basic balance from deteriorating (Chart 7). The process of offshoring has sharply reversed since the Covid-19 crisis. While FDI is still deteriorating, it now stands at -2.4% of GDP, compared to -4.3% just before the pandemic. Net portfolio investments are also accelerating, especially given the rise in long-term interest rates in Japan, positive real rates, and the value bias of Japanese equities. We are buyers of the yen over the long term, but a further rise in global yields and energy prices are key risks to our view.             United Kingdom Chart 8UK Balance Of Payments The UK has the worst trade balance in the G10, and the picture has not improved much since the pandemic (currently at -6.7% of GDP). Similar to both the euro area and Japan, much of the drag on the trade balance has been due to rising import costs from energy and fuels. This puts the UK at risk of an escalation in the conflict between Ukraine and Russia. Meanwhile, the improvement in the income balance over the last few years has started to deteriorate, as transfer payments under the Brexit withdrawal agreement kick in. As a result, the current account balance is deteriorating anew (Chart 8). Both portfolio and direct investment in the UK were robust in the post-Brexit environment but have started to deteriorate. This is critical since significant foreign investment is necessary to boost productivity in the UK and prevent the pound from adjusting much lower. With bond yields in the UK rising, and the FTSE heavy in cyclical stocks, this should limit further deterioration in the UK’s financial account. A significant drop in the estimated path of settlement payments for Brexit will also boost the income balance. The key for the pound over the coming years remains how fast the UK can improve productivity, which will convince foreign investors that the return on capital for UK assets will increase. Canada Chart 9Canada Balance Of Payments Canada’s domestic economy has been relatively insulated from the geopolitical shock in Europe, but its export sector is benefiting tremendously from it. Rising oil prices are boosting Canadian terms of trade. As a result, the current account has turned into a surplus for the first time since 2009, in part driven by an improving trade balance (Chart 9). Outside of trade, part of the improvement in the Canadian current account balance is specifically driven by income receipts from Canada’s positive net international investment position. At C$1.5 trillion, income receipts are becoming an important component of the current account balance. Foreign direct investment into Canada continues to remain robust, given strong commodity prices. This is boosting our basic balance measure, which today sits at a surplus of 2.4% of GDP and should continue to improve. Finally, because of Canada’s improving balance-of-payments backdrop, it is no longer reliant on foreign capital as it had been in the past, which supports the loonie.         Australia Chart 10Australia Balance Of Payments Australia continues to sport the best improvement in both its trade and current account balances over the last few years. As a result, the basic balance has eclipsed 4% of GDP for the first time since we have been measuring this series (Chart 10). The story for Australia remains improving terms of trade, specifically in the most desirable commodities – copper, high-grade iron ore, liquefied natural gas, and to a certain extent, high-grade coal. Foreign direct investment in Australia has eased significantly. Investment in projects in the resource space are now bearing fruit, easing the external funding constraint. Meanwhile, domestic savings can now be easily recycled for sustaining capital investment. In fact, foreign direct investment turned negative in Q4 2021. This also explains the drop in net portfolio investment since Australians now need to build a positive net international investment position. We have a limit buy on the Aussie dollar at 70 cents, as we are bullish the currency over a medium-term horizon.         New Zealand Chart 11New Zealand Balance Of Payments For the third quarter of 2021, New Zealand’s current account balance hit record lows, despite robust commodity (agricultural) prices. Imports of fertilizers, crude oil, and vaccines have led to a widening trade deficit. A drop in the exports of wood also affected the balance. With a negative net international investment position of about 48% of GDP, the income balance also subtracted from the current account total (Chart 11). From a bigger-picture perspective, New Zealand’s basic balance has been negative for many years, as coupon and dividend payments to foreign investors, as well as valuation adjustments from net foreign liabilities, have kept the current account in structural deficit. However, as the prices of key agricultural goods head higher, New Zealand can begin to benefit from a terms-of-trade boom that will limit its external funding requirement. In that respect, portfolio investments are also improving. New Zealand has the highest bond yield in the G10, on the back of the highest policy rate so far (the RBNZ raised interest rates again this week). New Zealand’s defensive equity market has also corrected sharply amidst the general market riot. As such, foreign investors could begin to favor this market again based on high yields and a reset in valuations. Going forward, New Zealand should continue to see further improvement in its basic balance relative to the US, supporting the kiwi. Switzerland Chart 12Switzerland Balance Of Payments The Swiss trade balance remains in a structural surplus, with a post Covid-19 boom that has led a new high as a share of   GDP (Chart 12). Global trade has been rather resilient due to high demand for goods. While Switzerland has a large net international investment position, income flows this quarter were hampered by servicing costs for foreign direct investments. The net international investment position did improve by CHF27 billion on a quarter-over-quarter basis in Q3, on the back of a net increase in foreign asset purchases. Currency movements also had little impact on the portfolio in Q3, which is atypical. The SNB will always have to contend with a structural trade surplus that puts upward pressure on the currency. This will keep the Swiss franc well bid, especially in times of crisis when the positive balance-of-payments backdrop makes the CHF a safe haven.             Norway Chart 13Norway Balance Of Payments Q3 2021 saw a strong recovery in Norway’s trade account that is likely to carry over to this year. A recovery in crude oil and natural gas prices was a welcome boon. The lack of tourism also boosted the services account (Norwegians travel and spend less abroad than foreigners visiting Norway). The ongoing electricity crisis in Europe was also an opportune export channel for Norway, which for the first time, opened its 450-mile-long, 1400-megawatt North Sea cable link to the UK. Positive income flows also benefit the current account and the krone (Chart 13). With one of the largest NIIPs in the world heavily skewed towards equity dividends, the NOK benefits when yields rise, even though the domestic fixed-income market is highly illiquid. While a resolution of the Russian-Ukrainian crisis could sap the geopolitical risk premium from oil, the reopening of the global economy will benefit Norwegian exports of oil and gas. Tepid investment in global oil and gas exploration will also ensure Norway’s terms of trade remain robust.       Sweden Chart 14Sweden Balance Of Payments The Swedish current account balance has deteriorated slightly in the last few quarters, on the back of supply-side bottlenecks. Particularly, exports of cars have been hampered amidst a semiconductor shortage. That said, the primary income surplus remains a key pillar of the current account, keeping the basic balance at a healthy surplus of about 6% of GDP (Chart 14). Portfolio inflows into Sweden have dwindled, like most other European economies. If this has been due to geopolitical tensions in Europe, it will eventually prove to be fleeting. That said, the Riksbank remains one of the most dovish in the G10 and the OMX is also one of the most cyclical stock markets, which may have spooked short-term foreign investments. The Swedish krona has been the weakest G10 currency year-to-date. Given that we expect most of the headwinds to be temporary, and the basic balance backdrop remains solid, we will go long SEK versus both the euro and the US dollar.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Cyclical Holdings (6-18 months) Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
Special Report Highlights The buildup of excessive household debt in Canada over the past two decades has occurred because of outsized demand for housing, not because of the impact of constrained housing supply on house prices. Outsized demand for housing has occurred because interest rates have been persistently too low, pointing to the need for the Bank of Canada to tighten monetary policy in order to prevent even further leveraging. The burden of Canada’s household sector debt may exceed its pre-pandemic level next year given current market expectations for the path of rate hikes. This implies that the prior peak in the Canadian policy rate (1.75%) likely reflects a high-end estimate of the neutral rate of interest in Canada. Regulatory changes have occurred in recognition of Canada’s extreme levels of household debt. Although a massive decline in Canadian house prices would cause a very severe recession, it would not likely precipitate a Lehman-style collapse of the Canadian financial system. Over the next twelve months, investors should position favorably toward CAD-USD. As the Canadian policy rate approaches our estimate of the neutral rate, a short CAD position and an overweight stance towards long-maturity Canadian bonds versus US Treasurys will likely be warranted. Within a global equity portfolio, exposure to relatively high-yielding Canadian banks should not be reduced until hard evidence of a significant slowdown in the housing market emerges. Feature The outlook for monetary policy in advanced economies has shifted rapidly in a hawkish direction over the past few months. While we believe that the Fed and other central banks will end up raising interest rates this year fewer times than investors currently expect, it is clear that monetary policy will tighten in the DM world over the coming 12-18 months. This has raised the question of how high policy rates may rise before monetary policy begins to restrict economic activity. Some investors have specifically focused this question on countries like Canada, which has a highly indebted household sector and has seen house prices rise at a 7% average annual pace for the past 20 years. In this report, we explore the root cause of Canada’s extreme household debt and argue against the constrained housing supply view. Instead, we conclude that persistently low interest rates have fueled excessive housing demand and that the prior peak in the Canadian policy rate (1.75%) probably reflects a high-end estimate of the neutral rate of interest in Canada – in contrast with that of the US. Finally, we note that the regulatory changes that have occurred in recognition of the risk from excessive household debt suggest that a massive decline in Canadian house prices would not likely precipitate a Lehman-style collapse of the