Japan
Listen to a short summary of this report. Executive Summary The Dollar Likes Volatility Uncertainty about Fed policy has supercharged volatility in bond markets, and correspondingly, USD demand (Feature chart). A well-telegraphed path of interest rates will deflate the volatility “bubble” in Treasury markets and erode the USD safety premium. The dollar has also already priced in a very aggressive path for US interest rates. The onus is on the Fed to deliver on these expectations. Our theme of playing central bank convergence – by fading excessive hawkishness or dovishness by any one central bank – continues to play out. Our latest candidate: short EUR/JPY. The Russia-Ukraine conflict, and ensuing volatility in oil markets, is providing some trading opportunities. One of those is that “good” oil will continue to trade at a premium to “bad” oil. Go long a basket of CAD and NOK versus the RUB. TRADES* INITIATION DATE INCEPTION LEVEL TARGET RATE STOP LOSS PERCENT RETURNS SPOT CARRY** TOTAL Short DXY 2022-05-12 104.8 95 107 Short EUR/JPY 2022-05-12 133.278 120 137 Bottom Line: We recommended shorting the DXY index on April 8th at 102, with a tight stop at 104. That stop-loss was triggered this week. We are reinitiating this trade this week at 104.8, in line with our cyclical view that the dollar faces downside on a 12–18 month horizon. Multiple factors tend to drive the dollar: Real interest rate differentials, growth divergences, portfolio flows into both public and private capital markets, or even safe-haven demand. Across both developed and emerging market currency pairs, the dollar has been strong (Chart 1), but what has been the key driver of these inflows? For most of this year, interest rate differentials have played a key role in pushing the dollar higher. That said, they have not been the complete story. Chart 2 shows that the dollar has very much overshot market expectations of Fed interest rate policy, relative to other central banks. That premium has been around 8%-10% in the DXY index. In real terms, the overshoot has been even higher. Chart 1The Dollar Has Been King Chart 2The Fed And The Dollar Chart 3The Dollar Likes Volatility A key source of this safe-haven premium has been rising volatility, specifically in the bond market. For most of the last two years, the dollar has tracked the MOVE index, a volatility measure of US Treasurys (Chart 3). Uncertainty about the path of US interest rates, and the corresponding rise in dollar hedging costs, have ushered in a wave of “naked” foreign buyers – owning USTs without a corresponding dollar hedge. Foreign purchases of US Treasurys are surging. Speculators have also expressed bearish bets on the euro, yen, and even sterling via the dollar. There is a case to be made that some of these bullish dollar bets will be unwound in the next few months, even if marginally. For example, the market expects rates to be 248 bps and 313 bps higher in the US by year end, respectively, compared to the euro area and Japan (Chart 4). This might be exaggerated. The real GDP growth and inflation differential between the eurozone and the US is 0.1% and 0.8%, respectively, for 2022. The difference in the neutral rate could be as low as 1.25%. This suggests that a simplified Taylor-rule framework will prescribe a policy rate differential of only 1.7% (1.25 + 0.5(0.8+0.1)). In a global growth slowdown, US inflation will come in much lower, which will allow the Fed to ratchet back interest rate expectations. Should growth accelerate, however, then growth differentials between open economies and the US will widen, narrowing the policy divergence we have been experiencing. The safe-haven premium in the dollar has also been visible in the equity market. One striking feature of the correction has been the inability for US equities to outperform, as they usually do, during a market riot point. The carnage in technology stocks has been absolute, and the tech-heavy US equity market continues to struggle against its global peers. As such, there has been a break in the historically strong relationship between the dollar and the outperformance of the US equity market (Chart 5). Chart 4Pricing In The Euro And Yen In Line With Rates Chart 5The Dollar Has Overshot The Relative Performance Of US Equities As US equity markets were surging throughout 2021, investors started accumulating dollars as a hedge against equity market capitulation, which explained the tight correlation between the put/call ratio and the USD (Chart 6). As the carry on the dollar has risen, and puts have become more expensive, our suspicion is that the greenback has become a preferred hedge. Chart 6Dollar Hedges Against A Drawdown In The S&P As we have highlighted in past reports, the dollar continues to face a tug of war. Higher interest rates undermine the US equity market leadership, while lower rates will reverse the record high speculative positioning in the dollar. Given recent market action, the path of US bond yields will be critical for the dollar outlook. Cresting inflation could pressure bond yields lower. As a strategy, we recommended shorting the DXY index on April 8th at 102, with a tight stop 104. That stop-loss was triggered this week. We are reinitiating this trade at 104.8, in line with our cyclical view that the dollar faces downside on a 12–18-month horizon. As usual, this week’s Month In Review report goes over our take on the latest G10 data releases and the implications for currency strategy both in the near term and longer term. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com US Dollar: Inflation Will Be Key Chart 7How Sustainable Is The Breakout? The dollar DXY index is up 9% year-to-date, hitting multi-year highs (panel 1). The Fed increased interest rates by 50bps this month. In our view, the Fed will continue to calibrate monetary policy based on data, and the key releases continue to surprise to the upside. Headline CPI came in at 8.3% in April, while the core measure was at 6.2%. Both were higher than expected. Importantly, the month-on-month rate for core was 0.6%, much higher than a run rate of 0.2% that will be consistent with the Fed’s target of inflation (panel 2). It is important to note that used car prices have had an important contribution to US CPI. Airfares had an abnormally large contribution to US CPI for the month of April. As these prices crest, along with other supply-driven costs, inflation could meaningfully roll over in the coming months (panel 3). The job’s report was robust, but there was disappointment in the participation rate that fell from 62.4% to 62.2%. This suggests there might be more labor slack in the US than a 3.6% unemployment rate suggests. Wages continue to inflect higher. The Atlanta Fed Wage Growth Tracker currently sits at 6% (panel 4). These developments continue to underpin market expectations for aggressive interest rate increases. The market now expects the Fed to raise rates to 2.5% by December 2022. Speculators are also very long the dollar. Three factors could unhinge market expectations. First, inflation could come crashing back down to earth which will unwind some of the rate hikes priced in the very near term. That would hurt the dollar. Second, growth could pick up outside the US, especially in economies with lots of pent-up demand like Japan. Third, financial conditions could ease, which will help revive animal spirits. In conclusion, our 3-month view on the dollar remains neutral, but our 12-18-month assessment is to sell the dollar. We are reinitiating our short DXY position today with a stop-loss at 106. Euro: A Recession Is Priced Chart 8Go Short EUR/JPY The euro has broken below 1.05 and the whisper circulating in markets is that parity is within striking distance. EUR/USD is down 8.7% year-to-date. We have avoided trading the euro against the dollar and have mostly focused on the crosses – long EUR/GBP, and this week, we are selling EUR/JPY. The euro is in a perfect tug of war: Rising inflation is threatening the credibility of the ECB while there is the risk of slowing growth tipping the euro area into a recession. In our view, the euro has already priced in the latter, much more than potentially higher rates in the eurozone. The ZEW sentiment index, a gauge of European growth prospects, is at COVID-19 lows, along with EUR/USD (panel 1). My colleague, Mathieu Savary, constructed a stagflation index for Europe which perfectly encapsulates the ECB’s quandary. A growing cohort of ECB members are supporting a July rate hike. On the surface, the ECB has the lowest rate in the G10 (outside of Switzerland). With HICP inflation at 7.5% (panel 2), emergency monetary settings are no longer required. A “least regrets” approach suggests gently nudging rates higher to address inflationary pressures. House prices in Germany and Italy are rising at their fastest pace in over a decade, much more than wage inflation (panel 3). The key for the ECB will be to telegraph that policy remains extremely accommodative. It is hard to envision that hiking rates from -0.5% to -0.25% will trigger a European recession, but the ECB will need to balance that outcome with the possibility that inflation crests and real rates rise in Europe. In our trading books, we are long EUR/GBP as a play on policy convergence between the ECB and the BoE. This week, we are playing the same theme via shorting EUR/JPY. In a risk-off environment, EUR/JPY should fall. In an economic boom, the cross has already priced in a stronger euro, relative to the yen (panel 4). We are neutral on the euro over a 3-month horizon but are buyers over 12-18 months. Japanese Yen: A Mean-Reversion Play Chart 9A Capitulation In The Yen? The Japanese yen is down 10.5% year-to-date, one of the worst performing G10 currency this year. In retrospect, a chart formation since 1990 suggests that we witnessed a classic liquidation phase that could only be arrested by an exhaustion in selling pressure, or a shift in fundamentals (panel 1). The two key drivers of yen weakness are the rise in US yields (panel 2) and the higher cost of energy imports. As today’s price move suggests, any reversal in these key variables will lead to a selloff in USD/JPY – falling bond yields and/or lower energy prices. We have been timidly long the yen, via a short CHF position. Today we are introducing a short EUR/JPY trade as well. What has been remarkable in the last month is the improvement in Japanese economic fundamentals, as the country slowly emergences from the latest COVID-19 wave: Both the outlook and current situation components of the Eco Watchers Survey improved in April. This is a survey of small and medium-sized businesses, very sensitive to domestic conditions. PMIs in Japan are improving on both the manufacturing and service fronts. The Tokyo CPI surprised to the upside, with the headline figure at 2.5%. Historically, the earlier release of the Tokyo CPI has been