Fixed Income
Highlights The 2018 outlook for both economic growth and corporate profits remains constructive for risk assets, although evidence is gathering that global growth is peaking. Some measures of global activity related to capital spending have softened in recent months. Nonetheless, the G3 aggregate for capital goods orders remains in an uptrend, suggesting that it is too soon to call an end in the mini capital spending boom. Our global leading indicators are not heralding any major economic slowdown. The dip in early 2018 in the Global ZEW index likely reflected uncertainty over protectionist trade action. Economic growth in the major countries outside of the U.S. may have peaked, but will remain robust at least through this year. The potential for a trade war is a key risk facing investors. Sino-American tensions are likely to intensify over the long term as the two nations spar over geopolitical and military supremacy. That said, there are hopeful signs that the latest trade skirmish will not degenerate into a full-blown trade war and thereby cause lasting damage to risk assets. Stay overweight equities and corporate bonds. President Trump will announce on May 19 whether he will terminate the nuclear agreement with Iran. Cancelation could be a game-changer for Iranian internal politics, and the return of hardliners would signal greater instability in the region. Stay long oil and related investments. The profit picture remains bright as global margins continue to make new cyclical highs and earnings revisions are elevated. EPS growth is peaking in Europe and Japan, but has a bit more upside in the U.S. later this year. Cross-country equity allocation is a tough call, but relative monetary policy, our positive view for the dollar, the potential for earnings surprises and better value bias us toward European stocks relative to the U.S. in local currency terms. Rising U.S. corporate leverage is not an issue now, but could intensify the next downturn as ratings are slashed, defaults rise and banks tighten lending standards. The bond bear market remains intact, although the consolidation phase has further to run. By Q1 2019, the Fed could find itself with inflation close to target, above-trend growth driven by a strong fiscal tailwind, and an unemployment rate that is a full percentage point below NAIRU. Policymakers will then try to nudge up the unemployment rate, but the odds of avoiding a recession are very low. Feature Investors are right to be concerned following the March 23 U.S. announcement of tariffs on about $50 billion of Chinese imports. The President is low in the polls and needs a victory of some sort heading into midterm elections. Getting tough on trade plays well with voters, and the President faces few constraints from Congress on this issue. Trump wants a raft of items from China, including opening up to foreign investment and a crackdown on intellectual theft. Sino-American tensions are likely to intensify over the long term as the two nations spar over geopolitical and military supremacy.1 That said, we do not expect the latest trade skirmish to degenerate into a full-blown trade war. First, China has already signaled it wants to avoid significant escalation. Beijing has offered several concessions, and its threat of retaliatory trade action has been measured so far. On the U.S. side, the fact that the Administration has decided to bring its case against China to the World Trade Organization (WTO) shows that the Americans are willing to proceed through the normal trade-dispute channels. The bottom line is that, while we cannot rule out escalating trade action that causes meaningful damage to the equity market, it is more likely that the current round of tensions will be limited to brief flare-ups. Investors should monitor the extent of European involvement. If Europe joins the U.S. effort to force China to change its trade practices via the WTO, then China will have little choice but to give in without a major fight. In terms of other geopolitical risks, North Korea should move to the back burner for a while now that the regime has agreed to negotiations. Of greater near-term significance is May 19, when Trump will announce whether he will terminate the nuclear agreement with Iran. Cancelation could be a game-changer for Iranian internal politics, and the return of hardliners would signal greater instability in the region. Oil prices would benefit if the May deadline for issuing waivers on Iran sanctions passes. Trade penalties against Iran would reduce its oil production and exports. The U.S. is also considering sanctions on Venezuela's oil industry. Moreover, Russia and Saudi Arabia are reportedly considering a deal to greatly extend their alliance to curb oil supply. While there are downside risks as well, our base case outlook sees the price of Brent reaching US$74 before year end. Global Growth: Some Mixed Signs Also facing investors this year is the risk that the recent softening in the economic data morphs into a serious growth scare. The 2018 outlook for both the economy and corporate profits remains constructive in our view, but evidence is gathering that global growth is peaking. Investors may begin to question recent upward revisions to the growth outlook for this year and next. Industrial production has softened and the manufacturing PMI has shifted lower in most of the advanced economies (Chart I-1). Bad weather in North America and Europe in early 2018 may be partly to blame, but Korean exports, a leading indicator for the global business cycle, have also softened. The Chinese economy is decelerating and we believe the growth risks are underappreciated. President Xi has cemented his power base and there has been a shift toward accelerated reform. Chinese leaders recognize that leverage in the system is a problem, and the regime is tightening policy on a multi-pronged basis. Structural reforms are positive for long-term growth, but are negative in the short term. The tightening in financial conditions is already evident in the Chinese PMI and the sharp deceleration in the Li Keqiang index (although the latest reading shows an uptick; not shown). A hard landing is not our base case, but the risks are to the downside because the authorities will err on the side of tight policy and low growth. It is also disconcerting that some of our measures of global activity related to capital spending have softened in recent months, including capital goods imports and industrial production of capital goods (Chart I-2). Nonetheless, the fact that the G3 aggregate for capital goods orders remains in an uptrend suggests that it is too soon to call an end in the mini capital spending boom. Consumer and business confidence continues to firm in the major economies. Chart I-1Some Signs Of A Peak In Global Growth Chart I-2A Soft Spot For Capital Spending Our global leading indicators are not heralding any major economic slowdown (Chart I-3). BCA's Global LEI remains in an uptrend and its diffusion index is above the 50 line. In contrast, the global measure of the ZEW investor sentiment index plunged in March. We attribute the decline to the announcement of steel and aluminum tariffs and the subsequent market swoon, suggesting that the ZEW pullback will prove to be temporary. Turning to the U.S., retail sales disappointed in January and February, especially considering that taxpayers just received a sizable tax cut. Nonetheless, this probably reflects lagged effects and weather distortions. Our U.S. consumer spending indicator continues to strengthen as all of the components remain constructive outside of auto sales. Household balance sheets are the best that they have been since 2007; net worth is soaring and the aggregate debt-to-income ratio is close to the lowest level since the turn of the century (Chart I-4). Given robust employment growth and the tightest labor market in decades, there is little to hold U.S. consumer spending back. We expect that the tax cut effect on retail sales will be revealed in the coming months, helping to sustain the healthy backdrop for corporate profits. Chart I-3Global Leading Indicators Mostly Positive Chart I-4U.S. Consumers In Good Shape Global Margins Still Rising The profit picture remains bright as global margins continue to make new cyclical highs and earnings revisions are elevated (Chart I-5). Earnings-per-share surged in the early months of the year in both the U.S. and Japan, although they languished in the Eurozone according to IBES data (local currencies; not shown). Relative equity returns in local currency tend to follow relative shifts in 12-month forward EPS expectations over long periods, and bottom-up analysts have lifted their U.S. earnings figures in light of the fiscal stimulus (Chart I-6). Chart I-5Global Margins Still Rising Chart I-6EPS And Relative Equity Returns The key question is: can the U.S. market outperform again in 2018 now that the tax cuts have largely been priced in? One can make a compelling case either way. Growth: Global growth will remain robust for at least the next year, and the Eurozone and Japanese markets are more geared to global growth than is the U.S. However, the impressive fiscal stimulus in the pipeline means that economic growth momentum is likely to swing back toward the U.S. this year. GDP growth in Europe and Japan will remain above-trend, but it has probably peaked for the cycle in both economies. Valuation: Our composite measure of valuation suggests that Europe and Japan are on the cheap side relative to the U.S. based on our aggregate valuation indicator, which takes into consideration a wide variety of yardsticks (Chart I-7). That said, one of the reasons why European stocks are on the cheap side at the moment is that export-oriented German exporters are quite exposed to rising international tariffs. Earnings: Previous currency shifts will add to EPS growth in the U.S. in the first half of the year, but will be a drag in Europe and Japan (Chart I-8). However, these effects will wane through the year unless the dollar keeps falling. Indeed, we expect the dollar to firm modestly over the next year, favoring the European equity market at the margin. In contrast, we expect the yen to strengthen in the near term, which will trim Japanese EPS growth. Chart I-7Valuation Ranking Of Nonfinancial ##br##Equity Markets Relative To The U.S. Chart I-8Impact Of Currency Shifts On EPS Growth Chart I-9 updates the forecast from our top-down earnings models. The incorporation of the fiscal stimulus lifted the U.S. EPS growth profile relative to our previous forecast. EPS growth is expected to peak at over 20% later this year (4-quarter moving total basis using S&P 500 data). Growth is expected to decelerate thereafter since we have factored in a modest margin squeeze as U.S. wage growth picks up. Narrowing margins are less of a risk in Europe. U.S. EPS growth should be above that of Europe in 2018, but will then fall to about the same pace in 2019. We expect Japanese profit growth to remain very strong this year and next, given Japan's highly pro-cyclical earnings sensitivity. However, this does not incorporate the risk of further yen strength. Earnings expectations will also matter. Twelve-month bottom-up expectations are higher than our U.S. forecast ('x' in Chart I-9 denotes 12-month forward EPS expectations). In contrast, expectations are roughly in line with our forecast for the European market. It will therefore be more difficult at the margin for U.S. earnings to surprise to the upside. Monetary Policy: The relative shift in monetary policies should favor the European and Japanese markets to the U.S. The FOMC will continue tightening, with risks still to the upside on rates in absolute terms and relative to the other two economies. Sector Performance: Sector skews should work in Europe's favor. Financials are the largest overweight in Euro area bourses, while technology is the largest overweight in the U.S. We are constructive on the financial sector in both markets, but out-performance of the sector will favor the Eurozone broad market. Meanwhile, tech companies are particularly sensitive to changes in discount rates, since they often trade on the assumption that most of their earnings will be realized far into the future. As such, higher long-term real bond yields will adversely affect U.S. tech names, especially in an environment where the dollar is strengthening. The Japanese market has a relatively high weighting in industrials and consumer discretionary. The market will benefit if the global mini capex boom continues, but this could be counteracted by softness in global auto sales and further yen strength. It is a tough call, but relative monetary policy, our positive view for the dollar, the potential for earnings surprises and better value bias us toward European stocks relative to the U.S. in local currency terms. We continue to avoid the Japanese market for the near term because of the potential for additional yen gains. As for the equity sector call, investors should remain oriented toward cyclicals versus defensives. Our key themes of a synchronized global capex mini boom, rising bond yields and firm oil prices favor the industrials, energy and financial sectors. Chart I-10 highlights four indicators that support the cyclicals over defensives theme, the dollar and the business sales-to-inventories ratio. Telecom, consumer discretionary and homebuilders are underweight. Chart I-9Profit Forecast Chart I-10These Indicators Favor Cyclical Stocks We will be watching the indicators in Chart I-10 to time the shift to a more defensive equity sector allocation. Leverage And The Next Recession As the economic expansion enters the late stages, investors are focused on where leverage pressure points may lurk. Last month's Special Report on U.S. corporate vulnerability to higher interest rates and a recession raised some eyebrows. For our sample of 770 companies, we estimated how much interest coverage for the average company would decline under two scenarios: (1) interest rates rise by 100 basis points across the curve; and (2) interest rates rise by 100 basis points and there is a recession in which corporate profits fall by 25% peak to trough. Given all the client inquiries, we decided to delve deeper into the results. We were concerned that our sample of high-yield companies distorted the overall results because it includes many small firms and outliers. We are more comfortable with the results using only the investment-grade firms, shown in Chart I-11. The 'x' marks the interest rate shock and the 'o' marks the combined shock. Nonetheless, the main qualitative message is unchanged. The starting point for interest coverage is low, considering that interest rates are near the lowest levels on record and profits are extremely high relative to GDP. This is the result of an extended period of corporate releveraging on the back of low borrowing rates. Chart I-12 shows that the interest coverage ratio has declined even as profit margins have remained elevated. Normally the two move together through the cycle. Chart I-11Corporate Leverage Will Take A Toll Chart I-12The Consequences Of Rising Leverage The implication is that the next recession will see interest coverage fare worse than in previous recessions. Of course, there are many other financial ratios and statistics that the rating agencies employ, but our results suggest that downgrades will proliferate when the agencies realize that the economy is turning south. Moreover, banks may tighten C&I lending standards earlier and more aggressively because they will also be finely attuned to the first hint of economic trouble given the leverage of the companies in their portfolio. Recovery rates may be particularly low in the next recession because the equity cushion has been squeezed via buybacks, which will intensify widening pressure in corporate spreads. Tighter lending standards would generate more corporate defaults, even wider spreads and a greater overall tightening in financial conditions. Corporate leverage could therefore intensify the pullback in business spending in the next recession. The good news is that we do not see any other major macro-economic imbalances, such as areas of overspending, that could turn a mild recession into a nasty one. As long as growth remains solid, the market and rating agencies will ignore the leverage issue. Indeed, ratings migration has improved markedly following the energy related downgrades in 2014 and 2015. An improving rating migration ratio is usually associated with corporate bond outperformance relative to Treasurys (Chart I-13). We remain overweight U.S. investment-grade and high-yield bonds within fixed-income portfolios for now. The European corporate sector is further behind in the leverage cycle (Chart I-14). Europe does not appear to be nearly as vulnerable to rising interest rates. Nonetheless, our European Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) has deteriorated over the past couple of years due to some erosion in profit margins, debt coverage and the return on capital. Meanwhile, the U.S. CHM has improved in recent quarters because the favorable earnings backdrop has temporarily overwhelmed rising leverage (top panel of Chart I-14). For the short-term, at least, corporate health is moving in favor of the U.S. at the margin. Chart I-13Ratings Migration Is Constructive For Now Chart I-14Corporate Health Trend Favors U.S. The implication is that, while we see trouble ahead for the U.S. corporate sector in the next economic downturn, in the short term we now favor the U.S. over Europe in the credit space. We are watching our Equity Scorecard, bank lending standards, the yield curve and our profit margin proxy in order to time our exit from both corporate bonds and equities (see last month's Overview section). We are also watching for a rise in the 10-year TIPS breakeven rate above 2.3% as a signal that the FOMC will get more aggressive in leaning against above-trend growth and a falling unemployment rate. Powell Doesn't Rock The Boat The Fed took a measured approach when reacting to the fiscal stimulus that is in the pipeline. The FOMC lifted rates in March and marginally raised the 'dot plot' for 2019 and 2020. Policymakers shaved the projection for unemployment to 3.6% by the end of 2019. This still appears too pessimistic, unless one assumes that the labor force participation rate will rise sharply. Table I-1 provides estimates for when the unemployment rate will reach 3½% based on different average monthly payrolls and participation rates. Our base case scenario, with 200k payrolls per month and a flat participation rate, sees the unemployment rate reaching 3½% by March 2019. Table I-1Dates When 3.5% Unemployment Rate Threshold Is Reached The soft-ish February reports for consumer prices and average hourly earnings took some of the heat off the FOMC. Core CPI, for example, rose 'only' 0.2% from the month before. Still, when viewed on a 3-month rate-of-change basis, underlying inflation remains perky; the core CPI inflation rate increased from 2.8% in January to 3% in February (Chart I-15). Inflation in core services excluding medical care and shelter, as well as in core goods, have also surged on a 3-month basis. We expect the latter to continue to pressure overall inflation higher, following the upward trend in import prices. The recent downtrend in shelter inflation should also stabilize due to the falling rental vacancy rate. Chart I-15U.S. Inflation Is Perky Moreover, the NFIB survey of U.S. small businesses shows that the gap between the difficulties of finding qualified labor versus demand problems is close to record highs. The ISM manufacturing survey shows that companies are paying more for their inputs and experiencing delays with suppliers. This describes a late-cycle environment marked with rising inflationary pressures. We expect that core inflation will grind up to the 2% target by early next year. By the first quarter of 2019, the Fed could find itself with inflation close to target, above-trend growth driven by a strong fiscal tailwind, and an unemployment rate that is a full percentage point below its estimate of the non-inflationary limit. Policymakers will then attempt a 'soft landing' in which they tighten policy enough to nudge up the unemployment rate. Unfortunately, the Fed has never been able to generate a soft landing. Once unemployment starts to rise, the next recession soon follows. Our base case is that the next recession begins in 2020. Bond Bear In Hibernation For Now The bond market showed that it can still intimidate in February, but things have since calmed down as the U.S. mini inflation scare ebbed, some economic data disappointed and trade friction created additional macro uncertainty. Bearish sentiment and oversold technical conditions suggest that the consolidation period has longer to run. Nonetheless, unless inflation begins to trend lower, the fact that even the doves on the FOMC believe that the headwinds to growth have moderated places a floor under bond yields. Fair value for the 10-year Treasury is 2.90% based on our short-term model, but we expect it to reach the 3.3-3.5% range before the cycle is over. Both real yields and long-term inflation expectations have room to move higher. Private investors will also have to absorb US$680 billion worth of bonds this year from governments in the U.S., Eurozone, Japan and U.K., the first positive net flow since 2014 (see last month's Overview). Yields may have to fatten a little in order for the private sector to make room in their portfolios for that extra government supply. In the Eurozone, the net supply of government bonds available to the private sector will still be negative this year, even if the ECB tapers to zero in September as we expect. Some investors are concerned about a replay in the European bond markets of the Fed's 'taper tantrum' of 2013, when then-Chair Bernanke surprised markets with a tapering announcement. The ECB has learned from that mistake and has given several speeches recently highlighting that policymakers will be making full use of forward guidance to avoid "...premature expectations of a first rate rise."2 We think they will be successful in avoiding a similar tantrum, but the flow effect of waning bond purchases will still place some upward pressure on the term premium in Eurozone bonds (Chart I-16).3 Chart I-16ECB: End Of QE Will Pressure Term Premium The bottom line is that monetary policy will undermine global bond prices in both the U.S. and Eurozone, but we expect U.S. yields to lead the way higher this year. Japanese bond prices will be constrained by the 10-year yield target. Investors with a horizon of 6-12 months should remain overweight JGBs, at benchmark in Eurozone government bonds and underweight Treasurys within hedged global bond portfolios. We recommend hedging the currency risk because we continue to expect the dollar to rebound this year. This month's Special Report, beginning on page 18, discusses the cyclical factors that will support the dollar: interest rate differentials, a rebound in U.S. productivity growth and a shift in international growth momentum back in favor of the U.S. In terms of the longer-term view, the Special Report makes the case that the U.S. dollar's multi-decade downtrend will persist. This does not mean, however, that long-term investors will make any money by underweighting the greenback. The 30-year U.S./bund yield spread of 190 basis points means that the €/USD would have to rise to more than 2.2 to offset the yield disadvantage of being overweight the euro versus the dollar over the next 30-years. Indeed, once it appears that the U.S. yield curve has discounted the full extent of the Fed tightening cycle (perhaps 12 months from now), it will make sense for long-term investors to go long U.S. Treasurys versus bunds on an unhedged basis. Conclusion Recent data releases suggest that global growth is peaking, especially in the manufacturing sector. Nonetheless, we do not believe that this heralds a slowdown in growth meaningful enough to negatively impact the profit outlook in the major countries. Indeed, the major fiscal tailwind in the U.S. will lift growth and extend the runway for earnings to expand at least through 2019. That said, fiscal stimulus at this stage of the U.S. business cycle will serve to accentuate a boom/bust cycle, where stronger growth in 2018/19 gives way to higher inflation a hard landing in 2020. The Fed is willing to sit back and watch the impact of fiscal stimulus unfold in the near term. But by early 2019, the Fed will find itself behind the curve with rising inflation and an overheating economy. The monetary policy risk for financial markets will then surge, setting up for a classic end to this expansion. The consequences of years of corporate releveraging will come home to roost. This year, trade skirmishes will be a headwind for risk assets and will no doubt generate further bouts of volatility. Nonetheless, recent signals from both the U.S. and China suggest that the situation will not degenerate into a trade war. The bottom line is that, while the economic expansion and equity bull market are both in late innings, investors should stay overweight risk assets and short duration for now. Stay overweight cyclical stocks versus defensives, overweight corporate bonds versus governments, overweight oil-related plays, and modestly long the U.S. dollar against most currencies except the yen. Our checklist of items to time the exit from risk is not yet flashing red. We would change our mind if our checklist goes south, our forward-looking indicators turn sharply lower or U.S. inflation suddenly picks up. We are also watching closely the situation in Iran, the U.S./China trade spat and NAFTA negotiations. Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst March 29, 2018 Next Report: April 26, 2018 1 For more information on why we believe that Sino-American conflict will be a defining feature of the 21st century, please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report "We Are All Geopolitical Strategists Now," dated March 28, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 2 ECB President Mario Draghi. Speech can be found at http://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/key/date/2018/html/ecb.sp180314_1.en.html 3 For more information, please see BCA's Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report "Bond Markets Are Suffering Withdrawal Symptoms," dated March 20, 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com II. U.S. Twin Deficits: Is The Dollar Doomed? In this Special Report, we review the theory behind exchange rate determination and examine the cyclical and structural forces that will drive the dollar. The long-term structural downtrend in the dollar is intact. This trend reflects both a slower underlying pace of U.S. productivity growth relative to the rest of the world and a persistent external deficit. The U.S. shortfall on its net international investment position, now at about 40% of GDP, is likely to continue growing in the coming decades. Fiscal stimulus means that the U.S. twin deficits are set to worsen, but the situation is not that dire that the U.S. dollar is about to fall off a cliff because of sudden concerns regarding sustainability. The U.S. is not close to the point where investors will begin to seriously question America's ability to service its debt. The U.S. will continue to enjoy a net surplus on its international investments except under a worst-case scenario for relative returns. From an economic perspective, we see little reason why the U.S. will not be able to easily continue financing its domestic saving shortfall in the coming years. There are some parallels today with the Nixon era, but we do not expect the same outcome for the dollar. The Fed is unlikely to make the same mistake as it made in the late 1960s/early 1970s. There are risks of course. Growing international political tensions and a trade war could threaten the U.S. dollar's status as the world's premier reserve currency. We will explore the geopolitical angle in next month's Special Report. While the underlying trend in the dollar is down, cyclical factors are likely to see it appreciate on a 6-12 month investment horizon. Growth momentum, which moved in favor of the major non-U.S. currencies in 2017, should shift in the greenback's favor this year. U.S. fiscal stimulus is bullish the dollar, despite the fact that this will worsen the current account balance. Additional protectionist measures should also support the dollar as long as retaliation is muted. The U.S. dollar just can't seem to get any respect even in the face of a major fiscal expansion that is sure to support U.S. growth. Nonetheless, there are a lot of moving parts to consider besides fiscal stimulus: a tightening Fed, accumulating government debt, geopolitical tension and growing trade protectionism among others. The interplay of all these various forces can easily create confusion about the currency outlook. Textbook economic models show that the currency should appreciate in the face of stimulative fiscal policy and rising tariffs, at least in the short term, not least because U.S. interest rates should rise relative to other countries. However, one could also equate protectionism and a larger fiscally-driven external deficit with a weaker dollar. Which forces will dominate? In this Special Report, we sort out the moving parts. We review the theory behind exchange rate determination and examine the cyclical and structural forces that will drive the dollar in the short- and long-term. Tariffs And The Dollar Let's start with import tariffs. In theory, higher tariffs should be positive for the currency as long as there is no retaliation. The amount spent on imports will fall as consumer spending is re-directed toward domestically-produced goods and services. A lower import bill means the country does not need to export as much to finance its imports, leading to dollar appreciation (partially offsetting the competitive advantage that the tariff provides). Tariffs also boost inflation temporarily, which means that higher U.S. real interest rates should also lift the dollar to the extent that the Fed responds with tighter policy. That said, the tariffs recently announced by the Trump Administration are small potatoes in the grand scheme. The U.S. imported $39 billion of iron and steel in 2017, and $18 billion of aluminum. That's only 2% of total imports and less than 0.3% of GDP. If import prices went up by the full amount of the tariff, this would add less than five basis points to inflation. The positive impact on U.S. growth is also modest as the tariffs benefit only two industries, and higher domestic prices for steel and aluminum undermine U.S. consumers of these two metals. A unilateral tariff increase could be mildly growth-positive if there is no retaliation by trading partners. This was the result of a Bank of Canada study, which found that much of the growth benefits from a higher import tariff are offset by an appreciation of the currency.1 Even a short-term growth boost is not guaranteed. A detailed analysis of the 2002 Bush steel tariff increase found that the import tax killed many more jobs than it created.2 Shortages forced some U.S. steel-consuming firms to source the metal offshore, while others made their steel suppliers absorb the higher costs, leading to job losses. A recent IMF3 study employed a large macro-economic model to simulate the impact of a 10% across-the-board U.S. import tariff without any retaliation. It found that tariffs place upward pressure on domestic interest rates, especially if the economy is already at full employment (Chart II-1). This is because the central bank endeavors to counter the inflationary impact with higher interest rates. However, a stronger currency and higher interest rates eventually cool the economy and the Fed is later forced to ease policy. This puts the whole process into reverse as interest rate differentials fall and the dollar weakens. Chart II-1At Full Employment, Import Tariffs Raise Rates The economic outcome would be much worse if U.S. trading partners were to retaliate and the situation degenerates into a full-fledged trade war involving a growing number of industries. In theory, the dollar would not rise as much if there is retaliation because foreign tariffs on U.S. exports are offsetting in terms of relative prices. But all countries lose in this scenario. China is considering only a small retaliation for the steel and aluminum tariffs as we go to press, but the trade dispute has the potential to really heat up, as we discuss in the Overview section. The bottom line is that the Trump tariffs are more likely to lead to a stronger dollar than a weaker one, although far more would have to be done to see any meaningful impact. Fiscal Stimulus And The Dollar Traditional economic theory suggests that fiscal stimulus is also positive for the currency in the short term. The boost in aggregate demand worsens the current account balance, since some of the extra government spending is satisfied by foreign producers. The U.S. dollar appreciates as interest rates increase relative to the other major countries, attracting capital inflows. The currency appreciation thus facilitates the necessary adjustment (deterioration) in the current account balance. The impact on interest rates is similar to the tariff shock shown in Chart II-1. All of the above market and economic adjustments should be accentuated when the economy is already at full employment. Since the domestic economy is short of spare capacity, a vast majority of the extra spending related to fiscal stimulus must be imported. Moreover, the Fed would have to respond even more aggressively to the extent that inflationary pressures are greater when the economy is running hot. The result would be even more upward pressure on the U.S. dollar. Reality has not supported the theory so far. The U.S. dollar weakened after the tax cuts were passed, and it did not even get a lift following the Senate spending plan that was released in February. The broad trade-weighted dollar has traded roughly sideways since mid-2017. Judging by the market reaction to the fiscal news, it appears that investors are worried about a potential replay of the so-called Nixon shock, when fiscal stimulus exacerbated the 'twin deficits' problem, investors lost confidence in policymakers and the dollar fell. Twin deficits refers to a period when the federal budget deficit and the current account deficit are deteriorating at the same time. Chart II-2 highlights that the late 1960s/early 1970s was the last time that the federal government stimulated the economy at a time when the economy was already at full employment. Seeing the parallels today, some investors are concerned the dollar will decline as it did in the early 1970s. Chart II-2A Replay Of The Nixon Years? Current Account And Budget Balances Often Diverge... The two deficits don't always shift in the same direction. In fact, Chart II-3 highlights that they usually move in opposite directions through the business cycle. This is not surprising because the current account usually improves in a recession as imports contract more than exports, but the budget deficit rises as tax revenues wither. The process reverses when the economy recovers. Chart II-3Twin Deficits And The Dollar The current account balance equals the government financial balance (i.e. budget deficit) plus the private sector financial balance (savings less investment spending). Thus, swings in the latter mean that the current account can move independently of the budget deficit. Even when the two deficits move in the same direction, there has been no clear historical relationship between the sum of the fiscal and current account balances and the value of the trade-weighted dollar (shaded periods in Chart II-3). In the early 1980s, the twin deficits exploded on the back of the Reagan tax cuts and the military buildup, but the dollar strengthened. In contrast, the dollar weakened in the early 2000s, a period when the twin deficits rose in response to the Bush tax cuts, the Iraq War, and a booming housing market. ...But Generally Fiscal Expansion Undermines The Current Account Over long periods, a sustained rise in the fiscal deficit is generally associated with a sustained deterioration in the external balance. Numerous academic studies have found that every 1 percentage-point rise in the budget deficit worsens the current account balance by an average of 0.2-0.3 percentage points over the medium term. One study found that the current account deteriorates by an extra 0.2 percentage points if the fiscal stimulus arrives at a time when the economy is at full employment (i.e. an additional 0.2 percentage points over-and-above the 0.2-0.3 average response, for a total of 0.4 to 0.5).4 Given that the U.S. economy is at full employment today, these estimates imply that the expected two percentage point rise in the budget deficit relative to the baseline over 2018 and 2019 could add almost a full percentage point to the U.S. current account deficit (from around 3% of GDP currently to 4%). It could be even worse over the next couple of years because the private sector is likely to augment the government sector's drain on national savings. The mini capital spending boom currently underway will lift imports and thereby contribute to a further widening in the U.S. external deficit position. Nonetheless, theory supports the view that the dollar will rise in the face of fiscal stimulus, at least in the near term, even if this is accompanied by a rising external deficit. Theory gets fuzzier in terms of the long-term outlook for the currency. However, the traditional approach to the balance of payments suggests that the equilibrium value of the dollar will eventually fall. An ongoing current account deficit will accumulate into a rising stock of foreign-owned debt that must be serviced. The Net International Investment Position (NIIP) is the difference between the stock of foreign assets held by U.S. residents and the stock of U.S. assets held by foreign investors. The NIIP has fallen increasingly into the red over the past few decades, reaching 40% of GDP today (Chart II-4). The dollar will eventually have to depreciate in order to generate a trade surplus large enough to allow the U.S. to cover the extra interest payments on its growing stock of foreign debt. Chart II-4Structural Drivers Of the U.S. Dollar The structural depreciation of the U.S. dollar observed since the early 1980s supports the theory, because it has trended lower along with the NIIP/GDP ratio. However, the downtrend probably also reflects other structural factors. For example, U.S. output-per-employee has persistently fallen relative to its major trading partners for decades (Chart II-4, third panel). The bottom line is that, while the dollar is likely to remain in a structural downtrend, it should receive at least a short-term boost from the combination of fiscal stimulus and higher tariffs. What could cause the dollar to buck the theory and depreciate even in the near term? We see three main scenarios in which the dollar could fall on a 12-month investment horizon. (1) Strong Growth Outside The U.S. First, growth momentum favored Europe, Japan and some of the other major countries relative to the U.S. in 2017. This helps to explain dollar weakness last year because the currency tends to underperform when growth surprises favor other countries in relative terms. It is possible that momentum will remain a headwind for the dollar this year. Nonetheless, this is not our base case. European and Japanese growth appears to be peaking, while fiscal stimulus should give the U.S. economy a strong boost this year and next (see the Overview section). (2) A Lagging Fed The Fed will play a major role in the dollar's near-term trend. The Fed could fail to tighten in the face of accelerating growth and falling unemployment, allowing inflation and inflation expectations to ratchet higher. If investors come to believe that the Fed will remain behind-the-curve, rising long-term inflation expectations would depress real interest rates and thereby knock the dollar down. This was part of the story in the Nixon years. Under pressure from the Administration, then-Fed Chair Arthur Burns failed to respond to rising inflation, contributing to a major dollar depreciation from 1968 to 1974. We see this risk as a very low-probability event. Today's Fed acts much more independently of Congress beyond its dual commitment on inflation and unemployment. And, given that the economy is at full employment, there is nothing stopping the FOMC from acting to preserve its 2% inflation target if it appears threatened. Chair Powell is new and untested, but we doubt he and the rest of the Committee will be influenced by any political pressure to keep rates unduly low as inflation rises. Even Governor Brainard, a well-known dove, has shifted in a hawkish direction recently. President Trump would have to replace the entire FOMC in order to keep interest rates from rising. We doubt he will try. (3) Long-Run Sustainability Concerns It might be the case that the deteriorating outlook for the NIIP undermines the perceived long-run equilibrium value of the currency so much that it overwhelms the impact of rising U.S. interest rates and causes the dollar to weaken even in the near term. This scenario would likely require a complete breakdown in confidence in current and future Administrations to avoid a runaway government debt situation. Historically, countries with large and growing NIIP shortfalls tend to have weakening currencies. The sustainability of the U.S. twin deficits has been an area of intense debate among academics and market practitioners for many years. One could argue that the external deficit represents the U.S. "living beyond its means," because it consumes more than it produces. Another school of thought is that global savings are plentiful, and investors seek markets that are deep, liquid and offer a high expected rate of return. Indeed, China has willingly plowed a large chunk of its excess savings into U.S. assets since 2000. If the U.S. is an attractive place to invest, then we should not be surprised that the country runs a persistent trade deficit and capital account surplus. But even taking the more positive side of this debate, there are limits to how long the current situation can persist. The large stock of financial obligations implies flows of income payments and receipts - interest, dividends and the like - that must be paid out of the economy's current production. This might grow to be large enough to significantly curtail U.S. consumption and investment. At some point, foreign investors may begin to question the desirability of an oversized exposure to U.S. assets within their global portfolios. We are not suggesting that foreign investors will suddenly dump their U.S. stocks and bonds. Rather, they may demand a higher expected rate of return in order to accept a rising allocation to U.S. assets. This would imply that the dollar will fall sharply so that it has room to appreciate and thereby lift the expected rate of return for foreign investors from that point forward. Chart II-5 shows that a 2% current account deficit would be roughly consistent with stabilization in the NIIP/GDP ratio. Any deficit above this level would imply a rapidly deteriorating situation. A 4% deficit would cause the NIIP to deteriorate to almost 80% of GDP by 2040. The fact that the current account averaged 4.6% in the 2000s and 2½% since 2010 confirms that the NIIP is unlikely to stabilize unless major macroeconomic adjustments are made (see below). Chart II-5Scenarios For The U.S. Net International Investment Position Academic research is inconclusive on how large the U.S. NIIP could become before there are serious economic consequences and/or foreign investors begin to revolt. Exorbitant Privilege The U.S. has been able to get away with the twin deficits for so long in part because of the dollar's status as the world's premier reserve currency. The critical role of the dollar in international transactions underpins global demand for the currency. This has allowed the U.S. to issue most of its debt obligations in U.S. dollars, forcing the currency risk onto foreign investors. The U.S. is also able to get away with offering foreign investors a lower return on their investment in the U.S. than U.S. investors receive on their foreign investment. Chart II-6 provides a proxy for these two returns. Relatively safe, but low yielding, fixed-income investments are a large component of foreign investments in the U.S., while U.S. investors favor equities and other assets that have a higher expected rate of return when investing abroad (Chart II-7). This gap increased after the Great Recession as U.S. interest rates fell by more than the return U.S. investors received on their foreign assets. Today's gap, at almost 1½ percentage points, is well above the 1 percentage point average for the two decades leading up to the Great Recession. Chart II-6U.S. Investors Harvest Higher Returns Chart II-7Composition Of Net International ##br##Investment Position A yield gap of 1.5 percentage points may not sound like much, but it has been enough that the U.S. enjoys a positive net inflow of private investment