Canadian financial system – it would, however, clearly cause a severe recession. Over the next twelve months, investors should position favorably toward CAD-USD. As the Canadian policy rate approaches our estimate of the neutral rate, a short CAD position and an overweight stance towards long-maturity Canadian bonds versus US Treasurys will likely be warranted. Within a global equity portfolio, exposure to relatively high-yielding Canadian banks should not be reduced until hard evidence of a significant slowdown in the housing market emerges. The Root Cause Of Canada’s Extreme Household Debt Chart II-1Canadian Households Are Massively Indebted Relative to disposable income, Canadian household debt has risen substantially over the past two decades. Chart II-1 highlights that Canada’s household debt to disposable income ratio has risen by 180% since 2000, and is currently over 50 percentage points higher than that in the US, even when nonfinancial noncorporate debt is included in the latter.1 Rising Canadian household indebtedness is a problem that is well known to investors, policymakers, regulators, banks, and consumers themselves. Organizations such as the IMF have repeatedly warned that excess household debt poses a potential economic stability risk. In the years prior to the pandemic, policymakers have responded with a series of macroprudential measures designed to limit speculation and foreign ownership in the housing market and to reduce the incremental risk to the economy posed by new borrowers. When asked why Canadian households have leveraged themselves so significantly over the past 20 years, most market commentators in Canada point to insufficient housing supply as the main driver of excessive house prices. Given normal ongoing demand for housing, they argue, persistent supply-side pressure on housing prices will naturally lead to a rising stock of debt relative to income. According to this narrative, the solution to Canada’s housing crisis is centered squarely on incentives to build more homes. Raising interest rates to cool mortgage demand will simply exacerbate the housing affordability problem, while simultaneously discouraging additional residential investment needed to decrease home prices structurally. Chart II-2The Supply Of Non-Apartment Dwellings Has Indeed Declined Over Time... We hold a different perspective. We do agree that there are some limitations on the supply side that likely are unduly boosting prices of certain dwelling types. For example, the Greenbelt that surrounds Ontario’s Golden Horseshoe region - a permanently protected area of land - has likely constrained some housing activity, and Chart II-2 highlights that single detached, semi-detached, and row/townhouses have fallen significantly as a share of overall housing completions. Apartments and other dwellings now account for a clear majority of new housing construction in Canada. However, there is a great deal of evidence positioned against the view that supply-side factors are the primary cause of outsized housing inflation and, by extension, a massive increase in Canadian household debt to GDP: Based on real residential investment, the pace of housing construction in Canada has not fallen relative to GDP or the population. Chart II-3 highlights that, compared with the US, residential investment has trended higher over the past 20 years. Based on Canadian housing completion data, Chart II-4 highlights that the number of completions has generally kept pace with half of the change in Canada’s population, a ratio that is easily consistent with two or more people per household. In addition, the chart highlights that the periods when houses were completed at a below-average rate relative to population growth have not been the same as when Canadian household debt has increased relative to disposable income. Chart II-3...But Overall Real Residential Investment Has Kept Pace With Canada's GDP And Population Chart II-4Housing Supply Has Not Been The Main Driver Of Rising Canadian Indebtedness Chart II-5Prices For All Canadian Property Types Have Surged Over The Past Two Decades If the rise in Canadian household indebtedness has been caused by the increasing scarcity of single-detached, semi-detached, and row/townhouses, then we would expect to see a persistent and growing divergence between overall Canadian house prices and those of apartment/condominiums. Chart II-5 highlights that this is not the case: while apartment/condo prices have at times grown at a slower rate than overall home prices over the past 15 years (as in the period from 2011 to 2016), they have also at times grown at a faster rate. The chart clearly highlights that the Canadian housing market is driven by a common factor, and that average house price gains have not been significantly different across property types over time. Similarly, if a scarcity of housing supply was the main driver of rising house prices and household debt, we would not expect to see a significant increase in the homeownership rate. Chart II-6 highlights that the Canadian homeownership rate did rise substantially from the mid-1990s to 2016 (the last available datapoint). While it is not clear what the sustainable or “equilibrium” homeownership rate is, it is notable that the most recent datapoint was not significantly lower than the peak rate reached in the US following that country’s massive housing bubble. Finally, Chart II-7 reiterates a point we made in our June 2021 Special Report: in several economies (including Canada), interest rates have remained well below levels that macroeconomic theory would traditionally consider to be in equilibrium over the past two decades. This has occurred alongside significant household sector leveraging. Chart II-7Too-Low Interest Rates Have Fueled Rising Household Indebtedness In Canada (And Other DM Economies) Chart II-6The Canadian Homeownership Rate Has Risen Significantly, Pointing To Excess Housing Demand     These factors strongly point to rising household debt levels as being driven by demand-side rather than supply-side factors – demand that has been fueled by persistently low interest rates. How High Can The Bank Of Canada Raise Interest Rates? Over the next 12 months, investors expect the Bank of Canada (BoC) to raise interest rates by 180 basis points, in line with the Fed (Chart II-8). Over the longer term, the BoC believes that interest rates will average between 1.75% and 2.75%. In the US, the 2/10 yield curve has flattened significantly in response to the Fed’s hawkish shift, and neither the explosion in headline consumer price inflation nor the Fed’s about face have significantly raised the market’s longer-term expectations for interest rates (which are even below the Fed’s estimates). In Canada, investors expect essentially the same long-term interest rate outlook, as evidenced by 5-year / 5-year forward government bond yields (Chart II-9). Chart II-8Investors Expect A Similar Magnitude Of Tightening In Canada And The US Over The Next Year... Chart II-9...And A Similar Average Interest Rate Over The Longer Term As in the case in the US, the hawkish shift among major central banks has left investors asking how high the BoC can raise interest rates, and what implications that might have for Canadian assets – especially the CAD and long-maturity Canadian government bonds. In our view, the best way for investors to assess the impact of rising interest rates on the private sector – especially a highly indebted one – is to project the impact that an increase in interest rates will have on the debt service ratio (DSR). The burden of servicing debt, rather than the stock of debt relative to income, is the right way to measure the impact of shifting monetary policy because it considers the combined effect of changes in leverage, income, and interest rates. The primary drawback of debt service ratio analysis is that the question of sustainability must be answered empirically. In countries experiencing an ever-rising debt service ratio, it can be difficult for investors to judge where the breaking point will be. Cross-country comparisons may sometimes be helpful in this respect, but Chart II-10 highlights that BIS estimates for household debt service ratios vary widely even among advanced economies. However, in Canada, the 2017-2019 tightening cycle provides a useful framework. As we anticipated in a 2017 Special Report,2 the rise in Canadian interest rates during that period caused the household debt service ratio to exceed the level reached in 2007, which contributed to a collapse in Canadian house price appreciation to its lowest level since the global financial crisis (Chart II-11). The decline in house prices during this period was also caused by the introduction of new macroprudential measures (particularly the introduction of a minimum qualifying rate for mortgages, more commonly referred to as a mortgage “stress test” rule), but the impact of higher interest rates was likely significant. Chart II-11The Last Tightening Cycle In Canada Contributed Significantly To A Major Slowdown In Canadian House Prices Chart II-10Private Sector Debt Service Ratios Vary Significantly Across DM Countries   Chart II-11 highlights that the Canadian household debt service ratio collapsed during the pandemic, which seems to suggest that the Bank of Canada has ample room to raise interest rates. However, the decline in the DSR occurred not only because of falling interest rates, but also because of the significant excess savings amassed as a result of the pandemic. As in the US, excess savings in Canada were the result of reduced spending on services and the generation of significant excess income from government transfers (see Chart I-20 from Section 1 of this month’s report). These fiscal transfers will eventually disappear, implying that the Canadian household DSR is artificially low. Chart II-12 shows our estimate of the evolution of the overall Canadian household sector DSR based on the following assumptions: Mortgage rates rise in line with market expectations for the change in the policy rate Government transfers fall back to their pre-pandemic trend Disposable income growth ex-transfers grows in line with consensus expectations for nominal GDP growth The overall debt-to-disposable income ratio, using our estimate for total disposable income, remains flat. The chart highlights that the Canadian household sector DSR may exceed its pre-pandemic level next year, and that a 1.75% policy rate is the threshold at which the DSR will hit a new high. The implication of our projection is that the re-acceleration in household sector debt that has occurred during the pandemic, shown in Chart II-13, will again contribute to a significant slowdown in the Canadian housing market as the BoC begins to raise interest rates as in 2018/2019. It also implies that the prior peak in the Canadian policy rate probably reflects a high-end estimate of the neutral rate of interest in Canada. Chart II-12Market Expectations For The Canadian Policy Rate Imply A Record High Debt Burden Chart II-13Canadian Household Loan Growth Has Reaccelerated During The Pandemic   As we discuss below, this is likely to lead to significant implications for CAD-USD and an allocation to long-maturity Canadian government bonds, once investors begin to upwardly revise their expectations for the US neutral rate. Extreme Household Debt And Canadian Financial Stability The question of financial stability