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Inflation Protected

Highlights High Conviction Views: The global cyclical backdrop remains negative for government bond markets, and the recent declines in yields will not be sustained. We continue to recommend a below-benchmark overall duration stance, favoring U.S. corporate debt with underweight exposures to U.S. Treasuries and Italian government debt, as our highest conviction views. Medium Conviction Views: Staying overweight global inflation protection, French government bonds versus Germany, and Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs) versus the rest of the developed bond markets, while remaining underweight U.S. Mortgage Backed Securities, are recommendations that we hold with a more moderate conviction level. Euro Area Bond Distortions: The ECB's negative interest rate and asset purchase programs have created significant distortions in the German bond yield curve that are not as evident in the Euro Area swap rate curve, especially at shorter maturities. ECB tapering will be the trigger for a reversal of these trends. Feature Chart of the WeekWhy Are Yields Falling? After publishing two Special Reports in the past two weeks, this Weekly Report is our first opportunity to comment on the markets in April. We find it somewhat surprising that government bonds in the developed world have rallied as much as they have since the most recent peak last month, with the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury and German Bund seeing yield declines of -29bps and -22bps, respectively. Most of the move in Treasuries has been in the real yield component, while Bunds have seen a more even split between declines in real yields and inflation expectations. This has occurred despite minimal changes in actual growth or inflation pressures in either the U.S. or Europe (Chart of the Week). The price action in the Treasury market after last week's U.S. Payrolls report is a sign that the bond backdrop remains bearish. Yields initially fell all the way to 2.26% after the March increase in jobs fell short of expectations, before subsequently rebounding sharply to end the day at 2.38%. While intraday yield reversals on Payrolls Fridays are as typical as the sun setting in the west, a 12bp swing is one of the larger ones in recent memory (perhaps because investors eventually noticed the weather-related distortions in the data or, more importantly, that the U.S. unemployment rate had fallen to 4.5%). We continue to favor a pro-growth bias for bond investors, staying below-benchmark on overall duration and selectively overweight on corporate credit (favoring the U.S.). Ranking Our Current Market Views, By Conviction We have seen little in the economic data over the past few weeks to change our main strategic market views and portfolio recommendations. We summarize our main opinions below, ranked in order of our conviction level: Highest conviction views: Below-benchmark on overall portfolio duration exposure (for dedicated bond investors). Global bond yields have more room to rise alongside solid economic growth, tightening labor markets, inflation expectations drifting higher and central banks moving to slightly less accommodative monetary policies, on the margin. While the sharp upward momentum in coincident bond indicators like the global ZEW sentiment index has cooled of late, the solid upturn in the BCA Global Leading Economic Indicator continues to point to future upward pressure on real yields (Chart 2). The recent pullback in yields also appears to have run too far versus the trend in global data surprises, which remain elevated (bottom panel). One factor that we see having a potentially huge negative impact on global bond markets is the European Central Bank (ECB) announcing a move to a less accommodative policy stance later this year. A taper of asset purchases starting in 2018 is the more likely outcome than any hike in policy interest rates, which we see as more of a story for 2019. This should help push longer-dated bond yields higher within the Euro Area, and drag up global bond yields more generally. Underweight U.S. Treasuries. We still expect the Fed to deliver at least two more hikes this year, and there is still room for U.S. inflation expectations to rise further and put bear-steepening pressure on the Treasury curve. Our two-factor model for the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield, which uses the global purchasing managers index (PMI) and investor sentiment towards the U.S. dollar as the explanatory variables, indicates that yields are now about 18bps below fair value. From a technical perspective, the Treasury market no longer appears as oversold as it did after the rapid run-up in yields following last November's U.S. elections. The large short positions indicated by the J.P. Morgan duration survey and the Commitment of Traders report for Treasury futures have largely been unwound, while price momentum has flipped into positive territory (Chart 3). This removes one of the largest impediments to a renewed decline in Treasury prices, and we expect that the 10-year yield to rise to the upper end of the recent 2.30%-2.60% trading range in the next couple of months, before eventually breaking out on the way to the 2.80%-3% area by year-end. Chart 2Maintain A Defensive Duration Posture Chart 3Stay Underweight U.S. Treasuries Underweight Italian government bonds, versus both Germany and Spain. Italian government debt continues to suffer from the toxic combination of sluggish growth and weak domestic banks. The OECD leading economic indicator for Italy is declining, in contrast to the stable-to-rising trends in Germany and Spain (Chart 4). Meanwhile, the 5-year credit default swaps (CDS) for the major banks in Italy remain elevated around 400bps, in sharp contrast to the declining CDS in Germany and Spain which are now at 100bps. It is no coincidence that the widening trend in Italy-Germany and Italy-Spain spreads began around the same time last year that Italian bank CDS started to disengage from the rest of Europe (bottom panel). Markets understand that the undercapitalized Italian banking system will need government assistance at some point, which will add to the Italian government's already huge debt/GDP ratio of 133%. Political uncertainty in Italy, with parliamentary elections due by the spring of 2018 and populist parties like the anti-euro Five-Star Alliance holding up well in the polls, will also ensure that the risk premium on Italian bonds stays wide both in absolute terms and relative to other Peripheral European markets. Overweight U.S. corporate bonds, versus both U.S. Treasuries and Euro Area equivalents. The positive case for U.S. corporate debt is built upon two factors - the cyclical decline in default risk and the marginal improvement in balance sheet metrics. The latest estimates from Moody's are calling for a decline in the U.S. speculative grade corporate default rate to 3.1% this year. This leaves our measure of default-adjusted spreads in U.S. high-yield at levels that our colleagues at our sister publication, U.S. Bond Strategy, have shown to have a high probability of delivering positive excess returns over Treasuries in the next 12 months.1 Add to that the recent change in trend of our U.S. Corporate Health Monitor (CHM), which appears largely driven by some more positive numbers coming from lower-rated issuers in the Energy space given the recovery in oil prices, and the optimistic case for U.S. corporate debt is compelling. This is in contrast to our Euro Area CHM, which shows that the improving trend in balance sheet metrics has stalled of late (Chart 5, top panel). Chart 4Stay Underweight Italy Chart 5Stay Overweight U.S. Corporates vs Europe The difference between the U.S. and European CHMs has proven to be a good directional indicator for the relative return performance between the two markets, and is currently pointing to continued outperformance of both U.S. investment grade and high-yield debt versus European equivalents (bottom two panels). The threat of an ECB taper also hangs over the Euro Area investment grade corporate bond market, given the large buying of that debt by the central bank over the past year that has helped dampen both yields and spreads. Chart 6Stay Overweight Inflation Protection Medium-conviction views: Overweight inflation protection (both inflation-linked bonds and CPI swaps) in the U.S., Euro Area and Japan. In the U.S., the breakeven inflation rate on 10-year TIPS looks a bit too wide relative to our shorter-term model based on financial variables. However, underlying U.S. inflation pressures remain strong (Chart 6, top panel), particularly given the evidence that conditions in the labor market are getting progressively tighter. We expect inflation expectations to eventually rise back to levels consistent with the Fed's 2% inflation target on headline PCE inflation (which is around 2.5% on 10-year TIPS breakevens that are priced off the CPI index). The reflation story is somewhat less compelling in Europe and Japan, although CPI swaps are now at levels consistent with the underlying trends in realized inflation in both regions (bottom two panels). We continue to view long positions in CPI swaps in Europe and Japan as having a positive risk/reward skew given the tightening labor market in the former and the yen-negative monetary policies in the latter. Long France government bonds (10yr OATs) versus Germany (10yr Bunds). This is purely a call on the upcoming French election, which our political strategists believe will not end in a victory for the populist Marine Le Pen. While Le Pen has seen a recent bump in support heading into the first round of voting on April 23rd, her strong anti-euro position will eventually prove to be her undoing in the run-off election on May 7th (Chart 7). We first made this recommendation back in early February, and even though France-Germany spreads have been volatile since then as both Le Pen and the far-left candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon have seen a pickup in their poll numbers, the yield differentials are essentially at the same levels.2 We take this as a sign that the market believes current spreads are enough to compensate for the likely probability that either candidate could win the French presidency. Overweight JGBs Vs. the Global Treasury index. The argument here is a simple one - in an environment where there is cyclical upward pressure on global bond yields, favor the lowest-beta bond market (Chart 8). Persistently low inflation will prevent the Bank of Japan (BoJ) from making any changes to its current hyper-accommodative policies this year, especially the 0% cap on the benchmark 10-year JGB yield.3 The lack of yield limits the prospects for JGBs on a total return basis, but relative to other government bond markets, JGBs should outperform over the next 6-12 months as non-Japanese yields rise further. Chart 7Stay Overweight France Vs Germany Chart 8Stay Overweight Low-Beta JGBs Underweight U.S. Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS). Investors should remain underweight U.S. MBS, as spreads remain tight by historical standards. Our colleagues at U.S. Bond Strategy note that nominal MBS spreads have been flat in recent weeks as the option cost, which is the compensation for expected prepayments, has tightened to offset a widening in the option-adjusted spread (OAS).4 Chart 9Stay Underweight U.S. MBS We tend to think of the OAS as being influenced by trends in net issuance while the option cost is linked to mortgage prepayments (Chart 9). Looking ahead, the supply of MBS should increase further when the Fed starts to shrink its balance sheet later this year (as was mentioned in the minutes of the March FOMC meeting that were released last week), leading to a wider OAS. At the same time, refinancing applications should stay low as Treasury yields and mortgage rates rise. This will keep downward pressure on the option cost component of spreads. But with the option cost already near its historical lows, it is unlikely to completely offset the widening in OAS going forward. We see little value in U.S. MBS at current spread levels. Bottom Line: The global cyclical backdrop remains negative for government bond markets, and the recent declines in yields will not be sustained. We continue to recommend a below-benchmark overall duration stance, favoring U.S. corporate debt with underweight exposures to U.S. Treasuries and Italian government debt, as our highest conviction views. Staying overweight global inflation protection, French government bonds versus Germany, and Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs) versus the rest of the developed bond markets, while remaining underweight U.S. Mortgage Backed Securities, are recommendations that we hold with a more moderate conviction level. How Much Has The ECB Distorted The European Bond Market? Last week, Benoit Coeure of the ECB Executive Board gave a speech entitled "Bond Scarcity and the ECB Asset Purchase Program."5 That title piqued our interest, as that exact topic has come up in several of our conversations with clients this year. In his speech, Coeure discussed how the huge rally at the short-end of the German government bond curve over the past year has been at odds with what has occurred in the Euro swap curve, where interest rates are much higher for shorter-maturity swaps. Typically, German yields and Euro swap rates move in tandem, with the only differences being a function of technical factors like fixed-rate corporate debt issuance or government bond repo rates - and, on occasion, shifts in the perceived health of Euro Area banks that are the counterparties to any interest rate swap. The latter has become much less of an issue in recent years given the regulatory changes to the swap market, where trading has moved to centralized exchanges to reduce counterparty risks. In this environment, the difference between German bond yields and Euro swap rates, a.k.a the swap spread, should be relatively modest. Yet as can be seen in Chart 10, there has been a notable divergence at the shorter-maturity portions of the respective yield curves, where swap rates are rising but bond yields remain subdued. We can also see the divergences in the slopes of the relative yield curves, with the Euro Area swap curve much flatter than the German bond curve, particularly at longer maturities (Chart 11). Chart 10Large Distortions At The Front End Of The German Curve Chart 11Euro Area Swap Curves Are Generally Flatter Coeure argued that part of this distortion can be attributed to ECB asset purchases, especially after the decision taken last December to allow bond buying at yields below the -0.4% ECB deposit rate. This created a more favorable demand/supply balance for German debt, especially given the dearth of short-dated issuance. In addition, Coeure noted that there have been substantial safe-haven flows into shorter-dated German bonds (including treasury bills) by non-Euro Area entities. Some of this demand comes from large institutional investors like sovereign wealth funds and currency reserve managers, who are worried about political risks in France and Italy, and about the general rising trend in global bond yields, and are thus seeking the safety of low duration German debt. But some of the demand for short-dated German paper also comes from non-Euro Area banks, who have excess liquidity that needs to be parked in Euros but do not have access to the ECB deposit facility for the excess reserves of Euro Area banks. We can see this in Chart 12, which shows ECB data for the relative government bond ownership trends for Germany, France and Italy. The data is broken into holdings for bonds with maturities of one year or less (short-term) and bonds with maturities greater than one year (long-term). It is clear that the non-Euro area buyers own a much larger share of short-term German paper, around 90%, than in France and Italy, while Euro Area entities own nearly 80% of long-term bonds in all three countries. Coeure is correct in pointing out that there is an excess demand condition for short-dated core European debt, exacerbated by foreigners who need Euro-denominated safe assets - particularly GERMAN safe assets, if those investors are at all worried about redenomination risks given the rise of anti-euro populist parties in Europe.6 It is clear that the economic messages sent by looking at the German bond and Euro swap curves are very different. The flatter swap curve is more consistent with a steadily growing Euro Area economy where economic slack is being steadily absorbed and inflation pressures are building (albeit slowly). Also, the sovereign spread differentials within Europe do not look as problematic using swaps as the reference rate rather than German bonds. That is the case in France, where spreads versus swaps look in line with the averages of the past few years (Chart 13). This contrasts with the yield differentials versus Germany, which have reportedly gone up as investors have priced in a higher sovereign risk premium before the French presidential election. Chart 12French Bond Valuations Look More Subdued vs Swaps Chart 13French Bond Valuations Look More Subdued vs Swaps The story is a little different for Italy, where bond spreads versus both German bonds and Euro Area swaps have risen for all but the shortest maturities (Chart 14). This could be consistent with an interpretation that Italy's banking sector woes will add to the nation's longer-term fiscal stresses (as discussed earlier in this report), but not in a way that raises immediate default risks (which is why the 2-year Italy vs swap spread is well-behaved). Regardless of the "bias of interpretation", one thing that is clear is that the ECB's extraordinary monetary policies have created distortions in Euro Area bond markets. These may start to unwind, though, if the ECB begins to signal a shift towards a tapering of asset purchases next year, as we expect. The distortions in Euro area government bond yields (and, by association, swap spreads) have occurred alongside both the cuts in ECB policy rates into negative territory and the expansion of its balance sheet to purchase government bonds (Chart 15). As the ECB moves incrementally towards less accommodative monetary policy, we would expect to see front-end Euro swap spreads narrow in absolute terms and relative to longer-tenor spreads, and the German bond curve to flatten toward levels seen in the swap curve. Chart 14Only Short-Dated Italian Bond Valuations Look More Subdued vs Swaps Chart 15ECB Policies Have Caused The Distortions In Euro Swap Spreads Bottom Line: The ECB's negative interest rate and asset purchase programs have created significant distortions in the German bond yield curve that are not as evident in the Euro Area swap rate curve, especially at shorter maturities. ECB tapering will be the trigger for a reversal of these trends. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Buy The Back-Up In Junk Spreads", dated March 14, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "Our Views On French Government Bonds", dated February 7, 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Staying Behind The Curve, For Now", dated March 21, 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see BCA U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Payback Period In Corporate Bonds", dated April 11, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 http://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/key/date/2017/html/sp170403_1.en.html 6 Coeure noted that, at the time that the ECB began its asset purchase program in March 2015, the share of German bonds of less than TWO years maturity held by foreigners was 70%, but that rose to 90% by the 3rd quarter of 2016. The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Chart 1Is Inflation Heating Up? In past reports we have argued that as long as inflation (and inflation expectations) are below the Fed's target, then the "reflation trade" will remain in vogue. In other words, with inflation still too low, the Fed has an incentive to back away from its hawkish rhetoric whenever risk assets sell off and financial conditions tighten. But with inflation heating up - the last two monthly increases in core PCE are close to the highest seen in this recovery (Chart 1) - will the Fed become less responsive? Not yet! Year-over-year core PCE is still only 1.75% (the Fed's target is 2%) and the cost of inflation protection embedded in long-dated TIPS remains too low (panel 2). In fact, the uptrend in TIPS breakevens lost some of its momentum last month alongside wider credit spreads and the S&P 500's first monthly decline since October. In this environment, we are inclined to add credit risk as spreads widen and believe a "buy the dips" strategy will work until inflation pressures are more pronounced. On a 6-12 month horizon we continue to recommend: below-benchmark duration, overweight spread product, curve steepeners and TIPS breakeven wideners. Feature Investment Grade: Overweight Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview Investment grade corporate bonds underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 15 basis points in March. The index option-adjusted spread widened 3 bps on the month and, at 118 bps, it remains well below its historical average (134 bps). While supportive monetary policy will ensure excess returns consistent with carry, investors should not bank on further spread compression as spreads have already discounted a substantial improvement in leverage (Chart 2). In fact, leverage showed a marked increase in Q4 2016 even though spreads moved tighter. The measure of gross leverage (total debt divided by EBITD) shown in Chart 2 increased in the fourth quarter even though total debt grew at an annualized rate of only 0.3%. However, EBITD actually contracted at an annualized rate of 7% in Q4 causing leverage to rise. The quarterly decline in EBITD looks anomalous, and the year-over-year trend is improving (panel 4). In fact, we would not be surprised to see leverage stabilize this year as profits rebound.1 But similarly, we also expect that the recent plunge in debt growth will reverse. Historically, it has been very rare for leverage to fall unless prompted by a recession. We will take up this issue in more detail in next week's report. Energy related sectors still appear cheap after adjusting for differences in credit rating and duration (Table 3), and we remain overweight. This week we also downgrade the Retailers and Packaging sectors, which have become expensive, and upgrade Cable & Satellite, which appears cheap. Table 3A Table 3B High-Yield: Overweight Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview High-Yield underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 25 basis points in March. The index option-adjusted spread widened 20 bps on the month and, at 383 bps, it is currently 136 bps below its historical average. Given the favorable policy back-drop described on page 1, we view the recent widening in junk spreads (Chart 3) as an opportunity to increase exposure to the sector. In fact, in a recent report2 we tested a strategy of "buying dips" in the junk bond market in different inflationary regimes. The strategy involved buying the High-Yield index whenever spreads widened by 20 bps or more in a month and then holding that position for 3 months. We defined the different inflationary regimes based on the St. Louis Fed's Price Pressures Measure (PPM).3 We found that our "buy the dips" strategy yielded positive excess returns 65% of the time in a very low inflation regime (PPM < 15%), 59% of the time in a low inflation regime (15% < PPM < 30%), 44% of the time in a moderate inflation regime (30% < PPM < 50%) and only 25% of the time in a high inflation regime (50% < PPM < 70%). Currently, the reading from the PPM is 13%. MBS: Underweight Chart 4MBS Market Overview Mortgage-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 4 basis points in March. The conventional 30-year MBS yield rose 6 bps on the month, driven entirely by a 6 bps increase in the rate component. The compensation for prepayment risk (option cost) declined by 