a reliable gauge for nationwide inflation. Importantly, the release was much below BoJ forecasts. Inflation in Japan could surprise to the upside (panel 3). Employment numbers remain robust. The unemployment rate fell to 2.6% in March, and the jobs-to-applicants ratio rose to 1.22. The Bank of Japan has stayed dovish, reinforcing yield curve control in its April 27 meeting, with strong forward guidance. That said, the BoJ will have no choice but to pivot if inflationary pressures prove stronger than they anticipate, and/or the output gap in Japan closes much faster as demand recovers. Related Report Foreign Exchange StrategyWhat To Do About The Yen? We were stopped out of our short USD/JPY position at 128. In retrospect, USD/JPY rallied above 131 and is finally falling back down to earth. We are already in the money on our short CHF/JPY position, from our last in-depth report on the yen. This week, we recommend shorting EUR/JPY. British Pound: A Volte-Face By The BoE Chart 10The Pound Is Being Traded As High Beta The pound is down 9.8% year-to-date. While the Bank of England raised rates to 1% this month, they also expect the economy to temporarily dip into recession this year. This week’s disappointing GDP release confirmed the BoE’s fears. In short, pricing in the SONIA curve for BoE rate hikes remains aggressive. The Bank of England has been one of the more proactive central banks, yet the currency has been performing akin to an inflation crisis in emerging markets (panel 1). Inflation continues to soar in the UK with headline CPI now at 6.2% (panel 2). According to the BoE’s projections, inflation will rise to around 10% this year before peaking, well above previous forecasts of 8%. Together with tighter fiscal policy, the combination will be a hit to consumer sentiment. While the BOE must contain inflationary pressures (in accordance with their mandate), the risks of a policy mistake have risen, akin to the eurozone. Labor market conditions appear tight on the surface (panel 3), but our prognosis is that the UK needs less labor regulation, especially towards areas in the economy where labor shortages are acute and are pressuring wages higher. That is unlikely to change in the near term. As such, the current stance of tight monetary and fiscal policy will stomp out any budding economic green shoots. We are currently short sterling, via a long EUR position. In our view, the EUR/GBP cross still heavily underprices the risks to the UK economy in the near term. Given that the pound is very sensitive to global financial conditions (panel 1), it could rebound if recession fears ease, but our suspicion is that it will still underperform the euro. Canadian Dollar: The BoC Will Stay Hawkish Chart 11The CAD Will Stay Resilient The CAD is down 3% year-to-date. The key driver of the CAD remains the outlook for monetary policy and the path of energy prices (panel 1). In the near term, oil prices will stay volatile, but the CAD has not priced in the fact that the BoC is matching the Fed during this interest rate cycle, and/or the rise in energy prices. Together with the NOK, we are going long the CAD versus the RUB today. As we expected, the Bank of Canada raised interest rates by 50bps to 1% at the April 13 meeting. Since then, all the measures the BoC looks at to calibrate monetary policy are continuing to suggest more tightening in monetary policy. Both headline and core inflation came in strong, with headline inflation at 6.7% in March. The common, trim, and median inflation prints were at 2.8%, 4.7%, and 3.8%, respectively, well above the BoC’s target. This continues to suggest inflationary pressures in Canada are broad- based (panel 2). The employment report in April disappointed market consensus, but employment in Canada is back above pre-pandemic levels, and the unemployment rate fell to 5.2%, close to estimates of NAIRU. This suggests the BoC’s path for monetary policy will not be altered (panel 3). House price inflation seems to be moderating across many cities, which argues that monetary policy is having the intended effect, but price increases remain well above nominal income growth (panel 4). Speculators are slightly long the CAD, a risky stance over the next three months. That said, we are buyers of CAD over a 12-to-18-month horizon. New Zealand Dollar: Positive Catalysts, But Fairly Valued Chart 12Real NZ Rates Need To Stabilize The NZD is down 8.7% year-to-date. The RBNZ remains the most hawkish central bank in the G10. They further raised interest rates to 1.5% on April 13. Given a strict mandate on inflation, together with house price considerations, long bond yields have accepted that the RBNZ will be steadfast in tightening policy and hit 3.8% this month. This will help stabilize real yields are rising (panel 1). Underlying data suggests that the “least regrets” approach by the RBNZ makes sense – in a nutshell, tighten policy as fast as economically possible, to get ahead of the inflation curve. CPI continues to accelerate, hitting 6.9% year-on-year in Q1, from 5.9% the previous quarter (panel 2). House price inflation is rolling over from very elevated levels (panel 3). This suggests that monetary policy is having the intended effect of dampening demand. A weak NZD could sustain imported inflation, but a hawkish central bank cushions this risk. The RBNZ is forecasting a 2.8% overnight rate for June 2023. The OIS curve suggests that market expectations are much higher. This fits with our view that the market had been overpricing higher interest rates in New Zealand, especially relative to other countries. We already took profits on our long AUD/NZD trade and continue to expect the NZD to underperform at the crosses, even if it rises versus the dollar. Australian Dollar: Our Top Pick Against The Dollar Chart 13The AUD Has A Terms Of Trade Tailwind The Australian dollar is down 5.5% year-to-date. The Reserve Bank of Australia raised interest rates by 15bps on its May 3rd meeting, in line with the hawkish tone telegraphed at the prior meeting. The two critical measures that the RBA is focusing on, inflation and wages, have been improving. That said, we had expected the RBA to wait for fresh wage data, out next week, before calibrating monetary policy. The key point is that emergency monetary settings are no longer required in Australia. Home prices remain robust, the unemployment rate has fallen to a cycle low of 4% in and inflationary pressures remain persistent. Headline CPI was at 5.1% year-on-year in Q1. The trimmed-mean and weighted- median CPI print came in at 3.7% and 3.2%, respectively, above the upper bound of the RBA’s 2%-3% target range. The external environment is one area of concern for the AUD. The trade balance continues to soar, but China’s zero COVID-19 policy is a risk to Australian exports. On the flip side, many speculators are now short the Aussie, which is bullish from a contrarian perspective. We are long the AUD as of 72 cents, expecting this trade to be volatile in the near term, but to pay off over a longer horizon. Swiss Franc: The Yen Is A Better Hedge Chart 14Swiss Inflation Will Fall Year-to-date, CHF is down 9% against USD and flat against the EUR. The Swiss economy continues to perform well and remains relatively insulated from the inflation dynamics taking place in the rest of the G10. In April, headline CPI inched higher to 2.5% and core CPI to 1.5% year-over-year (panel 2), while the unemployment rate was down to 2.3%. The KOF indicator was also above expectations at 101.7. At 62.5, the manufacturing PMI is still well in the expansionary zone. In other data, retail sales were up 0.8% month-on-month in March and the trade surplus was down to CHF 1.8bn, likely due to the elevated exchange rate versus the euro. Since then, the franc has given up all its gains against the euro. Several SNB board members have recently spoken about the beneficial role of a strong franc in helping to control inflation (panel 4). That said, it is unclear whether the SNB, known for rampant currency interventions, will be as welcoming to a highly valued franc should inflation roll over. Switzerland’s trade surplus as a share of GDP has been persistently increasing since the early 2000s. An expensive currency would not be positive for economic growth. In fact, SNB sight deposits, have been on the rise recently. Last week, these deposits posted the largest one-week increase in two years. In a world where inflation starts to roll over, the SNB will be more dovish. In this environment, EUR/CHF can see more upside. Norwegian Krone: Bullish On A 12-to-18 Month Horizon Chart 15NOK Has Upside The NOK is down 10.7% against the USD this year. This is a remarkable development amidst higher real rates in Norway (panel 1). The Norges Bank is one of the most predictable central banks. It is set to deliver quarterly 25bps hikes through the end of 2023 to a total of 2.5%. In April, headline CPI rose 5.4% and the measure excluding energy was up 2.6% (panel 2). Although slightly above the latest projections, these figures are unlikely to make the bank deviate from its projected rate path. Economic activity is recovering steadily since the removal of pandemic-related restrictions in February. Household consumption and retail sales grew 4.3% and 3.3% month-over-month, respectively, in March. The manufacturing PMI broke above the 60 level in April, while industrial production was up 2.2% on the month in March. Registered unemployment fell under 2% in April, below pre-pandemic levels. This is helping boost wages (panel 3). Norway’s trade balance continued to break all-time highs with a NOK 138bn surplus in March. Elevated energy prices and the transition away from Russian energy should be a significant tailwind for the Norwegian economy. Oil companies planned to increase investment even before the invasion, and recent developments will likely induce more capex. NOK has significantly underperformed in the last month largely due to broad risk-off sentiment. Once markets stabilize, the krone should strengthen over the next 12–18 months. Given the relatively “safer” nature of Norwegian oil, we are initiating a long NOK/RUB trade today, along with a long CAD leg. Swedish Krona: Into A Capitulation Phase Chart 16SEK Has Upside The SEK is down 10.8% versus the dollar this year. In a major policy U-turn, the Riksbank raised rates by 25bps during its last meeting, after inflation came in above expectations at 6.1% on the year in March. The Bank also announced a faster pace of balance-sheet reduction, as well as expecting two-to-three more hikes before the end of the year. Just like the euro area, Sweden is within firing range of tensions between Russia and Ukraine (panel 1). Swedish GDP contracted 0.4% from the previous quarter. Global uncertainty and rising prices are weighing on consumer confidence, reflected in subdued retail sales and household consumption in March. The manufacturing PMI remains robust at 55 but is falling quite rapidly, as are real rates (panel 2). As a small open economy, Sweden needs external demand to recover. On a positive note, orders remain very strong and an easing of lockdowns in China should contribute to growth in manufacturing and goods exports later this year. It is also encouraging that Sweden’s trade surplus rose to 4.7bn SEK in March. The krona remains vulnerable to both a growth contraction in Europe as well as geopolitical risk, especially as Finland might join NATO, sparring retaliation from Russia. That said, the negative news is likely already priced in. SEK should benefit from growth normalization and a pick-up in the Chinese credit impulse in the second half of the year. As a way to benefit from this dynamic, we are short CHF/SEK, but short USD/SEK positions will be warranted later this year. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Artem Sakhbiev Research Associate artem.sakhbiev@bcaresearch.com Footnotes Strategic View Cyclical Holdings (6-18 months) Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