is often posed by investors when discussing Canada’s extreme household debt burden. Some investors view the US subprime financial crisis as the likely template for the Canadian economy, given the fact that the US credit bubble also focused on the housing market. Despite our pessimistic assessment of the capacity of the Canadian economy to tolerate higher interest rates (unlike the US today), we do not share the view that the Canadian financial system faces a potential insolvency risk, like the US banking system did in 2008. We see two potential arguments in favor of the instability view. The first is related to the sheer concentration of debt in Canada relative to other countries. Chart II-14 highlights that the median debt-to-income ratio of indebted Canadian households is currently the second highest in the world (after Norway) among the 29 countries that the OECD tracks. This concentration measure has worsened considerably since we published our 2017 Special Report. The combination of a very high average level of debt and extremely high leverage among those who are indebted suggests that Canadian banks may be exposed to significant credit losses in the event of a serious housing market crash. Chart II-14The Degree Of Concentration In Canadian Household Debt Is A Potential Financial Stability Risk Chart II-15A Decline In The CMHC's Footprint In The Mortgage Insurance Market Is Also Concerning The second argument relates to the declining share of mortgages insured by the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC). The CMHC is a Crown corporation that provides mortgage-default insurance to Canadian banks. Banks must purchase such insurance when a borrower’s loan-to-value ratio exceeds 80%. The CMHC has seen increased competition from two private mortgage insurers, and Chart II-15 highlights that the number of mortgages with CHMC insurance has been steadily falling over time. In order for the CMHC to be able to reduce systemic risk during a crisis, it must be present enough in the mortgage market to be able to replace private insurers in the event of a shock that causes them to leave the market. In effect, the CMHC should be able to act as a ballast to prevent a sharp tightening in Canadian mortgage lending standards and credit provision, which could occur if banks find themselves unable to purchase mortgage insurance to cover borrowers with relatively small down payments. In this respect, the reduced footprint of the CMHC is concerning. However, these risks have to be weighed against two key structural changes that legitimately lower the systemic risk facing the Canadian banking system (or lower the impact of a major adverse housing event). The first of these changes is the introduction of the minimum qualifying rate for mortgages in Canada (the mortgage stress test), which we regard as one of the most important macroprudential policies that Canada has enacted to reduce the systemic risk of rising household debt. The stress test rules – which apply to all borrowers – force mortgage borrowers to pass the CMHC’s gross debt and total debt service ratio thresholds under the assumption of higher interest rates than borrowers will actually pay: either the contracted mortgage rate plus 2 percentage points, or 5.65% – whichever is higher. Given prevailing mortgage rates in Canada, this effectively means that new borrowers will not exceed the CMHC’s debt service thresholds until the Bank of Canada’s policy rate exceeds 2.5%. That is positive from a financial stability perspective, although it does not rule out the slowdown in household spending that we would expect if the aggregate household debt service ratio hits a new high next year in response to BoC tightening. The second important risk-reducing structural change is a significant improvement in Canadian bank capital levels. Chart II-16 highlights that Tier 1 capital has risen significantly relative to risk-weighted assets for Canadian depository institutions, and is now on par with US levels (in contrast to a typically lower level over the past decade). The IMF stress tested Canadian banks in 2019, when capital levels were lower than they are today. They found that most Canadian banks would run down conservation capital buffers in the adverse economic scenario that they modeled, subjecting them to dividend restrictions for a period of time following the adverse event. However, Canadian banks would not breach their minimum capital requirements in the scenario modeled by the IMF, which involved a 40% decline in house prices and a 2% cumulative decline in Canadian real GDP over a two year period – which is essentially what occurred in the US and Canada in 2008 and 2009 (Chart II-17). Chart II-16Canadian Bank Capital Appears Sufficient To Weather A Storm Chart II-17The IMF's Stress Tests Modeled A Repeat Of The 2008/2009 Crisis To conclude on the question of financial stability, it is clear that the magnitude and concentration of household debt implies that the impact of a serious housing market crash on the Canadian economy would be severe. But the fact that regulatory changes have occurred in recognition of this risk suggests that although a massive decline in Canadian house prices would cause a very severe recession, it would not likely precipitate a Lehman-style collapse of the Canadian financial system. Investment Conclusions Three conclusions emerge from our report. First, when considering the total experience of the past two decades, it is clear that the buildup of excessive household debt in Canada has occurred because of outsized demand for housing, not because of the impact of constrained housing supply on house prices. Outsized demand for housing has occurred because interest rates have been persistently below what traditional monetary policy rules such as the Taylor Rule would prescribe, pointing to the need for the Bank of Canada to tighten monetary policy in order to prevent even further leveraging. While US interest rates were also below what the Taylor Rule would have suggested for several years following the global financial crisis, the US household sector did not leverage itself significantly during that period because of the multi-year impact of the 2008/2009 financial crisis on US household balance sheets (Chart II-18). Canadian households did not suffer the same type of balance sheet impairment, and yet the Bank of Canada wrongly imported hyper-accommodative US monetary policy in an attempt to prevent a significant further increase in the exchange rate (which was still persistently strong for several years following the crisis). Through its actions, the Bank of Canada succeeded in staving off “Dutch Disease”, but at the cost of fueling a substantial housing and credit market bubble. Second, the fact that the Bank of Canada is likely to struggle to raise interest rates above 1.75% implies that a sizeable divergence may emerge between Canadian and US monetary policy over the coming few years if we are correct in our view that the US neutral rate is higher than the Fed currently expects. While such a divergence is not likely to occur over the coming year, Chart II-19 highlights that a 125 basis point policy rate spread – consistent with a nominal neutral rate of 1.75% in Canada and 3% in the US – last occurred in the mid-to-late 1990s, when CAD-USD ultimately declined to 0.65. Chart II-18The Bank Of Canada Staved Off "Dutch Disease", At The Cost Of Fueling A Major Housing And Credit Bubble Chart II-19Some Potentially Large Downside For CAD If US Neutral Rate Expectations Move Higher Over the coming year, we expect Canadian dollar strength rather than weakness: we are generally bearish toward the US dollar on the expectation of above-trend global growth, and our fundamental intermediate-term model suggests that CAD should strengthen. Thus, while it is too early to short the Canadian dollar, we would be inclined to turn bearish in response to rising long-term US interest rate expectations. We would draw similar conclusions for Canadian government bonds: investors should raise exposure to long-dated Canadian government bonds versus similar maturity US Treasurys as the Bank of Canada raises its policy rate toward our estimate of the neutral rate. Chart II-20Relative ROE Justifies A Valuation Premium For Canadian Banks Finally, the improvements that have been made over the past several years to dampen the impact of a housing market crash on the Canadian financial system suggests that exposure to Canadian banks should not be reduced until hard evidence of a significant slowdown in the housing market emerges. Chart II-20 highlights that the valuation premium of Canadian banks appears to be supported by a sizeable ROE advantage relative to global banks. Panel 2 highlights how composite relative valuation indicator for Canadian banks suggests that they have been persistently expensive for some time, but not extremely so. Canadian banks would certainly underperform their global peers should the adverse scenario modeled by the IMF’s 2019 stress test of the banking system to occur, especially if it implied that Canadian banks would be forced to restrict dividends for a time to bolster capital adequacy. However, we would advise investors against shorting relatively high-yielding Canadian banks as Canadian interest rates rise, until they see clear signs of Canada-specific slowdown in housing demand in response to higher rates. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst Gabriel Di Lullo Research Associate   Footnotes 1 For an explanation of why we add US nonfinancial noncorporate debt to the numerator of the US household sector debt to disposable income ratio when comparing Canada to the US, please see: “Reconciling Canadian-U.S. measures of household disposable income and household debt: Update”. 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy "Canada: A (Probably) Happy Moment In An Otherwise Sad Story," dated July 14, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com
Canada’s CPI inflation rate increased in January, reinforcing the case for the Bank of Canada to start hiking interest rates at its March 2 meeting. Headline CPI inflation rose to 5.1% y/y from 4.8%, while the three core inflation measures all accelerated and…