6 bps, but this was exactly offset by a 6 bps widening in the option-adjusted spread. As a result, the zero-volatility spread was flat on the month. The option-adjusted spread represents expected excess returns to MBS assuming that prepayments fall in line with expectations. On this basis, MBS look more attractive than they have for some time (Chart 4). However, net MBS issuance also surged in Q4 2016 (panel 4) and should remain robust this year despite higher mortgage rates.4 Interest rates have not been a deterrent to mortgage demand since the financial crisis. The limiting factors have been a lack of household savings and restrictive bank lending standards. Both of these headwinds continue to gradually fade. The option-adjusted spread still appears too low relative to issuance. Nominal MBS spreads are linked to rate volatility (bottom panel), and volatility should increase as the fed funds rate moves further off its zero-bound.5 The wind-down of the Fed's MBS portfolio - which we expect will begin in 2018 - should also pressure implied volatility higher as the private sector is forced to absorb the increased supply, some of which will be convexity-hedged. Government-Related: Underweight Chart 5Government-Related Market Overview The Government-Related index outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 22 basis points in March. The high-beta Sovereign and Foreign Agency sectors outperformed by 71 bps and 41 bps, respectively. Meanwhile, the low-beta Domestic Agency and Supranational sectors outperformed by 9 bps and 15 bps, respectively. Local Authorities underperformed the Treasury benchmark by 17 bps. The performance of Sovereigns has been stellar this year, as the sector has benefited from a 3% depreciation in the trade-weighted dollar (Chart 5). However, the downtrend in the dollar looks more like a temporary reversal than an end to the bull market. With U.S. growth on a strong footing, there is still scope for global interest rate differentials to move in favor of the dollar. Potential fiscal policy measures - such as lower tax rates and a border-adjusted corporate tax - would also lead to a stronger dollar, if enacted. As such, we do not believe the current outperformance of Sovereigns can be sustained. We continue to recommend overweight allocations to Foreign Agencies and Local Authorities, alongside underweight allocations to the rest of the Government-Related index. Municipal Bonds: Neutral Chart 6Municipal Market Overview Municipal bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 24 basis points in March (before adjusting for the tax advantage). The average Municipal / Treasury (M/T) yield ratio declined 2% on the month and remains firmly anchored below its post-crisis average. This year's decline in M/T yield ratios has been concentrated at the short-end of the curve (Chart 6), and long maturities now offer a significant valuation advantage. This week we recommend favoring the long-end of the Aaa Muni curve (10-year maturities and beyond) versus the short-end (maturities up to 5 years). Overall, M/T yield ratios appear fairly valued on a tactical basis. While fund inflows have ebbed in recent weeks (panel 4), this has occurred alongside a plunge in gross issuance (bottom panel). The more concerning near-term risk for Munis is that yield ratios have already discounted a substantial improvement in state & local government net borrowing (panel 3). However, we expect net borrowing to decline during the next couple of quarters on the back of rising tax revenues. State & local government tax receipts decelerated throughout most of 2015 and 2016 alongside falling personal income growth and disappointing retail sales. However, both income growth and retail sales have moved higher in recent months, and this should soon translate into accelerating tax receipts and lower net borrowing. Longer term, significant risks remain for the Muni market.6 Chief among them is that state & local government budgets now finally look healthy enough to increase investment spending. Not to mention the significant uncertainty surrounding the potential for lower federal tax rates and plans to invest in infrastructure. Treasury Curve: Favor 5-Year Bullet Over 2/10 Barbell Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview The Treasury curve underwent a small parallel shift upward in March, roughly split between a bear-steepening leading up to the FOMC meeting on March 15 and a bull-flattening from the meeting until the end of the month. Overall, the 2/10 Treasury slope flattened 1 basis point on the month and the 5/30 slope ended the month 1 bp steeper. Our recommended position long the 5-year bullet and short the 2/10 barbell - designed to profit from a steeper yield curve - returned +3 bps in March and is up 7 bps since inception on December 20. In addition, we also entered a short January 2018 fed funds futures trade on March 21.7 The performance of this trade has so far been flat. In a recent report,7 we identified the main cyclical drivers of the slope of the yield curve as: The fed funds rate (higher fed funds rate = flatter curve) Inflation expectations (higher inflation expectations = steeper curve) Interest rate volatility (higher volatility = steeper curve) Unit labor costs (higher unit labor costs = flatter curve) We concluded that even though the Fed is in the process of lifting the funds rate, the yield curve likely has room to steepen as long-maturity TIPS breakevens recover to levels more consistent with the Fed's inflation target (Chart 7). In addition, interest rate volatility has likely bottomed for the cycle and the uptrend in unit labor costs could level-off if productivity growth continues to rebound. The recent decline in bullish sentiment toward the dollar has also not yet been matched by a steeper 5/30 slope (bottom panel). TIPS: Overweight Chart 8TIPS Market Overview TIPS outperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 6 basis points in March. The 10-year TIPS breakeven rate declined 5 bps on the month and, at 1.97%, it remains well below its pre-crisis trading range of 2.4% to 2.5%. While the catalyst for the recent softening in TIPS outperformance seems to be the hawkish re-rating of Fed rate hike expectations, the uptrend in TIPS breakevens was probably due for a pause in any case. Breakevens had become stretched relative to our TIPS Financial Model - based on the dollar, oil prices and the stock-to-bond total return ratio. However, measures of pipeline inflation pressure - such as the ISM prices paid survey (Chart 8) - still point toward wider breakevens and, as was noted on the front page of this report, recent core inflation prints have been quite strong. All in all, growth appears strong enough that core inflation should continue its gradual uptrend and, more importantly, the Fed will be keen to accommodate an increase in both realized core inflation and TIPS breakevens, which remain below target. This means that in the absence of a material growth slowdown, long-maturity TIPS breakevens should continue to trend higher until they reach the 2.4% to 2.5% range that historically has been consistent with the Fed's inflation target. In a baseline scenario where the unemployment rate is 4.7% at the end of the year and the dollar remains flat, our Phillips curve model8 predicts that year-over-year core PCE inflation will be 2.02% at the end of this year. ABS: Maximum Overweight Overweight Chart 9ABS Market Overview Asset-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 17 basis points in March, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +22 bps. Aaa-rated issues outperformed the Treasury benchmark by 16 bps on the month, and non-Aaa issues outperformed by 26 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated ABS tightened 5 bps on the month. At 48 bps, the spread remains well below its average pre-crisis level (Chart 9). Banks are now tightening lending standards on both auto loans and credit cards. While we do not expect this recent development to have much of an impact on consumer spending, it is usually an indication that there is growing concern about ABS collateral credit quality. As such, this week we scale back our recommended allocation to ABS from maximum overweight (5 out of 5) to overweight (4 out of 5). While credit card charge-offs remain well below pre-crisis levels, net losses on auto loans have started to trend higher (bottom panel). We continue to favor Aaa-rated credit cards over Aaa-rated auto loans, despite the modest spread advantage in autos (panel 3). Further, the spread advantage in Aaa consumer ABS relative to other high-quality spread product is becoming less compelling. Aaa ABS now only provide a 12 bps option-adjusted spread cushion relative to conventional 30-year Agency MBS and offer a slightly lower spread than Agency CMBS. Non-Agency CMBS: Underweight Chart 10CMBS Market Overview Non-agency commercial mortgage-backed securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 10 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +16 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS widened 4 bps on the month, but remains below its average pre-crisis level. Commercial real estate prices are still growing strongly, and prices in both major and non-major markets have re-gained their pre-crisis peaks (Chart 10). However, lending standards are tightening and, more recently, loan demand has rolled over (panel 4). This suggests that credit risk is starting to increase in commercial real estate, as do CMBS delinquencies which have put in a bottom (panel 5). Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 14 basis points in March, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +16 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for Agency CMBS tightened 2 bps on the month, and currently sits at 53 bps. The option-adjusted spread on Agency CMBS looks attractive compared to other high-quality spread product: Agency MBS = 36 bps, Aaa consumer ABS = 48 bps, Agency bonds = 18 bps and Supranationals = 22 bps. We continue to recommend an overweight position in Agency CMBS. Treasury Valuation Chart 11Treasury Fair Value Models The current reading from our 2-factor Treasury model (which is based on Global PMI and dollar sentiment) places fair value for the 10-year Treasury yield at 2.54% (Chart 11). Our 3-factor version of the model, which also incorporates the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty Index, places fair value at 2.28%. The lower fair value results from the large spike in the uncertainty index last November, which has only been partially unwound (bottom panel). Large spikes in uncertainty that do not coincide with deterioration in other economic indicators tend to mean revert fairly quickly. So we are inclined to view the fair value reading from our 2-factor model as more indicative of true fair value at the moment. For further details on our Treasury models please refer to the U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Message From Our Treasury Model", dated October 11, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com At the time of publication the 10-year Treasury yield was 2.35%. 1 For further detail on the medium-term profit outlook please see The Bank Credit Analyst, February 207, dated January 26, 2017, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Keep Buying Dips", dated March 8, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 A composite of 104 economic indicators designed to capture the probability of PCE inflation exceeding 2.5% during the subsequent 12 months. https://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/economic-synopses/2015/11/06/introducing-the-st-louis-fed-price-pressures-measure 4 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Keep Buying Dips", dated March 28, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Road To Higher Vol Is Paved With Uncertainty", dated February 14, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Trading The Municipal Credit Cycle", dated October 18, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Yield Curve On A Cyclical Horizon", dated March 21, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 8 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Odds Of March", dated February 21, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification Corporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation Total Return Comparison: 7-Year Bullet Versus 2-20 Barbell (6-Month Investment Horizon)
Highlights Monetary Policy: The Fed will lift rates this week, but will likely leave its median forecast for three hikes this year unchanged. With inflation still below target the Fed has an incentive to take it easy. Curve steepeners, TIPS breakeven wideners and overweight spread product positions will benefit. Duration: The growth outlook is improving and the 10-year Treasury yield could soon move higher, breaking out of its recent trading range. An already elevated economic surprise index should not be a deterrent. High-Yield: Junk spreads have widened even though default rate indicators continue to show improvement. With valuations now looking more attractive, we upgrade high-yield from neutral to overweight. Feature Chart 1How Much Hawkishness ##br##Can Markets Take? In early November, just prior to the U.S. election, money markets were still only discounting one rate hike before the end of 2017. The Fed has already raised rates once since then and the market is now almost priced for another three hikes before year-end (Chart 1). Encouragingly, financial markets digested the shift up to two 2017 rate hikes without much of a hiccup - the yield curve steepened, TIPS breakevens widened and junk spreads tightened - but the journey from two to three hikes has not gone down quite as easily (Chart 1, bottom panel). The yield curve has now started to flatten, breakevens have leveled off and junk spreads have edged wider. The worry is that a further shift in expectations - from three to four hikes in 2017 - might cause markets to choke. Fed Will Take It Slow Markets are already priced for a rate hike at this week's FOMC meeting along with no change to the Fed's median forecast for three hikes in 2017. As such, we would not expect much of a market reaction if that outcome is delivered. If the Fed were to increase its median forecast from three to four hikes in 2017, then we would anticipate at least some tightening of financial conditions. In other words, we would expect the yield curve to flatten, TIPS breakevens to narrow, the dollar to strengthen and credit spreads to widen. As we have written several times,1 with core inflation and TIPS breakevens still below target, the Fed must ensure that the economic recovery continues. It will therefore be quick to back away from any nascent hawkishness if financial conditions start to tighten. With markets already showing some signs of stress, we expect the Fed to err on the side of caution this week. This means the Fed will lift rates, but also leave the median forecast of three 2017 rate hikes unchanged. This notion that the Fed should be lifting rates, but only very slowly, is confirmed by our Fed Monitor (Chart 2). The Fed Monitor is a composite of 32 indicators that track the evolution of U.S. economic growth, inflation pressures and financial market conditions. Historically, a positive reading from the monitor has coincided with rate hikes, and vice versa. Chart 2BCA Fed Monitor Suggests A Slow Pace Of Rate Hikes The Fed Monitor just recently moved above zero, suggesting that only modestly tighter monetary policy is required. As an aside, we view the strongly positive readings from the Fed Monitor in 2011 and 2012 as anomalous and an artifact of the zero-lower-bound on interest rates. Since interest rates could not be lowered as much as would have been necessary (according to the Fed Monitor) in 2009, they also could not be raised as quickly as the monitor suggested in 2011. With the base effects from the financial crisis now out of the data, the Fed Monitor should go back to providing a useful signal about the future course of monetary policy. Chart 3BCA Fed Monitor Components We gain further insight from splitting the Fed Monitor into its three key components: growth, inflation and financial conditions (Chart 3). The growth component has accelerated strongly into positive territory but the inflation component still suggests that an easy policy stance is required. Financial conditions are also consistent with modest Fed tightening but have ticked down in recent weeks as the market has discounted a more rapid pace of hikes. Judging from the prior two cycles, an acceleration of the inflation component will be necessary for the Fed to deliver on its current expected path of rate hikes. While the Fed has sometimes started to lift rates with the inflation component below zero, that component has always surged into positive territory soon after hikes began (Chart 3, panel 2). While economic growth is accelerating, below-target inflation means that the Fed must continue to nurture the economic recovery. Investors should position for a steeper curve, wider TIPS breakevens and tighter credit spreads until inflationary pressures are more pronounced. This means at least until long-maturity TIPS breakevens reach the 2.4% to 2.5% range and core PCE inflation is firmly anchored around 2%. Bottom Line: The Fed will lift rates this week, but will likely leave its median forecast for three hikes this year unchanged. With inflation still below target the Fed has an incentive to take it easy. Curve steepeners, TIPS breakeven wideners and overweight spread product positions will benefit. Consolidation Complete? The 10-year Treasury yield has been stuck in a tight range below 2.6% since mid-December (Chart 4), but recent trends in the economic data suggest that it could be on the verge of breaking through this key resistance level. Economic surprises are positively correlated with changes in the 10-year Treasury yield and currently appear extended (Chart 4, bottom panel). While not a mean-reverting series by construction, economic surprises tend to follow a mean reverting pattern because investors revise their expectations higher as the economic data outperform. Eventually, expectations are bound to become excessive and the series will mean revert. However, we have found that economic surprises are usually first reflected in Treasury yields. In fact, changes in the 10-year Treasury yield tend to lead the economic surprise index by several weeks. This means that stagnant yields during the past few months have already foreshadowed a reversal in the surprise index. In other words, some mean reversion in economic surprises is already in the price and should not prevent yields from rising in the coming weeks. More important is that economic growth should be sustainably above trend on a 6-12 month horizon. This will continue to put upward pressure on inflation and ensure that the Fed remains in a rate hike cycle. Judging from recent data, not only is growth sustainably above trend, but it is probably even accelerating. Last week's February employment report showed that nonfarm payrolls rose by 235k, the second consecutive month of gains above 200k. The rate of change of employment growth is now threatening to reverse the downtrend that started in early 2015, and aggregate hours worked have accelerated suggesting that GDP growth will be strong in Q1 (Chart 5). Chart 410-Year Yield Facing Resistance Chart 5Labor Market Points To Stronger Growth... Financial conditions are also supportive of a further acceleration in growth. We found that the financial conditions component of our Fed Monitor provides a strong indication of near-term trends in GDP growth (Chart 6). This highlights that growth should be strong during the next few months but also that the Fed must respond to any tightening in financial conditions if it wants growth to remain robust. Chart 6...So Do Financial Conditions Bottom Line: The growth outlook is improving and the 10-year Treasury yield could soon move higher, breaking out of its recent trading range. An already elevated economic surprise index should not be a deterrent. The Value Is Back In High-Yield One of our key themes for 2017 is that the uptrend in the high-yield default rate is due for a pause.2 With the first quarter of the year nearly complete, all the indicators that make up our Default Rate Model are showing noticeable improvement (Chart 7). Chart 7Default Rate Indicators Are Showing Improvement Interest coverage remains elevated A strong Manufacturing PMI points to a rebound in after-tax cash flow Lending standards have rolled over and are now just barely in "net tightening" territory An improving sales/inventory ratio portends a return to positive industrial production growth Job cut announcements have fallen back to 2011 levels on a trailing 12-month basis Meantime, even though the default outlook continues to improve, junk spreads have actually widened during the past couple of weeks. The average option-adjusted spread on the Bloomberg Barclays High-Yield index has widened from a low of 344 basis points up to 378 bps (Chart 8). Some of that spread increase is likely attributable to declining oil prices, as energy sector credits have indeed underperformed the overall index. However, the underperformance of the energy sector also started before the sharp drop in oil prices (Chart 8, bottom panel). In any event, our commodity strategists are not expecting the current decline in oil prices to persist and their estimates show that the oil market has recently shifted from an environment of excess supply to one of excess demand. U.S. crude oil inventories are poised to decline later this month and the OPEC / non-OPEC production deal negotiated by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Russia at the end of last year should be met with high compliance.3 If this view is correct, then the energy sector will not drag overall junk spreads wider in the months ahead. The combination of wider junk spreads and an improving default outlook has led to an increase in our preferred gauge of value for high-yield bonds - the default-adjusted spread (Chart 9). The default-adjusted spread is calculated by subtracting an ex-ante estimate of default losses from the average spread on the Bloomberg Barclays High-Yield index. Chart 8Energy Contributed To Junk Sell-Off Chart 9Some Value Returns To High-Yield To arrive at an estimate of default losses we use the Moody's baseline forecast for the default rate and our own forecast for the recovery rate based on the historical relationship between recoveries and defaults. With the release of February's default report, the Moody's baseline default rate forecast fell to 3.14% for the next 12 months. Based on this forecast we estimate that the recovery rate will be 44%. Combining the default and recovery rate forecasts gives an estimate for default losses of 3.14% x (1- 0.44) = 176 bps for the next 12 months. Since the average option-adjusted spread of the Bloomberg Barclays High-Yield index is currently 378 bps, we calculate the default-adjusted spread to be: 378 bps - 176 bps = 202 bps. A default-adjusted spread of 202 bps is 60 bps higher than the reading of 142 bps that prevailed just last week. This 60 bps spread advantage makes a considerable difference in terms of projected excess returns. Chart 10 shows the relationship between 12-month excess returns and the starting default-adjusted spread. We observe a reasonably strong correlation and note that, using a linear regression, an extra 60 bps of spread translates to an extra +251 bps of excess return on average over a 12-month period. Chart 1012-Month Excess High-Yield Returns Vs. ##br##Ex-Ante Default-Adjusted Spread (2002 - Present) Table 1 provides more detail in terms of what excess returns have historically been associated with different levels of the default-adjusted spread. We see that when the default-adjusted is between 100 bps and 150 bps, high-yield bonds earn positive excess returns 64% of the time over the following 12 months. When the default-adjusted spread is between 200 bps and 250 bps, high-yield earns a positive 12-month excess return 71% of the time. Table 112-Month High-Yield Excess Returns & Ex-Ante Default-Adjusted Spread Given our upbeat assessment of the trend in defaults and a wider junk spread than we have seen in a while, we think it is a good time to upgrade high-yield from neutral to overweight. The key near-term risk to this view is that the Fed will be more hawkish than we anticipate at this week's meeting. If the Fed's median forecast is revised up to four hikes in 2017, then it is possible that the recent bout of junk spread widening will have a bit further to run. However, given still-low inflation readings, the Fed would eventually be forced to back away from its hawkish rhetoric and support renewed spread tightening. In our view, the main risk to upgrading junk this week is that we are a bit too early. Bottom Line: Junk spreads have widened even though default rate indicators continue to show improvement. With valuations now looking more attractive, we upgrade high-yield from neutral to overweight. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Inflation: More Fire Than Ice, But Don't Sound The Alarm", dated January 24, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Fed's Pre-Emptive Hike Will Hit Gold, Not Oil", dated March 9, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Chart 1Keep A Close Eye On Financial Conditions The market's rate hike expectations moved sharply higher during the past two weeks as a string of Fed speeches, including one by Chair Yellen, all but confirmed a March rate hike. The market is now priced for 75 basis points of hikes during the next 12 months, compared to 50 bps at the end of January. At least so far, broad indicators of financial conditions have not tightened in response to this re-rating of the Fed (Chart 1). However, there are some preliminary indications that the reflation trade is fraying at the edges. The trade-weighted dollar has appreciated +0.2% since the end of January, the 2/10 Treasury slope has flattened 9 bps and the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate has declined 1 bp. The Fed is currently testing the markets with hawkish rhetoric but, with inflation and TIPS breakevens still below target, will ultimately support the reflation trade if it comes under threat. In this environment investors with 6-12 month investment horizons should maintain below-benchmark duration, remain overweight spread product and continue to position for a steeper curve and wider TIPS breakevens. Feature Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview Investment Grade: Overweight Investment grade corporate bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 48 basis points in February. The index option-adjusted spread tightened 6 bps on the month and, at 112 bps, it remains well below its historical average (134 bps). Our research1 shows that when core PCE inflation is between 1.5% and 2%2 investment grade corporate bonds produce an average monthly excess return of close to zero. A 90% confidence interval places monthly excess returns between -19 bps and +17 bps with inflation in this range and excess returns do not turn decisively negative until core PCE is above 2%. Given the Fed's desire to nurture a continued recovery in inflation, we are not worried about significant spread widening until inflation is sustainably above 2%. In the meantime we expect corporate bond excess returns to be low, but positive. While supportive monetary policy should ensure excess returns consistent with carry, investors should not bank on further spread compression as corporate spreads have already discounted a substantial improvement in leverage (Chart 2). Energy related sectors still appear cheap after adjusting for differences in credit rating and duration (Table 3), and our commodity strategists expect oil prices to remain firm even in the face of a stronger U.S. dollar. This week we upgrade the Wireless and Packaging sectors from underweight to neutral and downgrade the Consumer Cyclical Services sector from neutral to underweight. The former two sectors now appear cheap on our model, while the latter has become expensive. Table 3ACorporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation*Table 3BCorporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward* High-Yield: Neutral Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview High-Yield outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 112 basis points in February. The index option-adjusted spread tightened 25 bps on the month and, at 349 bps, it is currently 170 bps below its historical average. One of our key investment themes3 for this year is that the uptrend in defaults is likely to reverse (Chart 3), mostly due to recovery in the energy sector. However, still-poor corporate health and tightening monetary policy will lead to a resumption of the uptrend in 2018 and beyond. Despite the positive outlook for defaults, we retain only a neutral allocation to High-Yield because of very tight valuations. The index option-adjusted spread is now within a hair of the average level of 340 bps that prevailed during the 2004 - 2006 Fed tightening cycle, when indicators of corporate balance sheet health were in much better shape. In fact, the index spread is now only 116 bps wider than its all-time low of 233 bps, reached in 2007. Our preferred measure of High-Yield valuation is the default-adjusted spread - the average spread of the junk index less our forecast of 12-month default losses. At present, the default-adjusted spread is 142 bps. Historically, a default-adjusted spread between 100 bps and 150 bps is consistent with positive excess returns during the subsequent 12 months 64% of the time. It is only when the default-adjusted spread falls below 100 bps that positive excess returns become unlikely. Junk has provided positive excess returns over a 12-month horizon only 13% of the time when the starting default-adjusted spread is between 50 bps and 100 bps. MBS: Underweight Chart 4MBS Market Overview Mortgage-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 3 basis points in February. The conventional 30-year MBS yield fell 5 bps on the month, driven by a 7 bps decline in the rate component. The compensation for prepayment risk (option cost) increased by 1 bp, as did the option-adjusted spread. MBS spreads remain extremely tight relative both to history and Aaa-rated credit, although they have begun to widen somewhat relative to credit in recent weeks (Chart 4). More distressing is that the nominal MBS spread appears too tight relative to interest rate volatility (bottom panel). As we noted in a recent report,4 the long-run trend in interest rate volatility tends to be driven by uncertainty about the macroeconomic and political environment. In fact, rate volatility can be modeled using forecaster disagreement about GDP growth and T-bill rates. While the Fed's policy of forward guidance and a fed funds rate pinned at zero limited the amount of forecaster disagreement in recent years, this disagreement will re-emerge the further the fed funds rate moves off its lower bound. Another medium-term risk for MBS comes from the Fed ending the reinvestment of its MBS portfolio. As we described in a recent Special Report,5 the Fed is likely to allow its MBS portfolio to shrink at some point in 2018, putting further upward pressure on MBS spreads. Government Related: Underweight Chart 5Government-Related Market Overview The government-related index outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 30 basis points in February, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +51 bps. The high-beta Sovereign and Foreign Agency sectors outperformed the Treasury benchmark by 90 bps and 59 bps, respectively. Meanwhile, the low-beta Domestic Agency and Supranational sectors each outperformed by 4 bps. Local Authorities returned 24 bps in excess of duration-matched Treasuries. Sovereigns have outperformed Baa-rated corporate bonds year-to-date, a trend consistent with the rise in commodity prices and a trade-weighted dollar that has weakened by 1.5% (Chart 5). However, the dollar has started to appreciate in recent weeks and probably has further upside in the medium-term, especially if the Fed maintains its hawkish posture. Historically, it has been very rare for Sovereigns to outperform U.S. corporate bonds when the dollar is appreciating. After adjusting for credit rating and duration, the Foreign Agency and Local Authority sectors continue to appear cheap relative to U.S. corporate credit. In contrast, Sovereigns, Supranationals and Domestic Agencies all appear expensive. We continue to recommend overweight allocations to Foreign Agencies and Local Authorities, alongside underweight allocations to the rest of the government-related index. In a television interview last month Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin confirmed that GSE reform is still a priority for the new administration but that tax reform is much higher on the agenda. This means that agency spreads will likely remain insulated from any "reform risk" until next year at the earliest. Municipal Bonds: Neutral Chart 6Municipal Market Overview Municipal bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 13 basis points in February (before adjusting for the tax advantage). The average Municipal / Treasury (M/T) yield ratio has fallen 4% since the end of January and remains firmly anchored below its post-crisis average. The decline in the average M/T yield ratio was concentrated in short maturities, while ratios at the long-end of the curve actually rose (Chart 6). Accelerating fund flows and falling issuance will continue to support yield ratios in the near term. In fact, our tactical yield ratio model - based on issuance, fund flows and ratings migration - shows that yield ratios are presently very close to fair value. Although the average M/T yield ratio still appears expensive if we include the global economic policy uncertainty index as an additional explanatory variable.6 One risk to Munis is that yield ratios have already discounted a substantial reduction in state and local government net borrowing in Q1 (panel 3). While we expect this improvement will materialize in the next few quarters, net borrowing is biased upward beyond this year based on the lagged relationship between corporate sector and state and local government health.7 Treasury Curve: Favor 5-Year Bullet Over 2/10 Barbell Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview The Treasury curve has bear-flattened since the end of January as the market revised its Fed rate hike expectations sharply higher. Both the 2/10 and 5/30 Treasury slopes have flattened by 9 basis points since January 31. As such, our recommended position long the 5-year bullet and short the 2/10 barbell - designed to profit from a steeper yield curve - has returned -26 bps since the end of January, although it has returned close to 0 bps since it was initiated on December 20.8 As was stated on the front page of this report, the Fed's increasingly hawkish rhetoric has already caused the uptrend in TIPS breakevens to pause and the nominal Treasury slope to flatten (Chart 7). With inflation still below target these trends are not sustainable from the point of view of Fed policymakers. If the trend of decreasing TIPS breakevens and a flattening curve persists, we would expect the Fed to back away from its hawkish rhetoric. This dynamic will support a steeper yield curve at least until core PCE inflation is back to the Fed's 2% target and long-dated TIPS breakevens are anchored in a range between 2.4% and 2.5% (a range that is typically consistent with core PCE inflation at 2%). The persistent attractiveness of the 5-year bullet relative to the rest of the curve makes a position long the 5-year bullet and short a duration-matched 2/10 barbell the most attractive way to position for a steeper yield curve (panel 3). The carry buffer in the 5-year helps mitigate some of the risk of curve flattening. TIPS: Overweight Chart 8TIPS Market Overview TIPS underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 18 basis points in February. The 10-year TIPS breakeven rate declined 3 bps on the month and, at 2.04%, it remains well below its pre-crisis trading range of 2.4% to 2.5%. While the catalyst for the recent softening in TIPS outperformance seems to be the hawkish re-rating of Fed rate hike expectations, the uptrend in TIPS breakevens was probably due for a pause in any case. Breakevens had become stretched relative to our TIPS Financial Model - based on the dollar, oil prices and the stock-to-bond total return ratio (Chart 8). Diffusion indexes for both PCE and CPI inflation have also shifted into negative territory, suggesting that realized inflation readings will soften during the next couple of months. On a cyclical horizon, however, the Fed will be keen to allow breakevens to rise toward levels more consistent with its inflation target and will quickly adopt a more dovish stance if breakevens fall significantly. This "Fed put" should remain in place at least until core PCE inflation is firmly anchored around 2% and long-dated TIPS breakevens return to a range between 2.4% and 2.5%. As we detailed in a recent report,9 while accelerating wage growth will ensure that inflation remains in a long-run uptrend, the impact from wages will be mitigated by deflating import prices meaning that the uptrend will be slow. We continue to expect that year-over-year core PCE inflation will not attain the Fed's 2% target until the end of this year. ABS: Maximum Overweight Chart 9ABS Market Overview Asset-Backed Securities performed in-line with the duration-equivalent Treasury index in February. Aaa-rated issues underperformed the Treasury benchmark by 2 basis points, while non-Aaa issues outperformed by 12 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated ABS widened 3 bps on the month. At 50 bps, the spread remains well below its average pre-crisis level. Banks are now tightening lending standards on both auto loans and credit cards (Chart 9). While we do not think this will have much of an impact on consumer spending,10 it is usually an indication that there is growing concern about ABS collateral credit quality. While credit card charge-offs remain well below their pre-crisis levels, net losses on auto loans have in fact started to trend higher (bottom panel). We continue to recommend Aaa-rated credit cards over Aaa-rated auto loans, despite the spread advantage in autos. We will closely monitor the evolving credit quality situation, but for now continue to view consumer ABS as a very attractive alternative to other short-duration Aaa-rated spread product such as MBS and Agency bonds. The main reason being the sizeable spread advantage that has persisted in ABS for some time. At present, Aaa-rated consumer ABS offer an option-adjusted spread of 50 bps, compared to 31 bps for 30-year conventional Agency MBS and 18 bps for Agency bonds. Non-Agency CMBS: Underweight Chart 10CMBS Market Overview Non-agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 34 basis points in February. The index option-adjusted spread for non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS widened 7 bps on the month, but remains below its average pre-crisis level (Chart 10). Rising CMBS delinquency rates and tightening commercial real estate lending standards make us cautious on non-agency CMBS. This caution has only intensified now that spreads are firmly entrenched below their pre-crisis average. Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 20 basis points in February. The index option-adjusted spread for Agency CMBS widened 5 bps on the month, and currently sits at 53 bps. The spread offered on Agency CMBS is similar to what is offered by Aaa-rated consumer ABS (50 bps) and greater than what is offered by conventional 30-year MBS (31 bps) for a similar amount of spread volatility. We continue to recommend an overweight position in Agency CMBS. Treasury Valuation Chart 11Treasury Fair Value Models The current reading from our 2-factor Treasury model (which is based on Global PMI and dollar sentiment) places fair value for the 10-year Treasury yield at 2.42% (Chart 11). Our 3-factor version of the model, which also incorporates the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty Index, places fair value at 2.21%. The lower fair value results from the large spike in the uncertainty index last November, which has only been partially unwound (bottom panel). Large spikes in uncertainty that do not coincide with deterioration in other economic indicators tend to mean revert fairly quickly. So we would be inclined to view the fair value reading from our 2-factor model as more indicative of true fair value at the moment. For further details on our Treasury models please refer to the U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Message From Our Treasury Model", dated October 11, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com At the time of publication the 10-year Treasury yield was 2.49%. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Inflation: More Fire Than Ice, But Don't Sound The Alarm", dated January 24, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Year-over-year core PCE inflation is currently 1.74%. 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Road To Higher Vol Is Paved With Uncertainty", dated February 14, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy / Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "The Way Forward For The Fed's Balance Sheet", dated February 28, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 For further details on the model please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 For further details on the linkage between corporate sector health and state & local government health please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Trading The Municipal Credit Cycle", dated October 18, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 8 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 9 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Inflation: More Fire Than Ice, But Don't Sound The Alarm", dated January 24, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 10 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Odds Of March", dated February 21, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification Corporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation Total Return Comparison: 7-Year Bullet Versus 2-20 Barbell (6-Month Investment Horizon) Current Recommendation
Highlights Chart 1Strong Growth & An Easy Fed More than a month has passed since the Fed's latest rate hike and, at least so far, the economy is displaying no ill effects. While the economic data continue to surprise to the upside, Fed rate hike expectations have moderated since mid-December (Chart 1). The combination of accelerating growth and accommodative monetary policy sets the stage for further outperformance in spread product. This message was underscored by last Friday's employment report which showed robust payroll gains of +227k alongside a slight deceleration in wage growth. This is consistent with an environment where growth remains above trend but the recovery in inflation proceeds more gradually. Against this back-drop we favor overweight positions in spread product and TIPS relative to nominal Treasuries, while also positioning for a bear-steepening of the Treasury curve. While we would not rule out a near-term correction in risk assets, due to extended positioning and elevated policy uncertainty, we would view any correction as a buying opportunity given the supportive growth and monetary policy back-drop. Feature Investment Grade: Overweight Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview Investment grade corporate bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 5 basis points in January (Chart 2). The index option-adjusted spread tightened 2 bps on the month and, at 121 bps, it remains well below its historical average (134 bps). In a recent report1 we examined historical excess returns to corporate bonds given different levels of core PCE inflation. We found that excess returns are best when year-over-year core PCE is below 1.5%. This should not be surprising since an environment of low inflation is most likely to coincide with extremely accommodative monetary policy. When inflation is between 1.5% and 2% (year-over-year core PCE is currently 1.7%), average monthly excess returns are close to zero and a 90% confidence interval places them between -19 bps and +17 bps. Excess returns do not turn decisively negative until core PCE is above 2%. Given the Fed's desire to nurture a continued recovery in inflation, we expect corporate bond excess returns to be low, but positive. The Technology sector is relatively defensive and is close to neutrally valued according to our model (Table 3). In addition, our Geopolitical Strategy service has observed that many of the firms in this sector carry significant exposure to China, a risk as U.S. protectionism ramps up.2 We therefore downgrade our position in Technology from overweight to neutral, and upgrade our positions in Wirelines, Media & Entertainment and Other Utilities from underweight to neutral. Table 3ACorporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation* Table 3BCorporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward* High-Yield: Neutral Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview High-Yield outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 124 basis points in January. The index option-adjusted spread tightened 21 bps on the month and, at 376 bps, it is currently 144 bps below its historical average. As we highlighted in our year-end Special Report,3 the uptrend in defaults is likely to reverse this year, mostly due to recovery in the energy sector. However, still-poor corporate health and tightening monetary policy will lead to a resumption of the uptrend in 2018 and beyond. Given the improving default outlook, last week we upgraded high-yield from underweight to neutral. Still-tight valuation is the reason we maintain a neutral allocation as opposed to overweight. Our estimate of the default-adjusted high-yield spread - the average spread of the junk index less our forecast of 12-month default losses - is currently 152 bps (Chart 3). This is close to one standard deviation below its long-run average. Historically, we have found that a default-adjusted spread between 150 bps and 200 bps is consistent with positive 12-month excess returns 65% of the time, but with an average 12-month excess return of -164 bps. With the spread in this range a 90% confidence interval places 12-month excess returns between -500 bps and +171 bps. MBS: Underweight Chart 4MBS Market Overview Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 24 basis points in January. The conventional 30-year MBS yield rose 5 bps in January, driven by a 7 bps widening of the option-adjusted spread. The rate component of the yield held flat, while the compensation for prepayment risk (option cost) declined by 2 bps. MBS spreads remain extremely tight, relative both to history and Aaa-rated credit. Historically, the option-adjusted spread is correlated with net MBS issuance and robust issuance will eventually lead this spread wider. At least so far, net MBS issuance shows no sign of slowing down. While refinancing applications declined alongside the recent spike in Treasury yields, purchase applications have remained resilient (Chart 4). The Fed ceasing the reinvestment of its MBS portfolio would also significantly add to MBS supply. As we explained in a recent report,4 we expect the Fed will not start to wind down its balance sheet until 2018. However, if growth is stronger than we expect there is a chance the process could begin near the end of this year. In that same report we also observed that nominal MBS spreads are very low relative to both the slope of the yield curve and implied rate volatility. This poses a risk to MBS in the near-term. Government-Related: Cut To Underweight Chart 5Government-Related Market Overview The government-related index outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 21 basis points in January. Sovereign bonds outperformed by 75 bps, while Foreign and Domestic Agency bonds outperformed by 6 bps and 