Economy
Dear Client, Next week I will be hosting a series of Roundtable discussions with BCA’s clients in both Europe and Asia. Our next report published on April 28th will be a recap of my observations from these meetings. Best regards, Jing Sima China Strategist Highlights The sharp uptick in Chinese producer prices should be transitory, unlikely to trigger a policy response. There are two scenarios under which Chinese manufacturers’ profit margins will benefit: either Chinese exporters will raise export prices and pass input costs onto American customers, or the RMB will depreciate versus the US dollar and commodities prices will experience a setback. The second scenario is more likely in the next 3-6 months. After a pandemic-driven boost in 2020, US imports from China will likely moderate in the second half of 2021 and into 2022. President Biden’s grand infrastructure spending plan, even if approved later this year, will not be a game changer for China’s exports or economy. The strength in the USD may intensify in the near term, and Chinese policymakers will be happy to allow the RMB to depreciate mildly. Stay underweight Chinese stocks. Feature Last week’s China’s producer price index (PPI) was more elevated than the market expected. However, it does not warrant a policy response, given that the increase was mostly driven by supply constraints rather than an overheating domestic economy. Chinese manufacturers have had a tough time passing on mounting input prices to customers, which raises the question about how profit margins will be maintained. For exporters, the answer may be a combination of increasing export prices in USD terms and depreciating the RMB. The rate of growth in US demand for Chinese export goods may moderate in the second half of 2021 and into 2022 after a pandemic-driven boost in 2020. China’s economic growth and interest rate differentials with the US will continue to narrow in the rest of this year. We expect the RMB to face headwinds against the USD, at least in the next quarter or two. Meanwhile, global investors should continue to underweight Chinese stocks. The PBoC Will Not React To Supply-Side Price Pressures Chart 1Marchs Strong PPI Does Not Reflect An Overheating Domestic Economy Despite above-expectation readings in China’s PPI, the domestic economy shows no signs of overheating. The upside pressure on producer prices reflects the impact of both the global rally in commodities and base effects (Chart 1). In March, strength in the PPI was also accentuated by seasonality due to a resumption in construction and real estate activity following the Chinese New Year holiday. While base effects and global supply bottlenecks will continue to buoy PPI prints throughout Q2, these effects are likely transitory and would not justify a policy response. At 0.4% year-over-year in March, core CPI remains significantly below the central bank’s 3% target and does not indicate any demand-side pressure. Instead, the inability for Chinese producers to pass on higher input prices to consumers highlights the relatively subdued state of domestic demand (Chart 1, bottom panel). Chart 2Current Macro Policy Works To Cap The Upsides In Both The Price And Quantity Of Money At this point there are little signs that rising producer prices are spilling over to consumer prices. We expect Chinese authorities to continue its current policy trajectory, which intends to keep a steady interbank rate while keeping money supply growth at or below the rate of nominal GDP expansion (Chart 2). China’s Deteriorating Terms Of Trade Chinese export prices climbed slightly in USD terms, but not by enough to offset the RMB’s relentless appreciation from the second half of last year, as indicated by falling export prices in RMB terms (Chart 3). A deteriorating terms of trade (ToT), defined as export prices relative to import costs, means that Chinese producers must export a greater number of units to purchase the same number of imports (Chart 4). The declining ToT can be a powerful deflationary force for China’s manufacturing sector. Chart 3Chinese Export Prices Are Rising In USD Terms But Falling In Local Currency Terms Chart 4Terms Of Trade Have Been Falling Chart 5Chinese Output Prices Lead US Consumer Inflation By A Year While there are limited choices for China to improve its ToT, manufacturers could raise export prices in USD terms and “recycle” cost-push inflation back to the US. Chinese PPI normally leads US consumer inflation by 12 to 18 months (Chart 5). Hence, it is possible that the US will see import prices from China picking up more momentum by the middle of next year. The RMB’s performance is a key macro driver for manufacturing-related output prices. A depreciation in the RMB can be a meaningful reflationary force for manufacturers. There has been a clear negative correlation between the trade-weighted RMB and Chinese manufacturers' output prices and industrial profits, as shown in Chart 6. In