Feature This week, we present the third edition of the BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy (GFIS) Global Credit Conditions Chartbook – a review of central bank surveys of bank lending standards and loan demand. The data from lending surveys during the last quarter of 2021 were mixed, with business credit standards easing in the US, Japan, Canada, and New Zealand while remaining mostly unchanged in the euro area and UK (Chart 1). Supply chain disruptions have had a two-pronged effect on borrowing. While they have hurt business confidence and prospects, they have also created loan demand as firms look to replenish depleted inventory stocks. The overall picture is one of solid economic fundamentals that are nonetheless perturbed by inflation concerns and lingering uncertainty regarding Covid-19 infections. Chart 1Credit Standards Eased In Most Developed Markets In Q4/2021 An Overview Of Global Credit Conditions Surveys Chart 2Credit Standards And Spreads Are Correlated After every quarter, major central banks compile surveys to assess prevailing credit conditions. The purpose is to obtain from banks an assessment of how their lending standards and demand for loans, for both firms and consumers, changed over the previous quarter. Most surveys also ask questions about the key factors driving these changes and expectations for the next quarter.1 For fixed income investors, these surveys are valuable for a few reasons. Firstly, data on consumer lending is a window into consumer health while business loan demand sheds light on the investment picture. These help derive a view on the path of future economic growth and interest rates and thus, the appropriate duration stance of a bond portfolio. Also, credit standards can tell us about the pass-through from fiscal and monetary policy measures to realized financial conditions (i.e. corporate borrowing rates). Most importantly, credit standards exhibit a direct correlation with corporate bond spreads (Chart 2). As they have access to detailed, non-public information on a large number of borrowers, loan officers are uniquely positioned to evaluate corporate health. When banks are tightening standards, they see an issue with the credit quality of either current or future loans, which impacts borrowing costs in the corporate bond market. Tightening standards indicate a worsening borrowing backdrop and weaker growth, which then pushes up corporate spreads. Vice-versa, easing standards imply a favorable backdrop and plentiful liquidity—both bullish signs for spread product. US In the US, a net percentage of domestic respondents to the Fed’s Senior Loan Officer Survey, reported easing standards for commercial and industrial (C&I) loans to firms of all sizes over Q4/2021 (Chart 3). This marks the fourth consecutive quarter of easing standards. However, banks did report a slower pace of easing, which correlates with tighter financial conditions on the margin (top panel). While we are still in a period of easy financial conditions in absolute terms, this could soon start to change as hot inflation prints and booming economic data cause the Fed to turn increasingly hawkish. Despite this, banks expect to ease standards further over 2022, indicating confidence that underlying economic fundamentals and corporate health will be able to weather monetary tightening. US banks also reported stronger C&I loan demand from all firms in Q4, marking three consecutive quarters of improvement (middle panel). The picture was optimistic, with banks attributing increased loan demand to inventory financing, mergers & acquisitions, and fixed investment. Meanwhile, only 4.2% and 12.5% of banks saw a decrease in internal funds and increasing precautionary demand, respectively, as somewhat important. Inventories accounted for all but 2% of the 6.9% annualized GDP growth in Q4. With inventory stocks still depressed in absolute terms, we expect inventory restocking will continue to buoy demand over 2022. Chart 3US Credit Conditions​​​​​ Chart 4US Loan Demand Outlook For 2022 On the consumer side, banks reported easier standards across the board, with standards easing for credit card, auto, and other consumer loans (bottom panel). However, the pace of easing, which has historically been good at calling turning points in consumer confidence (on a rate-of-change basis), appears to have peaked. Consumer sentiment has already been battered by rampant inflation and falling real wage expectations; tighter credit standards down the road could prove to be a further headwind. As part of the one-off special questions in this edition of the survey, respondents were asked about the reasoning behind their outlook for loan demand over 2022 (Chart 4). Of those that expected higher demand, 70% cited higher spending and investment demand from borrowers as their income prospects improved. Meanwhile, only 33% thought that precautionary demand for liquidity would be a factor. Lenders thought that both, a worsening or an improvement in supply chain disruptions, could contribute to increased demand. 53% expected that continued disruption would create greater inventory financing needs. Meanwhile, 55% expected that easing supply chain troubles would boost demand as product availability concerns faded. Of those that expected weaker loan demand, interest rates were by-and-large the biggest factor, with an overwhelming 96% believing that rising rates would quell loan demand. This was followed by concerns that supply chain disruptions would keep prices high and product availability scarce (70%). On the whole, the responses capture a US economy that is at a tipping point, with market participants watching to see how it weathers an aggressive rate hiking cycle from the Fed. While underlying economic variables such as growth and employment remain strong, it still remains to be seen how much of a tightening in financial conditions the markets can bear. Euro Area In the euro area, banks on net reported a very slight tightening of standards to enterprises for the second consecutive quarter in Q4/2021 (Chart 5). Effectively, standards were unchanged as 96 of the 100 respondents to the survey reported no change from Q3. Slightly lower risk tolerance from banks contributed to tightening while lower risk perceptions related to the general economic outlook and the value of collateral had an easing effect. As in the US, standards in the euro area do show a correlation to overall financial conditions. Those have already tightened noticeably since the February 3rd meeting of the European Central Bank (ECB) Governing Council where President Lagarde set a more hawkish tone. While banks do expect a slight easing of standards over Q1/2022, that is unlikely given high inflation and geopolitical uncertainties which will negatively impact risk perceptions. Chart 5Euro Area Credit Conditions​​​​​​ Chart 6Credit Demand In Major Euro Area Economies​​​​​​ Loan demand growth from enterprises was remarkably strong in Q4, with 18% of firms reporting increased demand for loans (middle panel). The main driver was increased demand for inventories, followed closely by fixed investment and merger & acquisition needs. Loan demand leads realized growth in inventories, which has been already been picking up. In Q1, banks expect continued growth in loan demand, albeit at a slower pace. On the consumer side, however, loan demand only increased slightly, with the pace of growth slowing from the previous quarter (bottom panel). This was in line with consumer confidence taking a hit from rising inflation and the Omicron variant in the fourth quarter. The generally low level of interest rates had a small positive impact, while durable goods spending had a slight negative impact on consumer credit demand. Lenders expect moderate growth in consumer credit demand in Q1. Moving to the four major euro area economies, demand for loans to enterprises picked up in Germany, France, and Italy, while remaining unchanged in Spain (Chart 6). Fixed investment needs made a positive contribution across the board. This is corroborated by data on total lending, which is still growing on a year-on-year basis, even though the pace of growth is slowing in all the major euro area economies except Spain. UK In the UK, overall corporate credit standards eased slightly in Q4/2021, marking the fourth straight quarter of easing (Chart 7). However, there was dispersion along firm size. Large private non-financials accounted for all the easing and standards for small and medium firms actually tightened slightly. Going forward, lenders expect a further easing in standards in Q1, about on par with the easing seen in Q4. Chart 7UK Credit Conditions​​​​​ Chart 8UK Lenders Expect A Robust Growth To Ease Credit Availability​​​​​​ On the demand side, lenders reported slightly weaker corporate demand for lending in Q4. Again, the results were uneven across firm size – loan demand from large firms strengthened moderately, while demand from small and medium firms weakened. On average, lenders expect a slight pickup in corporate demand over Q1. Moving to the UK consumer, demand for unsecured lending continued to rise at a brisk pace, hovering around the highest levels since Q4/2014 (bottom panel). Going forward, lenders expect a continued increase in demand, but at a much slower pace. The strong developments in loan growth are seemingly at odds with the GfK consumer confidence index which has declined a total of 12 points since its July peak. Although the Bank of England does not survey respondents on the factors driving household unsecured lending demand, the divergence between confidence and loan demand suggests that precautionary demand for liquidity is playing a role. This lines up with the GfK survey, where expectations for the general economic situation over the next year are in freefall with consumers bracing for high inflation and further Bank Rate increases. Pivoting back to the drivers of corporate lending, the leading factor behind increased credit availability was an improvement in the overall economic outlook, followed by market share objectives (Chart 8). In contrast to the UK consumer, lenders are bullish on the economic outlook and believe it will continue to drive further easing over Q1/2022. On the demand side, investment in commercial real estate, which has seen steady improvement since Q3/2020, was the leading factor. This was followed by merger & acquisition and inventory financing needs. Capital investment needs, meanwhile, were a drag on demand. Moving forward, real estate investment and inventory restocking needs are expected to drive demand. Japan In Japan, credit standards to firms and households continued to ease in Q4/2021 (Chart 9). However, more than 90% of respondents in each case reported that standards were basically unchanged, and there were no reported instances of tightening among the sample of 50 lenders. Those that did report easier standards cited aggressive competition from other banks and strengthened efforts to grow the business. The vast majority of lenders expect standards to remain unchanged over Q1, but there is a slight easing expected on a net percentage basis. Chart 9Japan Credit Conditions Business loan demand on the whole was unchanged in Q4 although small and medium firms did increase demand slightly (middle panel). In contrast to other regions, business loan demand tends to behave counter-cyclically in Japan, with businesses borrowing more on a precautionary basis when they are pessimistic and vice-versa. Those dynamics were at play in Q4, with lenders attributing increased demand to a fall in firms’ internally generated funds. Banks expect a slight net pickup in demand next quarter, in line with business confidence which has fallen from its September peak on the back of concerns about Covid-19 infections, supply chain disruptions, and rising input prices. On the consumer side, loan demand was basically unchanged, with a very small net percentage of banks reporting weaker demand (bottom panel). The key reason for decreased demand was a decrease in household consumption, which is in line with retail sales, where the pace of growth has been falling. Even though core inflation in Japan is low, consumers are still exposed to rising energy prices, which might cause them to tighten other parts of their budgets. Canada Chart 10Canada Credit Conditions In Canada, business lending standards continued to ease at a slightly slower pace in Q4/2021 (Chart 10). This marks the fourth consecutive quarter of easing conditions, coming amid booming economic activity, high capacity utilization, and buoyant sentiment. Both, price and non-price lending conditions eased at roughly the same pace. On the consumer side, non-mortgage lending conditions continued to ease, but at a slower pace (middle panel). 