income of about 1.2% of GDP, despite the fact that foreign investors hold far more U.S. assets than the reverse (Chart II-6, top panel). In Chart II-8 we simulate the primary investment balance based on a persistent 3% of GDP current account deficit and under several scenarios for the investment yield gap. Perhaps counterintuitively, the primary investment surplus that the U.S. currently enjoys will actually rise slightly as a percent of GDP if the yield gap remains near 1½ percentage points. This is because, although the NIIP balance becomes more negative over time, U.S. liabilities are not growing fast enough relative to its assets to offset the yield differential. Chart II-8Primary Investment Balance Simulations However, some narrowing in the yield gap is likely as the Fed raises interest rates. Historically, the gap does not narrow one-for-one with Fed rate hikes because the yield on U.S. investments abroad also rises. Assuming that the yield gap returns to the pre-Lehman average of 1 percentage point over the next three years, the primary investment balance would decline, but would remain positive. Only under the assumption that the yield gap falls to 50 basis points or lower would the primary balance turn negative (Chart II-8, bottom panel). Crossing the line from positive to negative territory on investment income is not necessarily a huge red flag for the dollar, but it would signal that foreign debt will begin to impinge on the U.S. standard of living. That said, the yield gap will have to deteriorate significantly for this to happen anytime soon. What Drives The Major Swings In The Dollar? While the dollar has been in a structural bear market for many decades, there have been major fluctuations around the downtrend. Since 1980, there have been three major bull phases and two bear markets (bull phases are shaded in Chart II-9). These major swings can largely be explained by shifts in U.S./foreign differentials for short-term interest rates, real GDP growth and productivity growth. A model using these three variables explains most of the cyclical swings in the dollar, as the dotted line in the top panel of Chart II-9 reveals. Chart II-9U.S. Dollar Cyclical Swings Driven By Three Main Factors The peaks and troughs do not line up perfectly, but periods of dollar appreciation were associated with rising U.S. interest rates relative to other countries, faster relative U.S. real GDP growth, and improving U.S. relative productivity growth. Since the Great Recession, rate differentials have moved significantly in favor of the dollar, although U.S. relative growth improved a little as well. Productivity trends have not been a factor in recent years. Note that the current account has been less useful in identifying the cyclical swings in the dollar. Looking ahead, we expect short-term interest rate differentials to shift further in favor of the U.S. dollar. We assume that the Fed will hike rates three additional times in 2018 and another three next year. The Bank of Japan will stick with its current rate and 10-year target for the foreseeable future. The ECB may begin the next rate hike campaign by mid-2019, but will proceed slowly thereafter. We expect rate differentials to widen by more than is discounted in the market. As discussed above, we also expect growth momentum to swing back in favor of the U.S. economy in 2018. U.S. productivity growth will continue to underperform the rest-of-world average over the medium and long term. Nonetheless, we expect a cyclical upturn in relative productivity performance that should also support the greenback for the next year or two. Conclusion Reducing the U.S. structural external deficit to a sustainable level would require significant macro-economic adjustments that seem unlikely for the foreseeable future. We would need to see some combination of a higher level of the U.S. household saving rate, a balanced Federal budget balance or better, and/or much stronger growth among U.S. trading partners. In other words, the U.S. would have to become a net producer of goods and services, and either Europe or Asia would have to become a net consumer of goods and services. Current trends do not favor such a role reversal. Indeed, the U.S. twin deficits are sure to move in the wrong direction for at least the next two years. Longer-term, pressure on the federal budget deficit will only intensify with the aging of the population. The shortfall in terms of net foreign assets will continue to grow, which means that the long-term structural downtrend in the trade-weighted value of the dollar will persist. Other structural factors, such as international productivity trends, also point to a long-term dollar depreciation. It seems incongruous that the U.S. dollar is the largest reserve currency and that U.S. is the world's largest international debtor. The situation is perhaps perpetuated by the lack of an alternative, but this could change over time as concerns over the long-run viability of the Eurozone ebb and the Chinese renminbi gains in terms of international trade. The transition could take decades. The U.S. twin-deficits situation is not that dire that the U.S. dollar is about to fall off a cliff because of sudden concerns about the unsustainability of the current account deficit. Even though the NIIP/GDP ratio will continue to deteriorate in the coming years, it does not appear that the U.S. is anywhere close to the point where investors would begin to seriously question America's ability to service its debt. The U.S. will continue to enjoy a net surplus on its international investments except under a worst-case scenario for relative returns. From an economic perspective, we see no reason why the U.S. will not be able to easily continue financing its domestic saving shortfall in the coming years. There are other risks of course. Growing international political tensions and a trade war could threaten the U.S. dollar's status as the world's premier reserve currency. We will explore the geopolitical angle in next month's Special Report. In 2018, we expect the dollar to partially unwind last year's weakness on the back of positive cyclical forces. Additional protectionist measures should support the dollar as long as retaliation is muted. Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst Mathieu Savary Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy 1 A Wave of Protectionism? An Analysis of Economic and Political Considerations. Bank of Canada Working Paper 2008-2. Philipp Maier. 2 The Unintended Consequences of U.S. Steel Import Tariffs: A Quantification of the Impact During 2002. Trade Partnership Worldwide, LLC. Joseph Francois and Laura Baughman. February 4, 2003. 3 See footnote to Chart II-1. 4 Fiscal Policy and the Current Account. Center for Economic Policy Research, Discussion Paper No. 7859 September 16, 2010. III. Indicators And Reference Charts The earnings backdrop remains constructive for the equity market. In the U.S., bottom-up forward earnings estimates and the net earnings revisions ratio have spiked on the back of the tax cuts. Unfortunately, many of the other equity-related indicators in this section have moved in the wrong direction. The monetary indicator is shifting progressively into negative territory as the Fed gradually tightens the monetary screws. Valuation in the U.S. market improved a little over the past month, but our composite Valuation Indicator is still very close to one sigma overvalued. Technically, our Speculation Indicator is still in frothy territory, but our Composite Sentiment Indicator has pulled back significantly toward the neutral line. Our Technical Indicator broke below the 9-month moving average in March (i.e. a 'sell' signal). These are worrying signs. Nonetheless, at this point we believe they are a reflection of the more volatile late-cycle period that the market has entered. An equity correction could occur at any time, but a bear market would require a significant and sustained economic downturn that depresses earnings estimates. Our checklist does not warn of such a scenario over the next 12 months. It is also a good sign that our Willingness-to-Pay indicator is still rising, at least for the U.S. The WTP indicators track flows, and thus provide information on what investors are actually doing, as opposed to sentiment indexes that track how investors are feeling. While this suggests that investor flows remain positive for the U.S. equity market, the WTP appears to have rolled over in both Europe and Japan. This goes against our overweight in European stocks versus the U.S. in currency hedged terms (see the Overview section). Our Revealed Preference Indicator (RPI) remained on its bullish equity signal in March. The RPI combines the idea of market momentum with valuation and policy measures. It provides a powerful bullish signal if positive market momentum lines up with constructive signals from the policy and valuation measures. Conversely, if constructive market momentum is not supported by valuation and policy, investors should lean against the market trend. So far, the indicator has not flashed 'red'. Treasurys are hovering on the 'inexpensive' side of fair value, but are not cheap based on our model. Extended technicals suggest that the period of consolidation will persist for a while longer. Value is not a headwind to a continuation in the cyclical bear phase. Little has changed on the U.S. dollar front. It is expensive by some measures, but is on the oversold side technically. We still expect a final upleg this year, before the long-term downtrend resumes. EQUITIES: Chart III-1U.S. Equity Indicators Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk Chart III-3U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators Chart III-4Revealed Preference Indicator Chart III-5U.S. Stock Market Valuation Chart III-6U.S. Earnings Chart III-7Global Stock Market And Earnings: ##br##Relative Performance Chart III-8Global Stock Market And Earnings: ##br##Relative Performance FIXED INCOME: Chart III-9U.S. Treasurys And Valuations Chart III-10U.S. Treasury Indicators Chart III-11Selected U.S. Bond Yields Chart III-1210-Year Treasury Yield ComponentsChart III-13U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor Chart III-14Global Bonds: Developed Markets Chart III-15Global Bonds: Emerging Markets CURRENCIES: Chart III-16U.S. Dollar And PPP Chart III-17U.S. Dollar And Indicator Chart III-18U.S. Dollar Fundamentals Chart III-19Japanese Yen Technicals Chart III-20Euro Technicals Chart III-21Euro/Yen Technicals Chart III-22Euro/Pound Technicals COMMODITIES: Chart III-23Broad Commodity Indicators Chart III-24Commodity Prices Chart III-25Commodity Prices Chart III-26Commodity Sentiment Chart III-27Speculative Positioning ECONOMY: Chart III-28U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop Chart III-29U.S. Macro Snapshot Chart III-30U.S. Growth Outlook Chart III-31U.S. Cyclical Spending Chart III-32U.S. Labor Market Chart III-33U.S. Consumption Chart III-34U.S. Housing Chart III-35U.S. Debt And Deleveraging Chart III-36U.S. Financial Conditions Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Chart III-38Global Economic Snapshot: China Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst
Highlights Fixed Income Asset Allocation: Global growth indicators remain solid, while inflation pressures continue to build. Central banks will remain focused on those factors, and not news-driven market volatility spikes, until the trends change. The cyclical environment still favors a below-benchmark duration stance for bond investors, favoring credit over government debt, but with lower risk-adjusted return expectations. U.K. Gilts: Bank of England hawkishness is increasing, but policymakers will be hard pressed to tighten more than is currently priced. Stay overweight Gilts in hedged global government bond portfolios. Position for a steeper Gilt curve by going long the 5yr in a 2yr/5yr/10yr butterfly trade. Feature Chart of the WeekStill A Bond-Bearish Backdrop Higher financial market volatility remains the most important investment theme for 2018, as investors continue to be fed a steady diet of worrisome headlines. Threats of a U.S. - China trade war, widening LIBOR-OIS spreads in the U.S., the ascent of trade and foreign policy hawks in the White House, troubles at Facebook hitting the market-leading technology stocks - all are just the latest reasons for investors to become more cautious on taking risk. Yet the ability of markets to shrug off, or succumb to, growing uncertainty will be related to two things - the momentum of global economic growth and the future direction of global monetary policy. On the former, the latest data releases have shown some moderation in the strong coordinated global growth upturn witnessed over the past year. Our aggregate measures such as the global PMI and global ZEW indices have dipped lower in the first few months of 2018. These indicators remain at levels suggesting growth is still in decent shape, even with some worsening in expectations (Chart of the Week). On the latter, the BCA Central Bank Monitors are still showing a growing need to tighten monetary policy further in the major developed economies. This continues to put upward pressure on government bond yields through rising inflation expectations and a higher expected path of short-term interest rates. Until there is evidence of a more meaningful downturn in global growth, bond yields will keep on drifting higher. We continue to recommend a below-benchmark overall portfolio duration stance for fixed income investors, favoring spread product over government bonds, while running below-average portfolio risk (i.e. tracking error) given more elevated levels of market volatility. The "TINA Trade" Is Now The "TISNA Trade" - There Is STILL No Alternative Central bankers remain on a path to normalize the extraordinary monetary accommodation of the past several years, led by their steadfast belief in the Phillips Curve at a time of low unemployment in most countries. Against this backdrop, government bond yields cannot fall enough to limit the damage from rapid equity market selloffs without much softer growth or inflation data that would alter the expected trajectory of policy rates. This implies a higher structural level of market volatility now relative to previous years, as we discussed in a recent Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report.1 Yet despite the signs of greater nervousness among investors, there is still a strong level of positive sentiment towards equities and bearish sentiment towards bonds according to the Market Vane indices (Chart 2). The latest edition of the widely-followed Bank of America Merrill Lynch Investor Survey also revealed a disconnect between the opinions of investors (worries over protectionism, trade wars, higher inflation and softer global growth) and actual positions (large equity overweight's favoring cyclical growth stocks).2 Investors seem to be "nervously complacent", staying long risk assets (equities, credit) and underweight safe havens (government bonds) but with a growing list of concerns. For now, this appears to be the most appropriate allocation, for the following reasons: Global growth is still generally strong. Our global manufacturing PMI remains close to the cyclical highs, although there was some pullback seen in the "flash estimates" for March in the euro area, Japan and the U.K. (Chart 3). The breadth of the current cyclical global upturn remains strong, with all eighteen countries in the composite index having a PMI in the "growth zone" above 50 (top panel). Chart 2Pro-Risk Sentiment,##BR##Despite More Volatile Markets Chart 3Global Growth##BR##Still Looks Good The OECD global leading economic indicator continues to accelerate, while the Citigroup global inflation surprise index is also picking up (Chart 4). These are pointing to continued upward pressure on global bond yields through higher real yields and faster inflation expectations, respectively. The global cyclical backdrop is boosting inflation. 75% of OECD countries are operating beyond full employment while capacity utilization rates in the developed economies are approaching 80% - the highest level since mid-2008 (Chart 5, top panel). Global oil prices should continue to grind higher, with BCA's commodity strategists now expecting the benchmark Brent oil price hitting $80/bbl in one year's time (middle panel). Also, global export price inflation is showing no signs of slowing, suggesting that global headline inflation should continue moving higher (bottom panel). Chart 4Upward Pressure On##BR##Real Yields AND Inflation Chart 5A More Inflationary##BR##Global Backdrop Central bankers are still biased towards becoming less accommodative. This was seen last week with the U.S. Federal Reserve hiking the fed funds rate and raising its growth and interest rate projections (Chart 6), while the Bank of England (BoE) gave a strong indication that an interest rate increase was coming in May. This comes as the European Central Bank continues to signal a tapering of its asset purchase program later this year. The latter point is critical for markets, as tighter global monetary policy has diminished the ability for investors to ignore sources of potential uncertainty. Take the current concern over trade tensions between the U.S. and China, for example. A Google Trends search of the phrase "China Trade War" shows, unsurprisingly, a huge recent spike in interest in that topic (Chart 7, top panel). There was also a big increase in such online searches around the time of Donald Trump's election victory in November 2016 and his inauguration in January 2017. At that time, however, global monetary policy was still accommodative, with the real fed funds rate well below the neutral "r-star" estimate (middle panel) and central bank balance sheets in the major developed economies expanding at a 20% annual rate (bottom panel). Chart 6The Fed Will Keep On Hiking Chart 7Expect More Vol Spikes While CBs Tighten The easy monetary settings helped keep market volatility low despite the shock of Trump's election win and what it meant for the implementation of his more aggressive campaign promises, like raising tariffs on U.S. imports from China. Fast forward to today and the real fed funds rate is now at neutral and central banks are buying bonds at a much slower pace. This means that markets will have a tougher time ignoring greater uncertainty, as was witnessed in last week's equity market selloff following President Trump's announcement of $60 billion in Chinese import tariffs. Going forward, without the soothing balm of very low interest rates and plentiful central bank liquidity expansion, volatility spikes like the ones seen in early February and last week will become more frequent. The implication is that volatility-adjusted returns on risk assets will be lower, even if the global growth backdrop remains reasonably supportive. A pro-risk investment bias, but playing with fewer chips on the table, is still appropriate over at least the next six months. Bottom Line: Global growth indicators remain at elevated levels, while inflation pressures continue to build. Central banks will remain focused on those factors, and not news-driven market volatility spikes, until the trends change. The cyclical environment still favors a below-benchmark duration stance for bond investors, favoring credit over government debt, but with lower risk-adjusted return expectations. U.K. Update: Sticking With Our Overweight Call On Gilts Chart 8Mixed Messages On U.K. Growth The BoE kept interest rates unchanged at last week's policy meeting, but sent clear signals that a rate hike would be very likely in May. Two members of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), Michael Saunders and Ian McCafferty, actually voted a rate hike last week, which was a surprise. The BoE's increasing hawkishness continues a process that began in autumn of 2017, when policymakers began shifting their language in advance of a November rate hike - the first BoE rate increase since May 2007. The central bank had been worried more about the risks to the U.K. growth outlook since the July 2016 Brexit vote, while ignoring the currency-driven overshoot of its inflation target. Now, the BoE seems a bit more comfortable with the U.K. growth outlook, even amid the ongoing Brexit uncertainty, as was noted in the official policy statement from last week's MPC meeting: Developments regarding the United Kingdom's withdrawal from the European Union - and in particular the reaction of households, businesses and asset prices to them - remain the most significant influence on, and source of uncertainty about, the economic outlook. In such exceptional circumstances, the MPC's remit specifies that the Committee must balance any significant trade-off between the speed at which it intends to return inflation sustainably to the target and the support that monetary policy provides to jobs and activity. The steady absorption of slack has reduced the degree to which it is appropriate for the MPC to accommodate an extended period of inflation above the target. We find it a bit of a surprise that the BoE would seek to switch to inflation-fighting mode now, for two reasons: U.K. growth momentum may be slowing. The flash estimate for the March manufacturing PMI fell to an 8-month low, while the leading economic indicators (LEIs) from both the OECD and Conference Board have clearly rolled over (Chart 8). The BoE did highlight the recent pickup in wage inflation, with year-over-year growth in average weekly earnings now up to 2.8% in nominal terms. This has pushed real wage growth back into positive territory (3rd panel), which appears to be feeding through into a slight pickup in consumer confidence (bottom panel). Although the modest increase in February retail sales suggests that a consumer spending revival may be slower to arrive than the BoE is hoping for. U.K. inflation momentum is slowing. The surge in U.K. inflation following the decline in the British Pound after the 2016 Brexit vote is in the process of unwinding. The trade-weighted currency is up 9% from the 2016 low, which has sliced imported goods price inflation from 10% to 2% over the same period (Chart 9). Headline CPI inflation, which rose from near 0% to 3.1% in November 2017, now sits at 2.7%. The upturn in core CPI inflation has also stabilized. While both CPI inflation measures remain above the 2% BoE target, the momentum has clearly peaked and pipeline price pressures continue to decelerate. Investors have listened to the signals sent by the BoE, pricing in 45bps of hikes over the next year and pushing the 2-year Gilt yield to 0.9% - the highest level since May 2011 (Chart 10). At the same time, market-based inflation expectations have dipped a bit and the U.K. data surprise index has fallen back to the zero line (bottom panel). Chart 9U.K. Inflation Has Peaked Chart 10A Rapid BoE Repricing At The Wrong Time? Conflicting signals can also be seen in the slope of the Gilt curve. The nominal 2-year/10-year Gilt curve now sits at 55bps, just above the 2016 post-Brexit lows. The real Gilt curve (the nominal curve minus the 2-year/10-year U.K. CPI swap curve) is sitting at the flattest levels last seen since 2015/16 (Chart 11, top panel) when the BoE base rate was above zero in real terms (2nd and 3rd panels). Now, the real base is deeply negative around -2%, suggesting that the Gilt curve may already be discounting higher real BoE policy rates. At the same time, the U.K. inflation expectations curve is steepening, with 2-year CPI swaps falling faster than 10-year CPI swaps, as was the case during that 2015/16 episode (bottom panel). U.K. money markets are now pricing in an increase in the base rate to 1% over the next year. Given the slowing trends in the U.K. LEIs, the manufacturing PMI and realized inflation rates, we remain doubtful that the BoE will be able to deliver more hikes than are currently discounted. We continue to view U.K. Gilts as a "defensive" overweight within dedicated global government bond portfolios, especially given our recommendation to also stay defensive on overall duration exposure. The primary trend in the performance of U.K. Gilts relative to the Barclays Global Treasury Index, on a currency-hedged basis, is broadly correlated (inversely) to the ratio of the U.K. OECD LEI to the overall OECD LEI (Chart 12, top panel). Thus, we feel comfortable sticking with our call to expect U.K. Gilt outperformance in the next 6-12 months as long as the U.K. LEI continues to underperform - especially with the yield betas of Gilts to U.S. Treasuries and euro area government bonds now well below 1 (middle panel). Chart 11The Gilt Curve##BR##Looks Too Flat Chart 12Stay O/W Gilts & Add Go Long##BR##The Belly On A 2/5/10 Butterfly Given the recent flattening of the Gilt curve, which appears a bit extreme, we are adding a new trade to our Tactical Overlay this week: going long the belly (5-year) of a 2-year/5-year/10-year (2/5/10) Gilt butterfly. The current level of that 2/5/10 butterfly is 9bps, and we are targeting a move down to the -10bp to -15bp range. This trade is mildly negative carry, with -0.75bps of flattening per month already discounted in the forwards over the next year (bottom panel), but we anticipate the 2/5/10 butterfly to compress at a faster rate than the forwards in the coming months. Bottom Line: BoE hawkishness is increasing, but policymakers will be hard pressed to tighten more than is currently priced. Stay overweight Gilts in hedged global government bond portfolios. Position for a steeper Gilt curve by going long the 5yr point in a 2yr/5yr/10yr butterfly trade. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Policymakers Are Now Selling Put Options On Volatility, Not Asset Prices", dated March 6th 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2 https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-03-20/cracks-in-bull-case-emerge-yet-stubborn-investors-not-moving Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Economy: There is no imminent danger of a significant deterioration in global growth, but the rate of improvement is peaking. The result of the more moderate pace of economic growth and the mounting threat of protectionism is that there is more two way risk in both bond yields and spreads than there has been for some time. Fed: The message from last week's Fed meeting is that the committee recognizes that the outlook for U.S. growth and inflation has improved. Going forward, we anticipate a more hawkish Fed that is somewhat less responsive to tightening financial conditions. This will keep a floor under Treasury yields and impart volatility to credit spreads. Leveraged Loans: Leveraged loans have not yet started to outperform fixed rate junk bonds, but this will change as we approach the end of the credit cycle and loan coupons follow interest rates higher. Feature Yet another down week for risk assets, and all of a sudden 2018 is shaping up to be a pretty miserable year for spread product (Chart 1). High-Yield corporate bonds have underperformed duration-equivalent Treasuries by 29 basis points year-to-date, and investment grade corporates have underperformed by 90 bps. Meanwhile, the sell-off in Treasuries has also paused and the 10-year yield is now 12 bps below its 2018 peak. Chart 1Annual Excess Returns To Credit What exactly is going on? We identify two catalysts for the recent market moves and consider each in turn. Questioning The Synchronized Global Recovery Market moves during the past few weeks have, to some extent, been driven by investors starting to question the sustainability of the so-called "synchronized global recovery". The strong pace of global growth has been a key driver of higher bond yields and risk asset outperformance, and most indicators suggest this trend remains intact. The Global Manufacturing PMI is high compared to recent years, and our PMI diffusion index shows that only 1 out of 36 countries has a PMI below the 50 boom/bust line (Chart 2). Our Global Leading Economic Indicator is similarly elevated, and has a diffusion index that has mostly been in positive territory since mid-2016 (Chart 2, panel 2). But last week we received some evidence that this rapid pace of growth may not persist. Flash PMIs predict that the Eurozone Manufacturing PMI will fall to 56.6 in March, down from a recent peak of 60.6 (Chart 2, panel 3). Similarly, the Japanese PMI is predicted to fall to 53.2 in March, down from a recent peak of 54.8 (Chart 2, bottom panel). There is no Flash PMI data for China, the country with the largest weighting in the Global PMI index, but leading indicators suggest that Chinese PMI will also moderate in the months ahead. This is a risk we have flagged in several recent reports.1 Granted, these are all strong PMI readings that are still well above the 50 boom/bust line, but the pace of improvement has clearly moderated and this sort of marginal change often causes investors to extrapolate weaker growth into the future. This appears to be exactly what is happening. The Global ZEW index, a survey of investors' economic sentiment, fell in March (Chart 3). The BCA Carry Canary Indicator, a composite measure of emerging market currency trades geared to global growth, has also weakened (Chart 3, panel 2). Meanwhile, cyclical equity sectors (excluding technology) have not managed to outperform defensives even as Treasury yields have risen, a break from the prior correlation (Chart 3, panel 3). Of the four market-based indicators that most closely track the 10-year Treasury yield, only our Boom/Bust Indicator is not currently pointing to lower yields in the near-term (Chart 3, bottom panel). As usual, we turn to our 2-Factor Treasury Model to assess the impact of moderating global growth on the 10-year Treasury yield. At present, the model - which is based on the Global Manufacturing PMI and bullish sentiment toward the U.S. dollar - pegs fair value for the 10-year Treasury yield at 2.96% (Chart 4). However, if we assume that Flash PMI readings for the U.S., Eurozone and Japan are accurate, and also that PMIs in the rest of the world and dollar sentiment stay flat at current levels, then the fair value reading from our model will drop to 2.85% when the final March PMI data are released next week. This is not far from the current yield level, and could even be an optimistic forecast if the Chinese PMI starts to roll over, as we expect. Chart 2Global Recovery Still Intact Chart 3Global Growth Warning Signs Chart 42-Factor Treasury Model Of course the global economy also has to contend with the possibility of an escalating trade war between the U.S. and China. Markets reacted last week as the U.S. government ramped up the pressure by announcing a 25% tariff on $50-$60 billion worth of trade with China. While the immediate economic impact of these measures is highly uncertain, our Geopolitical strategists view an escalating trade war as a real possibility during the next 1-2 years.2 Bottom Line: There is no imminent danger of a significant deterioration in global growth, but the rate of improvement is peaking. The result of the more moderate pace of economic growth and the mounting threat of protectionism is that there is more two way risk in both bond yields and spreads than there has been for some time. Stay tuned. A Less Supportive Fed Chart 5Fed Versus Market The second catalyst driving bond markets at the current juncture is that the Fed is providing markets with a less accommodative monetary back-drop. Faced with a firmer outlook for U.S. growth and inflation, the Fed is now somewhat less responsive to tighter financial conditions than it has been during the past few years. This hawkishness will put a floor under Treasury yields going forward, and is also the most immediate risk to credit spreads, as we have explained in several recent reports.3 Chart 6The Fed's Phillips Curve Model Case in point, the Fed went ahead with a rate hike at last week's FOMC meeting despite the recent turbulence in financial markets. Not only that, but FOMC participants generally revised up their projections for both economic growth and the fed funds rate. The same number of participants (6) now expect four rate hikes this year as expect three. Last December only four participants expected four or more rate hikes in 2018. Further, the committee's median projection for the fed funds rate at the end of 2019 rose from 2.7% to 2.9%, the median for the end of 2020 rose from 3.1% to 3.4%, and even the median federal funds rate expected to prevail in the longer run rose from 2.8% to 2.9%. The market has moved a long way towards the Fed's dots in recent months, but is still somewhat more pessimistic. The overnight index swap curve is priced for slightly more than three rate hikes in 2018 (including last week's), but is below the Fed's median projection for 2019, 2020 and the longer run (Chart 5). As mentioned above, the Fed also revised up its projections for economic growth and the pace of labor market tightening. The Fed is now looking for an unemployment rate of 3.6% by the end of next year, well below its estimated 4.5% natural rate. At the same time, however, the Fed left its projections for core inflation largely unchanged leaving some to question whether the Fed is re-assessing its commitment to the Phillips curve. In fact, the following question was asked to Chairman Powell at last week's post-meeting press conference:4 Question: Interesting changes in the forecast. A higher growth forecast [...]. Lower unemployment, [...]. And yet, very little change in inflation. What does that say about what you and the Committee believe about the inflation dynamic? Answer: [...] that suggests that the relationship between changes in slack and inflation is not so tight. [...] It has diminished, but it's still there. In other words, the Chairman refused to dismiss the Phillips curve framework altogether but acknowledged that the slope is very flat. The implication is that the labor market will have to run hot for the next couple of years for the Fed to achieve its inflation target. By our assessment, the Fed's projections for the unemployment rate and inflation seem fairly reasonable. Chart 6 shows an expectations-augmented Phillips curve model of core inflation that we re-created from a 2015 Janet Yellen speech.5 Using the Fed's median projections for the unemployment rate, and also holding relative import prices and inflation expectations flat, the model projects that core inflation will rise during the next two years, but will remain slightly below the Fed's target. In other words, the Fed's inflation forecasts seem to agree with the empirical data. In Search Of A More Robust Phillips Curve One of the reasons that the Phillips curve is so flat is that while core PCE inflation includes some prices that respond briskly to labor market slack, it also includes many prices that are less driven by labor slack and more by idiosyncratic factors. The price of imported goods being a prime example. Recent research from the San Francisco Fed splits out those prices that are more sensitive to labor slack - procyclical inflation - from those that are less sensitive to labor slack - acyclical inflation.6 Interestingly, it is the acyclical components that have caused core inflation to run below the Fed's target in recent years, while procyclical inflation has been well above 2% (Chart 7). This framework is helpful because it allows us to estimate a more robust Phillips curve on just the components of inflation that are most sensitive to tightness in the labor market. For example, when we estimate a Phillips curve relationship on just procyclical inflation (excluding housing), the model shows that this component of inflation will rise by 0.18% for every percentage point decline in the unemployment rate. When we estimate the Phillips curve model on overall core PCE we find that a 1 percentage point decline in the unemployment rate only raises core PCE inflation by 0.09%. The top panel of Chart 8 shows that if the unemployment rate follows the path predicted by the Fed, then procyclical inflation (ex. housing) will rise during the next two years, and should stay above the Fed's 2% target. Our own model of housing inflation also shows that its deceleration should reverse in the coming months (Chart 8, panel 2). Chart 7Acyclical Components A Drag On Inflation Chart 8TCore Inflation Will Move Higher As for the acyclical components of inflation, in a prior report we discussed why health care inflation should rise during the next two years, and this has so far been confirmed by strong producer price data (Chart 8, panel 3).7 For the remaining acyclical components, of which 41% are goods and 59% are services, we would expect that at least the goods component will rise in response to the recent acceleration in non-oil import prices (Chart 8, bottom panel). In conclusion, there is reason to expect some upside in each component of core inflation. We anticipate that core inflation will move higher in the coming months and that the Fed will respond with continued gradual rate hikes. Bottom Line: The message from last week's Fed meeting is that the committee recognizes that the outlook for U.S. growth and inflation has improved. Going forward, we anticipate a more hawkish Fed that is somewhat less responsive to tightening financial conditions. This will keep a floor under Treasury yields and impart volatility to credit spreads. Leveraged Loan Update Chart 9Loan Coupons Will Rise We continue to recommend that investors favor floating rate leveraged loans over fixed rate high-yield bonds in their credit portfolios. The two main reasons for this recommendation are that (i) loans will benefit from higher coupons as the Fed lifts rates and LIBOR resets higher and (ii) loans will benefit from higher recoveries than bonds when the next default cycle occurs. However, somewhat puzzlingly, as 3-month LIBOR has increased during the past few years the coupon return on the S&P Leveraged Loan index has not kept pace. In fact, leveraged loans only started to outperform fixed rate junk a couple of months ago (Chart 9). There are two reasons for this. First, many leveraged loans have LIBOR floors at around 1%, so initial increases in LIBOR in 2016 had no impact on leveraged loan coupons. But 3-month LIBOR is now well above 1%, and yet leveraged loan coupons are still not rising. This is because issuers have been aggressively refinancing loans at lower spreads as LIBOR has increased. This spread compression has kept coupon payments low, but history tells us that this dynamic cannot persist. Eventually, as credit spreads stop tightening near the end of the credit cycle, issuers will not be able to reduce their interest costs through refinancing and will be forced to accept higher coupon payments as interest rates rise. Notice that even though the average price on the S&P Leveraged Loan index was higher between 2004 and 2006 than it is today, that did not prevent loan coupons from rising alongside LIBOR, after some initial lag (Chart 9, bottom panel). Bottom Line: Leveraged loans have not yet started to outperform fixed rate junk bonds, but this will change as we approach the end of the credit cycle and loan coupons follow interest rates higher. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Two-Stage Bear Market In Bonds", dated February 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 https://gps.bcaresearch.com/blog/view_blog/460 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Brainard Gives The Green Light", dated March 13, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 A full transcript of the post-meeting press conference: https://www.federalreserve.gov/mediacenter/files/FOMCpresconf20180321.pdf 5 https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/yellen20150924a.htm 6 https://www.frbsf.org/economic-research/files/el2017-35.pdf 7 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Monetary Restraints", dated February 27, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Fed preview: The Fed will hike rates again this week, and may signal a faster pace of future hikes given signs that U.S. inflation is starting to accelerate. Maintain a below-benchmark duration stance and stay underweight U.S. Treasuries in global hedged bond portfolios. Oversold U.S. Treasuries: While most indicators of positioning and momentum for U.S. Treasuries show a deeply oversold market, an analysis of past such episodes shows that it can take 4-6 months before bond yields correct an oversold condition in the absence of slowing growth or inflation - with yields potentially hitting new highs in the interim. ECB Tapering: The ECB strongly believes that the "stock effect" of its asset purchases matters more for European bond yields than the "flow effect". This suggests that the odds of a European "Taper Tantrum" later this year are low, although bond yields there are still headed higher. Feature Chart of the WeekThis Time Is Different? Global bond markets have calmed down after the big surge that started the year. The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield has traded in a relatively narrow 2.80-2.95% range since the VIX spike in early February, despite a string of weaker-than-expected U.S. economic data prints that has triggered sharp downgrades to Q1/2018 U.S. GDP growth forecasts. At the same time, 10-year benchmark yields for other major government bond markets (Germany, France, U.K., Canada) have been drifting lower, but remain above levels that began the year. In the case of U.S. Treasuries, the overall level of yields is being held up by the steady climb at the short-end of the yield curve. Recent hawkish comments from new Fed Chairman Jay Powell and long-time Fed dove Lael Brainard have raised expectations for a rate hike at this week's FOMC meeting, which is now priced as a certainty. The 2-year Treasury yield has climbed to a 10-year high of 2.3%, which is helping keep a floor underneath longer-term Treasury yields despite positioning indicators showing that traders and bond managers already have significantly reduced duration exposure (Chart of the Week). The other factor that is likely holding up global bond yields is the incremental move by the European Central Bank (ECB) towards a tapering of its asset purchases. The market has already repriced both future interest rate expectations and the term premia embedded in European government bond yields, although recent comments from ECB officials suggest that they believe that there will not be a "Taper Tantrum 2.0" in Europe similar to the Treasury market sell-off in 2013. This week, we tackle those two critical issues for bond markets head-on: the implications of large short positions in the U.S. Treasury market versus the ECB taper impact on global bond yields. Our conclusion is that the impact of both is likely overestimated by investors. How To Think About A Technically Oversold Treasury Market The Fed will deliver another rate hike this week. That outcome has already been fully discounted by the market, which should not be considered surprising given the current U.S. economic backdrop: Inflation: Underlying inflation has clearly bottomed out and has begun to accelerate, with the 3-month annualized growth rate of core CPI inflation now up over 3% (Chart 2). That trend should continue in the next several months: our model for CPI Shelter inflation is calling for a pickup (2nd panel), core goods inflation is showing signs of responding to the weakening U.S. dollar (3rd panel), and the big plunge in U.S. wireless phone prices that severely dampened inflation in 2017 is about to wash out of the year-over-year CPI data and boost core services inflation (bottom panel). Growth: Despite some recent signs of softening momentum in the Q1 data, the underlying trend in U.S. growth remains upbeat. Labor demand is accelerating and our payrolls growth model suggests further gains are coming (Chart 3). Corporate profit growth remains solid and the impact of the Trump tax cuts will only boost earnings momentum and business confidence. Leading economic indicators are also accelerating and suggest that any loss of growth momentum in Q1 - which seems to be an annual occurrence despite the seasonal adjustment of data - will be short-lived (bottom panel). Chart 2U.S. Inflation Is Starting To Perk Up Chart 3No Reason For Any Dovish Fed Surprises Financial Conditions: U.S. equity prices have recovered much of the losses suffered during the February VIX-driven correction, while corporate credit spreads remain narrow from a historical perspective (Chart 4). Add in the weaker U.S. dollar - the impact of which is already boosting import prices and potentially following through into the shorter-term inflation expectations of households (bottom panel) - and overall financial conditions remain highly accommodative. Against this positive backdrop, the Fed can feel confident that its growth and inflation forecasts for 2018 will be achieved, and that inflation expectations can continue to climb back to levels consistent with the Fed's inflation target. There is even a chance that the Fed could accelerate its planned pace of rate hikes (Chart 5), particularly if there is an upgrade to the FOMC growth and inflation projections, which will be updated for this week's meeting. Chart 4U.S. Financial Conditions##BR##Remain Accommodative Chart 5All Eyes On##BR##The