this scenario, the USD will continue to appreciate against the RMB and possibly emerging market currencies, a headwind to global trade (Chart 7). Chart 6A Falling RMB Can Be Reflationary To Chinese Producers Chart 7A Stronger USD Will Be Headwinds For Global Trade Maintaining a strong RMB can partly mitigate the pain stemming from escalating commodity import prices. However, in our view it is the least preferred option by policymakers. In previous cycles a rapidly strengthening RMB did not have a major impact on Chinese exporters' competitiveness, mainly because declines in commodities prices effectively offset a rising RMB (Chart 8 and Chart 9). Therefore, Chinese exporters did not need to boost prices in USD terms to maintain their profit margins. Chart 8RMB Appreciations Did Not Hurt Chinas Share In Global Trade Chart 9...Because Declines In Commodities Prices Were Able To Offset A Rising RMB Bottom Line: Chinese exporters can either raise prices and pass the inflation onto American customers, or the PBoC will allow further depreciation in the RMB to maintain Chinese producers’ competitiveness. Appreciating the RMB is the least preferred option. Don’t Count On A US Buying Spree Market participants in China are pricing in large windfalls from the US$1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan and proposed US$2.4 trillion American Jobs Plan.1 A positive export tailwind in Q1 this year boosted China’s economic activity beyond what measures of domestic money and credit would have predicted, as shown in Chart 10. However, given the strongly positive relationship between the export sector and real investment in China, it is concerning that any deceleration in US demand for Chinese export goods would seriously challenge the sanguine view for China’s economy this year (Chart 11). Chart 10Export Strength Appears To Be Propping Up The LKI Chart 11China's Export Sector Is Highly Investment-Intensive Moreover, US demand for Chinese export goods is subject to several countervailing forces, at least in the second half of 2021: The USD currently benefits from widening real interest differentials and stronger US growth relative to the rest of the world. For the next quarter or two, persistent strength in the USD and US Treasury yields will be headwinds to global trade and may cause a temporary setback for the global manufacturing sector (Chart 7 on Page 4). Residential and business investment in the US may not regain much vigor despite large stimulus checks. Our colleagues at BCA US Investment Strategy expect US residential investment to match the long-run trend growth, but the increase will be largely offset by below-trend growth in non-residential investment. More working-from-home options will continue to drive demand for single-family homes in the suburbs and beyond. On the other hand, demand will suffer for office space in central business districts and dwellings in urban centers. Brick-and-mortar retail construction is also going to crater. Consumption for goods in the US may also see below-trend growth in the second half of 2021 and into 2022, whereas the service sector will benefit most from the coming recovery in US business and social activities. Table 1 shows that goods spending rose in 2020 despite an overall decline in consumption, because households dramatically shifted their consumption into goods from services. As such, 2020’s pandemic-driven dividend for Chinese exporters is likely to become a drag on tradeable goods exports to the US in 2021 and/or 2022. Table 1US Consumer Spending Gap Is Almost Entirely On The Services Side It is also important for investors to put the US$2.4 trillion infrastructure spending budget proposed in the American Jobs Plan into prospective. The US lags far behind China in infrastructure spending. In the past 10 years, US public infrastructure investment (federal and state combined) has declined to an average of about $450 billion.2 This compares with China’s US $1.9 trillion yearly spending on infrastructure (Chart 12). China currently consumes seven to eight times more industrial metals than the US (Chart 13). As such, even if the US infrastructure investment plan will be approved later this year, it is unlikely to be a game changer for global commodity prices or Chinese exports. Chart 12Infrastructure Spending, China Vs. The US Chart 13US Consumption Of Industrial Metals Is Too Small Relative To China The proposed US$1.2 trillion spending on the US nation’s roads, bridges, green spaces, water, electricity, and universal broadband will be spread over the next eight years. The additional $150 billion per annum to the US public infrastructure investment will only boost the US spending from 24% to about 32% of China’s annual infrastructure investment. Furthermore, the fiscal multiplier effect from the extra public spending on investment from the US private sector and overall economy may not be as positive as the market has priced in, depending on the size