1-year ahead consumer spending growth expectations, sourced from the Bank of Canada’s (BoC) Survey Of Consumer Expectations, and non-mortgage lending conditions typically display an inverse correlation, with expected spending growth increasing when standards are getting easier on the margin and vice-versa. The divergence in Q4 is explained in part by excess savings accumulated during the pandemic that have yet to be spent down, and in part by expected price increases over the coming year. In either case, it demonstrates that nominal spending has room to grow even in an environment where consumer credit availability is worsening. We also saw mortgage standards ease at a slightly slower pace in Q4, with both price and non-price lending conditions easing (bottom panel). While the BoC has made a hawkish pivot, underlying conditions are still easy – the conventional 5-year mortgage rate is still flat at 4.79%, the same level as Q3/2020. However, house price growth has peaked, and rate hikes this year will help prices moderate further. New Zealand Chart 11New Zealand Credit Conditions In New Zealand, business credit standards eased in the six month period ended September 2021 (Chart 11). However, the real impact of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s (RBNZ) tightening is being felt in the housing market, where actual standards entered tightening territory. More importantly, a net 23.1% of respondents expect mortgage credit availability to erode by the end of March; if realized, this figure would be a series high. Banks reporting less credit availability cited regulatory changes and risk perceptions. On the mortgage loan demand side, banks continued to see increased demand even after the record spike in March 2021 (middle panel). Going forward, demand is expected to moderate and fall from current levels. These dynamics have already made their mark on house prices which have already peaked, indicating that the RBNZ’s push is working as intended. Business loan demand does not appear to have been much affected by higher rates, with demand picking up slightly and expected to increase going forward (bottom panel). However, confidence has been falling since September 2021, with businesses feeling the twin bite of supply chain disruptions and labor shortages.   Shakti Sharma Senior Analyst ShaktiS@bcaresearch.com Appendix: Where To Find The Bank Lending Surveys A number of central banks publish regular surveys of bank lending conditions in their domestic economies. The surveys, and the details on how they are conducted, can be found on the websites of the central banks: US Federal Reserve: https://www.federalreserve.gov/data/sloos.htm European Central Bank: https://www.ecb.europa.eu/stats/ecb_surveys/bank_lending_survey/ Bank of England: https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/credit-conditions-survey/2021/2021-q4 Bank of Japan: https://www.boj.or.jp/en/statistics/dl/loan/loos/index.htm/ Bank of Canada: https://www.bankofcanada.ca/publications/slos/ Reserve Bank of New Zealand: https://www.rbnz.govt.nz/statistics/c60-credit-conditions-survey   Footnotes 1      The weblinks to each individual survey for the US, euro area, UK, Japan, Canada and New Zealand can be found in the Appendix on page 12. GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Recommended Positioning     Active Duration Contribution: GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. Custom Performance Benchmark The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Global Fixed Income - Strategic Recommendations* Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Overlay Trades
BCA Research is proud to announce a new feature to help clients get the most out of our research: an Executive Summary cover page on each of the BCA Research Reports. We created these summaries to help you quickly capture the main points of each report through an at-a-glance read of key insights, chart of the day, investment recommendations and a bottom line. For a deeper analysis, you may refer to the full BCA Research Report. Executive Summary The first month of this year continues to see economic growth moderating around the world. However, it remains well above trend. There is a tentative growth rotation from the US to other G10 economies. The market expects five interest rate hikes from the Fed this year, but our bias is that they will underwhelm market expectations. A surge in eurozone inflation suggests that many central banks (including the ECB) will gently catch up to the Fed. We were stopped out of our long AUD/USD trade for a small profit and are reinstating this trade via a limit-buy at 0.70. The Dollar Is Flat In 2022, Despite A Hawkish Fed Recommendation Inception Level Inception Date Return Long AUD/NZD  1.05 Aug 4/21 1.72% Long AUD/USD 0.7 Feb 3/22 -     Bottom Line: The US dollar will continue to fight a tug of war between a hawkish Federal Reserve, which will boost interest rate differentials in favor of the US and tightening financial conditions that will sap US growth, and trigger a rotation from US stocks. Feature Chart 1The Dollar Has Been Flat In 2022 The dollar was volatile in January. The DXY started the year on a weakening path, surged last week on the back of a hawkish Federal Reserve, and is now relapsing anew. Year to date, the dollar index is flat. Remarkably, emerging market currencies such as the CLP, BRL, and ZAR, which are very sensitive to the greenback and financial conditions in the US, have been outperforming (Chart 1). Incoming economic data continues to be robust, but there has been a slight rotation in favor of non-US growth. The economic surprise index in the US has fallen below zero, while it is surging in other G10 countries (Chart 2). Manufacturing PMIs continue to roll over around the world, but remain robust, even in places like the euro area, which is more afflicted by the energy crisis, and the potential for military conflict in its backyard (Chart 3). Chart 2A Growth Rotation Away From The US Chart 3APMIs Are Rolling Over Globally Chart 3BPMIs Are Rolling Over Globally In this week’s report, we go over a few key data releases in the last month and implications for currency markets. Our take is that a growth rotation from the US to other economies is underway, and that will ultimately support a lower greenback (Chart 4). That said, near term risks abound, including geopolitical tensions, the potential for more hawkish surprises from the Federal Reserve, and the potential for a policy mistake in China. Chart 4The IMF Expects A Growth Rotation From The US This Year US Dollar: In A Tug Of War The dollar DXY index is flat year to date. Economic growth continues to moderate in the US, from very elevated levels. According to the IMF, the US should see robust growth of 4% this year, from 5.6% last year. This is quite strong by historical standards, and in fact argues for less accommodative monetary policy. The caveat is that financial conditions in the US are tightening quite quickly, which could accentuate the slowdown the IMF expects. There have been a few key data releases over the last month. The payrolls report was underwhelming, with only 199K jobs added in December, versus a consensus of 450K. Friday’s number will likely also be on the weaker side. That said, with the unemployment rate now at 3.9%, average hourly earnings growing at 4.7%, and headline CPI inflation at 7%, the case for curtailing monetary accommodation in the minds of the FOMC remains compelling. Last week, the FOMC opened the window for a faster pace of a rate hikes than the market was anticipating. Fed fund futures now suggest around five interest rate increases this year. In our view, the Fed could underwhelm market expectations for a few reasons. Sentiment has begun to deteriorate. The University of Michigan survey saw its sentiment index fall from 70.6 to 67.2. The expectations component fell from 68.3 to 64.1. These also came in below expectations. Both the Markit and ISM purchasing managers’ indices are rolling over. The services PMI in the US is sitting at 50.9, a nudge above the boom/bust level. The goods trade balance continues to hit a record deficit, at -$101bn in December, suggesting the dollar is too strong for the US external balance. In a nutshell, the economic surprise index in the US has turned firmly negative, at a time when market participants are pricing in a very hawkish pace of interest rate increases. A tighter Fed is what the US needs, but the perfect calibration of monetary policy could prove difficult to achieve. As such, we believe the Fed will slightly underwhelm market expectations of five rate hikes. With speculative positioning in the dollar close to record highs, this will surely deal a blow to the greenback. Chart 5AUS Dollar Chart 5BUS Dollar The Euro: War And Inflation The euro is up 0.6% year to date. Economic data in the eurozone has been resilient, despite a surge in the number of new COVID-19 cases, rising energy costs and the potential for military conflict between Ukraine and Russia. On the data front, inflation continues to surge. HICP inflation came in at 5.1% on the headline print and 2.3% on the core measure in January. This followed quite strong prints in both Germany and Spain earlier this week, where the latter is seeing inflation at 6.1%. Meanwhile, the unemployment rate continues to drift lower, falling to 7% in December for the entire eurozone, and as low as 5.1% for Germany. House prices are also surging across the monetary union. This begs the question of how long the ECB can remain on a dovish path and maintain credibility on its inflation mandate. Our favorite forward-looking measures for eurozone activity continue to point towards improvement. The Sentix investor confidence index rose from 13.5 to 14.9 in January, well above expectations. The ZEW expectations survey surged from 26.8 to 49.4 in January. The manufacturing PMI remained at a healthy 58.7 in January.  The ECB continues to maintain a dovish stance, keeping rates on hold and reiterating that inflation should subside in the coming quarters. According to their analysis, inflation is stickier than anticipated, but will ultimately head lower. This could prove wrong in a world where inflation is sticky globally and driven by supply-side factors. Ultimately, if inflation does prove transitory, then the hawkish pivot by other central banks will have to be reversed, in a classic catch-22 for the euro. Most of the above analysis suggests that investors should be buying the euro on weaknesses. However, the potential conflict in Ukraine raises the prospect that energy prices could stay elevated, which will hurt European growth. This will weaken the euro. Also, speculators are only neutral the currency according to CFTC data. As such, we are standing on the sidelines on EUR/USD and playing euro strength via a short cable position.  