Executive Summary A True Bond Bear Market, USD-Hedged Or Unhedged The US dollar has appreciated in 2022, most notably against the euro and Japanese yen. The rally has been more muted against the currencies of major US trading partners like the Canadian dollar and Chinese yuan. The dollar strength to date has had minimal impact on US inflation and will not force any adjustment in the Fed’s hawkish path on interest rates. The weakness of the euro and yen versus the USD will not turn the ECB or Bank of Japan more hawkish, given the lack of visible pass-through from currency depreciation to domestic inflation in Europe and Japan. The two largest owners of US Treasuries, China and Japan, have not increased Treasury purchases in response to higher US yields and a firmer US dollar. Geopolitical tensions and a desire to diversify out of US assets will continue to limit China buying of US Treasuries. Even higher US yields will be needed to compensate Japanese investors for higher bond and currency volatility at a time when the cost to hedge USD exposure is high and rising. Bottom Line: An appreciating US dollar is not yet a reason to expect a peak in US inflation or Treasury yields, or a change in ECB/BoJ policy. Maintain a neutral global duration stance and continue to underweight US Treasuries versus German Bunds and JGBs. Feature The strengthening US dollar (USD) has gotten the attention of investors, with the DXY index up +8.1% since the start of 2022 and threatening a major breakout from the range that has prevailed since 2016 (Chart 1). There have been notable moves in the major currencies that are in the DXY index, especially the euro (EUR) and Japanese yen (JPY). EUR/USD now sits at 1.05 and is threatening a move towards the parity level last seen in 2002. USD/JPY has seen a stunningly rapid increase to the current 130 level, rising 15 big figures in just two months. On a broader basis, the USD rally has been less impressive. The Federal Reserve’s nominal broad trade-weighted dollar index is up a more modest +3.7% year-to-date (Chart 2). Currencies of the major US trading partners have seen less impressive moves versus the dollar compared to the euro and yen. The Canadian dollar is down -1.9%, while the Mexican peso is flat, versus the dollar so far in 2022. Even the tightly managed Chinese currency (CNY) has belatedly joined the depreciation party, with USD/CNY up +4% since mid-April. Chart 1USD Breaking Out Against The Majors Chart 2Smaller FX Moves From The Larger US Trade Partners For bond markets, the move towards a stronger US dollar is relevant if a) it is sustainable; b) it helps cool off the overheating US economy; and c) it induces capital flows into US Treasuries. On all three counts, the current bout of dollar strength has not been enough to reverse the upward trajectory of US Treasury yields, in absolute terms and relative to government bonds in Europe and Japan. Multiple Drivers Of The USD Rally First and foremost, the latest appreciation of the USD has been about rising US interest rate expectations. The Fed’s increasingly hawkish rhetoric in response to surging inflation has forced a sharp upward adjustment of both the near-term and medium-term path for US bond yields. This has been most evident in the real yield component of yields, with the yield on the 10-year inflation-protected TIPS now in positive territory at +0.15% - a big increase from the -0.5 to -1% range that has prevailed during the past two years of the COVID pandemic. Related Report Global Fixed Income StrategyWe’re All Yield Chasers Now The momentum of the USD rally, with a +13.6% year-over-year gain in the DXY index, has been robust compared to the outright level of US bond yield spreads versus the major developed markets, especially after adjusting for realized inflation differentials (Chart 3). This reflects other USD-bullish factors beyond US interest rate expectations. The US dollar typically behaves as a defensive currency, appreciating during periods of slowing global growth and/or rising investor risk aversion. Both are happening at the same time right now, boosting the safe haven appeal of the US dollar. Global growth expectations are depressed, with the ZEW survey of investment professionals back down to the pandemic lows of 2020 (Chart 4, top panel).1 Worries about slowing growth and high inflation, and the rapid tightening of global monetary policies needed to combat that inflation, are also weighing on investor confidence. US equity market volatility has picked up and investors are paying up to protect their portfolios via options - the VIX index is back above 30 and the CBOE put/call ratio is at a two-year high (middle panel). Chart 3A Big USD Rally Fueled By Wider Real Yield Differentials Chart 4Slowing Global Growth & Rising Risk Aversion Weighing On USD This “perfect storm” of USD-bullish factors – rising US interest rate expectations, slowing global growth expectations and increased investor nervousness – has pushed to USD to a level that now appears stretched. BCA Research’s US Dollar Composite Technical Indicator, which combines measures of breadth, momentum, sentiment and trader positioning, is now at an overbought extreme that has heralded past US dollar reversals (bottom panel). Bottom Line: The rising US dollar now discounts a lot of Fed tightening, growth pessimism and investor fear. Conditions for a reversal are in place if any of those USD-bullish factors lose influence, most notably Fed expectations. USD Strength Does Not Impact The Outlook For The Fed, ECB Or BoJ Chart 5A True Bond Bear Market, USD-Hedged Or Unhedged USD strength has made life even more difficult of bond investors, at a time when returns across the fixed income universe have suffered because of the duration-related losses from rising bond yields. The Bloomberg Global Treasury index is down -12.2% so far in 2022, and down -18% from the 2020 peak, on a currency-unhedged basis (Chart 5). The returns are not much better this year on a USD-hedged basis, down -6.8% since the start of the year. The latter is suffering from both duration losses and the rising cost to hedge the US dollar. An investor hedging USD exposure into JPY must pay an annualized 165bps (using 3-month currency forwards), while hedging USD exposure into EUR costs 200bps. Those hedging costs primarily reflect higher US interest rate expectations versus Europe and Japan. They will only come down when markets believe that the Fed will stop raising interest rates and begin to easy policy. It is not clear that the current bout of USD strength, on its own, is enough to change the Fed’s plans. Typically, a substantially stronger US dollar would lead the Fed along a less hawkish path, as it would act to slow imported inflation pressures. However, this is not a typical Fed cycle with US headline CPI inflation at a 41-year high of 8.5%. A huge part of that US inflation overshoot is due to global supply squeezes that have impacted the prices of traded goods and commodities. On a rate-of-change basis, the appreciating US dollar is coinciding with some slowing of commodity price momentum, but less so for goods prices. The index of world export prices compiled by the CPB Research Bureau in the Netherlands is up +12.2% on a year-over-year basis, a rapid pace that typically exists during periods of US dollar depreciation (Chart 6, top panel). The annual growth of the CRB commodity index is +17.2%, down from the peak of +54.4% in June 2021, and has roughly tracked the acceleration of the US dollar (middle panel). Yet even with the moderation of commodity inflation, the US dollar strength seen to date has not been enough to slow overshooting global goods price inflation – a necessary condition for central banks like the Fed to turn less hawkish (bottom panel). We do expect global goods price inflation to moderate over the rest of 2022, especially in the US, as post-pandemic consumer spending patterns shift away from goods back towards services. This will be a demand-related story, however, not a USD-strength-related story. Until there is more decisive evidence that goods inflation is slowing meaningfully, the Fed will be forced to deliver on its latest hawkish rhetoric. This includes shifting to a path of hiking rates by 50bps per meeting and moving towards a faster reduction of the Fed’s balance sheet. Right now, there is not much evidence suggesting that the stronger dollar should derail that trajectory (Chart 7): Chart 6USD Strength Not Helping To Slow Global Inflation Chart 7The Fed Will Remain Hawkish, Despite A Firmer USD Non-oil import prices are expanding at a +7.5% pace and accelerating in the face of a firmer US dollar that would normally coincide with slowing import price growth (top panel) The overall level of US financial conditions – which includes not only the currency but other variables like equity prices and corporate bond yields - remains stimulative, both in absolute terms and relative to the level of the trade-weighted US dollar (middle panel). One area of concern is the widening US trade deficit, now nearly -5% of GDP in nominal terms (bottom panel). That wider deficit is primarily related to the combination of strong import demand (and soaring import prices) and soft export demand given slowing global growth. A stronger US dollar does not help reverse either of those trends. However, it is difficult for the Fed to isolate the impact of the currency on the trade deficit given the other non-currency-related factors weighing on US export and import demand (i.e. weaker exports because of the Ukraine war and China COVID lockdowns). In sum, the US dollar strength seen so far does not change our expectations on the path of US inflation, and the pace of Fed tightening, over the next 6-12 months. We still see the Fed delivering multiple rate hikes, but