of corporate tax hikes in the final bill. Bottom Line: After a pandemic-driven boost in 2020, growth in US imports from China will likely moderate in the second half of 2021 and into 2022. The proposed infrastructure spending plan in the US will benefit Chinese exports, but the magnitude of the windfall may be disappointing. Investment Implications As discussed in a previous report, rising US bond yields will have a muted effect on their Chinese counterparts. Tightened regulations on the real estate industry and a new round of environmental protection laws in China will continue to suppress the domestic credit demand. As a result, interest rate differentials between China and the US will continue to narrow. The strength in the USD has not run its course and the RMB will face slight depreciation pressures in Q2 and possibly into Q3. A declining RMB will provide reflationary benefits to China’s industrial profits, but with about a six-month time lag. In the meantime, we recommend global investors to continue underweighting Chinese stocks (Chart 14A and 14B). Chart 14AContinue Underweighting Chinese Stocks Chart 14BContinue Underweighting Chinese Stocks Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1According to the OECD, recent US stimulus will boost US GDP growth by almost 3 percentage points in the first full year (from 2021Q2 to 2022Q2). The knock-on effect from the stimulus on other economies is projected to be significant, including a half percentage point addition to China’s GDP during the same period. 2The Congressional Budget Office estimated that combined federal, state and local spending on infrastructure was (in 2019 dollars) $441 billion as of 2017. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
The NFIB Small Business Optimism Survey is sending a warning about US capex. While the overall report was upbeat, the share of business owners planning to make a capital expenditure during the next three to six months ticked down to 20 from 23. This is…
China’s trade surplus contracted significantly in March, falling to $13.8 billion from $37.8 billion. The narrower surplus reflects both a deceleration in exports and an acceleration in imports. Exports were weaker than expected, easing to 30.6% y/y from…
As expected, US inflation jumped in March. Headline CPI surged to a 31-month high of 2.6% y/y while core CPI rebounded to 1.6% y/y from 1.3% y/y. The impact of last year’s low base is in part to blame, but month-on-month changes suggest there is more at play.…
Highlights Duration: Treasury yields look fairly valued on several different valuation metrics and the yield curve discounts a much quicker pace of rate hikes than is currently signaled by the Fed’s “dot plot”. However, the economic data continue to beat expectations by a wide margin. This suggests that bond yields could overshoot their fair value in the near term. Maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration. Employment: The US employment boom is just getting started. Total employment is still 8.4 million below pre-pandemic levels, but 37% of missing jobs are from the Leisure & Hospitality sector where demand is about to surge. Fed: The US economy will reach the Fed’s definition of “maximum employment” in 2022. This will cause the Fed to lift rates before the end of 2022, an event that will be preceded by an announcement of asset purchase tapering either late this year or early next year. Feature Chart 1Price Pressures Building The past two weeks brought us a couple of interesting developments directly related to the Treasury market. First, long-dated Treasury yields declined somewhat, presumably because many investors concluded that the yield curve is already priced for the full extent of future Fed rate hikes. Second, we received further evidence – from March’s +916k employment report, the 12% year-over-year increase in producer prices and continued elevated readings from PMI Prices Paid indexes – that economic activity is recovering more quickly than even the most optimistic forecasters anticipated (Chart 1). These two opposing forces highlight a tension in the current outlook for US Treasury yields. Yields now look fairly valued on several different valuation metrics, a fact that justifies keeping bond portfolio duration close to benchmark. However, cyclical economic indicators are surging, a fact that suggests yields will keep rising in the near-term, causing them to overshoot fair value for a time. This week’s report looks at this tension between valuation indicators and cyclical economic indicators through the lens of our Checklist To Increase Portfolio Duration. While we think there are convincing arguments in favor of both “At Benchmark” and “Below Benchmark” portfolio duration stances on a 6-12 month investment horizon, we are deciding to stick with our recommended “Below Benchmark” stance for now, until the economic data are more in line with market expectations. Checking In With Our Checklist Back