Chart 6AEuro Chart 6BEuro The Japanese Yen: The Most Undervalued G10 Currency The Japanese yen is flat year to date. The number of new COVID-19 infections continues to surge in Japan, which has led to various restrictions across the region and constrained economic activity. This has split the recovery on the island, where domestic activity remains constrained, but the external environment continues to boom. Inflation remains well below the Bank of Japan’s long-run target, coming in at 0.5% for the core measure, and -0.7% for the core core measure (excluding fresh food and energy) in January. The Jibun Bank composite PMI was at 48.8 in January, below the 50 boom/bust level, even though the manufacturing print is a healthy 55.4. The labor market continues to heal, with the unemployment rate at 2.7% in December, but the jobs-to-applicants ratio at 1.16 remains well below the pre-pandemic high of 1.64. This is 30% lower. As a result, wage growth in Japan has been rather anemic.   The external environment continues to perform well. Machine tool orders rose 40.6% year on year in December, following strong machinery orders of 11.6% year on year in November. Exports also rose 17.5% year on year in December. That said, the surge in energy prices and a weak yen continues to be a tax on Japanese consumers. We have been constructive on the yen, on the back of a wave of pent-up demand that will be unleashed as Omicron peaks. The Bank of Japan seems to share this sentiment. While monetary policy was kept on hold at the January 17-18 meeting, the BoJ significantly upgraded its GDP growth forecasts. 2022 forecasts were upgraded from 2.9% to 3.8%. This dovetailed with the latest IMF release of the World Economic Outlook, where Japan was the only country to see improving growth from 2021 in the G10. In short, bad news out of Japan is well discounted, while any specter of good news is underappreciated. The bull case for the yen remains intact over a longer horizon in our view. From a valuation standpoint, it is the cheapest G10 currency. It is also one of the most shorted. And as we have witnessed recently, it will perform well in a market reset, given year-to-date appreciation. Should the equity market rotation from expensive markets like the US towards cheaper and cyclical markets like Japan continue, the yen will also benefit via the portfolio channel. Chart 7AJapanese Yen Chart 7BJapanese Yen The British Pound: A Hawkish BoE The pound is up 0.5% year to date. The Bank of England raised interest rates to 0.5% today. According to its projections, inflation will rise to 7.25% in April before peaking. The BoE also announced it will start shrinking its balance sheet, via selling £20bn of corporate bonds and allowing a run-off from maturing government bonds. The Bank of England is the one central bank caught between a rock and a hard place. Inflation in the UK is soaring, prompting the governor to send a letter to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, explaining why monetary policy has allowed inflation to deviate from the BoE’s mandate of 2%. Headline CPI for December was at 5.4% and core CPI at 4.2%. The retail price index rose 7.5% year on year in April. At the same time, the UK is facing an energy crisis that is hitting consumer spending, ahead of a well-telegraphed tax hike in April. The labor market continues to heal. The ILO unemployment rate fell to 4.1% in November. This was better than expectations and below most estimates of NAIRU. As such, the UK runs the risk of a wage-price spiral, that will corner the BoE in the face of tighter fiscal policy. Average weekly earnings rose 4.2% year on year in November, pinning real wages in negative territory. Nationwide house prices also continue to inflect higher, accelerating much faster than incomes. This will lead to demand for much higher wages in the UK, in the coming months. The Sonia curve is currently pricing four or more interest rate hikes this year. This is despite Omicron cases in the UK surging to new highs and tighter fiscal policy. Should the BoE tighten aggressively ahead of a pending economic slowdown, this will hurt the pound. PMIs remain relatively well behaved – the manufacturing PMI was 57.3 in January, above expectations, while the services PMI was a healthy 53.3, but this could turn quickly should financial conditions tighten significantly. The political situation in the UK remains volatile, especially with Prime Minister Boris Johnson facing a scandal domestically, while lingering Brexit tensions continue to hurt the trade balance. As such, portfolio flows are likely to keep the pound volatile in the near term. An equity market correction, especially on the back of heightened tensions in Ukraine, will also pressure cable. That said, more political stability domestically and internationally will allow the pound to continue its mean reversion rally. Given the above dynamics, we are long EUR/GBP in the short term but are buyers of sterling over the longer term.  Chart 8ABritish Pound Chart 8BBritish Pound Australian Dollar: RBA Watching Inflation And Wages The Australian dollar is down 1.7% year to date. The Reserve Bank of Australia kept rates on hold at its February 1 meeting, even though it ended quantitative easing. The two critical measures that the RBA is focusing on are the outlook for inflation, especially backed by an increase in wages. In our view, a more hawkish outcome is likely to materialize over the course of 2022. On the inflation front, key measures are above the midpoint of the central bank’s target. In Q4, headline inflation was 3.5%, the trimmed mean measure was 2.6%, and the median print was 2.7% year on year. In fact, the increase in Q4 prices took the RBA by surprise and was attributed to rising fuel prices. The RBA expects inflationary pressures to remain persistent in 2022, but to ultimately fall to 2.75% in 2023. This will still be at the upper bound of their 1-3% target range. The employment picture in Australia is robust, barring lackluster wage growth. The unemployment rate fell to 4.2% in December from 4.6%, which, according to most measures, is below NAIRU. The RBA expects this rate to dip towards 3.75% next year. Admittedly, wage growth is still low by historical standards, but it is also true that the behavior of the Phillip’s curve at these low levels of unemployment is uncertain. Ergo, we could see an unexpected surge in wage growth. House prices are rising at a record 32% year-on-year in Sydney. This is a clear indication that monetary policy remains too easy, relative to underlying conditions. In the very near term, COVID-19 continues to ravage Australia, which will keep the next set of economic releases rather underwhelming. Combined with the zero-COVID policy in China (Australia’s biggest export partner), the outlook could remain somber in the very near term. This will keep the RBA dovish. On the flip side, a dovish RBA has softened the currency and allowed the trade balance to recover smartly. Meanwhile, it has also led to a record short positioning on the AUD. Our expectation going forward remains the same – as China eases policy, Australian exports will remain strong. A simultaneous peak in the spread of Omicron will also allow a domestic recovery, nudging the RBA to roll back its dovish rhetoric, relative to other central banks. Ergo, investors will get both a terms-of-trade and interest rate support for the AUD. We are reintroducing our limit but on AUD/USD at 70 cents, after being stopped out for a modest profit. Chart 9AAustralian Dollar Chart 9BAustralian Dollar New Zealand Dollar: Up Versus USD, But Lower On The Crosses The New Zealand dollar is down 2.3% year to date, the worst performing G10 currency. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand has been among the most hawkish in the G10. This has come on the back of strengthening economic data. In Q4, inflation in New Zealand shot up to a 32-year high of 5.9%. The labor market continues to heal, with the unemployment rate at a post-GFC low of 3.2% in Q4, well below NAIRU. Meanwhile, house prices continue to inflect higher, with dwelling costs in Wellington up over 30%. The trade balance continues to print a deficit but has been improving in recent quarters on the back of rising terms of trade. Meanwhile, given New Zealand currently has the highest G10 10-year government bond yield in the developed world, and bond inflows have been able to finance this deficit. In a nutshell, we expect the RBNZ to stay hawkish, but also acknowledge that is being well priced by bond markets. Overall, the kiwi will appreciate versus the US dollar, but will lag AUD, which is much more shorted and has a better terms-of-trade picture. As such, we are long AUD/NZD. Chart 10ANew Zealand Dollar Chart 10BNew Zealand Dollar Canadian Dollar: A Terms-Of-Trade Boom The CAD is down 0.3% year-to date. The Bank of Canada kept rates on hold at its January 26 meeting. This was a surprising outcome for us, as we expected the BoC to raise interest rates, but was in line with market expectations. Taking a step back, all the conditions for the BoC to raise interest rates are in place. The widely viewed Business Outlook Survey showed improvement in Q4, especially vis-à-vis wage and income growth. This is on the back of very strong inflation numbers out of Canada. The headline, trim and median inflation prints were either at or above the upper bound of the central bank’s target at 4.8%, 3.7% and 3%. On the labor front, employment levels in Canada are back above pre-pandemic levels, with the unemployment rate at 5.3%, close to estimates of NAIRU, while the participation rate has also recovered towards pre-pandemic levels. House price inflation is also prominent across many cities in Canada, which argues that monetary policy is too loose for underlying demand conditions. Longer term, the key driver of the CAD remains the outlook for monetary policy, and the path of energy prices. We remain optimistic on both fronts. On monetary policy, we expect the BoC will continue to monitor underlying conditions but will ultimately have to tighten policy as Omicron peaks. Among the G10 countries, Canada is one of the only countries where infection rates have peaked and are falling dramatically. Oil prices also remain well bid, as the Ukraine/Russia conflict continues to unfold. Should we reach a diplomatic solution in Ukraine, while Omicron also falls to the wayside, travel resumption will bring back a meaningful source of oil demand. From a positioning standpoint, speculators are only neutral the CAD. That said, we are buyers of CAD over a 12–18-month horizon given our analysis of the confluence of macro factors.  Chart 11ACanadian Dollar Chart 11BCanadian Dollar Swiss Franc: Sticking To NIRP The Swiss franc is down 0.8% year to date. The Swiss economy continues to hold up amidst surging COVID-19 infections. Economic wise, inflation is inflecting higher, the unemployment rate has dropped to 2.4%, and wages are rising briskly. This is lessening the need for the central bank to maintain ultra-accommodative settings. House price inflation also suggests that monetary conditions remain too easy relative to underlying demand. The Swiss National Bank remains committed to its inflation mandate, and inflation in Switzerland is among the lowest in the G10. As such, it will likely lag the rest of other developed market central banks in raising rates, with currently the lowest benchmark interest rate in the world. On the flip side, Switzerland runs a trade surplus that has been in structural appreciation, underpinning the franc as a core holding in any FX portfolio. In the near term, rising interest rates are negative for the franc. We are long EUR/CHF on this basis, as we believe the ECB will begin to react to rising inflation pressures. That said, we were long CHF/NZD on the prospect of rising volatility in the FX market and took 4.6% profits on January 14. In the near term, this trade could continue to perform well.  