less than the 298bps discounted in the US overnight index swap (OIS) curve over the next year. Conversely, the weakness of the euro and yen versus the US dollar does not change our outlook for the ECB and Bank of Japan. We see both central banks not delivering anything close to the rate hikes discounted in OIS curves. Chart 8Not Much Inflation From A Weaker Euro & Yen On a trade-weighted basis, the euro is only down -5% over the past year - a modest move in comparison to soaring euro area inflation, which hit +7.5% on a headline basis and +3.5% on a core basis in April (Chart 8, middle panel). The ECB is under pressure to end its asset purchases very quickly and begin raising rates, but the euro does not appear to be a reason to accelerate the ECB’s timetable. In Japan, the very rapid weakening of the yen has generated shockingly little inflation, especially in the current environment of strong global goods/commodities inflation. The trade-weighted yen is down -12.7% on a year-over-year basis, yet Japan’s “core-core” CPI index that excludes food and energy prices remains in deflation hitting -0.7% in March – a move exaggerated by plunging mobile phone prices, but still very weak compared to the path of the yen and global goods prices. OIS curves are currently discounting 183bps of ECB rate hikes and 9bps of Bank of Japan rate hikes over the next year. We recommend fading that pricing by staying overweight core Europe and Japan in global bond portfolios, especially versus the US where the Fed is far more likely to follow through on discounted rate hikes. Bottom Line: The dollar strength to date has had minimal impact on US inflation and will not force any adjustment in the Fed’s hawkish path on interest rates. At the same time, the weakness of the euro and yen versus the USD will not turn the ECB or Bank of Japan more hawkish, given the lack of visible pass-through from currency depreciation to domestic inflation in Europe and Japan. Can Foreign Investors Replace Fed Treasury Buying? Chart 9UST Demand Shifting To More Price-Sensitive Buyers For bond investors, the role of non-US demand for US Treasuries has always been a source of mystery that is often used to explain yield movements. Rumors of flows from major emerging market currency reserve managers or large Asian pension funds has often been used to justify a bullish or bearish view on Treasuries – even when hard data that could prove the existence of such flows is published with long lags that make it useless for timely analysis. The impact of potential foreign bond buying on US Treasury yields has been less influential over the past couple of years. Fed buying via quantitative easing (QE) has swamped all other sources of demand for Treasuries. With the Fed now in a rate hiking cycle that will also lead to a rapid start of quantitative tightening (QT) this summer, the question of who will replace the Fed’s demand for US Treasuries becomes once again relevant for the future path of US bond yields beyond the expected path of the fed funds rate. Already, there has been an adjustment in the term premium for longer-term US Treasury yields – the component of bond yield valuation that would be most impacted by large flows - as the Fed has slowed its pace of bond buying (Chart 9). The New York Fed’s estimates of the term premium on the 10-year Treasury yield reached deeply depressed levels – around -100bps - at the peak of the Fed’s pandemic QE program in 2020. As the US economy has recovered from the 2020 COVID recession, US interest rate expectations have increased but so have estimates of the term premium, which are now back to zero or even slightly positive. The Fed’s QE bond buying has been purely volume driven, with the size and timing of the purchases announced well in advance. The Fed is often called a “price insensitive” buyer since its buying is done without any consideration of yield levels. Other Treasury investors, including foreign buyers, are more price sensitive, with demand influenced by the level of yields. According to the TIC database on US capital flows produced by the US Treasury Department, net foreign buying of Treasuries has picked up, totaling +$346 billion over the 12 months to the most recently available data from February 2022 (Chart 10). That increase has entirely come from private investors, as so-called “official” flows have been flat. Chart 10China Remains On A UST Buyer's Strike Chart 11European Buying Of USTs Set To Peak? The latter is a continuation of the trend seen over the past few years where China, the nation with the second largest holdings of US Treasuries, has stopped buying them. This is a decision rooted in both geopolitics and economics. Smaller trade surpluses mean China has fewer new currency reserves to invest, while worsening Sino-US tensions have led Chinese authorities to diversify existing reserve holdings away from US Treasuries into gold and other assets. Looking ahead, China is unlikely to significantly ramp up its Treasury purchases despite more attractive US yields and Chinese policymakers tolerating some mild currency weakness versus the US dollar. Beyond China, demand for Treasuries from Europe and Japan has picked up but remains moderate by historical standards. For European investors, there has been a major swing in the TIC data, moving from a net outflow (on a 12-month running total basis) of -$194 billion in December 2020 to a net inflow of +$24 billion in February 2022 (Chart 11, top panel). Typically, net inflows into Treasuries are linked to the FX-hedged spread between US and German government debt. Specifically, when the hedged 10-year Treasury-Bund spread widens to a level between 100-150bps, the flows from Europe into Treasuries begin to improve (middle panel) When that hedged spread narrows to zero or lower, the flows turn the other way and European demand for Treasuries begins to wane. That is typically followed by a widening of the unhedged Treasury-Bund spread (bottom panel). With the current FX-hedged Treasury-Bund spread now at zero, a result of the high cost of hedging US dollars into euros given elevated US rate expectations, we expect European demand for Treasuries to diminish over the rest of 2022. This will help support a wider Treasury-Bund spread as the Fed delivers far more rate hikes than the ECB. For Japan, the largest holder of Treasuries, there has only been a stabilization of outflows over the 12 months to February 2022 (Chart 12, top panel). Past periods of large net inflows from Japan into US Treasuries have occurred when the hedged 10-year US Treasury-JGB spread has approached 200bps (middle panel). With the current spread at only 112bps, Japanese investor demand for Treasuries is unlikely to return without a significant increase in US yields. Chart 12UST Yields Not Attractive Enough To Induce More Japanese Demand Chart 13Foreign Bond Investing Is Too Volatile For Japanese Investors Right Now More timely weekly capital flow data from Japan shows that Japanese investors have been reluctant to move money into foreign bonds (Chart 13). Elevated levels of bond/rate volatility, and currency volatility given the huge rally in USD/JPY, have made large Japanese bond investors more cautious on increasing foreign bond allocations, even on a currency-hedged basis. If bond/FX volatility subsides, Japanese investors will become “better buyers” of foreign bonds once again. However, Japanese investors may opt to increase allocations to European bonds rather than US Treasuries, with European yields at comparable levels to US Treasuries in JPY-hedged terms (Tables 1-4). For example, a 30-year German Bund hedged into yen now yields 1.46%, compared to a JPY-hedged 30-year US Treasury yield of 1.33%. Table 12-Year Developed Market Government Bond Yields, Hedged Into USD, EUR & JPY Table 25-Year Developed Market Government Bond Yields, Hedged Into USD, EUR & JPY Table 310-Year Developed Market Government Bond Yields, Hedged Into USD, EUR & JPY Table 430-Year Developed Market Government Bond Yields, Hedged Into USD, EUR & JPY Bottom Line: Foreign demand for US Treasuries is unlikely to accelerate enough to replace diminished Fed QE purchases over the next 6-12 months, given high USD-hedging costs and elevated Treasury yield volatility. Non-US investors will not help bring an end to the US bond bear market. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The Global ZEW expectations series shown in Chart 4 is an equal-weighted average of the individual expectations series for the US and euro area. GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Recommended Positioning Active Duration Contribution: GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. Custom Performance Benchmark The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Global Fixed Income - Strategic Recommendations* Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months) Tactical Overlay Trades
The Japanese yen dropped nearly 2% versus the USD on Thursday on the reaffirmation of the BoJ’s commitment to ultra-easy policy. The BoJ pledged to purchase an unlimited amount of bonds daily in order to maintain its 10-year JGB yield target “at around…
Executive Summary Summarizing Our Main Investment Themes In One Chart Our current strategic recommendations are centered around four key themes: global inflation will slow over the rest of 2022, Europe remains too weak to handle significantly higher interest rates, corporate default risk in the US and Europe is relatively low, and the fundamental backdrop for emerging markets is poor. If we are going to be proven wrong on any of those themes, it will most likely be because global inflation remains high for longer due to resilient commodity prices and lingering supply chain disruptions. A sluggish economy will handcuff the ECB’s ability to raise rates as fast as markets are discounting over the next year. The state of corporate balance sheet health in the developed world is not problematic, on average, even with some sectors taking on more leverage in response to the 2020 COVID downturn. A sustainable rebound in EM markets would require a “perfect storm” combination of events to occur – aggressive China stimulus, a de-escalation of Russia/Ukraine tensions, a weaker US dollar and diminished global inflation pressures. Bottom Line: We remain comfortable with our main fixed income investment recommendations: maintaining neutral global portfolio duration, overweighting core European bonds versus US Treasuries, favoring high-yield corporates over investment grade (both in the US and Europe), and underweighting EM hard currency debt. Feature One of the foundations of a sound medium-term investment process is to allocate capital towards highest conviction views, while constantly assessing - and reassessing - if those views are unfolding as expected. Trades that are not going according to plan may need to be reconstructed, if not exited