14 bps, respectively. Local Authorities outperformed by 34 bps and Supranationals outperformed by 2 bps. This week we downgrade the government-related sector from overweight to underweight, although we recommend maintaining an overweight allocation to both the Foreign Agency and Local Authority sectors. Sovereigns are not attractive compared to corporate credit, according to our model, and will struggle to outperform if the dollar remains in a bull market, as we expect it will. A stronger dollar increases the cost of debt servicing from the perspective on non-U.S. issuers. Foreign Agencies and Local Authorities both appear attractive relative to corporate credit, after adjusting for differences in credit rating and duration. Foreign Agencies in particular will perform well if oil prices continue to trend higher. Supranationals offer very little spread, and are best thought of as a hedge in spread widening environments. Domestic Agency debt can also be thought of in this vein, but with the added risk that spreads start to widen if any progress is made toward GSE reform. While any concrete movement on GSE reform is still a long way off, the new administration has brought the topic back into the headlines and this has led to some increased volatility in Domestic Agency spreads in recent weeks (Chart 5). Municipal Bonds: Upgrade To Neutral Chart 6Municipal Market Overview Municipal bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 40 basis points in January (before adjusting for the tax advantage). The average Municipal / Treasury (M/T) yield ratio fell 2% in January and currently sits just below its post-crisis average. Even though net state & local government borrowing edged higher in Q4, issuance has rolled over in recent weeks and fund flows have sharply reversed course (Chart 6). As a result, our tactical yield ratio model - based on issuance, fund flows and ratings migration - shows that yield ratios are very close to fair value. Although the average M/T ratio still appears expensive if we include the global economic policy uncertainty index as an additional explanatory variable.5 While we remain cautious on the long-term prospects for state & local government health, we expect that improving trends in fund flows and issuance will support yield ratios for the next several months. Eventually we expect that increased state & local government investment will lead to higher issuance, but this will take some time to play out. In the meantime it will be crucial to monitor the federal government's progress on tax reform, particularly if there appears to be any appetite for removing municipal bonds' tax exempt status. Our sense is that the tax exemption will remain in place due to the administration's stated preference for increased infrastructure spending. But that outcome is highly uncertain. Treasury Curve: Favor 5-Year Bullet Over 2/10 Barbell Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview After a volatile end to last year, the Treasury curve was relatively unchanged in January. The 2/10 slope steepened by 1 basis point on the month and the 5/30 slope steepened by 2 bps. In previous reports we detailed how the combination of accelerating economic growth and still-accommodative Fed policy will cause the Treasury curve to bear-steepen this year. This steepening will be driven by a continued, but gradual, recovery in long-dated TIPS breakeven inflation back to pre-crisis levels (2.4% to 2.5%). Once inflation expectations return to pre-crisis levels, it is possible that the Fed will shift to a monetary policy that is focused more on tamping out inflation than supporting growth. At that point the curve will shift from a bear-steepening to a bear-flattening regime. However, as we posited in a recent report,6 it could take until the end of this year before TIPS breakevens return to pre-crisis levels and core inflation returns to the Fed's target. To position for a steeper Treasury curve, we recommend that investors favor the 5-year bullet versus a duration-equivalent 2/10 barbell. Not only will the bullet outperform the barbell as the curve steepens, but the 5-year bullet is currently very cheap relative to the 2/10 slope (Chart 7). This trade has so far returned +29 bps since initiation on December 20. TIPS: Overweight Chart 8TIPS Market Overview TIPS outperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 58 basis points in January. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate increased 10 bps on the month and, at 2.05%, it remains well below its pre-crisis range of 2.4% to 2.5%. The Fed will be keen to allow TIPS breakevens to rise toward levels more consistent with its inflation target, and will quickly adopt a more dovish policy stance if breakevens fall. This "Fed put" is a key reason why we remain overweight TIPS relative to nominal Treasuries, although we expect the uptrend in breakevens will moderate during the next few months. As we detailed in a recent report,7 while accelerating wage growth will ensure that inflation remains in an uptrend, the impact from wages will be mitigated by deflating import prices. Diffusion indexes for both PCE and CPI have also rolled over recently, suggesting that inflation readings will soften during the next couple of months. The anchor from slowly rising inflation will prevent TIPS breakevens from increasing too quickly, and breakevens are also too high compared to the reading from our TIPS Financial model - based on the dollar, oil prices and the stock-to-bond total return ratio (Chart 8). At the moment, only pipeline measures of inflationary pressure such as the ISM prices paid index (panel 4) suggest that breakevens will move rapidly higher in the near term. Remain overweight TIPS but expect the uptrend in breakevens to moderate in the months ahead. ABS: Maximum Overweight Chart 9ABS Market Overview Asset-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 6 basis points in January. Aaa-rated issues outperformed by 5 bps while non-Aaa issues outperformed by 17 bps. Credit card issues outperformed by 8 bps and auto loans outperformed by 5 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated ABS tightened 3 bps on the month. At 51 bps, the spread remains well below its average pre-crisis level. As was noted in the Appendix to our year-end Special Report,8 consumer ABS provided better volatility-adjusted excess returns than all fixed income sectors except Baa-rated corporates and Caa-rated high-yield in 2016. With ABS spreads still elevated relative to other similarly risky fixed income sectors, we expect this risk-adjusted performance to continue. The spread on Aaa-rated credit card ABS tightened 4 bps in January, and now sits at 49 bps. Meanwhile, the spread on Aaa-rated auto loan ABS tightened 1 bp on the month, and now sits at 54 bps. In early November we recommended favoring Aaa-rated credit cards relative to Aaa-rated auto loans. Collateral credit quality between credit cards and auto loans is clearly diverging in favor of credit cards (Chart 9, bottom panel), and in early November, our measure of the volatility adjusted breakeven spread (days-to-breakeven) was displaying no discernible valuation advantage in autos. Since November, however, autos have started to look more attractive (Chart 9, panel 3). If auto loan spreads continue to widen relative to credit cards we may soon shift back into autos. Non-Agency CMBS: Underweight Chart 10CMBS Market Overview Non-agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 60 basis points in January. The index option-adjusted spread for non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS tightened 6 bps on the month, and is now close to one standard deviation below its pre-crisis mean (Chart 10). Rising CMBS delinquency rates and tightening commercial real estate lending standards make us cautious on non-agency CMBS. This caution has only intensified now that spreads are at their tightest levels since prior to the financial crisis. Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 22 basis points in January. The index option-adjusted spread for Agency CMBS tightened 4 bps on the month, and currently sits at 51 bps. The spread offered from Agency CMBS is similar to what is offered by Aaa-rated consumer ABS (52 bps) and greater than what is offered by conventional 30-year MBS (30 bps) for a similar amount of spread volatility. We continue to recommend an overweight position in Agency CMBS. Treasury Valuation Chart 11Global PMI Model The current reading from our 2-factor Global PMI model (which includes the global PMI and dollar sentiment) places fair value for the 10-year Treasury yield at 2.44% (Chart 11). Our 3-factor version of the model, which also incorporates the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty Index, places fair value at 2.08%. The lower fair value is the result of a large spike in the uncertainty index in November that has yet to unwind (bottom panel). Large spikes in uncertainty that do not coincide with deterioration in other economic indicators tend to mean revert fairly quickly. So we would be inclined to view the fair value reading from our 2-factor model as more indicative of true fair value at the moment. It is for this reason that we recently moved back to a below-benchmark duration stance.9 For further details on our Global PMI models please refer to the U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Message From Our Treasury Model", dated October 11, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. At the time of publication the 10-year Treasury yield was 2.44%. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Inflation: More Fire Than Ice, But Don't Sound The Alarm", dated January 24, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Trump, Day One: Let The Trade War Begin", dated January 18, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Is It Time To Cut Duration?", dated January 17, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 For further details on the model please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Inflation: More Fire Than Ice, But Don't Sound The Alarm", dated January 24, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Inflation: More Fire Than Ice, But Don't Sound The Alarm", dated January 24, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 8 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes for 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 9 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Dollar Watching: Another Update", dated January 31, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification Corporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation Total Return Comparison: 7-Year Bullet Versus 2-20 Barbell (6-Month Investment Horizon)
Highlights Inflation: Inflation will trend higher this year, but at a measured pace. The impact of a tight labor market and accelerating wage growth will be mitigated by deflating import prices. Even if the economic recovery remains on track, year-over-year core PCE inflation is likely to still be below the Fed's 2% target by the end of this year. Yield Curve: With core inflation still low, the Fed will be quick to back away from its rate hike plans if there is any indication that inflation might reverse its uptrend. This supports a bear-steepening of the yield curve and the continued outperformance of TIPS versus nominal Treasuries. Spread Product: Excess returns to spread product are not likely to turn deeply negative until core PCE inflation is above 2% and Fed policy becomes more focused on halting inflation than supporting the recovery. We retain a neutral allocation to spread product in our portfolio. Feature Chart 1A Sustainable Recovery After seven years of false starts and disappointments, a durable recovery in inflation is finally under way (Chart 1). The key difference between the current uptrend and prior episodes of rising inflation - such as those witnessed in 2011 and 2014 - is that this time around most labor market indicators suggest the economy is very close to full employment. For this reason the recovery in core inflation is likely to persist, and will eventually settle at a level close to the Fed's 2% target for core PCE. That being said, it is still far too soon for investors to worry about inflation, particularly as it relates to the performance of risk assets. The remainder of this report discusses why the recovery in inflation is likely to be slow moving, and also how the inflation outlook impacts our major fixed income investment calls. Some Near-Term Headwinds There are two reasons why year-over-year measures of core inflation are likely to moderate during the next three months. First, diffusion indexes for both CPI and PCE inflation have recently dipped below the zero line (Chart 2), meaning that more components of each index have decelerating prices than have accelerating prices. Historically, rising year-over-year core inflation has been associated with diffusion indexes above zero. Second, January and February of last year saw incredibly large price increases in both core CPI and core PCE (Chart 3). This means that gains in January and February of this year will also have to be very strong to overcome the large base effect and cause the year-over-year growth rates to move higher. Chart 2Diffusion Indexes Point To Deceleration Chart 3A Large Base Effect In Jan & Feb Now these are only very short term arguments. The base effects will be out of the way by March and diffusion indexes can reverse course very quickly. However, they do suggest that inflation readings are likely to be relatively weak during the next few months. This will be critical for the near-term path of monetary policy and, in our view, makes it likely that the Fed will keep rates steady until the June FOMC meeting. The Phillips Curve Chart 4A Phillips Curve Model Of Inflation Turning to the longer run outlook for inflation, we employ a Phillips curve model of core PCE inflation based on one that Janet Yellen referred to in a speech from September 2015.1 In this framework, the year-over-year change in core PCE inflation is modeled using: Lagged core inflation Inflation expectations (from the Survey of Professional Forecasters) Non-oil import price inflation relative to core PCE inflation Resource utilization (calculated as the difference between the unemployment rate and the Congressional Budget Office's (CBO) estimate of the natural rate of unemployment) The model does an excellent job capturing changes in core PCE inflation since 1990 (Chart 4), and is also useful because it gives us a glimpse of the mental framework that Fed policymakers apply to the task of inflation forecasting. Most importantly, the model allows us to generate inflation forecasts given estimates for inflation expectations, the unemployment rate and the U.S. dollar (which closely tracks relative import prices). For example, in a base case scenario where we assume that inflation expectations and the dollar remain flat, but that the unemployment rate declines from its current level of 4.7% to 4.5% by the end of this year, the model predicts year-over-year core PCE inflation will rise from its current level of 1.65% to 1.87% by November, still below the Fed's 2% target. If we keep the same forecast for a steadily declining unemployment rate but also incorporate a 5% increase in the value of the trade-weighted U.S. dollar, then core PCE inflation is projected to rise to 1.76% by November. The stronger dollar means that import prices exert a bit more of a drag. Conversely, if we keep the same unemployment assumption but assume that the U.S. dollar depreciates by 5%, then core PCE inflation is projected to reach 1.98% by November. In this scenario import prices actually provide a slight boost to core inflation. Overall, to create a scenario where core inflation reaches the Fed's target before the end of this year we need to make a fairly optimistic assumption about the unemployment rate and also incorporate a substantial dollar depreciation. In our view, it is more likely that the dollar remains under mild upward pressure this year as the U.S. economy continues to de-couple from the rest of the world. Fiscal policy remains the wildcard, as any protectionist measures implemented by the new U.S. government could lead to import price shocks. Although at first blush any watering-down of trade deals, imposition of tariffs, or protectionist tweaks to the tax code would seem likely to send import prices higher, much depends on how much of the adjustment to the new trade policy occurs through the exchange rate or through prices. This is incredibly hard to determine until the details of any protectionist trade measures are known. Our Global Investment Strategy service explored the potential ramifications of one such trade proposal - a border-adjusted corporate tax - in a Special Report published last week.2 A Bottom-Up Perspective An alternative to the Phillips curve approach is to split core inflation into its major sub-components: shelter, core goods and core services excluding shelter. We can then examine each sub-component separately and identify different macro drivers for each (Chart 5). Shelter has been the strongest contributor to core inflation so far in this recovery and can be modeled using home prices, the rental vacancy rate and household formation (Chart 5, panel 1). Based on these relationships, we expect shelter inflation will remain elevated for quite some time, while our model suggests it is even likely to move a bit higher during the next few months. After briefly seeming like it might rebound earlier last year, the rental vacancy rate has since fallen to new lows while home price appreciation continues at a steady rate of just above 4% per year (Chart 6). Further, the vacancy rate should remain under downward pressure and home prices under upward pressure as long as household formation continues to outpace home construction. The top panel of Chart 6 shows that the difference between housing starts and household formation closely tracks the rental vacancy rate. The vacancy rate rose throughout the 1990s and early 2000s as housing starts outpaced the creation of new households, but starts have not been sufficiently robust so far in this recovery. In addition, housing inventory as a percent of households is near the lows of the early 1990s (Chart 6, bottom panel). This inventory calculation includes the "shadow inventory" from foreclosed homes which has almost normalized back to pre-crisis levels, in any case. Chart 5The Components Of Core CPI Chart 6Drivers Of Shelter Inflation We expect that shelter inflation will remain elevated at least until housing construction starts to outpace the creation of new households, but will moderate once that supply response starts to emerge. Chart 7Atlanta Fed Wage Growth Tracker* ##br##Versus Unemployment Rate Core goods inflation (Chart 5, panel 2) has been, and will continue to be, the major source of deflation in this cycle. A large fraction of core goods are imported and, as such, core goods inflation tends to follow the trend in the U.S. dollar. The bull market in the U.S. dollar will continue to keep a lid on core goods prices, and will limit how quickly inflation can rise. Any meaningful increase in inflation this year is likely to come from the core services excluding shelter component, which historically tends to track fluctuations in wage growth (Chart 5, bottom panel). As we have previously highlighted, the labor market is close to full employment and the relationship between the unemployment rate and wage growth remains strong (Chart 7). In this environment, even modest further declines in the unemployment rate should exert meaningful upward pressure on wages. Bottom Line: Inflation will trend higher this year, but at a measured pace. The impact of a tight labor market and accelerating wage growth will be mitigated by deflating import prices. Even if the economic recovery remains on track, year-over-year core PCE inflation is likely to still be below the Fed's 2% target by the end of this year. Investment Implications Duration & TIPS Chart 8Leading Inflation Indicators & Breakevens Long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates still have upside, although the rate of increase is unlikely to maintain its current rapid pace. As core inflation converges with the Fed's target so should long-dated measures of inflation expectations such as TIPS breakevens. Historically, core PCE inflation close to 2% has coincided with long-dated TIPS breakevens in a range between 2.4% and 2.5%. With the 10-year breakeven currently at 2.05%, we expect it has another 35 to 45 basis points of upside. Measures of pipeline inflation pressure, such as producer prices and the prices paid and supplier deliveries components of the ISM manufacturing survey also point to rising breakevens (Chart 8). We continue to recommend an overweight allocation to TIPS versus nominal Treasury securities. With rate hike expectations still relatively depressed,3 real yields do not have much downside. Rising breakevens should therefore also pressure long-dated nominal yields higher in the months ahead. While we currently recommend a benchmark duration stance, we are actively looking for an opportunity to shift to below-benchmark duration, as was discussed in last week's report.4 Yield Curve As breakevens and nominal yields move higher the yield curve should also steepen (Chart 9). The strong positive correlation between the slope of the yield curve and TIPS breakevens is the result of the impact of Fed policy on both variables. Chart 9Wider Breakevens Correlated With A Steeper Yield Curve Fed policy tends to be accommodative in the early stages of a recovery, and this causes the yield curve to steepen and breakevens to widen as investors logically expect that easy money will cause both growth and inflation to move higher. In contrast, the yield curve tends to flatten and breakevens tend to fall later in the recovery once Fed policy turns more restrictive. Chart 105-Year Bullet Still Cheap Given that core inflation and TIPS breakevens both remain below the Fed's targets, it is too soon to expect a shift toward restrictive Fed policy. In other words, the Fed will be quick to back away from its rate hike plans if there is any indication that breakevens or inflation might reverse their uptrends. It is only once core inflation and TIPS breakevens have returned to the Fed's targets that the stated purpose of Fed policy will shift from supporting the recovery to snuffing out inflation. To profit from a steeper yield curve we entered a long 5-year bullet short duration-matched 2/10 barbell trade on December 20. So far this trade has returned 14 bps, and the 5-year bullet continues to look very cheap on the curve (Chart 10). Spread Product In prior research we considered the performance of spread product throughout the four phases of the Fed cycle (Chart 11).5 We define the four phases of the Fed cycle as follows: Phase I represents the early stage of the withdrawal of monetary stimulus. This phase begins with the first hike of a new tightening cycle and ends when the fed funds rate crosses above its equilibrium level. Phase II represents the late stage of the tightening cycle, when the Fed hikes its target rate above equilibrium in an effort to slow the economy. Phase III represents the early stage of the easing cycle. It begins with the first rate cut from the peak and lasts until the Fed cuts its target rate below equilibrium. Phase IV represents the late stage of the easing cycle. It encompasses both the period when the fed funds rate descends to its cycle trough and the subsequent adjustment period when the Fed remains on hold in an effort to kick start an economic recovery. Chart 11Stylized Fed Cycle Using a very simple estimate of the equilibrium fed funds rate based on potential GDP and a long-run moving average of the funds rate itself, we have found that excess returns to investment grade corporate bonds are highest in phase IV and phase I, when the fed funds rate is below equilibrium (Table 1). However, the key problem with this analysis is that it is very difficult to estimate the equilibrium fed funds rate in real time. As stated above, the estimate used in Table 1 incorporates the CBO's estimate of potential GDP which is frequently revised after the fact. So while we are confident that we are currently in phase I of the Fed cycle, the challenge becomes looking for other indicators that might warn us about the transition from phase I to phase II, where excess returns are much worse. We have found that core PCE inflation is one such indicator. We calculated average monthly excess returns to investment grade corporate bonds when year-over-year core PCE inflation is below 1.5%, between 1.5% and 2%, and between 2% and 2.5% (Table 2). Table 1Investment Grade Corporate Bond Excess Returns* Under The Four Phases##br## Of The Fed Cycle (August 1988 To Present) Table 2Investment Grade Corporate Bond Excess Returns* Under Different Ranges##br## For Year-Over-Year Core** PCE (August 1988 To Present) The results show that the highest returns occur when inflation is below 1.5%. This should not be surprising since an environment of low inflation is most likely to coincide with phase IV of the Fed cycle. We found mixed results for when inflation is between 1.5% and 2%. In this environment average monthly excess returns are close to zero and a 90% confidence interval places them between -19 bps and +17 bps. This environment likely encompasses phase I of the Fed cycle and the transition into phase II. It is not until core PCE inflation is above 2% that excess returns turn decisively negative. Monthly excess returns average -13 bps in this environment, with a 90% confidence interval of -35 bps to +10 bps. With inflation likely to remain between 1.5% and 2% for the balance of the year, it is too soon to turn all-out bearish on spread product. For the moment we recommend a neutral allocation, but with an underweight allocation to high-yield bonds where valuations are exceedingly tight. Given that inflation is low and Fed policy is accommodative, we would be quick to upgrade both investment grade and high-yield corporates on any near-term sell off. The current uncertainty surrounding fiscal policy also complicates the outlook for spread product. On the one hand, it raises the risk of a near-term sell off if it appears as though some of the more stimulative aspects of Trump's agenda will not be implemented. On the other hand, in addition to headline-grabbing promises of increased infrastructure spending, there are many other policy details that could also have significant market implications. One example would be the elimination of the tax deductibility of corporate interest expenses. Such a provision is currently included in the Republican's plan for corporate tax reform, and would severely diminish supply in the corporate bond market if it is implemented. Bottom Line: Excess returns to spread product are not likely to turn deeply negative until core PCE inflation is above 2% and Fed policy becomes more focused on halting inflation than supporting the recovery. We retain a neutral allocation to spread product in our portfolio. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/yellen20150924a.htm 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy, "U.S. Border Adjustment Tax: A Potential Monster Issue For 2017", dated January 20, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 3 The overnight index swap curve is priced for 54 basis points of rate hikes during the next twelve months. 4 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Is It Time To Cut Duration?", dated January 17, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Investment Strategy / U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Bonds And The Fed Funds Rate Cycle", dated May 27, 2014, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Chart 1Upside Risks & Uncertainty The evidence of economic acceleration continues to pile up and we maintain our view that bond yields will be higher than current forwards by the end of 2017. In the near-term, however, the bond market has been too quick to discount a more positive growth outlook, especially considering still-elevated levels of economic policy uncertainty. Our cautious optimism is echoed by the readings from our global PMI models and also by the Fed. The minutes from December's FOMC meeting revealed that more participants saw upside risks to growth and inflation than saw downside risks, but also that this improved economic forecast was judged to be more uncertain than any Fed forecast since 2013 (Chart 1). We remain bond bears on a 12-month horizon, but advocate a benchmark duration stance in the near term. A period of flat bond yields is the most likely outcome until elevated uncertainty levels revert to a more normal range (see the global economic policy uncertainty index). Feature Investment Grade: Neutral Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview Investment grade corporate bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 82 basis points in December and by 478 basis points in 2016. The index option-adjusted spread tightened 6 bps on the month and 42 bps on the year. At 122 bps, the spread is currently well below its historical average (134 bps). Corporate spreads have tightened substantially since last February despite elevated gross leverage (Chart 2).1 As we pointed out in our end-of-year Special Report titled "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017",2 it is very rare for spreads to tighten when leverage is in an uptrend. While a rebound in profit growth will likely cause the uptrend in leverage to abate this year, spreads have already moved to discount a significant reversal. Although valuations are by no means attractive, accelerating economic growth and still-accommodative Fed policy will keep spreads at tight levels during the first half of this year. This sweet spot will persist at least until TIPS breakeven inflation rates return to pre-crisis levels, which would likely presage a hawkish shift in Fed policy. Energy sector debt returned 12.5% in excess of duration-equivalent Treasuries in 2016, compared to excess returns of under 5% for the overall corporate index. Despite this large outperformance, energy credits still appear attractive according to our model (Table 3), and should continue to outperform into the New Year. Table 3ACorporate Sector Relative Valuation##br## And Recommended Allocation* Table 3BCorporate Sector##br## Risk Vs. Reward* High-Yield: Underweight Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview High-yield outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 188 basis points in December and by 1539 basis points in 2016. The index option-adjusted spread narrowed 46 bps on the month and 251 bps on the year. At 383 bps, it is currently 137 bps below its historical average. As we highlighted in our year-end Special Report,3 the uptrend in defaults is likely to reverse this year, mostly due to recovery in the energy sector. However, still-poor corporate health and tightening monetary policy will lead to a resumption of the uptrend in 2018 and beyond. Given the improving default backdrop, we are actively looking to upgrade our allocation to high-yield debt. However, valuations do not present a sufficiently compelling opportunity at the moment. Our estimate of the default-adjusted high-yield spread - the average spread of the junk index less our forecast of 12-month default losses - is below 150 bps (Chart 3). This is close to one standard deviation below the long-run average. Historically, we have found that a default-adjusted spread between 100 bps and 200 bps is consistent with positive 12-month excess returns 65% of the time, but with an average 12-month excess return of close to zero. With the spread in this range, a 90% confidence interval would place 12-month excess returns between -3% and +4%. MBS: Underweight Chart 4MBS Market Overview Mortgage-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 6 basis points in December, but underperformed by 11 bps in 2016. The conventional 30-year MBS yield rose 5 bps in December, completely driven by a 5 bps increase in the rate component. The compensation for prepayment risk (option cost) and option-adjusted spread were both flat on the month. In 2016, the conventional 30-year MBS yield rose 6 bps. This was driven by a 12 bps increase in the rate component that was partially offset by a 9 bps decline in the option-adjusted spread. The option cost increased 3 bps on the year. Our underweight in MBS is predicated upon very low option-adjusted spreads, relative both to history and other comparable spread product (Chart 4). Historically, the option-adjusted spread is correlated with net MBS issuance and eventually we expect rising net issuance to lead the option-adjusted spread wider. Importantly, purchase applications have remained firm in the face of higher mortgage rates even though refinancings have collapsed (bottom panel). Another tail risk for the MBS market is the possibility that the Fed ceases the reinvestment of its mortgage portfolio. While we do not expect this to occur in 2017, with two rate hikes now in the bank the fed funds rate is approaching levels where the Fed might begin to consider it. A new Fed Chair in early 2018 might also be more inclined to wind down the balance sheet. Government Related: Overweight Chart 5Government Related Market Overview The government-related index outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 27 basis points in December. Foreign Agency and Sovereign bonds outperformed by 84 bps and 83 bps respectively, while Local Authorities outperformed by 22 bps. Domestic Agency bonds and Supranationals were a drag on performance during the month, underperforming the Treasury benchmark by 10 bps and 7 bps respectively. The government-related index outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury benchmark by 150 bps in 2016. The best performing sub-sectors for the year were Sovereigns (outperformed by 322 bps), Local Authorities (outperformed by 286 bps) and Foreign Agencies (outperformed by 258 bps). Domestic Agency bonds outperformed Treasuries by 38 bps, while Supranationals underperformed by 11 bps. Foreign Agency bonds and Local Authority bonds continue to appear attractive relative to U.S. corporate credit, after adjusting for credit rating and duration. We recommend focusing our government related allocation in these two sectors. In contrast, Sovereigns and Supranationals both appear expensive relative to U.S. corporate credit, and we recommend avoiding these sectors. Spreads on Domestic Agency debt have room to tighten in the near-term (Chart 5). Spreads widened to the top of their recent range last month on rumors that the new government could seek to speed up the process of GSE reform. We view these concerns as premature. This week we also remove our recommendation to favor callable agencies over bullets. Bullets have tended to outperform when the 2/5 Treasury slope steepens (bottom panel). We expect the 2/5 curve to be biased steeper in the first half of this year. Municipal Bonds: Underweight Chart 6Municipal Market Overview Municipal bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 134 basis points in December, but underperformed the index by 103 basis points in 2016 (before adjusting for the tax advantage). The average Municipal / Treasury (M/T) yield ratio fell 8% in December, but increased 13% during 2016. At present the average M/T ratio is 98%, only slightly below its post-crisis average (Chart 6). Although M/T ratios moved higher last year, trends in issuance and fund flows suggest they are still too low. As we noted in our year-end Special Report,4 our tactical model of the M/T yield ratio - based on issuance, fund flows, ratings changes and economic policy uncertainty - pegs current fair value for the average M/T yield ratio at 112%. Further, as was also highlighted in our year-end report, the municipal credit cycle is likely to take a turn for the worse in late 2017, with muni downgrades starting to outpace upgrades. This analysis is based on indicators of state & local government budget health that tend to follow our indicators of corporate sector health with a two year lag. Just last month Moody's downgraded $1.6 billion worth of the City of Dallas' general obligation debt from Aa3 to A1. The downgrade was justified based on the city's poorly funded public safety pension plan. Attention will increasingly turn to underfunded public pensions when state & local government budget health starts to deteriorate later this year. Treasury Curve: Favor 5-Year Bullet Over 2/10 Barbell Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview The Treasury curve shifted higher and flattened in December. The 2/10 slope flattened by 1 basis point on the month and the 5/30 slope flattened 6 bps. For 2016 as a whole, the Treasury curve bear-steepened out to the 10-year maturity. The 2/10 slope steepened 4 bps and the 5/30 slope flattened 12 bps. In our year-end Special Report,5 we detailed how the combination of accelerating economic growth and still-accommodative Fed policy will cause the Treasury curve to bear-steepen in the first half of 2017. This steepening will be driven by continued, but gradual, recovery in long-dated TIPS breakeven inflation back to pre-crisis levels (2.4% to 2.5%). Once inflation expectations return to pre-crisis levels, it is possible that the Fed will shift to a monetary policy that is focused more on tamping out inflation than supporting growth. At that point the curve will shift from a bear-steepening to a bear-flattening regime. A steepening curve environment will cause bullet trades to outperform barbells. On top of that, the 5-year bullet is currently extremely cheap on the curve (Chart 7). For these reasons we recommended entering a long 5-year bullet, short 2/10 barbell trade on December 20. This trade has already returned 8 bps since initiation, even though the 2/10 slope has flattened 10 bps during this period. A resumption of curve steepening will cause our long 5-year bullet, short 2/10 barbell trade to perform even better in the months ahead. TIPS: Overweight Chart 8TIPS Market Overview TIPS outperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 6 basis points in December, and by 331 bps in 2016. The 10-year TIPS breakeven rate increased by 1 bp in December and by 41 bps in 2016. At present it sits at 1.96%, still well below the 2.4% to 2.5% range that is consistent with the Fed's 2% inflation target. As we explained in our year-end Special Report,6 the Fed will be keen to allow TIPS breakevens to rise toward levels more consistent with its inflation target, and will quickly back away from a hawkish policy stance should breakevens fall. But while breakevens will continue to trend higher, the rate of increase should moderate to be more in line with the shallow uptrend in realized inflation. It is difficult for the Fed to drive long-dated inflation expectations higher while it is in the midst of a tightening cycle. For this reason, trends in actual inflation will be a more important determinant of TIPS breakevens than in the past. And while there are indications that the uptrend in realized inflation will persist, notably recent accelerations in wage growth and survey measures of prices paid (Chart 8). There is currently no indication that core and trimmed mean inflation are breaking out to the upside (bottom panel). We remain overweight TIPS relative to nominal Treasuries on the expectation that long-dated breakevens reach the 2.4% to 2.5% range in the second half of 2017, and that core PCE inflation reaches the Fed's 2% target by the end of the year. ABS: Maximum Overweight Chart 9ABS Market Overview Asset-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 17 basis points in December but outperformed the Treasury benchmark by 94 bps in 2016. Aaa-rated ABS underperformed Treasuries by 21 bps in December but outperformed by 75 bps in 2016, while non-Aaa ABS outperformed the benchmark by 13 bps in December and by 257 bps in 2016. The index option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated ABS widened by 11 bps in December, but tightened by 10 bps in 2016. Further, the spread differential between Aaa-rated auto ABS and Aaa-rated credit card ABS narrowed substantially in 2016. The option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated auto loan ABS has tightened by 20 bps since the end of 2015, while the option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated credit card ABS has tightened by 10 bps. We have previously noted that, after adjusting for spread volatility, Aaa-rated auto loan ABS no longer offer an attractive opportunity relative to Aaa-rated credit cards (Chart 9). We continue to favor Aaa-rated credit cards over Aaa-rated auto loans, given the low spread differential and divergences in collateral credit quality (bottom panel). As was noted in the Appendix to our year-end Special Report,7 consumer ABS provided better volatility-adjusted excess returns than all fixed income sectors except for Baa-rated corporates and Caa-rated high-yield in 2016. With spreads still elevated relative to other similarly risky fixed income sectors, we expect this risk-adjusted performance to continue. Non-Agency CMBS: Underweight Agency CMBS: Overweight Chart 10CMBS Market Overview Agency CMBS underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 40 basis points in December, but outperformed by 117 bps in 2016. The index option-adjusted spread for Agency CMBS widened 10 bps in December but tightened 6 bps in 2016. Agency CMBS still offer 50 bps of option-adjusted spread. This is similar to what is offered by Aaa-rated consumer ABS (51 bps) and greater than what is offered by conventional 30-year MBS (26 bps) for a similar amount of spread volatility. We continue to recommend an overweight position in Agency CMBS. Non-agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 19 basis points in December, but outperformed by 313 bps in 2016. The index option-adjusted spread for non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS widened 7 bps in December but tightened 48 bps in 2016. It has recently moved well below its average pre-crisis level (Chart 10). Rising CMBS delinquency rates and tightening commercial real estate lending standards make us cautious on non-agency CMBS. This caution has only intensified now that spreads are at their tightest levels since prior to the financial crisis. Treasury Valuation Chart 11Global PMI Model The current reading from our 2-factor Global PMI model (which includes the global PMI and dollar sentiment) places fair value for the 10-year Treasury yield at 2.31% (Chart 11). Our 3-factor version of the model, which also incorporates the global economic policy uncertainty index, places fair value at 2.02%. The lower fair value is the result of a large spike in the global economic policy uncertainty index in November that barely reversed in December (bottom panel). Large spikes in uncertainty that do not coincide with deterioration in other economic indicators tend to mean revert fairly quickly. So we would be inclined to view the fair value reading from our 2-factor model as more indicative of true fair value at the moment. However, unusually high uncertainty is one reason we are reluctant to adopt a below benchmark duration stance for the time being even though we expect yields to be higher in 12 months. At the time of publication the 10-year Treasury yield was 2.37% For further details on our Global PMI models please refer to the U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Message From Our Treasury Model", dated October 11, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. Monetary Conditions And Rate Expectations The BCA Monetary Conditions Index (MCI) combines changes in the fed funds rate with changes in the trade-weighted dollar using a 10:1 ratio. Historically, economic downturns have been preceded by a break in this index above its equilibrium level - calculated using the Congressional Budget Office's estimate of potential GDP growth (Chart 12). With the MCI having just reached this estimate of equilibrium, the shaded region in Chart 13 shows the expected path of the federal funds rate assuming that the MCI remains at its equilibrium level. The upper-end of the shaded region corresponds to a scenario where the trade-weighted dollar depreciates by 2% per year and the lower-end of the shaded region corresponds to a scenario where the dollar appreciates by 2% per year. The thick line through the middle of the region corresponds to a flat dollar. Chart 12Monetary Conditions Vs. Equilibrium Chart 13Fed Funds Rate Scenarios As can be seen in Chart 13, both the market and Fed are discounting a move in the MCI above its equilibrium level. This would be consistent with behavior witnessed in past cycles when the MCI broke above its equilibrium level several years before the next recession. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com Alex Wang, Research Analyst alexw@bcaresearch.com 1 Defined as total debt divided by EBITD. 2 Please see 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 Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification Corporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation Total Return Comparison: 7-Year Bullet Versus 2-20 Barbell (6-Month Investment Horizon)