Chart 12ASwiss Franc Chart 12BSwiss Franc Norwegian Krone: Higher Rates Ahead The NOK is up 1.1% year-to-date. The Norges Bank kept the policy rate unchanged at 0.5% at its January meeting and reiterated that rate increases in March are likely. In their view, rising prices, low unemployment, and an easing of Covid-19 restrictions will give way to policy normalization, barring a persistence in Omicron infections. With as many as four rate hikes expected in 2022, the central bank is among the most aggressive in the G10. Headline CPI rose to 5.3% in December, spurred by record high electricity prices, while the core inflation came in at 1.8%. The unemployment rate dropped to 3.4% in Q4, the lowest since 2019. The manufacturing PMI rolled over slightly in January but at 56.5 remains well above the long-term average. Daily Covid-19 cases continue to hit record highs, but hospitalizations remain low, and the government has already scaled back most restrictions after a partial lockdown in December. This will contribute to an economic upswing and aid a recovery in retail sales that were down 3.1% month on month in December.  Norway’s trade balance shot up to record highs in December, driven by surging oil and natural gas export prices. A surging trade surplus supports the krone. Meanwhile, in a rising rate environment, portfolio flows into the cyclical-heavy Norwegian stock market could provide further support for the NOK. In a nutshell, the krone is undervalued according to our PPP models and appears attractive on a tactical and cyclical basis.  Chart 13ANorwegian Krone Chart 13BNorwegian Krone Swedish Krona: Lower Now, Strong Later The SEK is down 0.5% year-to-date. The Swedish economy continued to strengthen in Q4 with GDP growth rising 1.4% quarter-on-quarter, exceeding expectations. In December, the unemployment rate fell to 7.3%, the lowest since the onset of the pandemic, and household lending edged higher to 6.8% year on year. In other data, the manufacturing PMI increased to 62.4 in January. Headline inflation adjusted for interest rates rose to 4.1%, highest since 1993, well above the Riksbank’s 2% target. This has raised doubts on whether the central bank will be able to hold off raising rates until 2024 as it had previously announced. However, excluding energy prices the CPI declined slightly to 1.7%. In short, the Riksbank faces the same conundrum as the ECB, on the persistence of higher inflation, driven by high energy costs. The Omicron variant continues to spread at record pace in Sweden, but recent numbers suggest some moderation. This was probably due to stricter measures in Sweden, in contrast to its Scandinavian neighbors. The cost of this stringency has been softer business and consumer confidence, which are down to multi-month lows. Retail sales also fell by 4.4% in December from the previous month. Taking a step back, Sweden is a small open economy very sensitive to global growth conditions. As such, a rebound in global and Chinese economic activity will hold the key to a rebound in SEK. In our models, the SEK is also undervalued. Chart 14ASwedish Krona Chart 14BSwedish Krona   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
The Bank of Canada kept the policy rate unchanged at 0.25% at its Wednesday meeting but signaled that a rate hike at its March 2 meeting is likely. Governor Tiff Macklem highlighted “a significant shift in monetary policy” and removed the statement in the…
Highlights Federal Reserve: Market turbulence will not dissuade the Fed from starting to hike rates in March, with longer-term consumer inflation expectations climbing steadily higher. Given the choice of fighting high inflation or supporting asset prices, the Fed will choose the former as tightening financial conditions are not yet an impediment to above-trend US economic growth. Canada: Canadian growth is set to recover as the intense Omicron wave has peaked, further intensifying inflationary pressures. The Bank of Canada has all the information from its consumer and business surveys to justify hiking rates immediately, particularly with inflation expectations above the central bank’s 1-3% target range. Stay underweight Canadian government bonds in global fixed income portfolios, as markets have not yet discounted the likely cyclical peak in policy interest rates. Feature Chart of the WeekA Less Friendly Policy Backdrop For Risk Assets Risk assets have taken a beating over the past week, with major equity indices in the US and Europe suffering the sharpest selloffs seen since the early days of the pandemic. There are many sources of investor angst fueling the risk aversion wave - a potential Russian invasion of Ukraine, some mixed results on Q4/2021 corporate earnings reports, the lingering Omicron wave and most importantly, fears of tighter global monetary policy. The latter is most evident in the US, with a few prominent Wall Street investment banks now calling for the Fed to deliver much more than the 3-4 rate hikes currently discounted for 2022. The Fed is now in a difficult spot. Realized US inflation remains very high, supply chain disruptions are not going away, and wage growth is accelerating amid tight US labor market conditions. Survey-based consumer inflation expectations show little sign of peaking, with longer-term expectations now climbing steadily higher. As a result, the Fed has been forced to rapidly shift its policy guidance in a more hawkish direction. These trends are not unique to the US, however, as similar inflation dynamics are playing out in places like the UK and Canada where central banks are also expected to deliver a lot of monetary tightening this year (Chart of the Week). For inflation targeting central banks, a surge in inflation that becomes increasingly embedded in longer-term inflation expectations is a direct challenge to their credibility. The policy prescription must involve monetary tightening to raise real interest rates in a bid to stabilize inflation expectations. At the same time, given the starting point of near-0% nominal policy rates and high inflation, deeply negative real interest rates have a lot of room to rise before becoming a serious restraint on economic growth. This limits how far bond yields can decline in response to a generalized risk-off move like the one seen over the past week. For financial markets hooked on easy monetary policies, an inflation-induced monetary tightening cycle will lead to even higher bond yields – especially real yields - and more frequent bouts of market volatility this year. The events of the past week will likely not be a one-off. The Fed Cares About Inflation, Not Your Equity Portfolio US equity markets have had a rough start to 2022. The S&P 500 is down -9% so far in January, with the tech-heavy NASDAQ index down a whopping -13% (Chart 2). The VIX index now sits at 31, nearly double the level seen at the end of 2021. The selloff in risk assets has occurred alongside an increase in real US bond yields. TIPS yields for the 2yr, 5yr and 10yr maturities are up +20bps, +36bps and +43bps, respectively since the start of the year - a reflection of increasing Fed rate hike expectations. Yet other financial markets have seen more limited swings so far in 2022. Non-US equities are sharply outperforming the US; the EuroStoxx index of European equities is down -6%, while the MSCI emerging market (EM) equity index is down just -2%. US investment grade and high-yield spreads, using the Bloomberg benchmark indices, are up a relatively modest +9bps and +36bps, respectively, while the DXY US dollar index is up only +0.4%. The risk asset selloff seen year-to-date has been sharp, but has likely not been enough for the Fed to postpone the expected March liftoff of the fed funds rate. US financial conditions have tightened, but not nearly by enough to make the Fed to more concerned about the US economic growth outlook (Chart 3). Also, financial markets appear to be functioning normally, suggesting what is happening is a repricing of risk assets rather than a selloff driven by poor market liquidity conditions. Chart 2A 'Real' Equity Market Correction​​​​​​ Chart 3High Inflation, Not High Asset Values, is The Fed's Biggest Concern​​​​​​ The bigger risk to US growth may actually come from high inflation, rather than falling asset values. Real US household income growth, derived from responses in the New York Fed’s Survey of Consumer Expectations to individual questions on incomes and inflation, is expected to contract -3% over the next year (bottom panel). Given that decline in perceived spending power, with inflation far exceeding wage growth, it is no surprise that the University of Michigan consumer confidence index is near an 8-year low. US business confidence has also been hit by high inflation. The NFIB survey of small business sentiment and the Conference Board survey of corporate CEO confidence declined in the latter half of 2021, largely in response to inflationary supply chain disruptions and labor shortages. Nearly one-quarter of NFIB survey respondents cite “inflation” as the single most important problem in operating their businesses. Economic sentiment has clearly taken a hit because of elevated US inflation, even with the US unemployment rate at 3.9% and overall real GDP growth remaining solidly above trend. This suggests that slowing inflation could actually provide a more sustainable boost to the US growth through improved confidence – if the Fed can first successfully engineer a “soft landing” for the economy once it begins hiking rates. The problem the Fed now faces is that the high inflation of the past year is starting to leak into longer-term survey-based measures of inflation expectations. 5-10 year ahead consumer inflation expectations from the University of Michigan survey are now at a 10-year high of 3.1%, while the 10-year-ahead inflation forecast from the Philadelphia Fed’s Survey of Professional Forecasters is at a 23-year high of 2.6% (Chart 4). Market-based inflation expectations like TIPS breakevens have stopped rising, as a more hawkish Fed has boosted real TIPS yields, but remain elevated at levels consistent with the Fed achieving, but not exceeding, it's 2% medium-term inflation target (bottom panel). The combination of a tight US labor market and consumers expecting more inflation raises the risk that the US could enter a wage-price spiral, where workers demand wage increases in response to higher inflation and companies are therefore forced to raise prices to maintain profitability. The conditions for a wage-price spiral seem to now be in place in the US (Chart 5): unemployment is low, wages are accelerating and a growing number of US workers are quitting jobs to find better work. Perhaps most importantly, US consumers are more uncertain about where inflation will be in the future. Chart 4US Inflation Expectations Becoming More Entrenched​​​​​ Chart 5The Start Of A US Wage/Price Spiral?