Dots This Week Yet for all the positive economic, bond-bearish news, one fact stands out - the U.S. Treasury market is deeply oversold from a technical perspective. This should, in theory, limit the ability for bond yields to continue rising and could set up a short-covering bond rally if there is a more meaningful and prolonged slowing of economic growth or inflation. The technical indicators that we regularly monitor for the U.S. Treasury market are all at or near the extremes of the ranges observed since 2000 (Chart 6). Chart 6U.S. Treasuries Are Very Oversold The 10-year Treasury yield is 43bps above its 200-day moving average The 26-week total return of the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Treasury index is -4.3% The J.P. Morgan client survey of bond managers and traders showed the largest underweight duration positioning since the mid-2000s, although there has been some recent reduction of those positions The Market Vane index of sentiment for Treasuries is now at 49, near the bottom of the range since 2000 The CFTC data on positioning in 10-year Treasury futures shows a large net short of -8%, scaled by open interest Given this degree of investor negativity toward U.S. Treasuries, some pullback in yields seems inevitable. However, a look back at past episodes where Treasuries were this oversold shows that the timing of such a pullback is highly variable - anywhere from one month to seven months. The determining factor is the growth and inflation backdrop in the U.S. To show this, we did a simple study using two series from our list of Treasury technical indicators. Specifically, we looked at "oversold episodes" since 2000 where the Market Vane Treasury sentiment index dipped below 50 and where the 10-year Treasury yield was trading at least 30bps above its 200-day moving average. We then defined the end of the oversold episode as simply the point when the 10-year Treasury yield fell back below its 200-day moving average. We then looked at the duration (in days), and change in bond yields, for each oversold episode. There were eleven such episodes since the year 2000, not counting the current one which has not yet ended. In Table 1, we list them ranked by the number of days it took to complete each episode as we defined it. The longest correction of an oversold Treasury market since 2000 took place between July 2003 and February 2004, where 203 days passed before the 10-year yield dipped back below its 200-day moving average. The shortest correction was in May 2000, where only 28 days were needed. Table 1A Look At Prior Episodes Of An Oversold U.S. Treasury Market To determine what the U.S. economic backdrop was during each episode, we then simply asked if economic growth was rising or falling, or if inflation was stable/rising or falling, using the ISM Manufacturing index and core PCE inflation as the relevant data series. The answers to those questions are found in the final two columns of Table 1. All the positioning and economic indicators used in our historical study, shaded for the oversold episodes, are shown in Charts 7, 8 and 9. Chart 7U.S. Treasury Market##BR##Oversold Episodes 2000-2005 Chart 8U.S. Treasury Market##BR##Oversold Episodes 2006-2011 Chart 9U.S. Treasury Market##BR##Oversold Episodes 2011 To Today The simplest conclusion that we reached from our study is that the shortest corrections of an oversold Treasury market occurred, unsurprisingly, during the two episodes where both growth and inflation were slowing, with an average length of each episode of 42 days. The four episodes where growth and inflation were both rising had a more variable performance, lasting anywhere from 98 days to 203 days, averaging 156 days per episode. The five episodes where growth was slowing but inflation was stable or rising were also of varying length, averaging 140 days. In other words, it has taken around five months, on average, to correct an oversold Treasury market when inflation was stable or rising, and about 1.5 months when inflation was falling. In the current environment, where the ISM Manufacturing index is in an uptrend and core PCE inflation is rising, we should expect a longer period of time before the Treasury market corrects its oversold condition. If we mark the start of the current episode on February 20th of this year, using the definition described above, then the 10-year Treasury yield may return to its 200-day moving average of 2.4% by August (five months from now). A word of warning for traders and investors looking to play for that move by flipping to a long duration position now, though - the primary trend of the market, defined by that 200-day moving average, is currently rising. It was also rising during the two longest oversold correction episodes 2003-04 and 2013-14. The 10-year Treasury yield only declined -14bps and -17bps, respectively, over those entire episodes. During the 2013-14 episode, also a period similar to today when growth and inflation were both rising, yields actually climbed to new cyclical highs before finally peaking. In other words, betting on a reversal of an oversold bond market without any deterioration in growth and inflation dynamics may generate only modest returns over a lengthy period, and with substantial mark-to-market volatility in the meantime. In the current cycle, with leading indicators for U.S. growth and inflation accelerating and the Fed becoming more hawkish, we recommend maintaining below-benchmark duration positions in the U.S. rather than positioning now for a short-covering rally. Bottom Line: The Fed will hike rates again this week, and may signal a faster pace of future hikes given signs that U.S. inflation is starting to accelerate. While most indicators of positioning and momentum for U.S. Treasuries show a deeply oversold market, an analysis of past such episodes shows that it can take 4-6 months before bond yields correct an oversold condition in the absence of a slowing of economic growth or inflation - with yields potentially hitting new highs in the interim. Maintain a below-benchmark duration stance and stay underweight U.S. Treasuries in global hedged bond portfolios. The ECB Is Betting On A Tantrum-Free Taper Several key ECB officials have been giving speeches over the past week, spelling out a consistent message to the markets on the future of euro area monetary policy. Most notably, ECB President Mario Draghi and ECB Chief Economist Peter Praet gave speeches last week at a conference in Frankfurt. Both of them used nearly identical language to highlight how the ECB's main policy tool going forward will no longer be net asset purchases, but instead will be interest rates and forward guidance on changes to rates.1 This echoes the message sent after the ECB's policy meeting earlier this month, when the commitment to increase the pace of asset purchases was dropped from the ECB policy statement. Both Draghi and Praet repeated the ECB's official stance on the end of asset purchases, which requires a "sustained adjustment" in the path of inflation. This was described by Draghi as: Specifically, a sustained adjustment requires three conditions to be in place. [...] The first is convergence: headline inflation has to be on course to reach our aim over a meaningful definition of the medium term. The second is confidence: we need to be sure that this upward adjustment in inflation has a sufficiently high probability of being realized. The third condition is resilience: the adjustment in inflation has to be self-sustained even without additional net asset purchases. Draghi then went on to add these comments on the sequencing of rate hikes after the asset purchases are completed, with our emphasis added: [...] when progress towards a sustained adjustment in the path of inflation is judged to be sufficient, net purchases will come to an end. At that point, next to our forward guidance, appropriate financial conditions will be maintained by our reinvestment policy. [...] as regards the evolution of our policy rates beyond the end of our net purchases, we will maintain the sequencing that is currently set out in our forward guidance, namely our pledge to keep key interest rates at their current levels "well past" the end of net purchases. This time-based element of our guidance is already vital today, in particular to ensure that our policy stimulus is not weakened by premature expectations of a first rate rise, and so financial conditions remain consistent with inflation convergence. That last line can be roughly translated from policymaker-speak as "we want to avoid a Fed-style Taper Tantrum when we stop buying euro area government bonds." Chart 10An Orderly Repricing Of ECB Expectations Praet made similar comments in his speech, discussing how the first rate hike after the end of asset purchases must only take place once there is a "durable convergence" of euro area inflation with the ECB target of just below 2% on headline inflation. So far, the markets have been heeding the ECB's communication and policy guidance. The timing of the ECB's first full 25bp rate hike, taken from our "months-to-hike" indicator, shows that the market does not expect the ECB to adjust rates until November of 2019 (Chart 10). At the same time, the market is only slowly repricing the term premium on longer-dated euro area government bonds, which would be expected if the ECB were to take its time in fully tapering its asset purchases. With realized euro area inflation, and market-based inflation expectations, still well short of the ECB's target, the market appears to be "correctly" following the ECB's guidance on the timetable for future policy moves. This is keeping euro area bond yields at low levels and dampening interest rate volatility. There may be another factor at work holding down bond yields, however. In a speech given at the U.S. Monetary Policy Forum in New York last month - an event attended by numerous academic and Wall Street economists, as well as several current FOMC members - ECB Executive Board Member Benoit Coeure discussed the importance of the "stock" effect of central bank asset purchases compared to the "flow" effect.2 Or as Coeure described it: [...] the "stock effect" - that is, the persistence of the effects of the stock of bonds held by the central bank on its balance sheet under a commitment of reinvestment. If the effects of purchases dissipate quickly, a shorter purchase horizon could lead to term premia rising even as interest rate expectations remain well anchored by forward guidance. Financial conditions would then tighten. But if the effectiveness of asset purchases rises with the stock of assets already acquired - if there is some "crossover point" where the stock effect becomes more important than the continued flow of purchases - then a reduced pace of purchases would not unduly decompress the term premium. This brings up an interesting point about the ECB's policy strategy as it prepares to taper its asset purchase program. If the ECB can effectively communicate that it will continue to reinvest the maturing bonds on its balance sheet after the new asset purchases have stopped, then the market will not price in a bigger term premium on longer-dated bonds since the ECB will continue to own a huge share of the stock of euro area government debt. The stock effect will dominate the diminishing flow effect. Coeure noted in his speech that the experience of the U.S. in 2013, when Ben Bernanke surprised markets with talk that the Fed was planning on cutting back its asset purchases, is different than Europe today. The biggest reason is that the ECB owns a far bigger share of the European bond market than the Fed did at that time. That is because the ECB asset purchases since its bond buying program began in 2015 have dwarfed the net issuance of euro area government debt (Chart 11). At no point during the Fed's quantitative easing (QE) era did the central bank ever buy more U.S. Treasuries than the U.S. government was issuing. According to the logic of Benoit Coeure, the smaller Fed "footprint" in the Treasury market relative to the ECB's ownership share of euro area government bonds (Chart 12) should mean that the Treasury term premium will be more volatile than that for German bunds (and other euro area debt). That is because a greater share of Treasury issuance must be sold to private investors who are more price-sensitive than central banks. In other words, the flow effect dominates the stock effect. Chart 11ECB & BoJ Have Been Absorbing##BR##All Net Government Bond Issuance Chart 12The 'Stock Effect' Of QE##BR##Should Be Bigger In Europe & Japan In Chart 13, we try and visually prove Coeure's thesis. The chart plots the gap between central bank asset purchases and net government bond issuance (the blue solid line proxying the "flow effect", using IMF data) for the U.S., euro area and Japan versus our estimates of the term premium (the black dotted line). The correlation appears to be very strong for the euro area and Japan during the era of asset purchases for those central banks, perhaps due to the "stock effect" dominating the "flow effect". This differs from the experience seen in the U.S. during the Fed QE era, when there was no stable relationship between the term premium and the amount of Treasuries the Fed was purchasing relative to net issuance. Looking ahead, there are important implications of this "stock vs. flow" argument for the future direction of euro area (and Japanese) bond yields, both in absolute terms and relative to U.S. Treasuries. In Chart 13, we also added BCA's forecasts for net government bond issuance over the next two years relative to our projections for the pace of asset purchases from the ECB and BoJ (both new purchases and reinvestments), and the Fed's own projections for the runoff of Treasuries from its balance sheet. Our estimates show that there will still be no new government bond issuance for the private sector to absorb in the euro area and Japan in 2018 and 2019, even with the ECB expected to fully taper new buying to zero by the end of this year and the BoJ dramatically cutting back its pace of buying. This contrasts to the U.S., where the private sector will be forced to absorb an extra US$1 trillion (!) of Treasuries this year and next, thanks to the huge Trump fiscal stimulus and the diminished buying by the Fed. U.S. private investors may require a higher yield (i.e. term premium) to absorb that additional debt, especially if inflation expectations are rising and the Fed is hiking interest rates at the same time. The implication is that the spread between Treasuries and euro area debt (and Japanese bonds, for that matter) could stay stubbornly wide - at least until there is more decisive evidence that the U.S. economy is in a cyclical slowdown that would put the Fed rate hiking cycle on hold (Chart 14). Chart 13The 'Flow Effect' Of##BR##QE Does Still Matter Chart 14The 'Stock Effect' Could Keep The##BR##UST-Bund Spread Wider For Longer From the point of view of euro area debt, however, the existence of a "stock effect" means that those investors expecting a Taper Tantrum 2.0 will likely be disappointed in the size of any upward move in euro area bond yields this year. Bottom Line: The ECB strongly believes that the "stock effect" of its asset purchases (how much they already own) matters more for European bond yields than the "flow effect" (how much they are buying). This suggests that the odds of a European "Taper Tantrum" later this year are low, although bond yields there are still headed higher. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 The Draghi speech can be found at http://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/key/date/2018/html/ecb.sp180314_1.en.html, while the Praet speech can be found at http://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/key/date/2018/html/ecb.sp180314_2.en.html 2 Coeure's speech can be found at https://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/key/date/2018/html/ecb.sp180223.en.html Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Economy: Some of the economic data that feed into GDP have weakened during the past two months, but the fundamental drivers of economic growth remain strong. We continue to expect GDP growth close to 3% in 2018. Markets & Inflation: Bond yields fell during the past few weeks, but so far there is no suggestion that the bond bear market has been derailed. Expect yields to rise in the coming weeks, driven by higher inflation. State & Local Governments: State & local governments still have work to do to repair their fiscal situations. While this process will lead to continued improvement in municipal bond credit quality, it also means that state & local government spending will not provide a significant boost to economic growth. Money Markets: LIBOR/OIS spread widening does not reflect a re-assessment of credit risk in the financial system, but it does present an opportunity for U.S. investors to increase their returns by investing in foreign bonds. Feature Chart 1Growth Scare 2018? A consensus appears to have formed around the outlook for U.S. economic growth. The expectation is that growth, which was already on a solid footing in late-2017, will kick into an even higher gear this year on the back of more stimulative fiscal policy. In fact, Bloomberg consensus forecasts already called for 2018 U.S. GDP growth of 2.3% last October and have ramped up to 2.78% since then. We think it's safe to say that both investors and the Fed have bought into this view, and this makes it concerning that some data have challenged the prevailing narrative in recent weeks. Specifically, a series of disappointing data releases have caused the Atlanta Fed's GDP tracking estimate for first quarter growth to fall to 1.8% (Chart 1). A month ago this same model was calling for growth of 5.4%! Growth Scare 2018? First, we should note that while the Atlanta Fed's GDP tracking estimate for Q1 has declined, as of last Friday, the New York Fed's similar estimate remains at 2.73% (Chart 1). Further, our simple estimate for U.S. GDP growth derived from labor market data shows that growth is tracking close to 3% so far this year.1 Both our simple measure and the New York Fed's model suggest that U.S. growth is running significantly above its 2.2% average since 2010, while the Atlanta Fed's 1.8% estimate suggests it has fallen below its average post-crisis pace. The weakness in the Atlanta Fed model appears to be driven by some hard data - retail sales, durable goods orders and building permits - that have weakened during the past couple months. In general, we note that these measures are still growing more quickly than they were last year, and that the fundamental factors underpinning each component of growth remain strong. We consider each component of growth in turn. Consumer Spending The biggest reason to be pessimistic about consumer spending growth in the first quarter is that core retail sales have been weak for three months in a row.2 Core retail sales contracted in December and January, and increased by only 0.1% in February. However, taking a step back we see that retail sales accelerated sharply between September and November 2017. Even after the recent weakness, the year-over-year growth rate in core retail sales is still above levels observed throughout most of 2016 and 2017 (Chart 2). But more importantly, the fundamentals underpinning consumer spending remain strong and have not corrected at all during the past three months. Disposable income growth is trending higher and recently received a boost from tax cuts. Employment growth has also been strong - averaging +190k during the past 12 months - despite an already tight labor market. These factors have led to a rising trend in our real consumer spending model (Chart 2, panel 2). Finally, while the savings rate is already low and unlikely to fall further, it is also unlikely to rise significantly while consumer sentiment is elevated. The University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index hit 102 in March, its highest reading since 2004 (Chart 2, bottom panel). Chart 2Consumer Spending Chart 3Nonresidential Investment Non-Residential Investment Much like with retail sales, new orders for core durable goods have also contracted in each of the past two months, but the year-over-year growth rate is still high compared to the past few years. Meanwhile, our composite indicator of new orders surveys suggests that the recent decline will quickly reverse (Chart 3). Inventories have also been a drag on GDP growth in recent quarters but, according to our model, should increase going forward (Chart 3, bottom panel). Residential Investment The Atlanta Fed model expects residential investment to contribute negatively to GDP growth in the first quarter. This is largely due to the fact that single family building permits declined in January and February. But once again, so far there is no indication that this downtrend will persist. First, housing inventories continue to contract (Chart 4). Inventories typically increase prior to meaningful downturns in residential investment. Second, while higher mortgage rates have certainly dented housing affordability, homes are still much more affordable than prior to the financial crisis, and so far higher rates have not caused mortgage applications to roll over (Chart 4, panel 2). Household formation, the driver of demand for residential investment, is still in a multi-year uptrend and will continue to rise as long as income growth remains strong (Chart 4, panel 3). Fundamentally, it is difficult to see how residential investment can fall meaningfully when household formation is rising and home inventories are already low. Homebuilders appear to agree with this sentiment and are reporting levels of confidence near all-time highs (Chart 4, bottom panel). Chart 4Residential Investment Chart 5Net Exports Net Exports The Atlanta Fed's model projects that net exports will subtract 0.55% from GDP growth in Q1. This is driven mainly by February's sharp deterioration in the trade balance (Chart 5). While net exports are not the most important driver of U.S. growth, this is one area where that could see more downside in the long-run, depending on how much of the government's anti-trade rhetoric turns into law. In the short-run, dollar depreciation should provide at least some positive offset (Chart 5, bottom panel). Financial Conditions Financial conditions are another important driver of economic growth. A few months ago both the BCA Boom/Bust Indicator and the Financial Conditions component of our Fed Monitor were calling for a sharp acceleration in U.S. GDP. This is no longer the case, and the indicators are now consistent with