Highlights The economy is near full employment, but betting on significant inflation is premature. Market-based inflation expectations have risen substantially in recent weeks but these moves are not corroborated by survey measures of inflation expectations. Consumer inflation expectations are very well anchored due to ongoing deflation in many frequently purchased goods and services. We are on high alert for a near-term equity pullback, with Chinese liquidity tightening as a potential catalyst. Feature Chart 1Market-Based Inflation ##br##Expectations Breaking Out After years of focusing on deflation, the possibility of inflation has made a comeback on investors' radars. The shift makes sense, given that the labor market is now operating near full employment. The December payroll report showed that payrolls increased by 156,000, slightly lower than the 3-month average of 165,000. But, average hourly earnings increased by 0.4%, suggesting that slightly weaker employment growth is not due to sluggish demand, and reflects a smaller available pool of workers. However, as we explain below, the potential for a major inflation surge is low in 2017 and is premature as an investment theme. We are on high alert for a near-term pullback to the equity bull market, given that valuation and sentiment are stretched. But as we outline, the threat to the equity market is less likely to be domestic inflation than an external event, such as the fallout from tightening liquidity in China (similar to what occurred in mid-2015 and early 2016). In the past few weeks, one-year inflation expectations have moved to their highest level since mid-2014, when oil prices were above $110/bbl. Long-run inflation expectations have also spiked since the U.S. election (Chart 1). The extent to which this trend is judged sustainable, and provides an accurate forecast for general inflation, has important investment implications. Our view is that, although TIPS could move a bit higher, the market move should not be interpreted as a harbinger for a broad-based inflation acceleration. Policymakers consider a range of inflation expectations measures, but in recent years, market-based measures have garnered a lot of attention. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven rate in particular is often viewed as the market's assessment of whether the Fed can successfully achieve its inflation target. According to the Minutes of the December FOMC meeting, the recent rise in market-based inflation expectations was discussed at length. On this basis, the rise in TIPS is important as it could have a significant role in setting monetary policy. Beyond that, we have argued for some time that a major challenge for firms this cycle will be to raise selling prices, i.e. a lack of pricing power will restrain profit margins and, ultimately, earnings growth. If the recent pick-up in market-based inflation expectations heralds a more robust rise in actual inflation, then profits could positively surprise this year. The Rise In TIPS Is Partially Energy-Driven... Since 2010, there has been a strong correlation between oil prices and TIPS (Chart 2). The correlation has somewhat confounded policymakers.1 In theory, any oil price shock, even if it is considered to be permanent, should not exert any lasting impact on long-dated forward measures of inflation expectations. The reason is that as long as the Fed is committed to its 2% inflation target, then the market should expect that monetary policy will prevent a one-time shock to oil prices from having any permanent effect on the overall inflation rate. This is why, in theory, the 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven rate is a good indicator for policymakers. Chart 2Oil Prices And Breakevens As our fixed income team explained in a report last year,2 the main reason for the tight correlation between TIPS and oil prices stems from the market perception that monetary policy has been constrained. Prior to the financial crisis, oil prices rose from below $40 in 2003 to $140 in 2008. During that time, long-dated breakevens remained stable. One possible explanation for this lack of correlation is that the Fed tightened policy during this period, offsetting the inflationary impact from higher oil prices. But in 2015-2016, when oil prices fell from above $100 to below $40, breakevens plunged alongside. If the market perceives monetary policy to be constrained by the zero lower bound, then it could be the case that the cost of inflation compensation is highly sensitive to falling oil prices because the market perceives that the Fed has no ability to offset the deflationary shock. In other words, the 5-year/5-year TIPS breakeven rate has fallen because the zero lower bound is challenging the credibility of the Fed's inflation target. Our U.S. fixed income team forecasted that breakevens will head higher once oil prices move up and that the correlation between oil prices and breakevens will eventually weaken as the fed funds rate moves further away from the zero lower bound. The bottom line is that TIPS are most likely being unduly affected by energy price movements. ..And Only Thinly Corroborated By Alternative Inflation Indicators Despite our bias that the recent moves in market-based inflation expectations are exaggerated, TIPS are not the only gauge sending a more inflationary signal. This week's ISM manufacturing and non-manufacturing surveys both reported an uptick in prices paid (Chart 3). According to the manufacturing survey, 18 out of 21 recorded inputs were up in price over the past month. However, the bulk of these are commodities that have gone up in price alongside other financial market prices, and it is not clear the extent that the price rise is physical demand-driven, or financial demand-driven. In the non-manufacturing survey, the price rise was not quite as broad-based, but is nonetheless suggestive of upward price pressure. The NFIB small business survey also hinted at higher prices, although much more modestly than the ISM surveys (Chart 3). The Atlanta Fed's Business Inflation Expectations Survey has not broken out of the range that has held since 2011. There was no change in inflation expectations from the most recent survey of professional forecasters. Meanwhile, as we noted last week, consumers are not at all worried about inflation. In fact, according to the Conference Board survey, consumer inflation expectations are at a new cyclical low! At least part of the reason that consumers do not expect more inflation is likely due to their experience with frequently-purchased items. Table 1 shows inflation rates for selected high-frequency spending items, which account for about 30% of the total CPI basket. The table makes it easy to understand why perceptions about inflation are low: almost half of the items in the table are in deflation and only two are above the Fed's target of 2%. It may not matter that a good or service accounts for a small share of spending: if its price is going up/down at a steady pace, then there will be an impact on perceptions about inflation. Currently, very low or negative rates of inflation among frequently purchased items are likely pulling down consumers' perceptions of broad-based inflation. In this sense, one could argue that inflation expectations are very well-anchored. Chart 3Survey-Based Inflation ##br##Expectations More Mixed Table 1Inflation Rates For Selected ##br## High-Frequency Spending Items Actual Inflation Will Stay Subdued In 2017... Chart 4Only Mild Uptrend Likely In 2017 For many years, we have deconstructed core CPI and core PCE into their three major components to better understand and forecast the trend in consumer price inflation (Chart 4). Performing this exercise today continues to give a fairly benign forecast for inflation. Shelter, the largest component of core CPI, is mostly determined by rental vacancies which appear to be stabilizing just as market rents are rolling over. Our model suggests that shelter will not drive inflation higher in 2017. Core goods inflation (25% of core CPI) will also remain very low and possibly stay in deflationary territory. This component of inflation is most tightly correlated with the trade-weighted dollar (Chart 4, panel 3), and so will stay depressed as long as the bull market in the dollar remains intact. Wage growth is most tightly correlated with service sector inflation excluding shelter and medical care (Chart 4, bottom panel). This component, which accounts for 25% of core CPI, is the most likely source of inflation pressure now that wages are beginning to rise. But as we wrote in a Special Report on November 28, 2016, any wage inflation and pass-through is likely to be very gradual based on several structural headwinds at play this cycle. All in all, core PCE may converge on the Fed's target of 2% in the second half of 2017, but an inflation overshoot should not be a major driver of investment decision-making over the next six - twelve months. ...And Don't Blame Government Spending For Higher Inflation When It Does Come One missing ingredient from the above analysis is the likelihood that the political environment will become inflationary. This subject has been thoroughly covered by the financial press. Our own view has been that upcoming policies may not turn out to be particularly inflationary, at least not this year. For example, Trump's fiscal package may not boost aggregate demand by as much as the more optimistic estimates suggest. There simply are not enough marquee "shovel-ready" projects around that can make use of the public-private partnership structure that Trump's plan envisions in 2017. As for proposed personal tax cuts, the impact is likely to be modest, given that the benefits are tilted towards higher income groups that tend to save much of their earnings. Likewise, corporate tax cuts will have only an incremental effect on business capex, given that many companies are already flush with cash and effective tax rates are well below statutory levels. Our benign view about the impact of government spending on inflation is shared by researchers at the St Louis Federal Reserve. In a recent paper,3 researchers looked at periods when the central bank was not working to offset the potentially inflationary effects of fiscal policy, e.g. between 1959 and 1979, when the Fed followed a policy in which it accommodated increases in inflation. They found almost no effect of government spending on inflation. For example, a 10 percent increase in government spending during that period led to an 8 basis point decline in inflation. Note that this period covers years of when the economy was operating at full employment and below. As the researchers point out, this does not imply that countercyclical government spending is ineffective at boosting output, but it simply demonstrates that empirical evidence of inflation related to government spending is thin. The bottom line is that we view the likelihood of significant inflation pressure as low in 2017. The implication is that under this scenario, the Fed can afford to adjust their "dots" gradually, diminishing the risk for stocks and bonds of an aggressive adjustment to the policy backdrop. Equity Correction: Will China Be A Contributing Factor? Chart 5Is China Liquidity Tightening##br## A Repeat Threat To U.S. Equities? Over the past few weeks, we have argued that the odds of a meaningful equity correction are running high, given the aggressive rise in bond yields and exaggerated move in sentiment relative to only minor upside surprises in economic and earnings growth. We are still on high alert for this outcome and believe that one possible trigger is tighter liquidity conditions in China, which are aimed at supporting the renminbi. Indeed, just like the start of 2016, the Chinese renminbi is kicking off 2017 on a weak note. Chinese policymakers are again tightening rules to limit capital outflows: earlier this week, they adjusted the FX basket used to set the CNY's official daily fix. The new FX basket will include 24 currencies (up from 13). Consequently, the weight of the U.S. dollar drops from 26.4% to 22.4%. This will make it easier for the authorities to target a relatively stable renminbi versus the basket even as USD/CNY pushes higher. These attempts to support the renminbi is leading to tighter liquidity conditions and higher interbank interest rates. In Hong Kong, 3-month CNH Hibor has spiked to 10%. In the past, a combination of a weaker renminbi and rising interbank rates has spelled trouble for U.S. and global equities (Chart 5). There is no guarantee that history will repeat itself and one big difference with the sharp market sell-offs in mid-2015 and early 2016 is that the Chinese economy is not as weak as it was then. The PMIs released this week were generally firm. Overall, we are positive on equities and negative on bonds on a 12-month horizon but still see the risk of a correction to the Trump trade as elevated. Thus, investors should continue to stick close to benchmark tactically, looking to implement positions after a pullback in stock prices. Like in 2015 and early 2016, China could provide the trigger to that pullback if the authorities give up on capital controls and allow a sharp depreciation of the RMB. Lenka Martinek, Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy lenka@bcaresearch.com 1 https://www.stlouisfed.org/~/media/Files/PDFs/Bullard/remarks/Bullard-N… 2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report "A Tale Of Two Rallies", dated March 29, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 https://www.stlouisfed.org/on-the-economy/2016/may/how-does-government-…
Special Report Highlights Dear Clients, The holiday season is upon us, a time that is always filled with traditions. This week, we are starting a tradition of our own with this new "year-ahead" outlook report, focusing on the big ideas and themes that we expect will drive global bond market performance next year. We trust that you will find the report interesting and useful. This is our final report of the year; our next report will be published on January 10, 2017. On behalf of the entire BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy team, we wish you all a happy and prosperous 2017. Kindest regards, Robert Robis, Senior Vice President, Global Fixed Income Strategy Duration: Global growth will continue surprising to the upside in 2017, led by the U.S. This will put some additional upward pressure on global inflation, with developed markets operating close to full employment. Look for opportunities to reduce portfolio duration exposure once the current oversold conditions in bond markets have eased up. Favor core European bonds over U.S. Treasuries in the first half of the year, but look to reverse that position later in 2017 when the "taper talk" is revived in Europe. Yield Curves: Global yield curves will bear-steepen during the first half of 2017, led by faster growth, rising inflation expectations and accommodative monetary conditions. Later in the year, the U.S. Treasury curve will shift from bear-steepening to bear-flattening as the Fed begins to deliver more rate hikes. Watch for upside inflation surprises in Europe and Japan that could trigger additional bear-steepening at the longer-end of yield curves later in the year. Inflation: Inflation expectations will continue to grind higher in the U.S. on the back of faster economic growth and slowly rising wage pressures. Expectations will also rise in countries that will see additional currency weakness versus the powerful U.S. dollar, amid persistent strength in commodity prices. Continue to favor U.S. TIPS versus nominal U.S. Treasuries, and go long CPI swaps and inflation-linked bonds (versus nominals) in core Europe and Japan. Credit: Faster global economic growth will help support corporate profits and also boost risk appetite for growth-sensitive assets like corporate bonds. Valuations are not cheap, though, and the credit cycle is well-advanced, especially in the U.S. Balance sheet fundamentals continue to look better in Europe than in the U.S., particularly for higher-rated companies. Look to increase exposure to U.S. corporates, especially for high-yield, if spreads widen. Feature How To Think About Duration: Stay Defensive The big story for bond investors in 2016 was the rapid surge in global yields during the latter half of the year, led by the near -6% selloff in U.S. Treasuries since the July market peak. The bond rout has been triggered by improvements in the usual drivers of interest rates - real economic growth and inflation expectations (Chart 1). Expect more of the same in 2017, with rising U.S. yields keeping global bond markets under pressure during the first half of the year, and maybe longer. Chart 1An Cyclical Rise In Global Bond Yields There is the potential for a bond-bearish upside economic surprise in 2017, led by the U.S. The latest projections from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), released in October, call for the world economy to expand by 3.4% in 2017. This is a moderate increase from 3.1% this year, led by some acceleration in the emerging world and the U.S. However, the IMF is still projecting U.S. growth to be only 2.2% in 2017, in line with both the Bloomberg consensus and the Federal Reserve's own forecast. That figure is too low, in our view. The Case For Faster U.S. Growth BCA's Chief Global Strategist, Peter Berezin, recently made a compelling case for real U.S. GDP to expand by 2.8% in 2017, led by a steady pace of household consumption, improved capital spending and housing activity, along with some inventory rebuilding after the massive drawdowns seen earlier this year.1 Importantly, this was our expectation before the U.S. election victory by Donald Trump, who has promised a major fiscal stimulus that can provide an even bigger potential lift to U.S. demand. If the new President can deliver on even a portion of his campaign promises, then the risks to U.S. growth are to the upside. A positive growth surprise of the magnitude suggested by our forecast would sound some alarm bells at the Fed. The U.S. labor market is already operating beyond the Fed's estimate of full employment, with the headline unemployment rate at 4.6%, and wage pressures are building amid shortages of skilled labor. A rapid surge in wage inflation is unlikely, given the still structurally low overall inflation backdrop, but a steady grind higher in labor costs should help boost inflation expectations back toward levels consistent with the Fed's inflation target (Chart 2). In that scenario, the latest projections from the FOMC calling for three additional rate hikes in 2017 seem like a reasonable expectation, if not a bare minimum. Already, market expectations for the path of interest rates have been climbing steadily (Chart 3) and have now converged to the higher median projections of the FOMC (the "dots"). Chart 2Moving Back To Pre-Crisis Levels Chart 3Markets Have Converged To The Fed 'Dots' Market repricing toward the Fed dots has been a major driver of the current bond bear phase for U.S. Treasuries, but with the market and the Fed now seemingly on the same page, additional increases in rate expectations - and, by extension, the real component of U.S. Treasury yields - will require visible signs of the above-potential growth that we are forecasting. This positive growth story may not come to fruition if U.S. financial conditions tighten too rapidly. Specifically, a rapid overshoot of the U.S. dollar (USD) and/or a correction in overheated U.S. equity and credit markets could trigger a pullback in expectations for growth and inflation that could prevent the Fed from delivering on additional rate hikes in 2017. This would suggest that the "Fed policy loop" is still in effect, with financial market turbulence limiting the Fed's ability to further normalize the funds rate. We have always maintained that the Fed policy loop could be broken if the global economy was strengthening alongside faster U.S. growth, thus allowing the Fed to raise interest rates without causing an unwanted overshoot in the USD. This seems to be what is happening now, with an improving global growth backdrop allowing the Fed to shift to a more hawkish policy stance that is positive for the USD but NOT negative for financial markets (Chart 4). This stands in stark contrast to the latter months of 2015, when the threat of a Fed "liftoff" during a period of decelerating global growth triggered a rising USD, but with falling equity markets and wider credit spreads. The pace of USD appreciation is also an important factor to consider. During the 2014/15 bull phase for the USD, the annual rate of change of the greenback peaked out at nearly 15%. This was enough to cause a major drag on U.S. growth, corporate profits and inflation (Chart 5) that forced the Fed to shift to a less hawkish stance earlier in 2016, helping take some steam out of the USD. Chart 4A Better Growth Backdrop For USD Strength Chart 5This USD Rally Is Nothing Like The 2014/15 Move It would take at least a 10% rise from current levels (i.e. EUR/USD near 0.95 or USD/JPY near 130) over the course of the year to generate the same drag on U.S. growth and inflation seen in 2014/15. We are not expecting such a rapid appreciation given that the USD is already fundamentally overvalued, with our currency strategists expecting no more than another 5% rise in the trade-weighted USD in 2017 (i.e. enough to take EUR/USD to parity). This would be enough to push the USD toward the same overvaluation levels seen in previous USD bull markets in the mid-1980s and late-1990s. Thus, the USD is likely to be a moderate drag on U.S. growth in 2017, but not as severe as during the earlier stage of the current USD bull market. Under this scenario, risk assets like equities and corporate credit may not suffer severe pullbacks, although a needed correction of some of the post-U.S. election run-up in asset prices could happen in the first quarter of 2017. However, as we have discussed in recent weeks, interpreting the surge in risk assets since the U.S. election as solely driven by expectations of a U.S. fiscal boost from the incoming Trump administration is neglecting the rise in global growth that was already occurring before the election. Even if Trump disappoints on the fiscal stimulus in 2017, bond yields may not pull back that much if global growth continues to accelerate. Rising Global Yields, Led By The U.S. In the U.S, with the economy projected to look in decent shape, the Fed can deliver some additional rate hikes in 2017. The current FOMC "dots" call for an additional three rate increases in 2017, totaling 75bps. If our forecast for U.S. growth plays out, then U.S. inflation is likely to grind higher with the U.S. economy currently at full employment (Chart 6). This will put pressure on U.S. Treasuries, with the benchmark 10-year yield rising to the 2.8-3.0% level by the end of 2017. Against this backdrop, global yields have additional upside versus current forward levels, justifying a strategic below-benchmark portfolio duration stance. We recently moved to a tactical neutral duration posture, given the deeply oversold conditions in the major developed bond markets, but we are looking to re-establish a below-benchmark tilt sometime in early 2017 after bonds have fully consolidated the rapid late-2016 run-up in global yields, setting up the next phase of higher yields. This move will look very different as the year progresses, however, with the Treasury curve bear-steepening as longer-dated inflation expectations grind higher, then switching to a bear-flattening phase in the latter half of the year when U.S. inflation expectations approach the Fed's target. This will prompt the Fed to begin delivering more rate hikes, causing the USD to appreciate further. Potential asset allocation shifts out of bonds into equities could exacerbate the expected back-up in U.S. yields, if investors take a more pro-growth, pro-risk stance in their portfolios after years of defensive positioning since the 2008 equity market crash. Higher U.S. Treasury yields will put upward pressure on non-U.S. bond markets, although the ongoing presence of domestic bond buying by the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Bank of Japan (BoJ) will limit the increases in the real component of core European and Japanese bond yields. However, additional weakness in the euro and yen, against the backdrop of a stronger USD, will result in a rise in European and Japanese inflation expectations that will provide some boost to nominal yields in those markets (Chart 7). If commodity prices build on the sharp 2016 gains and continue rising in 2017, as our commodity strategists expect, then the inflation upticks in Europe and Japan could be surprisingly large. Chart 6Not Much Slack Left Chart 7Look For More Inflation Increases Next Year In Europe, in particular, we see the ECB being faced with another "taper or no taper" decision during the 3rd quarter of 2017, with the newly-extended ECB asset purchase program now scheduled to end next December. ECB President Mario Draghi has noted that the 2017 political calendar in Europe - with elections coming in France, Germany, the Netherlands and perhaps even Italy - will create an environment of uncertainty that could act as a drag on economic growth in the Euro Area. The ECB will not want to make the situation worse by talking about a taper of its bond purchases, which could cause a rapid rise in government bond yields and a widening of Peripheral European sovereign bond spreads. This should allow core European bond yields to outperform U.S. Treasuries during the bear-steepening phase in the U.S. that we expect, pushing the benchmark U.S. Treasury-German Bund spread to new cyclical wides. However, at some point later in the year, the transition to Fed rate hikes and a bear-flattening U.S. Treasury curve, combined with decent economic growth and rising inflation expectations in the Euro Area, will allow the Treasury-Bund spread to peak out - especially if the ECB starts to signal a taper sometime in 2018 (Chart 8). This will be one of the most important transitions for global bond investors to focus on next year. In terms of our recommended allocation, we continue to favor underweight positions in U.S. Treasuries versus core European markets entering 2017, but we would look for an opportunity to reverse that position sometime in the latter half of the year as Treasury yields approach our 2.8-3.0% target, Euro Area inflation expectations begin to move higher and the ECB taper talk heats up again. In Japan, we see limited upside in nominal Japanese government bond (JGB) yields, as the BoJ's new yield curve targeting regime will ensure that the JGB curve out to the 10-year point is stable, even as global yields rise further. The BoJ is starting to get the combination that it is looking for, rising inflation expectations and lower real yields, led by the sharp decline in the yen at the end of 2016 (Chart 9). If global yields move higher led by the U.S., then this move can continue as the spread between U.S. Treasuries and JGBs widens further (Chart 10). Chart 8UST-Bund Spreads In 2017: Wider, Then Narrower Chart 9Look For More Japan Reflation In 2017 Chart 10BoJ Yield