in February, following the big jump in bond yields, we unveiled a Checklist of several criteria that would cause us to increase our recommended portfolio duration stance from “Below Benchmark” to “At Benchmark”.1 As is shown in Table 1, the Checklist contains seven items that can be grouped into two categories: Valuation Indicators that compare the level of Treasury yields to some estimate of fair value Cyclical Indicators that look at whether trends in the economic data are consistent with rising or falling bond yields Table 1Checklist For Increasing Duration Valuation Indicators Chart 2Valuation Indicators As mentioned above, valuation indicators show that Treasury yields are roughly consistent with fair value, suggesting that a neutral duration stance is appropriate. First, consider the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield relative to survey estimates of the long-run neutral fed funds rate (Chart 2). Last week, survey estimates from the New York Fed’s Survey of Market Participants and Survey of Primary Dealers were updated to March, and while there was some upward movement in the estimated long-run neutral rate ranges, the median estimates in both surveys were unchanged from January. The result is that the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield remains near the top-end of its survey-derived fair value band (Chart 2, top 2 panels). Second, the same two surveys also ask respondents to forecast what the average fed funds rate will be over the next 10 years. We can derive an estimate of the 10-year term premium by subtracting those forecasts from the 10-year spot Treasury yield (Chart 2, bottom 2 panels). In this case, respondents did raise their average fed funds rate forecasts and our term premium estimates were revised down as a result. While both term premium estimates are now below their 2018 peaks, they remain elevated compared to recent historical averages. Third, we turn to the front-end of the yield curve to look at what sort of Fed rate hike path is priced into the market (Chart 3). We see that the market is currently priced for Fed liftoff in December 2022 and for a total of four 25 basis point rate hikes by the end of 2023. Only a handful of FOMC participants forecasted a similar path at the March Fed meeting. Chart 3Market Priced For December 2022 Liftoff We discussed the wide divergence between market expectations and the Fed’s “dot plot” in a recent report.2 Essentially, the divergence boils down to the Fed focusing more on actual economic outcomes while the market takes its cues from economic forecasts. We think there’s good reason for optimism about the economy, and therefore expect that the Fed will revise its interest rate forecasts higher in the coming months as the “hard” economic data improve. However, we should point out that respondents to the New York Fed’s Survey of Primary Dealers and Survey of Market Participants also have much more benign interest rate forecasts than the market, and respondents to those surveys do not share the Fed’s bias toward actual economic outcomes. Table 2 shows that the average respondent to the Survey of Market Participants only sees a 35% chance that the Fed will lift rates before the end of 2022 and the Survey of Primary Dealers displays a similar result. Table 2Odds Of A Fed Rate Hike By End Of Year The wide gap between rate hike expectations embedded in the yield curve and forecasts from both the FOMC and the New York Fed’s surveys suggests that Treasury yields are at least fairly valued, and perhaps too high. However, the most important question is whether the market’s rate hike expectations look lofty compared to our own forecast. As is explained in the below section (titled “The Employment Boom Is Just Getting Started”), we think that the jobs market will be strong enough for the Fed to lift rates before the end of 2022 and that the market’s anticipated rate hike path looks reasonable. However, even this view is only consistent with a neutral stance toward portfolio duration. Chart 4Higher Inflation Is Priced In For our final valuation indicator we focus specifically on the outlook for inflation compared to what is already priced into the forward CPI swap curve (Chart 4). The forward CPI swap curve is priced for headline CPI inflation to rise to 2.7% by May 2022 before falling back down only slightly. In reality, year-over-year headline CPI will probably spike to even higher levels during the next two months but will then recede more quickly. We think it’s reasonable to expect headline CPI inflation to be between 2.4% and 2.5% in 2022, a range consistent with the Fed’s 2% PCE target, but the forward CPI swap curve reveals that this outcome is already priced. All in all, the message from the valuation indicators in our Checklist is that a robust economic recovery is already reflected in market prices. Thus, even with our optimistic economic outlook, Treasury yields look fairly valued, consistent with