Emerging Markets
The Empire State manufacturing survey for June experienced it sharpest one month decline on record, falling to -8.6 from 17.8, resulting in a massive underperformance of expectations which stood at 11. The details of the survey were not any brighter. In…
The pressures in Hong Kong also highlight why we view Taiwan as a potential “Black Swan.” Similar political fissures are emerging as Beijing expands its economic and military dominance over Taiwan. Of course, the political backlash against Beijing has…
The current protests are part of a process going back to 2012 in which the disaffected and marginalized parts of Hong Kong society began speaking up against the political establishment. This emerged because of high income inequality, shortcomings in quality…
Highlights We spent nearly all of last week engaged in dialogue with clients: Over the course of a dozen face-to-face meetings, and multiple follow-up questions, we learned that crowding out is a real phenomenon. The Fed and trade tensions were essentially all that people wanted to discuss. We’re expecting a 25-basis-point rate cut in July, but our investment recommendations have not changed: We remain bullish on risk assets and bearish on Treasuries, and we continue to recommend that investors maintain below-benchmark duration positioning. Feature It turns out that you really can’t fight the Fed. Not when meeting with investors right now, anyway, as its impending moves dominated our discussions with several U.S.-based clients last week. We expect monetary policy will be Topic A on our meetings schedule this week and next, especially if the plot thickens after the FOMC releases its updated Summary of Economic Projections (“the dots”) and markets mull over Wednesday’s post-meeting statement and press conference. This report covers our recent exchanges with investors on the points that came up most often. Chart 1Healing, If Not Yet Fully Healed Q: How likely is it that the Fed will cut rates? We think a rate cut at the FOMC meeting beginning tomorrow is unlikely. Fed officials only revealed that they were seriously contemplating the idea recently, and it would feel rather sudden if they followed through so soon, especially when the Mexican tariff cloud has lifted, economic data have been reasonably firm and financial conditions are still easing (Chart 1). We pay particularly close attention when Fed speakers all start singing from the same sheet, though, and the prepared-to-adjust-the-target-range-as-necessary refrain is signaling a rate cut. Our base case is that changes in the post-meeting statement and the updated dots will point in the direction of a cut at the next FOMC conclave at the end of July. Q: Why has the Fed changed its tune so much since mid-December? We view the Fed’s evolution from a tightening bias to an easing bias as having unfolded in three distinct stages. The first stage occurred in early January, following the sharp fourth-quarter selloff in equities and corporate bonds. The decline in stock prices amounted to a meaningful decline in household wealth, the sudden widening in bond spreads heralded higher debt-service costs for corporations and consumers, and the surge in mortgage rates caused several would-be homebuyers to lose their nerve (Chart 2). With the accumulated tightening in financial conditions equating to at least one, if not two, 25-basis-point hikes in the fed funds rate, additional hikes would have amounted to piling on, and the Fed opted to move to the sidelines for perhaps a six-month stay. Financial conditions are still tighter than they were before the fourth-quarter selloff, but they’ve eased quite a bit. Chart 2The Rate Backup Spooked Homebuyers, But They'll Be Back The Fed signaled an even lengthier pause in March, bemoaning the risk of too-low inflation expectations, at a time when global growth was already slumping (Chart 3). It seemed to us that it began to worry about the prospect of entering the next recession with inflation expectations below 2%, from which it would not be able to lower the real fed funds rate below -2%. Inflation expectations of 2.5%, on the other hand, would support a real fed funds rate of -2.5%, providing the Fed with additional firepower to restart the economy. The post-meeting dots removed two full rate hikes from the median voter’s terminal-rate projection, and appeared to stretch the Fed’s pause from six months to twelve. Chart 3As Global Trade Goes, So Goes Global Growth Global trade facilitates global growth. Impediments to trade can cast a long shadow over the global economy, and the escalation of trade tensions provided the catalyst for the Fed’s latest dovish turn. Against a backdrop of uninspiring global growth, taking out some monetary policy insurance to protect against increasing trade frictions may well be a prudent course of action, especially in a low-inflation environment. At the moment, we assign slightly better than a 50% probability that the FOMC will cut the target rate at its July 30-31 meeting, but much could change between now and then. Q: What will happen if the Fed cuts rates? If the Fed cuts the fed funds rate in response to a rapidly weakening economy, risk assets will fare poorly. If the economy’s doing fine, and the rate cut is simply an insurance policy, the additional accommodation would give the economy an incremental boost, extending the longevity of the expansion. A longer runway for the business cycle, in turn, would mean longer (and bigger) bull markets in equities and spread product. In our base-case scenario in which the economy’s doing fine, a rate cut (or cuts) would be tantamount to spiking the punchbowl, and would therefore extend the sell-by date on our overweight equities and spread product recommendations. We don’t think the U.S. economy needs easier monetary policy, but there’s nothing in the current low-inflation environment that would prevent the Fed from cutting the fed funds rate as insurance against a downturn. Q: But what will happen if the Fed falls short of the rate-cut expectations that are already being discounted by the markets? As implied by the overnight index swap (OIS) curves, the money markets are pricing in 75 basis points (“bps”) of rate cuts in 2019, and another 25 in 2020 (Chart 4). Those expectations are awfully aggressive, and they are flatly incompatible with our constructive view. If the economy proves to be more resilient than expected, spread product will outperform Treasuries, especially given how much the latter have surged on the pickup in risk aversion. In line with our U.S. Bond Strategy service’s Golden Rule of Bond Investing,1 we expect that long-maturity Treasuries will underperform the overall Treasury index if actual rate cuts fall short of expected rate cuts over the next twelve months. We expect that the yield curve will first shift higher as the market discounts a better economic future (real rates rise) and then steepen as investors begin to discount the inflation implications of unneeded incremental monetary accommodation. Chart 4The Money Market Seems To Foresee A Recession Chart 5Stocks Do Better When Real Rates Are Rising If the economy surprises to the upside, the resulting boost to earnings should help equity investors overcome any disappointment resulting from a rate-cut shortfall. In terms of equity analysts’ spreadsheets, we expect that the boost to the earnings numerator would be large enough to overcome the drag from a larger interest rate denominator. Empirically, U.S. equities perform better over periods when real rates are rising than they do when real rates are falling (Chart 5). Q: What do you see for the rest of the world? We see improvement for the rest of the world. After 2017’s globally synchronized upturn, the first since the crisis, 2018 was marked by a sharp divergence in momentum. The U.S., fueled by fiscal stimulus, powered ahead, while China slowed, hobbled by monetary tightening. We think it is telling that the rest of the world followed China, the world’s second largest standalone economy, rather than the U.S., the comparatively closed number one (Chart 6). Chart 6Divergent Paths Our China Investment Strategy and Geopolitical Strategy teams have repeatedly made the case that investors have underestimated the lagged impact of tight monetary policy and slowing domestic credit growth on the Chinese economy over the past two years. While the existing tariffs on imports to the U.S. are a drag on Chinese growth, policymakers’ efforts to redirect credit creation from the shadow banking system to the regulated banking system has had a larger impact on economic activity. Now that the regulatory impediment has been removed, total social financing growth has picked up, and our China team expects it to rise meaningfully over the coming year in order to overcome the combination of still-muted economic momentum and a larger shock to the export sector (Chart 7). The key takeaway is that ongoing policy efforts will allow Chinese growth to stabilize and there is scope for policy to induce re-acceleration over the coming six to twelve months. The bullish scenario holds that Chinese growth will rebound as policymakers make use of that capacity. Chart 7Add Leverage In Case Of Tariffs Chinese imports are the key channel by which China impacts growth in the rest of the world. Increased Chinese aggregate demand will feed increased demand for materials and goods imports. China’s imports are Europe’s, Japan’s, emerging Asia’s, and the resource economies’ exports. If China bottoms and turns higher, we anticipate that its trading partners will as well with a lag of a few months. We side with the bulls and expect that it will, and we expect that the China-driven revival in the global economy, ex-U.S., will help spark a modest self-reinforcing acceleration cycle. As this virtuous circle begins to turn, the growth divergence between the U.S. (where the fiscal thrust from the stimulus package is nearly spent) and the rest of the world will narrow. We expect the dollar will peak once markets catch on to the shift, and that U.S. equities will shift from leader to laggard, in common-currency terms. Narrowing equity outperformance should help push the dollar lower at the margin, which in turn should help blunt Treasuries’ appeal to foreign investors, steering investment capital away from the U.S. Dollar softness, at the margin, should help contribute to S&P 500 earnings gains, reinforcing our bullish equity take in absolute terms. An exogenous shock could trip up the U.S. economy, but it’s hard to find clear-cut signs of internal weakness. Q: What data are you watching to tell you that your view may not come to pass? Much of our sanguine take turns on the idea that monetary policy settings have not yet turned restrictive. We cannot know in real time where the line of demarcation between reflationary and restrictive monetary policy lies, however, so we are on the lookout for data that might disprove our assessment that the fed funds rate is still comfortably in reflationary territory. Housing is the segment of the economy that is most sensitive to interest rates, and we would be concerned if it took a turn for the worse. For now, though, we’re encouraged by the homebuilder sentiment survey, which has retraced nearly all of its fourth-quarter losses (Chart 8), and suggests that the modest recovery in housing starts and new home sales will continue. Chart 8Homebuilders Are Feeling Pretty Chipper Chart 9What Recession? The inverted yield curve has gotten everyone’s attention, but one month of inversion is not enough to declare that a recession is on the way. It also appears that the inversion may have been inspired by investor risk aversion more than a sense that recession is nigh. Our Global Fixed Income Strategy service looked at the average position of several key data series at the onset of the last five recessions and found that conditions look a lot better than they did when those recessions were developing (Chart 9).2 The Leading Economic Index’s (LEI) recession forecasting record matches the yield curve’s. When it contracts on a year-over-year basis, recessions have reliably followed (Chart 10). The LEI is still expanding, but it has been steadily decelerating, and we are keeping a close eye on it. If it contracted while the yield curve was inverted, we would probably have to throw in the towel on our view that policy is still easy, and a recession is therefore still a ways off. Chart 10The LEI Is Not Yet Sounding The Recession Alarm Doug Peta, CFA Chief U.S. Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see the U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report titled, “The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing,” published July 24, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see the Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report titled, “The Risk Aversion Curve Inversion,” published June 4, 2019, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com.
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Chinese total social financing numbers for May increased to CNY1400 billion from CNY1360 billion. New loans rose to CNY1180 from CNY 1020 billion. M2 money supply was stable at 8.5% abut M1 increased to 3.4% from 2.9%. While these numbers are inconsistent…