Curve Targeting Is Working However, we are only recommending a neutral allocation to Japan versus hedged global benchmarks, despite the BoJ imposing a yield "cap" on JGBs. The risk-reward potential for JGBs is unattractive. If global yields fall because of a financial shock or a surprise growth slowdown, JGB yields cannot fall as much U.S. Treasuries or German Bunds with yields at such low levels already. On the other hand, if global yields continue to move higher, JGB yields will not rise to levels that make them attractive on a total return basis because the BoJ is targeting a 10-year yield near 0%. There is even a chance that the BoJ could raise its target level if the yen weakens even more rapidly and Japanese inflation expectations increase very rapidly (not our base case, but a risk that markets may begin to factor in later in 2017). Finally, in the U.K., we continue to recommend a below-benchmark stance on U.K. Gilts heading into 2017, given the surge in currency-induced inflation in the U.K. amid signs that the economy has not slowed much since the Brexit vote. We could transition back to an overweight stance if the U.K. government triggers the actual Brexit process in the spring, as this would likely force the Bank of England to extend its current bond-buying program beyond the March 2017 expiry date. Bottom Line: Global growth will continue surprising to the upside in 2017, led by the U.S. This will put some additional upward pressure on global inflation, with developed markets operating close to full employment. Look for opportunities to reduce portfolio duration exposure once the current oversold conditions in bond markets have eased up. Favor core European bonds over U.S. Treasuries in the first half of the year, but look to reverse that position later in 2017 when the "taper talk" is revived in Europe. How To Think About Yield Curves: Steepeners Everywhere Now, Flatteners Later In The U.S. As discussed earlier, we see the case for more steepening pressures on the major developed market government bond yield curves in 2017, led by faster growth, rising inflation and central banks being reluctant to slow either of those trends. In the case of the U.S., the shape of the curve will also be influenced, to some extent, by the combination of growth, inflation, the Fed and the size of the potential fiscal stimulus coming from the new Trump administration. As we have discussed in a recent report, there has historically been a strong correlation between the slope of the U.S. Treasury curve and the size of the U.S. federal budget deficit.2 Typically, that is a cyclical widening of the budget deficit that occurs during U.S. growth slowdowns, and the Treasury curve is also steepening because the Fed is cutting rates during economic downturns. Thus, we are currently in a relatively unique environment with the U.S. economy growing at full employment, while the government is considering a potentially large fiscal stimulus. If Trump is able to deliver on even some of his campaign promises with regards to tax cuts and spending increases, this will put upward pressure on the Treasury curve through faster nominal growth and greater Treasury issuance (Chart 11, top panel). Yet if the Fed delivers on the rate hikes implied by its inflation forecast and the "dots", this will raise real interest rates and flatten the Treasury curve (bottom panel). The Fed will likely begin to exert greater influence over the curve by quickening the pace, and raising the magnitude, of its rate hikes if Trump's fiscal stimulus is large enough. This means that the Treasury curve will steepen more before the transition to flattening later in 2017, as discussed earlier. Chart 11Trump's Deficits Will Steepen The UST Curve...Until The Fed Flattens It To benefit from that first move to a steeper Treasury curve, we recommend entering a 2/5/10 butterfly trade - buying the 5-year bullet and selling a duration-matched 2-year/10-year barbell. The 5-year is currently very cheap on the curve (Chart 12), and the belly of the curve should outperform in a typical fashion if the Treasury curve steepens, as we expect. Chart 125-Year UST Bullet Is Cheap On The Curve In core Europe, the slope of the yield curve will continue to be dictated by expectations of both inflation and the eventual ECB decision on tapering of its bond purchases. Currently, Euro Area inflation has been remarkably tame given the nearly 50% year-over-year rise in energy prices denominated in Euros - typically, a move of that magnitude would have generated a steeper yield curve via rising inflation expectations (Chart 13, third panel). Some steepening has already occurred through improving global growth (second panel) and, more recently, from expectations that the ECB would soon be forced to cut back on its bond buying program, resulting in a wider term premium on longer-dated bonds (bottom panel). We see a core European steepener as a trade for later in 2017, when the ECB will be forced to discuss a taper once again. In Japan, the only action in yield curves will come at the very long end of the curve. With no guidance on yields beyond the 10-year point from the BoJ, the JGB curve at the very long end (i.e 10-year versus 30-year) will be dictated by global steepening trends, especially with the weaker yen boosting Japanese inflation expectations (Chart 14). We currently have this curve steepening bias on in our recommended global bond portfolio (see page 17). Chart 13Look For Bear Steepening In Europe In H2/2017 Chart 14Japan 10/30 Curve Will Steepen With The UST Curve Bottom Line: Global yield curves will bear-steepen during the first half of 2017, led by faster growth, rising inflation expectations and accommodative monetary conditions. Later in the year, the U.S. Treasury curve will shift from bear-steepening to bear-flattening as the Fed begins to deliver more rate hikes. Watch for upside inflation surprises in Europe and Japan that could trigger additional bear-steepening at the longer-end of yield curves later in the year. Chart 15Can Euro Area Inflation Stay This Low In 2017? How To Think About Inflation: Bet On Higher Inflation Expectations Everywhere Our view on inflation protection in 2017 is simple: you must own it. With central banks remaining accommodative, and aiming for an inflation overshoot, the backdrop will remain conducive to faster inflation expectations. U.S. inflation expectations will be boosted more by an economy growing above potential, with faster wage and core inflation rates. While in Japan and the Euro Area, expectations will be raised by faster headline inflation on the back of sharply weaker currencies and rising energy prices, even with core inflation rates remaining subdued (Chart 15). We continue to maintain a position favoring TIPS over nominal U.S. Treasuries in our Overlay Trade portfolio (see page 19) and, this week, we are adding new long positions in 10-year CPI swaps in both the Euro Area and Japan. Bottom Line: Inflation expectations will continue to grind higher in the U.S. on the back of faster economic growth and slowly rising wage pressures. Expectations will also rise in countries that will see additional currency weakness versus the powerful U.S. dollar, amid persistent strength in commodity prices. Continue to favor U.S. TIPS versus nominal U.S. Treasuries, and go long CPI swaps and inflation-linked bonds (versus nominals) in core Europe and Japan. How To Think About Corporates: Favor Europe, But Look To Buy On Dips In The U.S. We have maintained a cautious stance on U.S. corporate debt in 2016, led by our concerns over the health of U.S. company balance sheets. Our own top-down Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) for the U.S. had been flagging a deterioration in U.S. balance sheets since mid-2014, and this indicator has typically been correlated to the level of corporate credit spreads. However, the deterioration in the U.S. CHM is starting to reverse, suggesting that company balance sheets could be embarking on a new trend towards some improvement. We have been recommending that investors favor Euro Area credit over U.S. credit, given the wide gap between our worsening U.S. CHM and our improving Euro Area CHM (Chart 16). We are not yet ready, however, to shift to a position favoring U.S. corporates over European equivalents. The individual components of the Euro Area CHM still at much strong levels than in the U.S. and, in the case of liquidity and interest coverage ratios, are dramatically improving in absolute terms (Chart 17). Chart 16Cyclical Improvement In U.S. Corporate Balance Sheets Chart 17European Balance Sheets Still Look Better Our bottom-up CHMs, which are constructed using individual company figures rather than economy-wide corporate data, paint a similar picture. The CHM for Investment Grade corporates is dramatically better for the Euro Area, and this is being reflected in outperformance of Euro Area debt over U.S. equivalents (Chart 18). For high-yield corporates, our bottom-up U.S. CHM has recently shown a dramatic shift towards the "improving health" zone, catching up to a similar trend in Euro Area high-yield (Chart 19). We exited our overweight tilts on Euro Area junk bonds versus U.S. equivalents in 2016 during the early stage of that convergence, and we are looking for an opportunity to upgrade U.S. junk on any spread widening in the New Year. If we are right that the U.S. is about the enter a period of upside growth surprises with a Fed that is slow to ratchet up the pace of rate hikes, then the U.S. could be entering a "sweet spot" that is great for the performance of growth sensitive assets like high-yield corporates (and equities). Chart 18Euro Area IG Corporates Should Outperform In 2017 Chart 19U.S. High-Yield Corporates Should Outperform In 2017 Default-adjusted spreads still on the expensive side for U.S. high-yield, so we would look for a better entry point before upgrading our U.S. junk allocation. However, we expect that to be our next big move in our corporate weightings in the early part of 2017. Bottom Line: Faster global economic growth will help support corporate profits and also boost risk appetite for growth-sensitive assets like corporate bonds. Valuations are not cheap, though, and the credit cycle is well-advanced, especially in the U.S. Balance sheet fundamentals continue to look better in Europe than in the U.S., particularly for higher-rated companies. Look to increase exposure to U.S. corporates, especially for high-yield, if spreads widen. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Better U.S. Economic Data Will Cause The Dollar To Strengthen", dated October 14, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Weekly Report, "Is The Trump Bump To Bond Yields Sustainable?", dated November 15, 2016, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Special Report Highlights Theme 1: Secular Stagnation Vs. Trumponomics. A larger deficit will cause Treasury yields to rise in 2017 and, for at least a while, it will appear as though secular stagnation has been conquered. Theme 2: A Cyclical Sweet Spot. Better growth and an accommodative Fed will create a sweet spot for risk assets in the first half of 2017. The Treasury curve will bear-steepen early in the year and transition to a bear-flattening only when long-dated TIPS breakevens reach the 2.4% to 2.5% range. Theme 3: Global Risks Shift From Bond-Bullish To Bond-Bearish. The trade-off between accelerating global growth and a stronger dollar will dictate the pace of next year's rise in Treasury yields. Be on the lookout for bond-bearish surprises from the ECB and BoJ in late 2017. Theme 4: Lingering Policy Uncertainty. Frequent spikes in the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty index are likely next year, probably warranting a policy risk premium in asset prices. The composition of the FOMC is another tail risk that bears monitoring. Theme 5: A Pause In The Default Cycle. Recovery in the energy sector will cause the uptrend in the default rate to reverse in 2017, but poor corporate health and tightening monetary policy will lead to a resumption of the uptrend in 2018 and beyond. Theme 6: The Muni Credit Cycle Starts To Turn. The municipal credit cycle will take a turn for the worse in 2017, and muni downgrades could start to outpace upgrades later in the year. Theme 7: A Rare Opportunity In Leveraged Loans. The rare combination of rising LIBOR and elevated defaults will cause leveraged loans to outperform fixed-rate junk bonds in 2017. Feature In this Special Report, the last U.S. Bond Strategy report of the year, we present seven major investment themes that will drive U.S. fixed income market performance in 2017. Our regular publication schedule will resume on January 10 with the publication of our Portfolio Allocation Summary for January 2017. Theme 1: Secular Stagnation Vs. Trumponomics With 2016 almost in the books, it is clear that Treasury returns will likely be close to zero for the year. The total return from the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Aggregate index will be only marginally better, in the neighborhood of 1% to 2% (see the Appendix at the end of this report for a detailed summary of U.S. fixed income returns in 2016). But these disappointing returns don't tell the whole story. Up until November 8, the Bloomberg Barclays Treasury and Aggregate indexes had returned 4% and 5% year-to-date, respectively (Chart 1). It was only then that the surprise election of Donald Trump caused investors to question many of the assumptions that had driven yields lower during the past several years. As of today, there is not much daylight between the market's expected path of the federal funds rate and the FOMC's own projections (Chart 2). This means that for below-benchmark duration positions to perform well going forward it is no longer sufficient to call for a convergence between the market's rate expectations and the Fed's dots, as we had been doing since July.1 For Treasury yields to rise going forward we must exit the regime of secular stagnation - one that has been characterized by serial downward revisions to the Fed's interest rate forecasts - and enter a new regime where improving global growth and Trumponomics lead to a series of faster-than-expected rate hikes and upward revisions to the Fed's dots. Chart 1Bond Market Returns In 2016 Chart 2Market Almost In Line With Fed What Is Secular Stagnation? For the purposes of the bond market we define secular stagnation based on the observation that in each cycle since 1980 it has required lower real interest rates to achieve the Fed's inflation target (Chart 3). The logical conclusion to be drawn is that the equilibrium real interest rate - the one that is consistent with steady inflation - must be in a secular downtrend. A paper published last year by the Bank of England (BoE),2 and discussed in detail by our own Bank Credit Analyst last February,3 identifies the drivers of this long-run decline in the equilibrium real rate and ranks them in order of importance. Chart 3This Is What Secular Stagnation Looks Like One key finding from the BoE's research is that expectations for lower trend growth account for only 100 bps of the 450 bps decline in global real yields since the mid-1980s. Increases in desired savings and decreases in desired investment for a given level of global growth account for the bulk of the decline (300 bps), while 50 bps of the decline remains unexplained (Table 1). Table 1The Drivers Of Secular Stagnation The most important factors identified in the paper include: Demographics: A lower dependency ratio (the non-working age population relative to the working age population) is associated with an increased desire to save. Inequality: The bulk of income gains during the past 35 years have accrued to the richest tiers of the population, the group that is most inclined to save rather than spend. EM Savings Glut: Since the 1990s many emerging market countries have increased foreign exchange reserves to guard against capital outflows, representing an extra source of demand for safe assets. Falling Capital Goods Prices: The relative price of capital goods has fallen about 30% since the 1980s. This means that less savings are required to undertake the same amount of investment. Less Public Investment: The reluctance of governments to pursue large-scale public investment projects has contributed an additional 20 bps of downside to global real yields. Spread Between Cost of Capital & Risk Free Rate: The expected cost of capital (measured using bank credit spreads, corporate bond spreads and the equity risk premium) has not fallen as much as the risk free rate during the past 30 years. This has made investment less sensitive to changes in the risk-free rate. Is Trumponomics The Solution? Can a Donald Trump presidency actually change any of these long-run factors? It is conceivable that fiscal policies focused on spurring capital investment could enhance the outlook for productivity growth and reverse some of the decline in potential GDP growth expectations. However, lower potential GDP growth expectations have also been driven by slower labor force growth, a trend that fiscal policy is powerless to address. On the plus side, the dependency ratio is likely to bottom in the coming years and the increased infrastructure investment that Trump has promised would certainly put upward pressure on rates. It is also possible that the watering-down of certain regulations might bring the cost of capital more in-line with the risk free rate. However, these potentially positive trends need to be weighed against increasingly isolationist trade and immigration policies that will hamper potential GDP growth, as well as proposed tax cuts that disproportionately target the highest income tiers. The latter will only exacerbate the impact of inequality on real yields. What's The Verdict? With so much uncertainty surrounding fiscal policy it is premature to declare the death of secular stagnation. However, secular stagnation will not be the dominant bond market theme in 2017. Amidst all the uncertainty, one thing that seems likely is that a Trump presidency will result in materially higher deficits next year and consequently more Treasury issuance. Chart 4Big Government Only A##br## Problem For Opposition With one party now in complete control of the Congress it is certain that government spending will increase next year. As our geopolitical strategists have repeatedly pointed out,4 lawmakers are only opposed to higher spending when they are not in power. Survey results show that this is also true of voters (Chart 4). Further, Moody's has estimated a range of outcomes for the federal deficit in 2017 based on how much of Trump's stated campaign agenda is implemented. These estimates range from 4.1% of GDP at the low end to 6% of GDP at the high end. This compares to 3.8% of GDP that was expected under current law.5 The greater supply of Treasury securities next year will offset some of the increased demand stemming from the excess of desired savings relative to investment. This will cause Treasury yields to move higher in 2017 and, for at least a while, it will appear as though the forces of secular stagnation have been conquered. Bottom Line: While Trumponomics will rule in 2017, the forces of secular stagnation are simply dormant and are likely to flare-up again in 2018 and beyond. Theme 2: A Cyclical Sweet Spot In the first half of 2017 the combination of improving economic growth and accommodative monetary policy will create a "sweet spot" for risk assets. The positive environment for risk assets will only end when Fed policy becomes overly restrictive. We expect that restrictive Fed policy will not be an issue until near the end of 2017. Above-Trend Growth Chart 5Contributions To GDP Growth Even prior to the election, U.S. economic growth appeared poised to accelerate in 2017. The main reason being that some of the factors that restrained growth in 2016 are shifting from headwinds to tailwinds (Chart 5). Consumer spending should continue to be a solid contributor to growth next year, just as in 2016. Surveys of consumer sentiment suggest we should even expect a modest acceleration (Chart 5, panel 1). Residential investment actually contributed negatively to real GDP in Q2 and Q3 of 2016 even though leading indicators remained firm. This drag is bound to reverse (Chart 5, panel 2). Government spending contributed almost nothing to growth in 2016 but is poised to accelerate next year based on trends in public sector employment. This does not even take into account the potential for more stimulative fiscal policy in 2017 (Chart 5, panel 3). Inventories were a large negative contributor to growth this year. History suggests that large inventory drawdowns tend to mean-revert fairly quickly (Chart 5, panel 4). Net exports exerted less of a drag on growth in 2016 than 2015 due to moderation in the pace of exchange rate appreciation. With the dollar still in a bull market, net exports will not be a significant driver of growth in 2017 (Chart 5, bottom panel). Nonresidential investment was also a large drag on growth in 2016 and should return to being a small positive contributor next year. First, most of the drag was related to lower capital spending from the energy sector (Chart 6). Now that oil prices have rebounded this drag will abate. Second, surveys of new orders have remained supportive (Chart 7, panel 1) and industrial production growth has rebounded off its lows (Chart 7, panel 2). The rebound in industrial production growth is also likely related to the recovery in energy prices. Chart 6Contribution To Nonresidential Fixed Investment Spending Chart 7Will Capex Return In 2017? The end of the drag from energy alone will be enough to make nonresidential investment a positive contributor to growth next year. The wildcard is that the easier regulatory backdrop under President Trump could unleash the animal spirits of the corporate sector and lead to even larger gains. While this outcome is obviously highly uncertain, there is some evidence that business optimism has already increased. The NFIB small business optimism index shot higher in November (Chart 7, bottom panel) and what's more, the NFIB's Chief Economist Bill Dunkelberg noted that "the November index was basically unchanged from October's reading up to the point of the election and then rose dramatically after the results of the election were known." Accommodative Monetary Policy Even with an improving growth outlook we expect the Fed will be slow to react with a faster pace of rate hikes, opting instead to nurture the recovery in inflation and inflation expectations until they are more firmly anchored around its target. With core PCE inflation still running at 1.7% - below the Fed's 2% target - and the 5-year/5-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate currently at 1.86% - well below the level of 2.4% to 2.5% consistent with the Fed's inflation target - there is no rush for the Fed to send a message that it will move aggressively to snuff out incipient inflationary pressures (Chart 8). Instead, the Fed will continue to send the message that there is no need to be aggressive given the downside risks, and will continue to be sensitive to any negative market response to more restrictive monetary policy. In other words, the "Fed put" is still in place. If risk assets start to sell off due to perceptions of overly restrictive monetary policy, the Fed will be quick to adopt a more dovish posture. The Fed will react in this manner at least until long-dated TIPS breakevens are firmly anchored in the range of 2.4% to 2.5%. It is only at that point that the Fed will be less concerned about negative market reactions to Fed tightening and more concerned with battling inflation. Further, it will take at least until the second half of next year for long-dated TIPS breakevens to return to target. This is because they will be held back by the slow uptrend in actual core inflation. The sensitivity of long-dated TIPS breakevens to core inflation has increased since the financial crisis (Chart 9). We posit that this is due to the zero-lower-bound on the fed funds rate. Prior to the financial crisis, with the fed funds rate well