an “At Benchmark” portfolio duration stance. Cyclical Indicators While valuation indicators perform well over longer time horizons, they are notoriously bad at pinpointing market turning points. It’s for this reason that we augment our Checklist with cyclical economic indicators, specifically high-frequency cyclical economic indicators that correlate tightly with bond yields. First, we look at the ratio between the CRB Raw Industrials commodity price index and gold (Chart 5). The CRB index is a good proxy for global economic growth and gold is inversely correlated with the stance of Federal Reserve policy – gold falls when policy is perceived to be getting more restrictive and rises when policy is perceived to be easing. This ratio has shown little evidence of rolling over and further gains are likely as the economy emerges from the pandemic. We also look at other high-frequency global growth indicators like the relative performance between cyclical and defensive equities and the performance of Emerging Market currencies (Chart 5, panels 2 & 3). The trend of cyclical equity sector outperformance continues while EM currencies have shown some tentative signs of weakness. The US dollar is one particularly important indicator for bond yields. As US yields rise relative to yields in the rest of the world it makes the US bond market a more attractive destination for foreign investors. When US yields are attractive enough, these foreign inflows can stop them from rising. One good indication that US yields are sufficiently high to attract a large amount of foreign interest is when investor sentiment toward the dollar turns bullish. For now, the survey of dollar sentiment we track shows that investors are still bearish on the US dollar (Chart 5, bottom panel). Bearish dollar sentiment supports further increases in bond yields. Chart 5Cyclical Indicators Chart 6Data Surprises Still Positive Finally, we track the US Economic Surprise Index as an excellent summary indicator of the US data flow relative to market expectations. The index also correlates tightly with changes in bond yields (Chart 6). Though the index has fallen significantly from the absurd highs seen late last year, it is still elevated compared to typical historical levels. In general, bond yields tend to rise when the economic data are beating expectations, as indicated by a positive Surprise Index. All in all, we see that the cyclical indicators in our Checklist are sending a very different signal than the valuation indicators. This suggests a high probability that yields could overshoot fair value in the near term. Bottom Line: Treasury yields look fairly valued on several different valuation metrics and the yield curve discounts a much quicker pace of rate hikes than is currently signaled by the Fed’s “dot plot”. However, the economic data continue to beat expectations by a wide margin. This suggests that bond yields could overshoot their fair value in the near term. Maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration. The Employment Boom Is Just Getting Started Chart 7Defining "Maximum Employment" The Fed has conditioned the first rate hike of the cycle on both (i) 12-month PCE inflation being at or above 2% and (ii) the labor market being at “maximum employment”. As we’ve previously written, we see strong odds that the inflation trigger will be met in time for a 2022 rate hike.3 This week, we assess the likelihood that “maximum employment” will be reached in time for the Fed to lift rates next year. Fed communications have made it clear that the FOMC’s definition of “maximum employment” is equivalent to an environment where the unemployment rate is between 3.5% and 4.5% - the range of FOMC participants’ NAIRU estimates – and the labor force participation rate has made a more-or-less complete recovery to pre-pandemic levels (Chart 7). Following March’s blockbuster employment report, we update our calculations of the average monthly nonfarm payroll growth that must occur to hit “maximum employment” by different future dates (Tables 3A-3C). Table 3AAverage Monthly Nonfarm Payroll Growth Required For The Unemployment Rate To Reach 4.5% By The Given Date Table 3BAverage Monthly Nonfarm Payroll Growth Required For The Unemployment Rate To Reach 4% By The Given Date Table 3CAverage Monthly Nonfarm Payroll Growth Required For The Unemployment Rate To Reach 3.5% By The Given Date For example, to reach the Fed’s definition of “maximum employment” by December 2022, nonfarm payroll growth must average between +410k and +487k per month between now and then. To reach “maximum employment” by the end of this year, payroll growth must average between +701k and +833k over the remaining nine months of 2021. It’s probably unrealistic to expect a return to “maximum employment” by the end of this year, but we do expect at least a couple more monthly payroll reports that are even stronger than last month’s +916k. Our optimism stems from the industry