entirely, to avoid losses. We feel the same way about the investment recommendations highlighted in the pages of our reports, which represent our portfolio, as it were. With this in mind, in this report we identify the four most critical themes underpinning our current main investment recommendations and evaluate the potential risks that our views will not turn out as expected. Theme #1: Global Inflation Will Decline In The Latter Half Of 2022 Our biggest theme for the rest of this year is that global inflation will cool off after the massive acceleration over the past year. Many of our current fixed income investment recommendations across the developed markets – maintaining neutral overall global duration exposure, underweighting global inflation-linked bonds versus nominal government debt, betting against additional yield curve flattening (especially in the US) – are predicated on reduced inflationary pressure on interest rates. Related Report Global Fixed Income StrategyA Crude Awakening For Bond Investors The expectation of lower inflation is based on some easing of the forces that first caused the current inflationary overshoot – booming commodity prices and rapidly accelerating goods prices due to supply-chain disruptions. Already, the commodity price factor is starting to fade, on an annual rate-of-change basis that matters for overall inflation, thanks to more favorable comparisons to the commodity surge in 2021 (Chart 1). The year-over-year growth rate of the CRB index has decelerated from a peak of 54.4% in June 2021 to 19.3% today, even with many commodity prices seeing big increases in response to the Russia/Ukraine war. This is because the increases in commodity prices were even larger one year ago when much of the global economy reopened from COVID-related economic restrictions. Favorable base effect comparisons are not the only reason why commodity inflation has slowed. Commodities are priced in US dollars, and the steady appreciation of the greenback, with the trade-weighted dollar up 5% on an year-over-year basis, has also helped to slow commodity price momentum (Chart 2). Slower global growth, coming off the overheated pace of 2021, has also acted as a drag on overall commodity price inflation (middle panel). Beyond the commodity space, some easing of global supply chain tensions has resulted in indicators of shipping costs seeing meaningful declines even with supplier delivery times still elevated (bottom panel). Chart 1Our Main Strategic Theme: Decelerating Global Inflation Chart 2Disinflationary Momentum From Commodities Already Underway A more fundamental factor that should help moderate global inflation momentum this year beyond the commodity/supply chain effects relates to a lack of broad-based global "excess demand", even as the world economy continues to recover from the massive pandemic shock in 2020. The IMF’s latest projections on output gaps – estimates of the amount of spare economic capacity – show that few major developed or emerging market economies are expected to have positive output gaps over 2022 and 2023 (Chart 3). The US is the most notable exception, with an output gap projected to average +1.6% this year and next. Most other developed market countries are projected to have an output gap close to zero. This suggests that the US is facing the most inflationary pressure from an overheating economy, which is why we continue to see the Fed as being the most hawkish major developed market central bank over the next couple of years. Chart 3Few Countries Expected To Have Inflationary Output Gaps In 2022/23 Yet even with so much of the macro backdrop supporting our call for slower global inflation in the coming months, there are several potential risks to that view. Chart 4A Risk To Our Lower Inflation View: Resilient Oil Prices Another war-related upleg in global oil prices Our commodity strategists continue to see oil prices settling down to the low $90s by year-end. Yet oil has seen tremendous volatility since the Ukraine war began as prices had to factor in the potential loss of Russian oil supplies in an already tight crude market. The benchmark Brent oil price briefly hit $140 in the immediate aftermath of the Russian invasion. A similar move sustained over the latter half of 2022 would trigger a reacceleration of oil momentum, putting upward pressure on overall global inflation rates. A renewed bout of energy-induced inflation would push global interest rate expectations, and bond yields, even higher from current levels – a challenge to both our neutral duration stance and underweight bias on global inflation-linked bonds (Chart 4). More supply-chain disruption from China Chinese authorities are clamping down hard on the current COVID wave sweeping across China. The current lockdowns in major cities like Shanghai could shave as much as one percentage point off Chinese real GDP growth for 2022, according to our China strategists. Those same lockdowns in a major transportation and shipping hub like Shanghai are already causing supply chain disruption within China. Supplier delivery times saw big increases in the March PMI data (Chart 5), while the number of cargo ships stuck outside Shanghai has soared. The longer this lasts, the greater the risk that supply chains beyond China would be disrupted, erasing the improvements in global supplier delivery times seen over the past few months. That could keep goods price inflation elevated for longer. Stubbornly resilient services inflation A big part of our lower inflation view is related to a rebalancing of consumer demand in the developed world away from goods towards services as economies move away from COVID restrictions. This implies an easing of the excess demand pressures that have triggered supply shortages for cars and other big-ticket consumer goods. The result would be a sharp slowing of goods price inflation, with the result that overall inflation rates in the major economies would gravitate towards the slower rate of services inflation. The latter, however, is accelerating in the US, UK and Europe (Chart 6) – largely because of soaring housing costs – which raises the risk that overall inflation will fall to a higher floor in 2022 as goods inflation slows. Chart 5Another Risk To Our Lower Inflation View: China Lockdowns Chart 6One More Risk To Our Lower Inflation View: Sticky Service Prices In the end, we see the balance of risks still tilted towards much slower global inflation this year. However, if we are going to be proven wrong on any of our major investment themes in 2022, it will most likely be because global inflation remains resilient for longer. Theme #2: Europe’s Economy Is Too Fragile To Handle Higher Interest Rates Beyond the global inflation call, our next highest conviction view right now is that markets are overestimating the ECB’s ability to tighten euro area monetary policy. Markets are now pricing in 85bps of ECB rate hikes by the end of 2022, according to the euro area overnight index swap (OIS) curve, which would take policy rates back to levels last seen before the 2008 financial crisis. The war has put the ECB in a difficult spot vis-à-vis its next policy move. High euro area inflation, with annual headline HICP inflation climbing to 7.4% in March and core HICP inflation reaching 2.9%, the highest level of the ECB era dating back to 1996, would justify a move to begin hiking policy interest rates as soon as possible. However, European growth momentum has slowed significantly so far in 2022. Initially this was due to the spread of the Omicron COVID variant that resulted in a wave of economic restrictions. That was followed by the shock of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, that has hit European economic confidence and raised fears that Europe would lose access to Russian energy supplies. Our diffusion indices of individual country leading economic indicators and inflation rates within the euro area highlight the pickle the ECB finds itself in (Chart 7). All countries have headline and core inflation rates above the ECB’s 2% target, yet only 60% of euro area countries have an OECD leading economic indicator that is higher than year ago levels. In the three previous tightening cycles of the “ECB era” since the inception of the euro in 1998, the diffusion indices for both growth and inflation reached 100% - in other words, every euro area economy was seeing faster growth and above-target inflation. Chart 7The ECB Will Have Difficulty Hiking As Much As Expected Chart 8Warning Signs On European Growth Other economic data are also sending worrying messages. The euro area manufacturing PMI fell to the lowest level since January 2021 in March, while the European Commission consumer confidence index and the ZEW expectations index have plunged to levels last seen during the depths of the 2020 COVID recession (Chart 8). Euro area export growth has also decelerated sharply, with exports to China contracting on a year-over-year basis. Simply put, these are not the kind of growth data consistent with a central bank that needs to begin tightening policy aggressively. The inflation data also does not paint a clean picture for the ECB. ECB President Christine Lagarde has repeatedly noted that the central bank is on the lookout for any “second round effects” from the current commodity-fueled surge in European inflation on more lasting inflationary measures like wages. On that front, European wage growth remains stunningly subdued. European annual wage growth was only 1.6% in Q4/2021, despite the unemployment rate for the whole euro area falling below the OECD’s full employment NAIRU estimate of 7.7% (Chart 9). Unit labor costs only grew at an 1.5% annual rate at the end of 2021, suggesting little underlying pressure on European inflation from wages. Chart 9No Inflationary Pressures From Wages In Europe Chart 10European Bond Yields Discount Too Much ECB Hawkishness Without a bigger inflation boost from labor costs, the ECB will feel less pressured to begin tightening monetary policy as rapidly and aggressively as markets are discounting – especially if global goods/commodity inflation slows as we expect. We remain comfortable with our overweight recommendation on core European government bonds (Germany and France), both within a global bond portfolio but especially versus the US. The Fed is far more likely to deliver the aggressive rate hikes discounted in money markets compared to the ECB (Chart 10). Theme #3: Corporate Default Risk In The US And Europe Is Relatively Low Another of our main investment themes relates to corporate credit risk. Specifically, we see high-yield debt in the US and Europe as being relatively more attractive than investment grade credit, even in a typically credit-unfriendly environment of tightening global monetary policy and slowing global growth momentum. Our Corporate Health Monitors are highlighting that corporate finances