​​​​​​ The New York Fed Survey of Consumer Expectations asks respondents to place probabilities on certain ranges for future US inflation rates one and three years ahead. The probability-weighted average of those inflation rates is dubbed “inflation uncertainty”, and those have doubled over the past year from 2% to 4% (bottom panel). This means that the survey respondents now see higher inflation outcomes as more probable, which will likely result in increased wage demands to “keep up” with the cost of living. With the US labor market looking tight as a drum, amid extensive shortages of quality workers as reported in business confidence surveys, the odds of wage increases because of higher inflation instead of higher productivity – a.k.a. a wage-price spiral – have shot up significantly. Already, the 5-year-annualized growth rate of US unit labor costs has doubled since the start of the pandemic (Chart 6), evidence that wage increases are not being matched by faster productivity. Given the strong historical correlation between unit labor cost growth and core inflation in the US, the rise in the latter will be more persistent if US workers ask for bigger cost-of-living driven wage increases. Chart 6Rising US Labor Costs Provide A Lasting Boost To US Inflation​​​​​​ ​​​​​ Former Fed Chair Alan Greenspan famously described “price stability” – the Fed’s stated medium-term goal - as a situation where “… households and businesses need not factor expectations of changes in the average level of prices into their decisions.” This is clearly not the situation in the US today, which is why the Fed has no choice but to move ahead with interest rate increases to begin the road back to price stability. Financial market selloffs may actually assist the Fed in achieving that goal through tighter financial conditions, thereby limiting how much interest rates must increase to cool off above-trend US economic growth. Interest rates must still go up first, though – especially in real terms. Already, investors have adjusted to that reality by lifting their medium-term “real rate expectations”. We proxy the latter by taking the difference between the forward path for nominal US interest rates discounted in the US overnight index swap (OIS) curve and the forward path of US inflation discounted in the US CPI swap curve. Over just the past month, that market-implied forward path for the real fed funds rate has shifted from discounting an average level of around -1% over the next decade to something closer to -0.25% (Chart 7). We anticipate that those real rate expectations will move even higher as the Fed begins to hike rates in March and continues its tightening cycle over the next 1-2 years. This will underpin the move higher in US bond yields that we expect this year, for both government and corporate debt, with the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield reaching a high of 2.25% by year-end. Bottom Line: Market turbulence will not dissuade the Fed from starting to hike rates in March. Longer-term consumer inflation expectations are climbing steadily higher, which is starting to feed into higher wage demands in a very tight labor market. Given the choice of fighting high inflation or supporting asset prices, the Fed will choose the former as tightening financial conditions are not yet an impediment to above-trend US economic growth. Stay below-benchmark on US interest rate exposure, both in terms of duration and country allocation, in global bond portfolios. Canada Update: The BoC Has A Lot Of Work To Do The Bank of Canada (BoC) meets this week and we anticipate that the first rate hike of this tightening cycle will be announced. This will just be the beginning of what will likely be an extended cycle. Canadian monetary conditions are far too accommodative given above-trend growth and accelerating inflation. The BoC places a lot of analytical weight on its Business Outlook Survey when assessing the state of the Canadian economy. The Q4/2021 survey signaled very strong business confidence and robust demand (both domestic and foreign), with a growing majority of firms surveyed planning to increase investment and hiring over the next year (Chart 8). Survey respondents also reported significant capacity constraints, especially in industries that have experienced strong demand during the pandemic, like retail, manufacturing and housing. This is related to global supply chain disruptions, but also to intensifying labor shortages. Chart 8A Bright Outlook For The Canadian Economy The survey was conducted before the Omicron variant began to spread through Canada, which lead to the reimposition of severe economic restrictions. The number of Canadian COVID cases has peaked, however, and some restrictions have already begun to be lifted in Ontario, Canada’s largest province by population. The economic impact of Omicron will therefore be concentrated in the first couple of months of 2022 and should not derail the hiring and investment plans indicated in the Business Outlook Survey. A reacceleration of Canadian economic growth post-Omicron would magnify high Canadian inflation at a time of intense capacity constraints and tight labor markets. The Canadian unemployment rate fell to 5.9% in December, just 0.2 percentage points above the pre-COVID low seen in February 2020. Headline CPI inflation reached a 31-year high of 4.8% in December 2021, with trimmed CPI inflation (which omits the most volatile components) reaching an 30-year high of 3.7% (Chart 9). The rise in inflation has been broad-based, with large increases seen for both goods inflation (6.8%) and services inflation (3.7%). Like the US, high inflation is becoming more embedded in survey-based inflation expectations. Canadian businesses expect inflation to be 3.2% over the next two years, according to the Business Outlook Survey.1 Canadian consumers expect inflation to be 4.9% over the next year and 3.5% over the next five years, according to the BoC’s Canadian Survey Of Consumer Expectations (Chart 10). The latter had been very stable around 3% since the survey began back in 2014, thus the 0.5 percentage point jump seen in the latest quarterly survey is a highly significant move that suggests the 2021 inflation surge is become more embedded in Canadian consumer psychology. Chart 9The BoC Has An Inflation Problem On Its Hands​​​​​​ Chart 10Canadian Consumer Inflation Expectations Are Rising​​​​​​ The Canadian inflation backdrop has similarities to the US situation described earlier in this report. Like the US, one-year-ahead Canadian consumer inflation expectations are far above wage expectations (only +2%), which suggests that Canadian consumers expect real wages to contract -2.9%. Also like the US, falling real wage expectations are acting as a drag on Canadian consumer confidence (bottom panel). And also like the US, we expect Canadian workers to increase their wage demands to restore real purchasing power, potentially starting a wage-price spiral. Given widespread Canadian labor market shortages, this process has likely already started. According to the BoC Business Outlook Survey, 43% of firms had to boost wages in Q4/2021 because of “cost of living adjustments”, compared to 29% in Q3/2021 (Chart 11). An even larger share of respondents in the Q4 survey (54%) reported having to raise wages to attract and retain workers, up significantly from Q3 and an indication of how Canadian firms are seeing their wage bill go up trying to find quality labor in a tight job market. Given the messages on growth and inflation from its surveys, the BoC has all the evidence it needs to begin the rate hiking process as soon as possible. The bigger question is how high will rates have to go to cool off Canadian economic growth and bring inflation back into the BoC’s 1-3% target range. The BoC’s own internal models estimate that the neutral level of the policy interest rate is between 1.75% and 2.75%. Those estimates were last produced back in April 2021, however, and the range may need to be revised higher to reflect the changes seen in the Canadian economy since then – most notably the greater supply constraints and higher inflation. At a minimum, the BoC will likely have to raise the policy rate to the higher end of its last estimated range for the neutral rate. Current market pricing in the Canadian OIS curve discounts the BoC hiking the policy rate from 0.25% today to 1.6% by the end of 2022 (Chart 12). With eight scheduled BoC policy meetings this year, including this week, the 2022 pricing is realistically achievable. However, only another 50bps of hikes are priced for 2023 and no additional hikes after that. Chart 12Markets Are Underestimating The Likely Cyclical Peak In Canadian Rates Chart 13Stay Underweight Canadian Government Bonds A peak policy rate around 2% would only be in the lower half of the BoC’s range of neutral rate estimates. It would also represent a very low peak real rate of 0% assuming inflation returns to the midpoint of the BoC target range. It is possible that markets are underestimating how high the BoC will have to lift rates, both in nominal and real terms, because of a fear that rate increases will hurt highly indebted Canadian homeowners and trigger a sharp pullback in house prices. This is a legitimate concern given the stretched housing valuations across most major Canadian cities. However, the BoC is facing the same credibility issue that the Fed and other inflation-targeting central banks are facing in the pandemic era. Canadian inflation is too high and becoming more embedded in inflation expectations. Also like the Fed, the BoC will have to fight the inflation battle now and deal with the collateral damage on financial conditions (and the housing market) later. Importantly, with the Fed also likely to deliver several rate hike in 2022. Thus, the BoC has less need to fear a surge in the Canadian dollar, driven by widening interest rate differentials, that could aggressively tighten financial conditions beyond the impact on asset markets and house prices from higher interest rates (Chart 13). Summing it all up, we maintain our negative strategic outlook on Canadian government bonds as markets are underestimating the tightening that will be required from the BoC over the next 1-2 years. Bottom Line: The Bank of Canada has all the information from its consumer and business surveys to justify hiking rates immediately, particularly with medium-term consumer inflation expectations now above the central bank’s 1-3% target range. Stay underweight Canadian government bonds in global fixed income portfolios, as markets have not yet discounted the likely cyclical peak in policy interest rates.   Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1      Business inflation expectations calculated as the share of respondents reporting expected inflation within a certain range multiplied by the midpoint of the range. We assume a value of 0.5 for “less than 1” and a value of 3.5 for “greater than 3”. GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Recommended Positioning     Active Duration Contribution: GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. Custom Performance Benchmark The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Global Fixed Income - Strategic Recommendations* Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Overlay Trades
Market participants have aggressively increased their rate hike expectations for Canada over the coming year. Recent data supports this shift. Canada’s headline inflation rate rose to a fresh 30-year high of 4.8% in December. More importantly, all three core…
The Bank of Canada’s Q4 Business Outlook Survey reveals that Canadian firms continue to face capacity pressures. The headline BoS indicator strengthened to 6 in Q4 from 4.6 in Q3. This increase reflects an improvement in sales indicators and firms’ investment…