breakdown of the current jobs shortfall. Table 4 shows the change in overall nonfarm payrolls between February 2020 and March 2021. In total, we see that the US economy is missing 8.4 million jobs compared to pre-pandemic. We also see that 3.1 million (or 37%) of those jobs come from the Leisure & Hospitality sector. That sector is predominantly made up of restaurants and bars, two services where demand is about to ramp up significantly as COVID vaccination spreads across the US. A few months in a row of 1 million or more jobs added is highly likely in the near future. Table 4Employment By Industry Bottom Line: We see the boom in employment as just getting started and we expect that the US economy will reach the Fed’s definition of “maximum employment” in 2022. This will cause the Fed to lift rates before the end of 2022, an event that will be preceded by an announcement of asset purchase tapering either late this year or early next year. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 https://www.bcaresearch.com/webcasts/detail/387 2 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Fed Looks Backward While Markets Look Forward”, dated March 23, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Limit Rate Risk, Load Up On Credit”, dated March 16, 2021, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Chinese stocks are increasingly unattractive amid both policy tightening (see The Numbers) and a regulatory clampdown targeting real estate, banking, and tech. Regarding the latter, an anti-monopoly probe on e-commerce giant Alibaba concluded on Friday with a…
China’s credit trends continue to point to a winding down of last year’s massive stimulus. Although new loans of CNY 2.7 trillion in March exceeded the CNY 2.3 trillion anticipated by the consensus, the annual growth rate has slowed to 12.6% y/y from…
Highlights The latest major economic releases have been solidly positive, … : The manufacturing ISM hit a 37-year high and the services ISM made a new all-time high in its 24-year history, while the March employment report was quite strong. … but they have fallen within the wide distribution of Goldilocks economic and market outcomes, … : The pace of vaccinations is limiting the potential of a negative pandemic surprise and the Fed continues to stick to its easier-for-longer messaging. … though we are watching the potential to drift into the too-hot right tail: Although the labor market is awash in excess capacity, both ISM surveys are telling a pro-inflation story replete with bottlenecks, shortages and suppliers willing to exploit their advantages. Earnings season will shed some light on how long the good times can be sustained: First quarter earnings releases begin this week with the SIFI banks. We will look to management commentary for insight into how corporate earnings are likely to stack up against expectations and how long we might be able to stick with our risk-friendly positioning. Feature When the COVID-19 pandemic reached the US last spring, our view turned on the outcome of the battle between policy makers and the virus. We were optimistic that the economy could escape long-term damage and that risk assets would be able to come back from their vicious February-March declines because we expected that policy makers would do what it took to build a bridge across the pandemic crater. Once the Democrats captured the White House and a majority in both houses of Congress, the policymakers-versus-the-virus outcome was settled, as the Biden-Pelosi-Schumer triumvirate ensured that fiscal policy would join monetary policy in erring to the side of providing too much support to the economy. The investment narrative now has shifted to whether or not policy makers have overdone it. It is possible to have too much of a good thing and excessive stimulus could cause the economy to overheat, hastening the end of the just-right Goldilocks combination of strong growth and easy monetary policy. It is also possible that the pandemic could still spring a nasty surprise on the United States, bringing about a growth disappointment despite indulgent policy, but the probability of a bad public-health outcome appears to shrink every week that the rapid vaccination clip is maintained. Our new framework is Goldilocks and the two tails (Figure 1), in which the probability of a just-right outcome that keeps the strong-growth, easy-policy beat going is considerably larger than unanticipated slowing (the too-cold left tail) or overheating (the too-hot right tail). This week, we review vaccine progress, consumer loan delinquencies and key economic releases to assess where in our stylized distribution the economy is likely to fall. Figure 1Goldilocks And The Two Tails The Left Tail We have viewed widespread vaccinations as the best way to inoculate the economy against a left-tail outcome. The more quickly herd immunity can be achieved via vaccinations, the less likely that growth will fall short of market