are in relatively good shape on either side of the Atlantic (Chart 11). This is primarily related to strong readings on interest coverage, free cash flow generation and profit margins, all of which are helping to service higher levels of corporate leverage. Defaults are expected to rise over the next year in response to slowing growth momentum, but the increase is projected to be moderate. Moody’s is forecasting the US and European high-yield default rates to be virtually identical, climbing to 3.1% and 2.6%, respectively, by February 2023. Those relatively low default rates, however, are for the aggregate of all high-yield borrowers. Default risks may be higher for some companies and industries that were more severely impacted by the pandemic. Chart 11US/Europe Default Risk Remains Relatively Modest Chart 12The IMF Sees Fewer Financially Vulnerable Firms Chart 13Default-Adjusted HY Spreads Still Offer Some Value An analysis of global private sector debt included in the latest IMF World Economic Report highlighted that companies that suffered the most significant declines in revenues in 2020 also took on greater amounts of debt than companies whose businesses were least impacted by the 2020 growth shock (Chart 12). Industries that were “worst-hit” by COVID also saw significant worsening of debt servicing capability, described by the IMF analysts as the percentage of firms among the “worst-hit” that had interest coverage ratios less than one (middle panel). Importantly, the IMF report noted that the “worst-hit” industries have seen significant improvements in interest coverage since 2020, reducing the number of financially vulnerable firms (those with high debt-to-assets ratios and interest coverage less than one). The IMF analysis uses corporate data from a whopping 71 countries, but the conclusions are like those from our Corporate Health Monitors for the US and Europe – corporate credit quality has improved, on the margin, since the dark days of the 2020 COVID recession for an increasing number of borrowers. Default-adjusted spreads for high-yield bonds in the US and Europe, which subtract expected default losses from high-yield index spread levels, show that high-yield bonds currently offer decent compensation for expected credit losses (Chart 13). This is especially true for European high-yield, where the default-adjusted spread is just below the average level since 2000. This fits with our current recommendation to maintain neutral allocations to both US and European high-yield. We have a bias to favor the latter, however, due to better valuation metrics and a more dovish outlook on ECB monetary policy compared to the Fed. Theme #4: The Fundamental Backdrop For Emerging Markets Is Poor Chart 14The Backdrop Remains Challenging For EM We have been negative on emerging market (EM) credit dating back to the latter months of 2021. Specifically, we are now underweight EM USD-denominated debt, both sovereigns and corporates. This is a high-conviction view and one that remains fundamentally supported. A sustainable rebound in EM markets would require a “perfect storm” combination of events to occur – aggressive China policy stimulus, a de-escalation of Russia/Ukraine tensions, a weaker US dollar and diminished global inflation pressures. While we expect the latter to occur in the coming months, there are meaningful risks to that view, as described earlier. Meanwhile, the situation in Ukraine appears to be worsening with Russia pushing the offensive and showing no desire for reengaging talks with Ukraine. Chinese policymakers are starting to respond to slowing Chinese growth, made worse by the COVID lockdowns, with some easing measures on monetary policy. Credit growth has also started to pick up, but the credit impulse remains too weak to warrant a more positive view on Chinese growth and import demand from EM countries (Chart 14). Finally, the US dollar remains well supported by a hawkish Fed and widening US/non-US interest rate differentials. This may be the most critical variable to watch before turning more positive on EM credit, given the strong historical correlation between the US dollar and EM hard currency spreads (bottom panel). For now, the trend of the US dollar remains EM-negative. Concluding Thoughts Chart 15Summarizing Our Main Investment Themes In One Chart Our four main investment themes, and associated recommendations, are summarized in Chart 15. The credit-related themes – underweighting high-yield bonds in the US and Europe versus investment grade equivalents, and underweighting EM USD-denominated debt – are already performing as expected. The interest rate related themes – slower global inflation and fading European rate hike expectations – should unfold in favor of our recommendations over the balance of 2022. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Recommended Positioning Active Duration Contribution: GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. Custom Performance Benchmark The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Global Fixed Income - Strategic Recommendations* Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months) Tactical Overlay Trades
According to BCA Research’s Foreign Exchange Strategy service, the answer to whether the carnage in the yen is in an apocalyptic phase depends on the time horizon. Daily traders, reconciling positions every few hours, should continue shorting the yen.…
Listen to a short summary of this report. Dear Client, In lieu of our weekly report next week, I will be hosting a webcast on Tuesday with my colleague Mathieu Savary, Chief European Strategist, on the implications of stagflation on European assets and global FX markets. I look forward to answering any questions you might have. Kind regards, Chester Executive Summary The Yen And Interest Rates The Japanese yen is in liquidation. The historical evidence suggests waiting for an exhaustion in selling pressure, before placing fresh bets. This exhaustion is likely to occur once global bond yields stabilize (Feature chart), and energy price inflation abates. A move lower in these two key variables would catalyze an explosive rebound in the yen, on the back of very cheap valuations and a large net short speculative position. The Bank of Japan will not meaningfully pivot soon. The reason is that downside risks to the Japanese economy supersede the risk of an inflation overshoot. What Japan needs is stronger fiscal spending, that would offset deficient domestic demand. That said, Japan is also one of the best candidates for generating non-inflationary growth, a bullish backdrop for the currency. Our 2022 target for the yen is 110. Our sense is that most of the downside risks are well understood by markets, while upside surprises are much underappreciated. RECOMMENDATIONS INCEPTION LEVEL inception date RETURN Short chf/JPY 135 2022-04-21 - Bottom Line: The yen has undershot. According to our in-house PPP models, the Japanese currency is undervalued by 35%. Historically, an investor buying the yen at such undervalued levels has made 6% per year over the subsequent 5 years. Feature The yen’s move in recent weeks has been explosive. Since early March, the yen has collapsed by 11%, pushing USD/JPY from around 115 to a nudge below 130. Over the last year, the yen is down 16%. In retrospect, a chart formation since 1990 suggests this is a classic liquidation phase that is unlikely to reverse until fundamentals shift. The two key drivers of yen weakness have been higher global yields, and elevated energy prices. Chart 1 shows that the yen has been perfectly tracking the US 10-year Treasury yield. Yield curve control (YCC) is leading to a capitulation of both domestic and foreign investors, fleeing from Japanese bonds towards external bond markets. Looking out the curve, investors do not expect the Bank of Japan to lift rates higher than 50 bps until 2028 (Chart 2). Chart 1The Yen And Interest Rates Chart 2The BoJ Is Expected To Stay Dovish Meanwhile, higher energy costs are also putting selling pressure on the yen as merchants sell JPY to pay for more expensive imports in US dollars. Is Selling Pressure Exhausted? Chart 3A Technical Profile Of The Japanese Yen The key question for investors is whether the carnage in the yen is in an apocalyptic phase. The answer depends on the time horizon. Daily traders, reconciling positions every few hours, should continue shorting the yen. Exhaustion in selling pressure is likely to manifest itself through a few technical patterns, most notably, a consolidation phase. Chart 3 suggests that reversals in the yen have tended to pass through a period of indigestion, allowing investors enough time to play on a reversal. We are not there yet. That said, for longer-term investors, being contrarian could pay off handsomely. The 1-year drawdown in the yen is within the scope of historical capitulation phases (Chart 4). Since JPY became freely floating, selloffs have been around 15%-20% especially during major events (the Asian financial crisis or the manufacturing recession the last decade, for example). The last major selloff was around Abenomics in 2012, a pivotal event. Chart 4The Yen Drawdown Has Matched Previous Capitulation Phases Speculators are also very short JPY and sentiment is quite depressed. This is bullish from a contrarian perspective. Low rates in Japan have led to the proliferation of carry trades. While these are likely to persist, the bulk of investors have already jumped on this bandwagon. A stabilization and/or reversal in US Treasury yields could flush out stale shorts in the yen (Chart 5). If, as we expect, the greenback does weaken in the second half of this year, that will also support the yen. Chart 5Sentiment On The Yen Is Very Depressed Japan’s Economic Outlook The yen tends to appreciate when the Japanese economy is exiting a recession (Chart 6). Part of the reason why the yen has been so weak is because economic growth in Japan has been anemic. While the external sector has been benefiting from a global trade boom, the domestic sector has been under siege from the pandemic, until recently. Chart 6The Yen Tends To Rebound When The Japanese Economy Recovers It is notable that while goods spending has been picking up around the world, the personal consumption component of GDP in Japan remains 5% below the pre-pandemic trend. Shinkansen passenger volumes are still down 42% this year after an even bigger collapse last year. Inbound tourists, a meaningful source of demand, has collapsed from about 25% of the overall Japanese population before the pandemic to zero today. These dire statistics are likely to reverse. The manufacturing PMI is ticking higher. The number of daily new COVID-19 cases has dramatically rolled over. This will be a welcome fillip to much subdued consumer and business sentiment. 