stable or slightly higher GDP growth (Chart 6). However, we should also note that the Financial Conditions component of our Fed Monitor has not actually tightened. It has merely leveled-off at extremely easy levels (Chart 6, bottom panel). Since it is the change in financial conditions that impacts GDP, the leveling-off is consistent with relatively stable GDP growth. Chart 6Financial Conditions Government Spending In a prior report we noted that the combination of tax cuts and the recent spending bill will add 0.8% to GDP this year and 1.3% in 2019. This is a sharp swing from the -0.5% fiscal impulse that was expected prior to the legislative changes.3 Federal government spending will certainly contribute positively to GDP growth this year. But we expect much less of a growth boost (if any at all) from state & local governments. This is discussed further in the section titled "State & Local Governments Still Cautious" below. Bottom Line: Some of the economic data that feed into GDP have weakened during the past two months, but the fundamental drivers of economic growth remain strong. We continue to expect GDP growth close to 3% in 2018. Bond Market Still Taking Cues From Inflation While the outlook for economic growth is always important, recently bond markets have been more driven by inflation, a topic where there is much less consensus in the investment community. Most recently, the 10-year Treasury has fallen 5 basis points since March 9th, with 4 bps of that decline concentrated in the inflation component. The 10-year real yield has fallen by only a single basis point. As we explained in a recent report, the first stage of the cyclical bond bear market is being driven by the re-anchoring of inflation expectations.4 The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is currently 2.08% and we think it will eventually settle into a range between 2.3% and 2.5%. The decline in the TIPS breakeven rate of the past few weeks is partly explained by a drop in oil prices, but we note that broader commodity indexes have not rolled over (Chart 7). This suggests that weakness in the oil price is not evidence of a broader demand shock and should prove transitory. But even more importantly, the actual inflation data are starting to rebound. Last week's CPI release showed that the 12-month rate of change in core CPI ticked up slightly to 1.85%, but also that the annualized 3-month rate of change jumped sharply above 3% (Chart 8). Further, shelter - the largest component of core inflation - had been trending lower during the past couple years, but leading indicators now suggest a reversal. The rental vacancy rate fell in the fourth quarter of last year for the first time since Q2 2016 (Chart 8, panel 3), and the rate of appreciation in home prices has accelerated (Chart 8, bottom panel). The biggest near-term risk to the bond bear market is that investor over-optimism with regards to the growth outlook leads to a period of negative data surprises. We have previously noted a strong correlation between whether the economic surprise index is above or below zero and whether bond yields rose or fell during the preceding month.5 We also created a model to get a sense of the surprise index's average pace of mean reversion (Chart 9). At the moment, our model forecasts that the surprise index will be close to +20 one month from now. So for now there is no imminent signal that the bond bear market will be derailed, but we will closely monitor data surprises to see if that message changes. Chart 7Breakevens Still Trending Higher Chart 8Inflation Coming Back Chart 9Data Surprises Are Mean Reverting Bottom Line: Bond yields fell during the past few weeks, but so far there is no suggestion that the bond bear market has been derailed. Expect yields to rise in the coming weeks, driven by higher inflation. State & Local Governments Still Cautious As was stated earlier, state & local governments are unlikely to follow the example of the federal government when it comes to spending. In fact, state governments have once again started to raise taxes and reduce budgets. Data for the 2018 fiscal year are shown in Chart 10, and the message is that states have enacted significant revenue increases compared to prior years, and more states are once again raising taxes than are cutting taxes. Further, the National Association of State Budget Officers has noted that of the states that have already announced their 2019 budgets, most have called for another year of slow spending growth and a few states are actually penciling-in declines in general fund spending.6 This should not be too surprising, even nine years into the economic recovery state & local governments are still barely bringing in enough revenue to cover their interest expenses (Chart 11), though they have made considerable progress re-building rainy day fund balances (Chart 12). As for the implications for municipal bond investors, as long as governments maintain focus on improving their fiscal situations than the outlook for credit quality will continue to improve. Our Municipal Health Monitor is still deep in "improving health" territory, a signal that is consistent with ratings upgrades outpacing downgrades for the time being (Chart 13). Chart 10State & Local Government Spending Chart 11Not Much Revenue Buffer Chart 12Rainy Day Funds Rebuilt Chart 13Muni Credit Quality Is Strong Bottom Line: State & local governments still have work to do to repair their fiscal situations. While this process will lead to continued improvement in municipal bond credit quality, it also means that state & local government spending will not provide a significant boost to economic growth. Wider LIBOR/OIS Spread An Opportunity For U.S. Investors Chart 14LIBOR / OIS Spread Widening Explained One trend that has caught investors' attention in recent weeks is the impressive widening in the spread between LIBOR (the cost of unsecured U.S. dollar financing for banks) and the overnight index swap (OIS) rate (the purest measure of the market's fed funds rate expectations). Traditionally, we think of the LIBOR/OIS spread as a measure of credit risk in the financial system. This is because LIBOR is an unsecured agreement between two banks, therefore in theory, it embeds some risk that the counterparty bank will default. But it's important to note that the LIBOR/OIS spread can also rise for idiosyncratic reasons related to the supply and demand for U.S. dollars. For example, when U.S. dollars are scarce, investors are willing to pay more to acquire them and this pressures the USD LIBOR rate higher relative to the OIS rate. In a completely efficient market, competition would then entice counterparties to offer lower LIBOR rates until they eventually only reflect the perceived credit risk of the banking system. However, there is a strong case to be made that strict post-crisis regulations, by making it costly for banks to hold low-margin assets on their balance sheets, have made the market less efficient at arbitraging movements in the LIBOR/OIS spread. This appears to be what is going on at the moment. In recent weeks a confluence of idiosyncratic events have led to both a lower supply and higher demand for U.S. dollars. First, the U.S. government raised the debt ceiling until 2019. The Treasury department is therefore using this breathing room to re-build its cash balance. It accomplishes this by issuing T-bills. As more T-bills are issued U.S. dollars are drained from the market, putting upward pressure on LIBOR. Notice that the spread between the 3-month T-bill rate and the 3-month OIS rate is widening in concert with the LIBOR/OIS spread (Chart 14). Second, companies' new ability to repatriate cash that had been held overseas has a similar impact on LIBOR. That overseas cash had been a source of demand in money markets, but it is now being re-deployed in the form of increased dividends or share buybacks (Chart 14, bottom panel). This is akin to draining U.S. dollars out of the market. Third, the Fed continues to shrink its balance sheet. As this process plays out the Treasury will have to ramp up its issuance, some of which will come in the form of T-bills that will drain even more U.S. dollars out of the market. Going forward, the Treasury department will eventually re-build its cash balance to a level it deems acceptable. This will cause T-bill issuance to taper off, though it will still remain quite strong due to rising deficits and the run-off of the Fed's balance sheet. Similarly, the one-time effect of corporate repatriation will ease over time, though companies may also be less enticed to hold overseas cash balances in the future. All in all, we would expect the widening in LIBOR/OIS to ease in the coming months, but it may take a very long time before it returns to its prior lows, if it gets there at all. A large enough easing of bank capital requirements would likely cause the LIBOR/OIS spread to return to its recent lows, but this does not appear to be an imminent risk. Then, to complicate matters even further, we also have to reckon with the fact that LIBOR is being phased out during the next few years. In fact, the Fed will start publishing its Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) next month. The SOFR rate will eventually replace LIBOR as the U.S. dollar benchmark for financial contracts, and over time more and more instruments will be tied to SOFR and fewer will be tied to LIBOR. We also would not rule out the possibility that SOFR replaces the fed funds rate as the Fed's target policy rate at some point down the road. The Implication For U.S. Investors Chart 15An Opportunity For U.S. Investors A wider LIBOR/OIS spread has one very important implication for U.S. investors. U.S. investors can take advantage of the scarcity of U.S. dollars in the financial system by swapping their dollars for foreign currencies over short time horizons. In other words, a U.S. fixed income investor can invest in a 10-year foreign government bond, and then increase the received yield by hedging the currency risk. For example, a U.S. investor can receive a yield of 3.3% on a 10-year German bund if they hedge the currency risk on a 3-month horizon. This is a greater yield than they would earn on a 10-year U.S. Treasury note. Without the wider LIBOR/OIS spread the hedged yield would not be nearly as high. If we assume the LIBOR/OIS spread is zero, then the hedged yield on a 10-year German bund falls to 2.80%. Chart 15 shows that as the return from currency hedging increases, U.S. investors earn more from hedged positions in foreign bonds than in domestic bonds. A wider LIBOR/OIS spread gives U.S. investors an extra incentive to put on these global trades. Bottom Line: LIBOR/OIS spread widening does not reflect a re-assessment of credit risk in the financial system, but it does present an opportunity for U.S. investors to increase their returns by investing in foreign bonds. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 For further details on this estimate please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Brainard Gives The Green Light", dated March 13, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Core retail sales exclude building materials, auto dealers and gas stations. 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Monetary Restraints", dated February 27, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Two-Stage Bear Market In Bonds", dated February 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "How Much Higher For Yields?", dated October 31, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 http://budgetblog.nasbo.org/budgetblogs/blogs/brian-sigritz/2018/01/12/governors-begin-releasing-fiscal-2019-budget-propo?CLK=7543618f-810a-4ac4-90e2-01a4b310c649 Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Bond Strategy: The investment backdrop is broadly evolving the way that we forecasted in our 2018 Outlook, thus we continue to maintain our core strategic recommendations. Maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration and overweight global corporate debt versus government bonds (focused on the U.S.). Look to reverse that positioning sometime during the latter half of 2018 after global inflation increases and central banks tighten policy more aggressively. Japan Corporates: Japanese companies are in excellent financial shape, according to our new Japan Corporate Health Monitor. Although softening Japanese growth and a firming yen may prevent an outperformance of Japanese corporate debt in the coming months. Feature "I love it when a plan comes together." - Hannibal Smith, Leader of The A-Team Many investors likely came down with serious case of a sore neck last week, given the head-turning headlines that came out: Chart 1A Pause In The 'Inflation Scare' U.S. President Donald Trump announcing a blanket tariff on metals imports, then exempting some important countries (Canada, Mexico, Australia) only days later. Trump agreeing to an unprecedented meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on the nuclear issue, only to have the White House press secretary later announce that no meeting would take place without North Korean "concessions". The European Central Bank (ECB) hawkishly altering its forward guidance to markets at the March monetary policy meeting, but then having that immediately followed by dovish comments from ECB President Mario Draghi. The strong headline number on the February U.S. employment report blowing away expectations, but the soft readings on wages suggesting that the Fed will not have to move more aggressively on rate hikes. For bond markets in particular, the ECB announcement and the U.S. Payrolls report were most important. Investors had been growing worried about a more hawkish monetary policy shift in Europe or the U.S. This was especially true in the U.S. after the previous set of employment data was released in early February showing a pickup in wage inflation that could force the Fed to shift to a more hawkish stance. That created a spike in Treasury yields and the VIX and a full-blown equity market correction. Since then, inflation expectations have eased a bit and market pricing of future Fed and ECB moves has stabilized, helping to bring down volatility and supporting some recovery in global equity markets (Chart 1). With all of these "tape bombs" hitting the news wires, investors can be forgiven for re-thinking their medium-term investment strategy in light of the changing events. We think it is more productive to check if the initial expectations on which that strategy was based still make sense. On that note, the developments seen so far this year fit right in with the key themes we outlined in our 2018 Outlook, which we will review in this Weekly Report. The Critical Points From Our Outlook Still Hold Up In a pair of reports published last December, we translated BCA's overall 2018 Outlook into broad investment themes (and strategic implications) for global fixed income markets. We repeat those themes below, with our updated assessment on where we currently stand. Theme #1: A more bearish backdrop for bonds, led by the U.S.: Faster global growth, with rebounding inflation expectations, will trigger tighter overall global monetary policy. This will be led by Fed rate hikes and, later in 2018, ECB tapering. Global bond yields will rise in response, primarily due to higher inflation expectations. ASSESSMENT: UNFOLDING AS PLANNED, BUT WATCH INFLATION EXPECTATIONS. Economic growth is still broadly expanding at a solid pace, as evidenced by the elevated levels of the OECD leading economic indicator and our global manufacturing PMI (Chart 2). The U.S. is clearly exhibiting the strongest growth momentum looking at the individual country PMIs (bottom panel), while there is a more mixed picture in the most recent readings in other countries and regions. Importantly, all of the manufacturing PMIs remain well above the 50 line indicating expanding economic activity. Last week's U.S. Payrolls report for February showed that great American job creation machine can still produce outsized employment gains with only moderate wage inflation pressures, even in an economy that appears to be at "full employment". The +313k increase in jobs, which included upward revisions to both of the previous two months of a combined +54k, generated no change in the U.S. unemployment rate which stayed unchanged at 4.1% with the labor force participation rate increasing modestly (Chart 3). Chart 2U.S. Growth Leading The Way Chart 3The Fed Can Still Hike Rates Only 'Gradually' The wage data was perhaps the most important part of the report, given that the spike in global market volatility seen last month came on the heels of an upside surprise in U.S. average hourly earnings (AHE) for January. There was no follow through of that acceleration in February, with the year-over-year growth rate of AHE slowing back to 2.6% from 2.9%, reversing the previous month's increase (middle panel). The immediate implication is that the Fed does not have to start raising rates faster or by more than planned. That pullback in U.S. wage growth, combined with the continued sluggishness of inflation in the other developed economies and the sideways price action seen in global oil markets, does suggest that inflation expectations may struggle to be the main driver of higher global bond yields in the near term. Overall nominal bond yields are unlikely to decline, however, as real yields are slowly rising in response to faster global growth and markets pricing in tighter monetary policy in response (Chart 4). Chart 4Real Yields Rising Now,##BR##Inflation Expectations Will Rise Again Later We have not seen enough evidence to cause us to change our view on inflation expectations moving higher over the course of 2018, particularly with BCA's commodity strategists now expecting oil prices to trade between $70-$80/bbl in the latter half of 2018.1 One final point: it is far too soon to determine if the protectionist trade leanings of President Trump will alter the current trajectory of global growth and interest rates. The implication is that investors should not change their overall planned investment strategy for this year at this juncture. Theme #2: Growth & policy divergences will create cross-market bond investment opportunities: Global growth in 2018 will become less synchronized compared to 2016 & 2017, as will individual country monetary policies. Government bonds in the U.S. and Canada, where rate hikes will happen, will underperform, while bonds in the U.K. and Australia, where rates will likely be held steady, will outperform. ASSESSMENT: UNFOLDING AS PLANNED. As shown in Chart 2, the big coordinated upward move in global growth seen in 2017 is already starting to become less synchronized in 2018. Recent readings on euro area growth have softened a bit while, more worryingly, a growing list of Japanese data is slowing. U.K. data remains mixed, while the Canadian economy is showing few signs of cooling off. China's growth remains critical for so many countries, including Australia, but so far the Chinese data is showing only some moderation off of last year's pace. Net-net, the data seen so far this year is playing out according to our 2018 Themes - better in the U.S. and Canada, softer in the U.K. and Australia. We are sticking to our view that the rate hikes currently discounted by markets in the U.S. and Canada will be delivered, but that there will be little-to-no monetary tightening in the U.K. and Australia (Chart 5). Theme #3: The most dovish central banks will be forced to turn less dovish: The ECB and Bank of Japan (BoJ) will both slow the pace of their asset purchases in 2018, in response to strong domestic economies and rising inflation. This will lead to bear-steepening of yield curves in Europe, mostly in the latter half of 2018. The BoJ could raise its target on JGB yields, but only modestly, in response to an overall higher level of global bond yields. ASSESSMENT: UNFOLDING AS PLANNED, ALTHOUGH WE NOW EXPECT NO BoJ MOVE TO TAKE PLACE THIS YEAR. Both central banks have already dialed back to pace of the asset purchases in recent months. This is in addition to the Fed beginning its own process of reducing its balance sheet by not rolling over maturing bonds in its portfolio. Growth of the combined balance sheet of the "G-4" central banks (the Fed, ECB, BoJ and Bank of England) has been slowing steadily as a result (Chart 6). The ECB continues to contribute the greatest share of that aggregate "G-4" liquidity expansion, although that is projected to slow over the balance of 2018 as the ECB moves towards a full tapering of its bond buying program by the end of the year (top panel). Chart 5Not Every Central Bank##BR##Will Deliver What's Priced Chart 6Risk Assets Are##BR##Exposed To ECB Tapering Barring a sudden sharp downturn in the euro area economy, the ECB is still on track for that taper. We have been expecting a signaling of the taper sometime in the summer, likely after the ECB gains even greater confidence that its inflation target can be reached within its typical two-year forecasting horizon. That story will not be repeated in Japan, however, where core inflation is still struggling to stay much above 0% and economic data is softening. We see very little chance that the BoJ will make any alterations of its current policy settings - with negative deposit rates and a target of 0% on the 10-year JGB yield - this year, as we discussed in a recent Special Report.2 We continue to expect a diminishing liquidity tailwind for global risk assets over the rest of 2018 (bottom two panels). Theme #4: The low market volatility backdrop will end through higher bond volatility: Incremental tightening by central banks, in response to faster inflation, will raise the volatility of global interest rates. This will eventually weigh on global growth expectations over the course of 2018, and create a more volatile backdrop for risk assets in the latter half of the year. ASSESSMENT: UNFOLDING AS PLANNED. We saw a sneak preview of how this theme would play out during that volatility spike at the beginning of February, triggered by only a brief blip up higher in U.S. wage inflation. With a more sustained increase in realized global inflation likely to develop within the next 3-6 months, a return to that world of high volatility is still set to unfold in the latter half of 2018, in our view. After reviewing our four investment themes for 2018 in light of the latest news, we conclude that the themes are largely playing out. Therefore, we will continue to stick with the investment strategy conclusions for this year that were derived from those themes (Table 1):3 Table 1A Pro-Risk Recommended Portfolio In H1/2018, Looking