expectations. We are impressed with the ground the US has made up after stumbling out of the gate; vaccine production has ramped up well beyond expectations and a mix of public and private injection sites are getting doses delivered. Assuming that new virus-resistant variants do not emerge, it looks as if the US is sure to meet the goal of inoculating a critical mass of the adult population well before September 30th (Chart 1). Chart 1Off And Running A self-reinforcing wave of defaults and bankruptcies would have been at the center of any worst-case economic and market scenarios. The Fed was keenly aware of the threat and preventing avoidable bankruptcies was an explicit monetary policy aim. Zero interest rates, massive asset purchases and new emergency measures like the Primary and Secondary Corporate Credit Facilities paved the way for record corporate bond issuance, eradicating the threat of bankruptcy for many viable businesses that were severely strained by the pandemic. Generous fiscal policy more directly buoyed household borrowers, but Powell and company had an eye out for them as well, highlighting the goal of : “just … keeping people solvent, keeping them in their homes, keeping them paying their bills just for maybe a few more months.”1 Personal loan performance has therefore been an important indicator for tracking the course of the recovery and policy makers’ success in promoting it. We have been monitoring 60-day delinquency rates across the four main consumer loan categories (90-day rates for credit cards) ever since TransUnion began publishing them on a monthly basis last spring. They have been a good barometer (with a lag) of the flow of transfer payments from the federal government to households. The $1,200 economic impact payments for adults with annual earnings below $75,000 were distributed in March and April, while the $600 weekly federal unemployment insurance (UI) benefit supplement was available from late March until the end of July, and delinquency rates steadily declined from March through August in every category but autos (Chart 2, top panel). Chart 260-Day Delinquency Rates Had Stopped Falling … Chart 3… But The Leading 30-Day Delinquencies Are Headed Lower After the UI supplements stopped flowing in the second half of the year, 60-day delinquencies began creeping up in every category but mortgages (Chart 2, third panel). A new round of $600 checks that were distributed in January, along with the resumption of federal UI benefit supplement payments at a rate of $300 per week, helped the February numbers and March’s $1,400 checks will extend the positive turn. The 30-day delinquency rates show the same pattern, but with bigger declines in February (Chart 3). 30-day delinquency rates lead 60- and 90-day rates and their positive trend will surely be enhanced by the latest round of direct payments and the gathering hiring momentum on display in the March employment report. Along with the success of the vaccination rollout, consumer loan performance suggests that the probability of left-hand tail outcomes is narrowing. Robust ISM Surveys And The Specter Of Cost-Push Inflation The ISM manufacturing and services PMI surveys stand out amid the welter of economic data that researchers and investors have to navigate. They are issued monthly with virtually no lag and provide a reliable read on the economy’s direction. Given that stocks tend to perform well when the economy performs well, they also provide information about the future direction of the stock market (Chart 4) and offer a first-cut guide to asset allocation. Chart 4A Strong Economy Is Good For Equity Returns The March composite releases were quite strong, with the manufacturing survey hitting a 37-year high and the services survey reaching the highest level in its 24-year history. The manufacturing survey was strong across the board, with new orders and order backlogs at or near extended highs (Chart 5, fourth panel) and the production and employment indexes (Chart 5, second and third panels) pointing to broad pickups. Unfortunately, the prices paid and supplier performance indexes (Chart 5, bottom panel) hinted that upward price pressures and supply bottlenecks have taken hold across broad swaths of the economy. Those components, and the accompanying comments from survey respondents, suggest that upward inflation pressures are building. The ISM services PMI survey closely resembled its manufacturing counterpart. New orders (Chart 6, fourth panel) and business activity (Chart 6, second panel) were very strong, though not as large a share of services employers are looking to hire (Chart 6, third panel). The share of respondents facing higher prices has broken out (Chart 6, fifth panel) and lengthening supplier delivery times are prevalent. The services sector has more slack than the manufacturing sector, but it is not immune from inflation pressure. Chart 5The Manufacturing PMI Looks A Lot Like ... Chart 6... Its