2% Inflation = Mission Impossible? The BoJ is likely to get its wish of 2% inflation in the coming months. However, it will prove fleeting. The overarching theme for Japan is an aging and declining population which has put a lid on consumer prices (Chart 7). This will support real interest rates. Inflation does not tend to accelerate on the island until the output gap is fully closed. That has yet to occur. Meanwhile, the political push to cut mobile phone prices has been a drag on CPI. Mobile phone charges alone have cut around 1.2%-1.5% from the core core measure of Japanese inflation, according to the BoJ. This has been a structural trend. As a result, long-term inflation expectations in Japan remain anchored near 1%, even though the rest of the world is seeing a price boom (Chart 8). The revealed preference is for low/stable prices. Chart 7Demographics Are Weighing On Japanese##br##Inflation Chart 8Long-Term Inflation Expectations In Japan Are Rising, But Muted Clearly, the Bank of Japan would like this to change, as it aims for a persistent 2% inflation target. That said, it will be unable to adjust monetary settings aggressively. The BoJ already owns over 50% of Japanese government bonds, and that has made the market very illiquid. As a result, ownership as a share of GDP is nearing attrition (Chart 9). Related Report Foreign Exchange StrategyThe Yen In 2022 Arguably, the BoJ could widen the target band for yield curve control, while lowering short rates further below zero, but that is unlikely to do much for inflation expectations. It could also expand its 0% bank loan scheme beyond renewable industries, and/or small/medium-sized firms, but the problem in Japan is a lack of demand. The currency remains the sole policy lever for the BoJ. Unfortunately, for a small, open economy, the BoJ has less control over the currency. The Ministry of Finance last intervened to support the currency in 1998 (Chart 10). That helped the yen temporarily, but global factors dictated its longer-term trend. Intervention this time around will not assuage the whale of carry traders. Chart 9The BoJ Has Not Been Aggressively Buying Government Bonds Chart 10The MoF Could Soon ##br##Intervene A falling yen would allow some pass-through inflation, but this is unlikely to be sticky. The yen needs to fall 10% every year to generate 1% inflation in Japan (Chart 11). Meanwhile, a policy based on depreciating your currency could lead to a crisis of confidence, especially vis-à-vis Japanese trade partners. Our model for core core inflation suggests that all the weakness in the currency will only boost this print to 0.5% in the coming months (Chart 12). Chart 11Currency Weakness Will Only Temporarily Help Boost Inflation Chart 12Core CPI Will Not Meaningfully ##br##Recover What Japan needs is more fiscal spending. For a low-growth economy, with ultra-loose monetary settings, the fiscal multiplier tends to be much larger. Putting it all together, real rates are unlikely to fall very much in Japan. This is very positive for the yen in a world with deeply negative real rates. As demand recovers, and the Japanese economy generates non-inflationary growth, the currency should find a solid footing. Why Valuation Matters Chart 13The Yen Is Very Cheap Japan is running a big trade deficit on the back of high energy prices. A cheap currency at least increases Japan’s competitiveness. This is particularly the case since the boom in external demand has been a much welcome cushion for Japanese growth. According to our PPP models, the Japanese yen is the cheapest G10 currency, undervalued by around 35% (Chart 13). Why valuations matter is because an investor who buys the yen today can expect to make 6% a year over the next half decade, based on the historical correlation between valuation and subsequent currency returns (Chart 14). This will especially be the case if Japanese inflation keeps lagging inflation in the US. As we argued at the beginning of this report, US yields will need to stabilize before long yen positions make sense on a tactical basis (Chart 15). Chart 14Valuation Matters For The Japanese Yen Chart 15Global Yields Need To Stabilize For The Yen To Bounce The Yen As A Safe Haven The yen still appears to have the best correlation with a rising VIX (Chart 16). In a world of slowing global growth and the potential for equity market turbulence, this bodes well for long yen positions. That said, the carry on this position will be unbearable especially if the Federal Reserve continues to sound hawkish. The better play on potential yen strength is a short CHF/JPY position. Historically, these currencies have tended to move together. However, more recently, the CHF has risen substantially versus the JPY, suggesting some mean reversion is due (Chart 17). Chart 16The Yen Remains A Good Hedge Chart 17Go Short CHF/JPY Strategically, we were stopped out of our short USD/JPY position at 128, initiated at 124. Our 2022 target for the yen is 110. Our sense is that most of the downside risks are well understood by markets, while upside surprises are much underappreciated. Tactically, we will wait for the consolidation phase we outlined earlier in this report, before initiating fresh positions. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Cyclical Holdings (6-18 months) Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
The yen has weakened considerably recently. It is down nearly 9% vis-à-vis the USD since the beginning of March. This continues a longer-term trend that brings the yen’s decline since the start of last year to 18%. As we recently highlighted, a stabilization…
Executive Summary The Dollar Has Broken Above Overhead Resistance Most central banks continue to dial up their hawkish rhetoric, led by the Fed. This is putting upward pressure on the dollar (Feature Chart). The big surprise has been resilient inflationary pressures across many economies. In our view, the market has already priced in an aggressive path for interest rates in the US, putting the onus on the Fed to deliver on these expectations. Meanwhile, other central banks that are also facing domestic inflationary pressures will play catch up. Our short USD/JPY position was triggered at 124. While there are no immediate catalysts for yen bulls, the currency is very cheap, and speculators are very short. Look to sell the DXY soon. RECOMMENDATIONS INCEPTION LEVEL inception date RETURN Short DXY 102 2022-04-07 - SHORT USD/JPY 124 2022-04-05 0.02 Bottom Line: Technically, the dollar has broken above overhead resistance, putting it within striking distance of the March 2020 highs at 103. However, given stretched positioning, our bias is that incremental increases in the DXY will require much more upside surprises in US interest rates. This is not our base case. Feature The dollar performed well in the first quarter of this year. Year-to-date, the DXY index is up 3.9%. Remarkably, this has coincided with strength in many commodity currencies such as the BRL, ZAR, COP, CLP, and AUD, that tend to be high beta plays on a falling dollar (Chart 1). Technically, the dollar has broken above overhead resistance, putting it within striking distance of the March 2020 highs of 103 (Chart 2). However, given stretched positioning, our bias is that incremental increases in the DXY will require much more upside surprises in US interest rates. This is not our base case. Chart 1The Dollar And Commodity Currencies Have Been Strong This Year Chart 2The Dollar Has Broken Above Overhead ##br##Resistance As we have highlighted in past reports, the dollar continues to face a tug of war. If rates rise substantially in the US, and that undermines the US equity market leadership (Chart 3), the dollar could suffer. If US rates rise by less than what the market expects, record high speculative positioning in the dollar will surely reverse. Chart 3Dollar Tailwinds Remain Intact This week’s Month-In Review report goes over our take on the latest G10 data releases, and the implication for currency strategy both in the near term and longer term. US Dollar: The Fed Stays Hawkish Chart 4The Case For More Tightening The dollar DXY index is up 3.9% year-to-date. The key data releases the Federal Reserve watches continue to suggest a hawkish path for interest rates going forward. Inflation remains strong in the US. Headline CPI came in at 7.9% year-on-year in February and is expected to accelerate in next week’s release. Nonfarm payrolls are still robust. The US added 431K jobs in March, nudging the unemployment rate to a cycle low of 3.6%. Wages are inflecting higher, which is pulling up unit labor costs. The Atlanta Fed Wage Growth Tracker currently sits at 6%. These developments continue to underpin market expectations for aggressive interest rate increases. The market now expects the Fed to raise rates to 2.25% by December 2022. Speculators are also very long the dollar. The mispricing in the dollar comes from the fact that markets are expecting the Fed to be more aggressive than other central banks in curtailing monetary accommodation this year (as proxied by two-year yield spreads). However, the reality is that other central banks are also ratcheting up their hawkish rhetoric. As such, we expect policy convergence to be a theme that will play out in 2022, putting downward pressure on the dollar. In conclusion, our 3-month view on the dollar is neutral, based on the risk of further escalation in the Ukrainian crisis and robust inflation prints, but our 9-month assessment will be to sell the dollar on any strength. We are revising our year-end target on the DXY to 95. The Euro: Stagflation Chart 5Euro Area Real Yields Are Too Low The euro continues to weaken, down 4.2% this year, after hitting an intraday low of 1.08 last month. Economic data in the eurozone has been soft, especially on the back of a surge in the number of new Covid-19 cases, rising energy costs driven by the military conflict between Ukraine and Russia, and a weak euro adding to upward pressure on inflation. This is pinning the euro area in a stagflationary quagmire. More specifically: The headline HICP (harmonized index of consumer prices) index for the euro area was 7.5% for March. The hawks in the ECB are very uncomfortable with last week’s HICP release of 9.8% in Spain, 7.3% in Germany, and 7% in Italy. House prices in the euro area are accelerating on the back of very low real rates. This is increasing the unaffordability of homes across the eurozone. One of our favorite measures of economic activity, the Sentix Economic Index, tumbled in April. At -18, this is the lowest since July 2020, a negative surprise vis-à-vis the expected -9.4. Faced with a deteriorating economic backdrop, but strong inflationary pressures, the ECB has chosen a hawkish path to maintain credibility. Asset purchases will be tapered this year, and rate hikes are on the table. Forward markets are now pricing 53 bps of interest rate increases this year. In our view, while the ECB will not deliver the pace