above zero, in the event of a deflationary shock investors would reasonably expect the Fed to offset that shock by easing policy. As such, the deflationary shock had a limited impact on long-dated breakevens. But when the fed funds rate is constrained at the zero-bound, there is reason to question whether the Fed can respond to a deflationary shock as in the past. Given the proximity of the fed funds rate to zero, realized inflation will be a much stronger determinant of long-dated breakevens in the current cycle. Chart 8Inflation Still Needs To Rise Chart 9Recovery In Breakevens Will Moderate Inflation Will Move Higher, But Only Slowly Inflation will continue to march higher in 2017, driven by a tight labor market and upward pressure on wage growth. With the unemployment rate already at 4.6% even modest employment gains can lead to exponential increases in wage growth (Chart 10). However, the pass-through from wage growth to overall price inflation is likely to be muted. Shelter, the largest component of core CPI, is mostly determined by rental vacancies which appear to be stabilizing just as market rents are rolling over. Our model suggests that shelter will not drive inflation higher in 2017 (Chart 11, panel 1). Core goods inflation (25% of core CPI) will also remain very low. This component of inflation is most tightly correlated with the trade-weighted dollar (Chart 11, panel 2), and so will stay depressed as long as the bull market in the dollar remains intact. Chart 10Wage Growth & Unemployment Chart 11Core Inflation By Component Historically, wage growth is most tightly correlated with service sector inflation excluding shelter and medical care (Chart 11, bottom panel). This component, which accounts for 25% of core CPI, is where we expect the marginal change in inflation will come from. We expect that the current uptrend in core inflation will remain intact next year, but core PCE will not converge with the Fed's 2% target until late-2017. Investment Implications The combination of better economic growth and accommodative Fed policy is a fertile environment for risk assets, and we expect spread product will perform well in the first half of next year. At the moment, however, we advocate only a neutral allocation to investment grade corporate bonds and an underweight allocation to high-yield based on poor valuation (see Theme 5). Given the positive economic back-drop we will be quick to increase exposure if spreads widen in the near term. Long-dated TIPS breakevens will also continue to widen until they reach the 2.4% to 2.5% range that is consistent with the Fed's inflation target. As such, we remain overweight TIPS relative to nominal Treasury yields, even though the uptrend in breakevens is likely to moderate in the months ahead. We will likely downgrade TIPS in 2017, once long-dated breakevens reach our target in the second half of the year. The cyclical sweet spot of better growth and an easy Fed also means that the Treasury curve is likely to bear-steepen in the New Year. Historically, excluding periods when the Fed is cutting rates, the 2/10 Treasury curve tends to steepen when TIPS breakevens rise and flatten when they fall (Chart 12). Further, after last week's Fed meeting the 5-year bullet now looks very cheap on the curve (Chart 13). Chart 12Wider Breakevens Correlated With A Steeper Yield Curve Chart 13The 5-year Bullet Is Cheap On The Curve We expect Treasury curve steepening to persist next year until TIPS breakevens normalize near our target. At that point the bear-steepening curve environment will shift to a bear-flattening one. Investors should buy the 5-year bullet and sell a duration-matched 2/10 barbell to profit from curve steepening in the first half of next year and to take advantage of the cheapness of the 5-year bullet. Bottom Line: The combination of better economic growth and an accommodative Fed will create a sweet spot for risk assets in the first half of 2017. The Treasury curve will bear-steepen and TIPS breakevens will continue to rise. Curve bear-steepening will transition to bear-flattening once long-dated TIPS breakevens level-off in the 2.4% to 2.5% range. Theme 3: Global Risks Shift From Bond-Bullish To Bond-Bearish Alongside secular stagnation, the most important theme driving U.S. bond markets during the past several years has been the divergence in growth between the U.S. and the rest of the world. We have repeatedly pointed out that these global growth divergences have led to upward pressure on the dollar, and that a strong dollar necessarily limits the amount of monetary tightening that can be achieved through higher interest rates. The strong dollar thus serves as a cap on long-dated Treasury yields. This theme will remain very much intact for most of 2017, but will probably be less potent than in prior years. Our Global LEI diffusion index - a measure of global growth divergences - has moved firmly into positive territory. This makes it unlikely that we will see another dollar appreciation of the scale witnessed in 2014/15 (Chart 14). The fact that the U.S. is still leading the way in terms of growth means the bull market in the dollar will stay in place, but the appreciation will be less potent going forward. Still, from the perspective of Treasury yields, it will be important to monitor the trade-off between accelerating global growth on the one hand and a stronger dollar on the other. One tool we have devised to help guide us in this respect is our 2-factor Global PMI model (Chart 15). This is a model of the 10-year Treasury yield based on global PMI and bullish sentiment toward the U.S. dollar. A stronger global PMI puts upward pressure on the 10-year Treasury yield while, for a given level of global growth, an increase in bullish sentiment toward the dollar pressures the 10-year yield lower. Chart 14Global Growth Divergences ##br##Less Pronounced Chart 152-Factor Global ##br##PMI Model At present, this model tells us that fair value for the 10-year Treasury yield is 2.26%, well below current levels. This is one reason we tactically shifted to a benchmark duration stance on December 6 even though we expect yields to rise next year. Going forward we will continue to use this model to assess whether increasing global growth or a stronger dollar is dominating in terms of the impact on Treasury yields. Chart 16A Bond Bearish Surprise? Through the mechanism described above, the rest of the world will continue to be a bond-bullish force with respect to U.S. Treasury yields for most of 2017. However, near the end of 2017 it is possible that either the Eurozone or Japan could start to exert upward pressure on U.S. Treasury yields. This could occur if it seems likely that either economic bloc is poised to reach its inflation target and the market starts to discount an end to their extremely accommodative monetary policies. We have highlighted the risks of such events in prior reports, in the context of our Tantrum Theory of Global Bond Yields.6 The unemployment rate in the Eurozone is declining rapidly, but has historically needed to break below 9% before core inflation starts to rise (Chart 16, panels 1 & 2). If the current pace of above-trend growth in Europe is sustained throughout 2017 then higher inflation and the end of the European Central Bank's (ECB) asset purchases could become a risk to global bond markets late next year. However, even minor setbacks in growth would be enough to push this risk out to 2018. In Japan, although inflation is still well below the Bank of Japan's (BoJ) target, yen weakness suggests it should begin to rise (Chart 16, bottom panel). While the BoJ has promised to wait until inflation is above target before abandoning its yield curve peg, it is possible that near the end of next year, if inflation is much higher, the market will start to discount the eventual end of the BoJ's policy and cause global bonds to sell off. For now we would characterize these bond-bearish surprises from the BoJ and/or ECB as tail risks for the global bond market that could flare in late 2017. Bottom Line: The trade-off between accelerating global growth and a stronger dollar will dictate the pace of next year's rise in Treasury yields. Be on the lookout for bond-bearish surprises from the ECB and BoJ in late 2017. Theme 4: Lingering Policy Uncertainty With fiscal policy having the potential to drastically alter the economic landscape and yet with so much still unknown about what will occur, lingering policy uncertainty will undoubtedly be a major theme for fixed income markets in 2017. Historically, the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty index created by Baker, Bloom and Davis7 has been a reliable gauge of these risks and has also tracked asset prices surprisingly well (Chart 17). Recently, the uncertainty index has spiked and asset prices have not responded in kind. This is likely a signal that the spike in uncertainty will quickly reverse, but it could be a signal that asset prices are overly complacent. At the very least the spike in uncertainty highlights the fact that bond markets have been very quick to discount the potentially positive impacts of a Trump presidency, but are at risk if these policies are not delivered. This lack of a "policy risk premium" in fixed income markets is driven home by the reading from our 3-factor Global PMI model (Chart 18). This model adds the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty index to the 2-factor Global PMI model mentioned in the previous section, increasing the explanatory power of the model in the process. At present, the 3-factor model gives a fair value reading of 1.82% for the 10-year Treasury yield. Chart 17Economic Policy Uncertainty & Bond Markets Chart 183-Factor Global PMI Model While the most recent spike in policy uncertainty may reverse before asset prices respond, the volatile nature of the incoming administration means that more frequent spikes of the uncertainty index are likely in 2017. At some point asset prices will probably react. There is another political risk in 2017 that carries extra importance for bond markets. In 2017 President Trump will appoint two new Fed Governors. Also, there is a good chance that Janet Yellen and Stanley Fischer will not be re-appointed as Chair and Vice-Chair respectively when their terms expire in early 2018. Given the pedigrees of Trump's economic advisors, we would expect the newly appointed Governors in 2017 to have hawkish policy leanings. While this will not significantly alter Fed decision making in 2017, since the core members of the Committee will still be in place, there is a risk that the market will anticipate that one of the newly appointed Governors will be Janet Yellen's eventual replacement. If that Governor is hawkish, then there is a risk that the market will start to discount a much more hawkish Fed reaction function as early as next year. This could potentially speed up the transition from a bear-steepening curve environment to a bear-flattening environment, putting spread product at risk earlier than we currently anticipate. The MBS market would also be at risk in this scenario, since any incoming hawkish Fed Governor would be very likely to favor an unwind of the Fed's balance sheet at a much quicker pace than is currently anticipated. We already recommend an underweight allocation to MBS due to low spread levels and a continued recovery in the housing market that will keep net issuance trending higher. A change of leadership at the Fed represents an additional tail risk. Although we think it is premature to say for certain that Chair Yellen and Vice-Chair Fischer won't be re-appointed in 2018, the key risk for next year is that the market anticipates that they will be replaced. Bottom Line: Frequent spikes in the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty index are likely next year, probably warranting a policy risk premium in asset prices. The composition of the FOMC is another tail risk that bears monitoring. Theme 5: A Pause In The Default Cycle The uptrend in the trailing 12-month speculative grade default rate will reverse in 2017, falling from its current 5.6% back closer to 4%. But this will only be a temporary reprieve and the uptrend will resume in 2018 and beyond. Increases in job cut announcements, contractions in corporate profits and tightening C&I lending standards all tend to coincide with a rising default rate (Chart 19). All three of these factors signaled rising defaults last year, but have since rolled over. We have often drawn a comparison between the current default cycle and the default cycles of the mid-1980s and mid-1990s, and this comparison is still apt. Chart 19The Current Default Cycle Is A Hybrid Of the Mid-1980s and Late-1990s Distress in the energy sector caused a contraction in corporate profits and rising defaults in 1986. But then a sharp easing of Fed policy and a recovery in oil prices caused the uptrend in defaults to reverse. Corporate profit contraction, increasing job cut announcements and tighter lending standards also caused the default rate to trend higher in 1998. This time, however, Fed policy remained restrictive (Chart 19, bottom panel) and banks had no incentive to ease lending standards amidst a back-drop of rising corporate leverage. The default rate continued to trend higher in the late 1990s, and did not peak until the next recession. While the energy price shock and subsequent recovery make the current cycle similar to the 1980s episode, the fact that the Fed is more inclined to hike than cut rates brings to mind the late 1990s. This leads us to believe that the recovery in energy prices will cause the default rate to fall next year. This, along with better economic growth and a relatively accommodative Fed, will keep downward pressure on credit spreads throughout most of 2017. However at some point, likely after TIPS breakevens have recovered to pre-crisis levels, the Fed's tone will turn decidedly more hawkish. This will lead to renewed tightening in lending standards, a resumption of the uptrend in defaults and wider corporate spreads. Despite our optimism about the macro outlook for 2017 we cannot forget that corporate balance sheet health continues to deteriorate (Chart 20). Our Corporate Health Monitor has been in 'deteriorating health' territory since 2013, and although corporate spreads have tightened since February they have yet to regain their 2014 lows. Additionally, net leverage for the nonfinancial corporate sector - defined as outstanding debt less cash on hand as a percent of EBITDA - is still trending higher (Chart 20, bottom panel). The only other period since 1973 when corporate spreads narrowed as net leverage increased was following the oil price crash and default spike of 1986. In that period spreads remained under downward pressure for approximately two years but never regained their prior lows. Spreads also benefitted from Fed rate cuts and a weakening dollar during that timeframe. In our view, the best way to play the corporate bond market in the current cycle is to maintain a cautious long-term bias but to look for attractive opportunities to initiate overweight positions. At the moment, we are actively looking to upgrade our allocation to corporate bonds but need a more attractive entry point first. At 405 bps, the average spread on the Bloomberg Barclays High-Yield index is only 65 bps above the average level observed in the 2004 to 2006 period when our Corporate Health Monitor was deep in 'improving health' territory. Not surprisingly, the spread appears even lower after adjusting for expected default losses (Chart 21). Chart 20Corporate Balance Sheets Continue To Add Leverage Chart 21Corporate Bond Valuation The default-adjusted high-yield spread is our preferred valuation measure for high-yield and investment grade corporate bonds alike. As is shown in Charts 22 and 23, the current default-adjusted spread of 162 bps is consistent with negative excess returns for both investment grade and high-yield bonds, on average, over a 12-month investment horizon. Chart 2212-Month Excess High-Yield Returns Vs.##br## Ex-Ante Default-Adjusted Spread (2002 - Present) Chart 2312-Month Excess Investment Grade Returns Vs.##br## Ex-Ante Default-Adjusted Spread (2002 - Present) However, this average negative excess return is heavily influenced by a few periods when excess returns were deeply negative. A more detailed examination, shown in Tables 2 & 3, reveals that when the default-adjusted spread is between 150 bps and 200 bps, 12-month excess returns for high-yield have been positive 65% of the time. Investment grade excess returns have been positive only 35% of the time with spreads at current levels, but have been positive 55% of the time when the default-adjusted spread is between 100 bps and 150 bps. Table 212-Month High-Yield Excess Returns & Ex-Ante Default-Adjusted Spread Table 312-Month Investment Grade Excess Returns & Ex-Ante Default-Adjusted Spread Given our optimistic assessment of the macro back-drop, we conclude that excess returns for both investment grade and high-yield corporate bonds are likely to be positive, but very low, during the next 12 months. But we will continue to look for opportunities to upgrade our allocation to spread product from more attractive levels. Bottom Line: The improving macro back-drop means that the default rate will move lower in 2017. However, the poor state of corporate balance sheets means that the default rate will likely resume its uptrend in 2018, once Fed policy turns decidedly more hawkish. Theme 6: The Muni Credit Cycle Starts To Turn Back in October, we published a Special Report 8 wherein we observed that Municipal / Treasury (M/T) yield ratios tend to fluctuate in long-run cycles determined by ratings downgrades and net borrowing at the state & local government level. That is, there exists a municipal bond credit cycle much in the same way that there exists a corporate credit cycle. Additionally, we introduced a Municipal Health Monitor - a composite indicator of the health of state & local government finances - to help us assess the stage of the municipal credit cycle and observed that it has tended to follow our Corporate Health Monitor with a lag of approximately two years (Chart 24). Chart 24The Municipal Credit Cycle Lags The Corporate Cycle This analysis leads us to believe that our Municipal Health Monitor will move into 'deteriorating health' territory at some point during 2017 and that municipal bond downgrades could start to outpace upgrades late next year. As such, we adopt a cautious stance with respect to the municipal bond market, not least of which because of the potentially negative impact on the market from a Donald Trump presidency. Lower tax rates next year will certainly undermine the tax advantage of municipal debt, while the potential for increased infrastructure spending could lead to a sizeable increase in municipal bond supply. Historically, most public investment has been financed at the state & local government level, and while Trump's current infrastructure plan relies entirely on incentives for private sector investment, these details could change before any plan is implemented. By far the largest risk to the municipal bond market would be if the municipal tax exemption is done away with entirely in the context of broader tax reform, but this now appears unlikely. Even in the absence of a federal government initiative we would not rule out increased state & local government investment next year. State & local government finances have made substantial progress since the crisis and many states are now in a position where they may start to loosen the purse strings (Chart 25). This poses an upside risk to muni supply in 2017. Of course, we have already seen large fund outflows in response to Trump's election victory. ICI data show that net outflows from municipal bond funds have totaled $14.86 billion since the end of October, and while M/T yield ratios have risen, they remain near the middle of their post-crisis trading ranges (Chart 26). Chart 25Healthy Enough To Invest Chart 26Municipal / Treasury Yield Ratios We will continue to look for opportunities to upgrade municipal bonds when the reading from our tactical Muni model turns more positive (Chart 27). This model- based on policy uncertainty, issuance, fund flows and ratings migration - shows that M/T yield ratios are not yet attractive. This is true even if we assume that last month's spike in policy uncertainty is completely reversed. This model has a strong track record of predicting Muni excess returns since 2010 (Table 4). Chart 27Tactical Muni Model Table 4Municipal Bond Excess Returns* Based On Fair Value Model** Residual: 2010 - 2016 Bottom Line: The municipal credit cycle will take a turn for the worse in 2017, and muni downgrades could start to outpace upgrades later in the year. Remain underweight for now, but look for near-term tactical buying opportunities in municipal bonds. Theme 7: A Rare Opportunity In Leveraged Loans Chart 28Leveraged Loans Will Outperform In 2017 Our final theme for 2017 relates to the potential for floating rate leveraged loans to outperform fixed rate high-yield bonds. Historically, these periods of outperformance have been few and far between. There have only been two periods since 1991 when loans have outperformed bonds for any length of time (Chart 28). However, we believe that the conditions are in place for loans to outperform fixed-rate junk in 2017. There are two factors that can potentially cause leveraged loans to outperform fixed-rate junk. The first is rising LIBOR, which causes loan coupon payments to reset higher. While there is some concern that LIBOR floors prevent loans from benefitting from higher LIBOR, most loans have LIBOR floors of 75 bps or 100 bps. With 3-month LIBOR already at 99 bps, LIBOR floors will not be a constraint for much longer. The second factor that could cause loans to outperform bonds is an elevated default rate. Since loans are higher-up in the capital structure than bonds, they benefit from higher recovery rates. This matters more in terms of relative performance when the default rate is high. It is highly unusual for elevated defaults and rising LIBOR to coincide. This is because the Fed is typically cutting rates when the default rate is rising. However, next year, much like in the late 1990s, both conditions are likely to be in place. Bottom Line: The rare combination of rising LIBOR and elevated defaults will cause leveraged loans to outperform fixed-rate junk bonds in 2017. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Fixed Income Strategy / U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Six Reasons To Tactically Reduce Duration Exposure Now", dated July 19, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Lukasz Rachel & Thomas D. Smith, "Secular Drivers of the Global Real Interest Rate (Staff Working Paper No. 571)", Bank of England, December 2015. 3 Please see Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, "Secular Stagnation And The Medium-Term Outlook For Bonds", dated February 25, 2016, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "U.S. Election: Outcomes & Investment Implications", dated November 9, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 5 Mark Zandi, Chris Lafakis, Dan White and Adam Ozimek, "The Macroeconomic Consequences of Mr. Trump's Economic Policies", Moody's Analytics, June 2016. 6 Please U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "The Tantrum Theory Of Global Bond Yields", dated August 16, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 For further details on the construction of this index please see www.policyuncertainty.com 8 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Trading The Municipal Credit Cycle", dated October 18, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Appendix: U.S. Bond Market 2016 Risk/Return Summary Chart A-1U.S. Bond Returns In Historical Context Chart A-22016 Total Returns Versus Volatility Chart A-32016 Vol-Adjusted Total Returns Chart A-42016 Excess Returns Versus Volatility Chart A-52016 Vol-Adjusted Excess Returns Chart A-62016 Corporate Sector Excess Returns Versus Duration-Times-Spread Chart A-7The Performance Of Our Corporate Sector Model In 2016