Services Counterpart It is important to remember that the PMI surveys are diffusion indexes that capture share rather than magnitude. The record and near-record readings don’t mean that respondents’ businesses are growing at their most rapid rate in decades; they mean that the share of respondents who report quickening growth is at record/near-record levels. The same goes for the near-record prices paid readings; they don’t reflect that prices are rising at close-to-record rates, they reflect that an unusually large proportion of companies report increasing prices. The diffusion of upward price pressures as reported in the surveys has had a solid record of leading year-on-year core CPI increases and testifies to the economy’s potential to overheat (Chart 7). Cost-push inflation pressures could derail the strong-growth/easy-policy backdrop. Chart 7Inflation Pressures Have Begun To Stir Bottom Line: The ISM PMI surveys reinforce the idea that the probability of a left-hand tail outcome is modest and shrinking, but they suggest that right-tail overheating is a valid concern. Labor Market Firmly In Goldilocks Territory Chart 8The Labor Market Still Has A Lot Of Slack Net payroll gains in the March employment report comfortably surpassed expectations, while January’s and February’s estimates were also revised higher. The employment figures added to the run of positive surprises in key economic data series that suggest that growth in 2021 and 2022 will run well above its long-term potential. Despite the gains, however, employment remains far below its pre-pandemic peak (Chart 8, top panel) and the spaces that were hardest hit by the pandemic, like restaurants and hospitality, are not operating at anything close to full capacity. With labor force participation sharply reduced from its pre-pandemic level (Chart 8, bottom panel), the labor market is a long way from being tight. With all the excess capacity in the labor market, wage growth has been well behaved. Neither of the main wage series is growing at a rate that would give rise to inflation concerns. Average hourly earnings are up a lot year-over-year (Chart 9, top panel) because of a 5% month-over-month surge last April, but they have been running in place for the last three months and face much tougher comparisons beginning next month. The employment cost index has been rising at a rate well below its 2019 peak (Chart 9, bottom panel) that accompanied half-century lows in the unemployment rate. Chart 9Wage Growth Is Not Yet A Reason For Concern With considerable ground to make up to get back to its pre-pandemic state, the labor market appears to have plenty of room to run before it pulls the overall economy into overheating territory. The combination of ample slack and a strong backlog of labor demand (Chart 10) hints at a best-of-both-worlds/Goldilocks scenario. As long as it remains in place, the labor market is likely to be a positive economic catalyst, promoting robust hiring activity without setting off a self-reinforcing wage-price dynamic that would prod the Fed to cut off monetary accommodation in an abrupt way that would disrupt financial markets. Chart 10There's Still A Lot Of Demand For Workers Investment Implications We stand by our base case that the Goldilocks backdrop of solid growth and ample monetary accommodation will remain in place at least into early 2022. That backdrop precludes the possibility of a recession and therefore argues for risk-friendly investment strategy. Stocks rarely experience significant reversals outside of recessions and spread product reliably generates positive excess returns over Treasuries and cash. Multi-asset investors should remain at least equal weight equity and credit while holding fixed income duration below benchmark levels. We have a high degree of conviction that the economy will avoid a downside surprise in the next twelve months, thanks to the success of the vaccination effort and measures undertaken to limit defaults by households and businesses. We are less sure that the economy will be able to avoid overheating. A rapid rise in consumer prices to levels that would unsettle markets and force the Fed into tightening monetary policy sooner than expected is not our base case but it cannot be ruled out. We will be perusing the data for any advance indications that inflation could be gaining a foothold while also carefully observing what we see in our day-to-day experience. We will also be listening eagerly to what corporate management teams have to say over the next three to four weeks when they report their first-quarter earnings and offer their impressions of the second quarter and the full year. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Interview conducted May 13, 2020 and broadcast May 17. Full Transcript: Fed Chair Jerome Powell's 60 Minutes interview on economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic - CBS New.
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