To Get Defensive Later In The Year 2018 Model Bond Portfolio Positioning: Target a moderate level of portfolio risk, with below-benchmark duration and overweights on corporate credit versus government debt. These allocations will shift later in the year as central banks shift to a more restrictive monetary policy stance and growth expectations for 2018 become more uncertain. Chart 7Tracking Our Recommendations 2018 Country Allocations: Maintain underweight positions in the U.S., Canada and the Euro Area, keeping a moderate overweight in low-beta Japan, and add small overweights in the U.K. and Australia (where rate hikes are unlikely). The year-to-date performance of the main elements of our model bond portfolio are shown in Chart 7. All returns are shown on a currency-hedged basis in U.S. dollars. Our country underweights are shown in the top panel, our country overweights in the 2nd panel, our credit overweights in the 3rd panel and our credit underweights in the bottom panel. The broad conclusion is that our best performing underweight is the U.S. and best performing overweight is Japan. All other country allocations are essentially flat on the year (in currency-hedged terms). Our call to overweight corporate debt vs. government debt, focused on the U.S., has performed well, but mostly through our overweight stance on U.S. high-yield. Bottom Line: The investment backdrop is broadly evolving the way that we forecasted in our 2018 Outlook, thus we continue to maintain our core strategic recommendations. Maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration and overweight global corporate debt versus government bonds (focused on the U.S.). Look to reverse that positioning sometime during the latter half of 2018 after global inflation increases and central banks tighten policy more aggressively. Introducing The Japan Corporate Health Monitor Japan's relatively small corporate bond market has not provided much excitement for non-Japanese investors over the years. Japanese companies have always been highly cautious when managing leverage on their balance sheets, and have traditionally relied heavily on bank loans, rather than bond issuance, for debt financing. The result is a corporate bond market with far fewer defaults and downgrades compared to other developed economies, with much lower yields and spreads as well. Due to its small size, poor liquidity and low yields/spreads, we have not paid much attention to Japanese corporate debt in the past. Thus, we don't have the same kinds of indicators available to us for Japanese corporate bond analysis as we have in the U.S., euro area or U.K. One such indicator is the Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) to assess the financial health of corporate issuers.4 We are changing that this week by adding a Japan CHM to our global CHM suite of indicators. In other countries, we have both top-down and bottom-up versions of the CHM. The former uses GDP-level data on income statements and balance sheets to determine the individual ratios that go into the CHM (a description of the ratios is shown in Table 2), while the latter uses actual reported financial data at the individual firm level which is aggregated into the CHM. Table 2Definitions Of Ratios##BR##That Go Into The CHM Consistent and timely data availability is an issue for building a top-down CHM, as there is no one source of top-down data on the corporate sector. Some data is available from the BoJ or the Ministry of Finance, or even from international research groups like the OECD, but not all are presented using a consistent methodology. Some data is only available on an annual basis, which significantly diminishes the usefulness of a top-down CHM as a timely indicator for bond investment. Thus, we focused our efforts on only building a bottom-up version of a Japan CHM, using publically available financial information released with higher frequency (quarterly). We focused on non-financial companies (as we do in the CHMs for other countries) and exclude non-Japanese issuers of yen-denominated corporate bonds. In the end, we used data on 43 companies for our bottom-up CHM. By way of comparison, there are only 36 individual issuers in the Bloomberg Barclays Japan Corporate Bond Index that fit the same description of non-financial, non-foreign issuers, highlighting the relatively tiny size of the Japanese corporate bond market. Our new Japan bottom-up CHM is presented in Chart 8. The overall conclusions are the following: Japanese corporate health is in overall excellent shape, with the CHM being in the "improving health" zone for the full decade since the 2008 Financial Crisis. Corporate leverage has steadily declined since 2012, mirroring the rise in company profits and cash balances over the same period. Return on capital is currently back to the pre-2008 highs just below 6%, although operating margins remain two full percentage points below the pre-2008 highs. Interest coverage and the liquidity ratio are both at the highest levels since the mid-2000s, while debt coverage is steadily improving. The overall reading from the CHM is one of solid Japanese creditworthiness and low downgrade and default risks. It is no surprise, then, that corporate bond spreads have traded in a far narrower range than seen in other countries. In Chart 9, we present the yield, spread, return and duration data for the Bloomberg Barclays Japanese Corporate Bond Index. We also show similar data for the Japanese Government Bond Index for comparison. Japanese corporates have a much lower index duration than that of governments, which reflects the greater concentration of corporate issuance at shorter maturities. Chart 8The Japan Corporate Health Monitor Chart 9The Details Of Japan Corporate Bond Index Japanese corporates currently trade at a relatively modest spread of 36bps over Japanese government debt, although that spread only reached a high of just over 100bps during the 2008 Global Financial Crisis - a much lower spread compared to U.S. and European debt of similar credit quality. That is likely a combination of many factors, including the small size of the Japanese corporate market and the relatively smaller level of interest rate volatility in Japan versus other countries. Given the dearth of available bond alternatives with a positive yield in Japan, the "stretch for yield" dynamic has created a demand/supply balance that is very favorable for valuations - especially given the strong health of Japanese issuers. Chart 10Japan Corporates Do Not Like A Rising Yen It remains to be seen how the market will respond to a future economic slowdown in Japan, which may be starting to unfold given the recent string of sluggish data. On that note, the performance of the Japanese yen bears watching, as the currency has a positive correlation to Japanese corporate spreads (Chart 10). The linkage there could be a typical one of risk-aversion, where the yen goes up as risky assets selloff. Or it could be linked to growth expectations, where markets begin to price in the impact on Japanese growth and corporate profits from a stronger currency. Given our view that the BoJ is highly unlikely to make any changes to its monetary policy settings this year, the latest bout of yen strength may not last for much longer. For now, given the link between the yen and Japanese credit spreads, we would advise looking for signs that the yen is rolling over before considering any allocations to Japanese corporate debt. Bottom Line: Japanese companies are in excellent financial shape, according to our new Japan Corporate Health Monitor. Although softening Japanese growth and a firming yen may prevent an outperformance of Japanese corporate debt in the coming months. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst Ray@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "OPEC 2.0 Getting Comfortable With Higher Prices", dated February 22nd 2018, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "What Would It Take For The Bank Of Japan To Raise Its Yield Target?", dated February 13th 2018, available at gfis.bcareseach.com. 3 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Our Model Bond Portfolio In 2018: A Tale Of Two Halves", dated December 19th 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 4 For a summary of all of our individual country CHMs, including a description of the methodology, please see the BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "BCA Corporate Health Monitor Chartbook: No Improvement Despite A Strong Economy", dated November 21st 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Duration: Fed Governor Lael Brainard stated last week that many of the headwinds that held back growth between 2014 and 2016 have faded. This acknowledgement from the most dovish Fed Governor opens the door for a more aggressive pace of Fed rate hikes, and gives the green light to the cyclical bond bear market. Labor Market: The economy continues to add jobs at a rapid pace, but there is some debate about whether the unemployment rate accurately reflects the amount of slack in the labor market. We find that even using the broadest measures of labor market slack, we should expect to see wages accelerate in the coming months. Credit Cycle: Corporate profit growth remains strong for now, but rising unit labor costs will cause profit growth to sustainably fall below debt growth later this year. This will lead to rising corporate leverage and wider bond spreads. We stand ready to reduce exposure to corporate bonds once our inflation targets are met. Feature Chart 1Fed's Current Projections Are Priced In The cyclical bond bear market is at a critical juncture. The yield curve has now largely priced-in the Fed's median fed funds rate projections (Chart 1), and this raises the possibility that the bear market could stall unless the Fed starts to signal a more aggressive path for hikes. With that in mind, last week's speech by Fed Governor Lael Brainard caught our attention.1 As the most dovish member of the Board of Governors, Governor Brainard's speeches are important bellwethers of inflection points in monetary policy. This is particularly true when the speeches convey a more hawkish tone, as was the case last week. Governor Brainard's shift in tone signals that the Fed is poised to adopt a somewhat more aggressive tightening bias. This will likely lead to upward revisions to its interest rate projections and give the green light for the cyclical bond bear market to continue. Brainard On Growth Comparatively weak economic growth outside of the U.S. has been a perennial concern for Governor Brainard, and indeed a key theme in this publication.2 But last week she acknowledged that this dynamic has shifted: Today many economies around the world are experiencing synchronized growth, in contrast to the 2015-16 period when important foreign economies experienced adverse shocks and anemic demand. [...] The upward revisions to the foreign economic outlook are also pulling forward expectations of monetary policy tightening abroad and contributing to an appreciation of foreign currencies and increases in U.S. import prices. By contrast, foreign currencies weakened in the earlier period, pushing the dollar higher and U.S. import prices lower. Chart 2 shows the dramatic shift that has occurred since mid-2016. The Global Manufacturing PMI has soared, and all but one of the 36 countries with available data now have PMIs above the 50 boom/bust line. As a consequence, the U.S. dollar has depreciated and import prices have surged. A more broadly-based global recovery is bearish for U.S. bonds. With less drag from a stronger U.S. dollar, interest rates must rise further to achieve the same amount of monetary tightening. Although we would still characterize the global economic recovery as highly synchronized, we recently flagged some preliminary signals that suggest the breadth of global growth might be deteriorating.3 Specifically, we observe that leading indicators of Chinese economic activity have rolled over, and the outperformance of emerging market currency carry trades has moderated (Chart 2, bottom panel). We will closely monitor both of these indicators during the next few months to see if the weakness persists, or if it starts to bleed into broader global growth aggregates. While the more optimistic assessment of global growth was the starkest change between last week's speech and Governor Brainard's earlier missives, she also noted reasons for optimism on the domestic front. Nonresidential investment is hooking up, and leading indicators point to further gains (Chart 3, panel 1). Financial conditions remain accommodative despite persistent Fed tightening. This differs from the mid-2014 to mid-2016 period when financial conditions tightened even though monetary policy was more accommodative (Chart 3, panel 2). Most importantly, the economy is poised to receive a huge dose of fiscal stimulus during the next two years in the form of a $1.5 trillion tax cut and a $300 billion increase in federal spending (Chart 3, bottom panel). Even our simple tracking estimate for U.S. GDP suggests that growth is shifting into a higher gear. Aggregate hours worked are growing at an annual pace of 2.2%. When coupled with a conservative estimate of 0.8% for productivity growth - the average since 2012 - that translates into real GDP growth of 3%, well above the average pace of 2.2% we've seen since 2010 (Chart 4). With growth that strong we will almost certainly see further tightening of the labor market in 2018. Chart 2Synchronized Growth Is Bond Bearish Chart 3Domestic Tailwinds Chart 4U.S. GDP Tracking At 3% Brainard On The Labor Market A key question for policymakers is how much slack remains in the labor market. If the Fed views the labor market as at full employment, then it necessarily expects inflation to accelerate and should be prepared to tighten policy. Conversely, an economy with significant labor market slack is not expected to generate inflation. Officially, the Fed's most recent Monetary Policy Report to Congress describes the labor market as "near or a little beyond full employment",4 and in last week's speech Governor Brainard gave an excellent summary of the risks surrounding that assessment. First, she noted that "if the unemployment rate were to continue to fall in the coming year at the same pace as in the past couple of years, it would reach levels not seen since the late 1960s" (Chart 5). With growth set to accelerate, we view this as a very likely outcome. In fact, we calculate that, assuming a flat labor force participation rate, the U.S. economy needs to add only 123k jobs each month to keep the unemployment rate under downward pressure. The economy has added an average of 190k jobs per month during the past year, and added a shocking 313k in February (Chart 6). We anticipate it will be some time before job growth falls below the 123k threshold. Chart 5How Much Slack? Chart 6Employment Growth However, it is possible that the unemployment rate is masking some hidden slack in the labor market. Governor Brainard noted that "the employment-to-population ratio for prime-age workers remains more than 1 percentage point below its pre-crisis level" (Chart 5, panel 2). "If substantially more workers could be drawn into the labor force, it would be possible for the labor market to firm notably further without generating imbalances." Chart 7Wage Growth Set To Accelerate In other words, if the labor force participation rate increases, then the unemployment rate could level-off even if job growth remains robust. This would keep a lid on inflation for longer than would be the case otherwise. In our view it will be very difficult for the participation rate to rise meaningfully on a cyclical horizon. As Governor Brainard noted in her speech: "declining labor force participation among prime-age workers predates the crisis" (Chart 5, bottom panel). Added to that, now nine years into the economic recovery, it is questionable whether workers that have been out of the labor force for so long are even able to be drawn back in. Our sense is that the unemployment rate will decline further in the coming months, and it will not be long before that translates into upward pressure on wages. It is important to note that whether we use the unemployment rate or the prime-age employment-to-population ratio as our preferred measure of labor market slack, we are very close to levels that have coincided with exponential wage gains in past cycles (Chart 7). Brainard On Inflation As discussed in our report from two weeks ago, our view is that the headwinds that had been working against inflation are set to fade this year.5 While Governor Brainard agrees that "transitory factors no doubt played a role in last year's step-down in core PCE inflation," she remains concerned that inflation's underlying trend may have softened. Brainard's concern relates to various measures of inflation expectations that are still below levels that prevailed prior to the financial crisis (Chart 8). Without expectations adjusting higher it is doubtful whether inflation can sustainably return to the Fed's 2% target. We share this concern, but note that the cost of inflation protection priced into bond yields has surged in recent months. Survey measures take longer to adjust than market prices, but we anticipate that these measures will also rise as inflation recovers in 2018. The further that measures of inflation expectations (both market-based and survey-based) recover, the more Brainard's concerns about a decline in inflation's underlying trend will fade into the background. Bottom Line: Governor Brainard correctly observed that many of the headwinds that held back growth between 2014 and 2016 have faded. This acknowledgement from the most dovish Fed Governor opens the door for a more aggressive pace of Fed rate hikes, and gives the green light to the cyclical bond bear market. How Sustainable Is Corporate Profit Growth? We've been growing more cautious on the outlook for credit spreads during the past few months, principally because the shift toward a less accommodative monetary policy removes an important support for the corporate bond trade. We view the Fed as getting even more hawkish once inflation expectations are re-anchored around pre-crisis levels, and as such we stand ready to reduce exposure to corporate bonds once both the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates reach our target range of 2.3% to 2.5% (Chart 8, panels 1 & 2). At the time of publication the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate was 2.12% and the 5-year/5-year forward rate was 2.14%. But this is only one piece of the puzzle. For a true bear market in corporate bonds to set in we also need to see rising leverage and mounting defaults. At least for now that is not happening. Our measure of gross leverage for the nonfinancial corporate sector - calculated as total debt divided by EBITD - has flattened off during the past year, and the 12-month trailing default rate is in a steady decline (Chart 9). Chart 8The Re-Anchoring Of Inflation Expectations Chart 9Wider Spreads Need Rising Leverage Chart 9 shows that periods of sustained corporate spread widening almost always coincide with rising gross leverage. Or put differently, for corporate spreads to widen we need to see corporate debt growth consistently exceed profit growth (Chart 9, panel 2). At first blush it is not obvious that profit growth will weaken any time soon. Leading indicators such as total business sales less inventories and the ISM manufacturing index point to a favorable profit outlook (Chart 10). Profit growth should also continue to benefit from dollar weakness for at least the next few months (Chart 10, bottom panel). But there is one leading profit indicator that is starting to flash red. A simple profit margin proxy created by taking the difference between the nonfarm business sector's implicit price deflator and its unit labor costs turned negative in Q4. Chart 11 shows that, although this indicator can be volatile, sustained negative readings almost always foreshadow periods of falling profit growth and corporate bond underperformance. Chart 10Rising Leverage Needs Weaker Profit Growth Chart 11Watch Unit Labor Costs In 2018 The Q4 weakness was driven by a big jump in unit labor costs, and with labor markets as tight as they are this is certainly a trend we see continuing. Unless corporate selling prices can keep pace we will see profit growth sustainably fall below debt growth this year, and this will lead to corporate bond underperformance. Bottom Line: Corporate profit growth remains strong for now, but rising unit labor costs will cause profit growth to sustainably fall below debt growth later this year. This will lead to rising corporate leverage and wider bond spreads. We stand ready to reduce exposure to corporate bonds once our inflation targets are met. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/brainard20180306a.htm 2 Please see Theme 3 in U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017" dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Two-Stage Bear Market In Bonds", dated February 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/20180223_mprfullreport.pdf 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Monetary Restraints", dated February 27, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Dear Client, Following up on last week's report, my colleagues Caroline Miller, Mathieu Savary, and I held a webcast on Wednesday to discuss the outlook for the dollar along with recent events. If you haven't already, I hope you find the time to listen in. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights Protectionism is popular with the American public in general, and Trump's base specifically. The sabre-rattling will persist, but an all-out trade war is unlikely. Trump is focused on the stock market, and equities would suffer mightily if a trade war broke out. The Pentagon has also warned of the dangers of across-the-board tariffs that penalize America's military allies. The rationale for protectionism made a lot more sense when there were masses of unemployed workers. That's not the case today. The equity bull market will eventually end, but chances are that this will happen due to an overheated U.S. economy and rising financial imbalances, not because of escalating trade protectionism. Investors should remain overweight global equities for now, but look to pare back exposure later this year. Feature Q: What prompted Trump's announcement? A: Last week began with President Trump proclaiming that he would seek re-election in 2020. Then came a slew of negative news, including the resignation of Hope Hicks, Trump's White House communications director, and the downgrading of Jared Kushner's security clearance. All this happened against the backdrop of the ever-widening Mueller probe. Trump needed to change the subject. Fast. However, it would be a mistake to think that the tariff announcement was simply a distractionary tactic. Turmoil in the White House might have been the immediate trigger, but events had been building towards this outcome for some time. The Trump administration had imposed tariffs on washing machines and solar panels in January. Hiking tariffs on steel and aluminum - two industries that had suffered heavy job losses over the past two decades - was a logical next step. In fact, the 25% tariff on steel and 10% tariff on aluminum were similar to the 24% and 7.7% tariff rates, respectively, that the Commerce Department proposed as one of three options on February 16th.1 Protectionism is popular with the American public. This is especially true for Trump's base (Chart 1). Indeed, it is safe to say that Trump's unorthodox views on trade are what handed him the Republican nomination and what allowed him to win key swing (and manufacturing) states such as Ohio, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. Trump made a promise to his voters. He is trying to keep it. Q: Wouldn't raising trade barriers hurt the U.S. economy, thereby harming the same workers Trump is trying to help? A: That's the line coming from the financial press and most of the political establishment, but it's not as clear cut as it may seem. An all-out trade war would undoubtedly hurt the U.S., but a minor skirmish probably would not. The U.S. does run a large trade deficit. Economists Katharine Abraham and Melissa Kearney recently estimated that increased competition from Chinese imports cost the U.S. economy 2.65 million jobs between 1999 and 2016, almost double the 1.4 million jobs lost to automation.2 This accords with other studies, such as the one by David Autor and his colleagues, which found that increased trade with China has led to large job losses in the U.S. manufacturing sector (Chart 2).3 Chart 1Trump Is Catering ##br##To His Protectionist Base Chart 2China's Ascent Has Reduced##br## U.S. Manufacturing Employment Granted, China does not even make it into the top ten list of countries that export steel to the United States. But that is somewhat beside the point. As with most commodities, there is a fairly well-integrated global market for steel. Due to its proximity to Asian markets, China exports most of its steel to the rest of the region (Chart 3). That does not stop Chinese overcapacity from dragging down prices around the world. Chart 3Most Of China's Steel Exports Don't Travel That Far Q: Wouldn't steel and aluminum tariffs simply raise prices for American consumers, thereby reducing real wages? A: That depends. If Trump's gambit reduces the U.S. trade deficit, this will increase domestic spending, putting more upward pressure on wages. As far as prices are concerned, the U.S. imported $39 billion of iron and steel in 2017, and an additional $18 billion of aluminum. That's only 2% of total imports and less than 0.3% of GDP. If import prices went up by the full amount of the tariff, this would add less than five basis points to inflation. And even that would be a one-off hit to the price level, rather than a permanent increase in the inflation rate. In practice, it is doubtful that prices would rise by the full amount of the tariff (if they did, what would be the purpose of retaliatory measures?). Most econometric studies suggest that producers will absorb about half of the tariff in the form of lower profit margins. To the extent that this reduces the pre-tariff price of imported goods, it would shift the terms of trade in America's favor. Chart 4Does Trade Retaliation Make Sense ##br## When Most Trade Is In Intermediate Goods? There is an old economic theory, first elucidated by Robert Torrens in the 19th century, which says that the optimal tariff is always positive for countries such as the U.S. that are price-makers rather than price-takers in international markets. Put more formally, Torrens showed that an increase in tariffs from very low levels was likely to raise government revenue and producer surplus by more than the loss in consumer surplus. So, in theory, the U.S. could actually benefit at the expense of the rest of the world by imposing higher tariffs.4 Q: This assumes that there is no trade retaliation. How realistic is that? A: That's the key. As noted above, a breakdown of the global trading system would hurt the U.S., but a trade spat could help it. Trump was trying to scare the opposition by tweeting "trade wars are good, and easy to win." In a game of chicken, it helps to convince your opponent that you are reckless and nuts. Trump's detractors would say he is both, so that works in his favor. Trump has another thing working for him. Most trade these days is in intermediate goods (Chart 4). It does not pay for Mexico to slap tariffs on imported U.S. intermediate goods when those very same goods are assembled into final goods in Mexico - creating jobs for Mexican workers in the process - and re-exported to the U.S. or the rest of the world. The same is true for China and many other countries. This does not preclude the imposition of targeted retaliatory tariffs. The EU has threatened to raise tariffs on Levi's jeans and Harley Davidson motorcycles (whose headquarters, not coincidently, is located in Paul Ryan's Wisconsin district). We would not be surprised if high-end foreign-owned golf courses were also subject to additional scrutiny! But if this is all that happens, markets won't care. The fact that the United States imports much more than it exports also gives Trump a lot of leverage. Take the case of China. Chinese imports of goods and services are 2.65% of U.S. GDP, but exports to China are only 0.96% of GDP. And nearly half of U.S. goods exports to China are agricultural products and raw materials (Chart 5). Taxing them would be difficult without raising Chinese consumer prices. Simply put, the U.S. stands to lose less from a trade war than most other countries. Chart 5China Stands To Lose More From A Trade War With The U.S. Q: Couldn't China and other countries punish the U.S. by dumping Treasurys? A: They could, but why would they? Such an action would only drive down the value of the dollar, giving U.S. exporters an even greater advantage. The smart, strategic response would be to intervene in currency markets with the aim of bidding up the dollar. Chart 6Slowing Global Growth Is Bullish##br## For The Dollar Q: So the dollar could strengthen as a result of rising protectionism? A: Yes, it could. This is a point that even Mario Draghi made at yesterday's ECB press conference. If higher tariffs lead to a smaller trade deficit, this will increase U.S. aggregate demand. The boost to demand would be amplified if more companies decide to relocate production back to the U.S. for fear of being shut out of the lucrative U.S. market. The U.S. economy is now operating close to full employment. Anything that adds to demand is likely to prompt the Fed to raise rates more aggressively than it otherwise would. That could lead to a stronger greenback. Considering that the U.S. is a fairly closed economy which runs a trade deficit, it would suffer less than other economies in the event of a trade war. A scenario where global growth slows because of rising trade tensions, while the composition of that growth shifts towards the U.S., would be bullish for the dollar (Chart 6). Q: What are the implications for stocks and bonds? A: Wall Street will dictate what happens to stocks, but Main Street will dictate what happens to bonds. The stock market hates protectionism, so it is no surprise that equities sold off last week. It is this fact that ultimately got Trump to soften his position. Trump is used to taking credit for a rising stock market. If stocks flounder, this could make him think twice about pushing for higher trade barriers. As far as bonds are concerned, they will react to whatever happens to growth and inflation. As noted above, a trade skirmish could actually boost growth and inflation. Given that the economy is near full capacity, the latter is likely to rise more than the former. This, too, could cause Trump to cool his heels. After all, if higher inflation pushes up bond yields, this will hurt highly-levered sectors such as, you guessed it, real estate. Q: In conclusion, where do you see things going from here? A: Trade frictions will continue. As my colleague Marko Papic highlighted in a report published earlier this week, NAFTA negotiations are likely to remain on the ropes for some time.5 The Trump administration is also investigating allegations of Chinese IP theft. The U.S. is a major exporter of intellectual property, but these exports would be much larger if U.S. companies were properly compensated for their ingenuity. Chinese imports of U.S. intellectual property were less than 0.1% of Chinese GDP in 2017, an implausibly small number (Chart 7). If China is found to have acted unfairly, this could lead the U.S. to impose across-the-board tariffs on Chinese goods and restrictions on inbound foreign direct investment. Nevertheless, as noted above, worries about a plunging stock market will constrain Trump from acting too aggressively. The rationale for protectionism made a lot more sense when there were masses of unemployed workers. Today, firms are struggling to find qualified staff (Chart 8). This suggest that Trump will stick to doing what he does best, which is taking credit for everything good that happens under the sun. Chart 7China Is Importing More IP From The U.S., ##br##But The "True" Number Is Probably Higher Chart 8Protectionism Makes Less Sense ##br##When The Labor Market Is Strong Ironically, the latest trade skirmish is occurring at a time when the Chinese government is taking concerted steps to reduce excess capacity in the steel sector, and the profits of U.S. steel producers are rebounding smartly (Chart 9). In fact, the latest Fed Beige Book released earlier this week highlighted that "steel producers reported raising selling prices because of a decline in market share for foreign steel ..."6 Chart 9Chinese Steel Exports Falling, U.S. Steel Profits Rising Meanwile, German automakers already produce nearly 900,000 vehicles in the U.S., 62% of which are exported. In fact, European automakers have a smaller share of the U.S. market than U.S. automakers have of the European one.7 A lot of what Trump wants he already has. The Pentagon has also warned that trade barriers imposed against Canada and other U.S. military allies could undermine America's standing abroad. This is an important point, considering that Trump invoked the rarely used Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, which gives the President broad control over trade policy in matters of national security, to justify raising tariffs. Trump tends to listen to his generals, if not his other advisors. He probably was not expecting their reaction. All this suggests that a major trade war is unlikely to occur. As we go to press, it appears that the White House will temporarily exclude Canada and Mexico from the list of countries subject to tariffs. We suspect that the EU, Australia, South Korea, and a number of other economies will get some relief as well. White House National Trade Council Director Peter Navarro has also said that some "exemptions" may be granted for specific categories of steel and aluminum products that are deemed necessary to U.S. businesses. That is a potentially very broad basket. The bottom line is that the equity bull market will end, but chances are that this will happen due to an overheated U.S. economy and rising financial imbalances met with restrictive monetary policy, not because of escalating trade protectionism. Investors should remain overweight global equities for now, but look to pare back exposure later this year. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see "Secretary Ross Releases Steel and Aluminum 232 Reports in Coordination with White House," U.S. Department of Commerce, February 16, 2018. 2 Katharine G. Abraham, and Kearney, Melissa S., "Explaining the Decline in the U.S. Employment-to-Population Ratio: A Review of the Evidence," NBER Working Paper No. 24333, (February 2018). 3 David H. Autor, Dorn, David and Hanson, Gordon H., "The China Shock: Learning from Labor-Market Adjustment to Large Changes in Trade," Annual Reviews of Economics, dated August 8, 2016, available at annualreviews.org. 4 A graphical illustration of this point is provided here. 5 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Market Reprices Odds Of A Global Trade War," dated March 6, 2018. 6 Please see "The Beige Book: Summary of Commentary on Current Economic Conditions By Federal Reserve District,"Federal Reserve, dated March 7, 2018. 7 Please see Erik F. Nielsen, "Chief Economist's Comment: Sunday Wrap," UniCredit Research, dated March 4, 2018. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights Risk assets find themselves in a precarious equilibrium. Record high valuations are fully justified if bond yields remain at current levels or fall, but valuations become increasingly hard to justify if bond yields march much higher. If the average of the German 10-year bund yield and U.S. 10-year T-bond yield breaks through 2%, we would downgrade equities and upgrade bonds. Stay long Italian BTPs versus French OATs. The Italian election result is not an investment game changer... ...but stay underweight the Italian equity market (MIB) on a 6-9 month horizon. Our sector stance to underweight banks necessarily implies underweighting the bank-heavy MIB. Feature "Even yet we may draw back, but once cross yon little bridge, and the whole issue is with the sword." - Julius Caesar, contemplating whether to cross the Rubicon River in 49 BC World GDP amounts to $80 trillion. But the combined value of equities and correlated risk assets such as high yield and EM debt is worth double that, around $160 trillion. Real estate is worth $220 trillion. Hence, global risk assets are worth around five times world GDP. With the value of risk assets dwarfing the world economy by a factor of five, it perplexes us that many commentators insist that causality must always run from the economy to financial markets. In fact, in major downturns, the causality usually runs the other way. Rather than economic downturns causing financial instabilities, it is more common for financial instabilities to cause economic downturns. Specifically, the last three economic downturns had their geneses in the financial markets. The bursting of the dot com bubble triggered the downturn of 2001; the large-scale mispricing of U.S. mortgages caused the Great Recession of 2008; and the explosive widening of euro area sovereign credit spreads resulted in the euro area recession of 2011. This raises a crucial question: is there a major vulnerability in financial markets right now? Risk Assets Are As Expensive As In 2000... For at least five decades, the ratio of global equity market capitalization to world GDP (effectively, the price to sales ratio) has proved to be an excellent predictor of subsequent 10-year global equity returns (Chart I-2). Chart of the WeekWorld Equities As Highly-Valued As In 2000 On Price To Sales Chart I-2Price To Sales Has Been An Excellent Predictor Of World Equity Returns Today's extreme ratio of global equity market capitalization to world GDP has been seen only once before in modern history - at the peak of the dot com boom in 2000. In the subsequent decade global equities went on to return a paltry 2% a year. Using the particularly tight predictive relationship in recent decades, we can infer that global equities are now priced to generate 2% a year in the coming decade too (Chart of the Week). Still, equities are not as extremely valued relative to government bonds as they were in 2000. Today, the global 10-year bond yield stands near 2%, implying a broadly equal prospective 10-year return from equities and bonds. In 2000, the global 10-year bond yield stood at 5%, implying that equities would return 3% less than bonds, which they duly did (Chart I-3). Chart I-3Relative To Government Bonds, Equities Were More Expensive In 2000 On the other hand, high yield credit is more extremely valued relative to government bonds than it was in 2000. Today, the global high yield credit spread stands at a very tight 4%: in 2000, it stood at 8% (Chart I-4). So taking the combination of equities and high yield credit, we can say that risk assets are as highly valued today as they were in 2000. Chart I-4Relative To Government Bonds, High Yield Credit Was Less Expensive In 2000 ...But Risk Assets Should Be Very Expensive When Bond Yields Are Ultra-Low The record high valuation of risk assets is fully justified when government bond yields are ultra-low. This is because bond returns take on the same unattractive asymmetry - known as 'negative skew' - that equity and high yield credit returns possess. For a detailed explanation, please revisit our report Are Bonds A Greater Risk Than Equities? 1 But in a nutshell, as bond risk becomes 'equity-like' it diminishes the requirement for a superior return on equities and other risk-assets, lifting their valuations exponentially. Consider what happens to valuations when bond yields decline from 4% to 2%. At a 4% bond yield, equities possess significantly more negative skew than 10-year bonds. So investors will demand a comparatively higher return from equities, let's say 8% a year. Whereas, at a 2% bond yield, equities and 10-year bonds possess the same negative skew. So investors will demand the same return from equities as they can get from bonds, 2% a year (Chart I-5). Chart I-5Below A 2% Yield, 10-Year Bonds Are Riskier Than Equities At the lower bond yield, the bond must deliver 2% a year less for ten years, meaning its price must rise by 22%.2 But equities must deliver 6% a year less for ten years, so the equity market must surge by 80%.3 All well and good, except if bond yields go back up to 4%. In which case, bond and equity prices must fall again - in proportion to their preceding rise. Hence, risk assets find themselves in a precarious equilibrium. Record high valuations are fully justified if bond yields remain at current levels or fall, but valuations become increasingly hard to justify if bond yields march much higher. However, a setback to $380 trillion of global risk assets means that yields can't march much higher without at least a temporary reversal. Unfortunately, the exact point at which the precarious equilibrium becomes threatened is hard to define. Still, we might define crossing the Rubicon as follows. If the average of the German 10-year bund yield and U.S. 10-year T-bond yield - now standing at 1.8% - breaks through 2%, we would downgrade equities and upgrade bonds. Italy: Banks More Important Than Politics On Sunday, Italy's electorate punished the establishment centre-left and centre-right parties - the Democratic Party and Forza Italia - whose combined vote share collapsed to just 33%. Italians gravitated to parties offering populist, anti-establishment and anti-migration bromides. Sound familiar? This is just a continuation of the pattern seen in recent elections in France, Germany and Austria - as well as the victories for Brexit and President Trump. Begging the question, does the Italian election result change anything for investors? Political change disrupts markets if it dislocates the long-term expectations embedded in economic agents and financial prices. The vote for Brexit changed expectations about the U.K.'s long-term trading relationships; the election of Trump changed expectations about fiscal stimulus, the tax structure, and protectionism; and the election of Macron exorcised the potential chaos of a Le Pen presidency. On this basis, the Italian election result is not an investment game changer. The one exception would be if M5S and Lega joined forces to govern, as it could throw EU integration into reverse. But the likelihood of this unholy alliance seems very low. Many people - including some of the more populist Italian politicians - claim that Italy's long-standing economic underperformance is because it is shackled to the euro. But membership of the single currency cannot be the main cause of Italy's underperformance. After all, through 1999-2007, Italian real GDP per head performed more or less in line with the U.S., Canada and France, even without a private sector credit boom. Italy's underperformance really started after the 2008 financial crisis (Chart I-6). And the most plausible explanation is that its dysfunctional banking system has been left broken for close to a decade (Chart I-7). Italy procrastinated because its government is more indebted than other sovereigns and its banking problems did not cause an outright crisis. Chart I-6Italy Has Underperformed##br## Since The Great Recession... Chart I-7...Because The Banks ##br##Were Left Unfixed But now the banking system is finally recuperating. In the past year, banks have raised almost €50 billion in much needed equity capital, the share of non-performing loans (NPLs) is down sharply having peaked at the same level as in Spain in 2013 (Chart I-8), and bank solvency is much healthier (Chart I-9). Chart I-8Italy's NPLs Are Finally Declining... Chart I-9...And Bank Solvency Is Getting Better In effect, Italy is where Spain was in 2014. So could Italy in 2018-21 repeat Spain's turnaround in 2014-17? Italy has more work to do, but on balance we remain cautiously optimistic, and express this optimism through a relative trade in bonds: long Italian BTPs versus French OATs. The connection with the Italian equity market (MIB) is more tenuous. The market's outsize exposure to banks means that sustained outperformance of the MIB requires sustained outperformance of banks. On a 6-9 month horizon, our sector stance is to underweight banks. Necessarily, this means our country stance must be to underweight Italy. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see the European Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Are Bonds A Greater Risk Than Equities?" published on January 25, 2018 and available at eis.bcaresearch.com 2 1.02^10 3 1.06^10 Fractal Trading Model* The rally in the Chilean peso appears technically extended. Hence, this week's trade recommendation is to short the Chilean peso versus the U.S. dollar setting a profit target of 2.7% with a symmetrical stop-loss. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart 10 The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations