Financial Markets
To cheaply hedge against a "Leave" vote, go long U.K. inflation protection, reduce exposure to U.K. corporate debt, and position for a steepening of the Gilt curve.
We continue to view the rally in equities and high-yield corporate bonds since February as a high-risk affair.
U.S. dollar softness has failed to lift equities of late, a tentative warning that correlations are changing as the U.S. economy cools.
The trading action of gold is currently sending a bearish message on the dollar as the price of the precious metal has broken above critical resistance. Though the causation between the dollar and gold usually runs from the former to the latter, gold also has a tendency to sniff out broad-based moves in the greenback. We remain broadly short USD in our portfolio.
Historically, carry trades have generated very large profits with limited volatility. Since 2008, this has not be the case. Going forward, carry trades should continue to underwhelm.
China's reflation policies have succeeded in reviving iron ore and steel prices, which are up 45.6% and 52.6% from their January lows, along with the profitability of domestic steelmakers.
We discuss the technical and political problems with helicopter money, plus the near-term outlook for the euro area economy and markets.
It is widely perceived that China suffers from a massive capital misallocation problem. Our indicators defy this conventional wisdom.
Colombia's structural growth outlook is superior to many other developing economies. In the near-term, however, Colombia's economy is set to weaken materially. Upgrade Colombian equities and sovereign credit to neutral versus EM benchmarks. Continue betting on further yield curve flattening/inversion and buy 10-year domestic bonds on weakness. Go long Colombian bank stocks / short Peruvian banks, and stay short the peso.
The factors that drove the recent rally - Fed dovishness, China reflation, and a pickup in economic data - are largely over.