of rate hikes anticipated by markets in the near term, pricing of interest rate differentials between the eurozone and the US will narrow, as the ECB plays catch up. We are neutral on the euro over a 3-month horizon but are buyers over 9 months and beyond. Stay long EUR/GBP as a play on policy convergence between the ECB and BoE. Our year-end target for EUR/USD is 1.18. The Japanese Yen: A Contrarian View Chart 6Too Many Yen Bears The Japanese Yen: A Contrarian View The Japanese yen is down 7% year-to-date. This pins it as the worst performing G10 currency this year. The story for Japan (and the yen) has been a very slow emergence from the latest Covid-19 wave. This has kept domestic inflation very subdued, allowing the BoJ to stay dovish, even as the external environment has done better. This has pushed interest rate differentials against the Japanese yen. The latest trigger for the selloff in the yen was the BoJ’s commitment to maintain yield curve control as global interest rates have been surging. This pushed USD/JPY above 125, the highest since 2015. On the back of this move, incoming economic data justified the BoJ’s stance. Headline inflation has picked up (still at 0.9%), but core “core” inflation remains at -1%. At 1.21, the job-to-applicant ratio is well below its pre-pandemic level of around 1.6. Ergo, the labor market is not as tight as a 2.7% unemployment rate suggests. Wage growth is improving, currently at 1.2% for February. That said, is it hard to argue that Japanese workers have bargaining power and can trigger a wage/inflation spiral that will allow the BoJ to pivot. Related Report Foreign Exchange StrategyThe Yen In 2022 Despite these negatives, we are constructive on the yen because the downside is well priced in, while upside surprises are not. Real rates remain higher in Japan than for other G10 countries. Speculators are also very short the yen. As we highlighted last week, the yen is also extremely cheap. We went short USD/JPY at 124. Our view is that interest rate expectations for the US are overdone in the near term. As such a stabilization/retracement in global yields could be a bullish development for yen bulls. Our target is 110 with a stop at 128. British Pound: A Hawkish BoE Chart 7The Case For A Hawkish BoE The pound is down 3.4% year-to-date. The Bank of England has been one of the more aggressive central banks, raising interest rates to 0.75% last month. Inflation continues to soar in the UK - headline CPI was at 6.2% in February while core inflation clocked in at 5.2%. This prompted the governor to send a letter to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, explaining why monetary policy has allowed inflation to deviate from the BoE’s mandate of 2%. According to the BoE’s projections, inflation will rise above 8% this year before peaking. At the same time, taxes are slated to rise in the UK this month. While the labor market continues to heal, the combination will be a hit to consumer sentiment in the near term. The SONIA curve in the UK is pricing 130 bps of price hikes this year. While the BOE must contain inflationary pressures (in accordance with their mandate), the risks of a policy mistake have risen. Tight monetary and fiscal policy in the UK could stomp out any budding economic green shoots. The pound is also very sensitive to global financial conditions, and an equity market correction, especially on the back of heightened tensions in Ukraine, will put pressure on cable. We are short sterling, via a long EUR position. In our view, the EUR/GBP cross is heavily underpricing the risks to the UK economy in the near term. Australian Dollar: A Commodity Story Chart 8The RBA Will Stay Patient The Australian dollar is up 3% year-to-date, making it the best performing G10 currency. The Reserve Bank of Australia kept rates on hold at its April 5th meeting, but it ratcheted up its hawkish tone. The two critical measures that the RBA is focusing on, inflation and wages, have been improving. As a result, the shift in the RBA stance was justified. Since its March meeting, home prices have continued to accelerate, rising 23.7% year-on-year in Q4. Meanwhile, the unemployment rate has fallen to a cycle low of 4% in Q4. This is below many measures of NAIRU. The RBA expects inflationary pressures to remain persistent in 2022, but ultimately fall to 2.75% in 2023. This will still be at the upper bound of their 2%-3% target range. Admittedly, wages are still low by historical standards, but as Governor Philip Lowe has highlighted, the behavior of the Phillip’s Curve at these low levels of unemployment is unpredictable. The external environment is also AUD bullish. The RBA Index of Commodity prices soared by 40.9% year-on-year in March, widening the gap with a rather muted AUD (up 3.4% this year). In our view, the market is concerned about the zero-Covid policy in China (Australia’s biggest export partner), which could dim Australia’s economic outlook in the near term. On the flip side, many speculators are now short the Aussie which is bullish from a contrarian perspective. A healthy trade balance is also putting upward pressure on the currency. We are lifting our limit buy on AUD/USD to 72 cents, after being stopped out for a modest profit earlier this year. New Zealand Dollar: Positive Catalysts, But Overvalued Chart 9Home Price Inflation In New Zealand Is Rolling Over The New Zealand dollar is up 1% year-to-date. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand is among the most hawkish within the G10. The cash rate is at 1%, the highest among major developed economies on the back of economic data which remains robust. Home prices, a metric the RBNZ monitors to calibrate monetary policy, are rising 23.4% year-on-year as of March. While we are modestly positive on the Kiwi, it has become very expensive according to most of our models. The result is that the trade balance continues to print a deficit, with the latest data point in February deteriorating to NZ$ -8.4 billion. Kiwi bonds also offer the highest yield in the G10, meaning the market has already priced a hawkish path of interest rates by the RBNZ. Given the crosscurrents mentioned above, we are neutral the kiwi versus the dollar over both a 3-month and 9-month horizon. Canadian Dollar: The BoC Will Stay Hawkish Chart 10The BoC Will Hike Next Week The CAD is up 0.4% year-to-date. The Bank of Canada is expected to raise interest rates by 50bps to 1% at next week’s meeting. This is not a surprise, since all the measures the BoC looks at to calibrate monetary policy are robust. Both headline and core inflation are well above the midpoint of the 1%-3% target range. The common, trim, and median inflation prints are either at or above the upper bound of the central bank’s target at 2.6%, 4.3%, and 3.5%, respectively. This suggests inflationary pressures in Canada are broad based. Employment in Canada is back above pre-pandemic levels, with the unemployment rate slated to come in at 5.4% with today’s release, close to estimates of NAIRU. House price inflation is raging across many cities in Canada, which argues that monetary policy is too easy and mortgage rates are too low. We have always highlighted that the key driver of the CAD remains the outlook for monetary policy and the path of energy prices. In the near term, oil prices will stay volatile as the situation in Ukraine continues to be very fluid, but the CAD has not priced in the fact that the BoC is leading the interest rate cycle vis-à-vis the US this time around. Speculators are only neutral the CAD, an appropriate stance over the next three months. That said, we are buyers of CAD over a 9-to-12-month horizon, with a target of 0.84. Swiss Franc: A Safe Haven Chart 11The SNB Will Lean Against Franc Strength The Swiss economy continued to fare well in the first quarter. The manufacturing PMI jumped to 64 in March. Retail sales were up 12.8% year-on-year in February. The labor market remains strong with unemployment near pre-pandemic levels. Switzerland’s direct exposure to the war appears relatively limited with little inflationary spillovers. CPI stood at 2.4% year-on-year in March, with about 1% of the increase coming from energy prices. The Swiss economy is still generating a record trade surplus, coming in at CHF 5.7bn in February. Safe-haven inflows into the franc have dampened inflationary dynamics. This leaves room for the SNB to continue easing monetary policy for longer relative to other central banks in the developed world. In terms of monetary policy, the SNB kept interest rates unchanged at -0.75% at its Q1 meeting. The SNB has also described the franc as “highly valued” and said that it is willing to intervene in FX markets as necessary to counter the upward pressure in the currency. Sight deposits have been rising in March. We are neutral CHF on both a 3-month and 9-month horizon but will be buyers of EUR/CHF at current levels. Norwegian Krone: Bullish On A 12-18 Month Horizon Chart 12NOK Has A Policy Tailwind The NOK is flat this year. In March, the Norges Bank raised the policy rate by 25 bps to 0.75%, in line with policymakers’ previous statements. Citing rising import prices and a tight labor market, the committee now expects to increase rates to 2.5% by the end of 2023, up from an assessment of 1.75% in December. Inflation accelerated again in February, with headline and core CPI at 3.7% and 2.1% year-on-year respectively. Despite the removal of all Covid-19 restrictions in mid-February, consumer demand data remained soft with retail sales, household consumption, and loan growth all down in February. Still, the overall economy remains strong, and the Bank expects a rebound in demand going forward. The manufacturing PMI jumped to 59.6 in March after a three-month decline. Industrial production rose 1.6% year-on-year in February, after lackluster performance in January. The trade surplus remains robust. Registered unemployment fell to 2% in March and with rising wage expectations, the case for tighter monetary policy remains intact. The uncertainty over energy-related sanctions can keep oil prices volatile in the near time, as well as the NOK. That said, our commodity team expects oil to average $93/bbl next year, which is higher than what the forward markets are pricing. That will be bullish for the NOK. Swedish Krona: Lower Now, Strong Later Chart 13The SEK Is Not Pricing Rate Hikes By The Riksbank SEK is down 4% year-to-date. The Riksbank remains one of the most dovish central banks in the G10, keeping the repo rate at 0% at its February meeting, with no hikes projected until 2024. Since then, inflation data has come in well above expectations and several board members have spoken out on the need to reevaluate monetary policy. The OIS curve is now pricing about two hikes by the end of the year. CPIF was 4.5% year-on-year in February and the measure excluding energy jumped to 3.4%, up from 2.5% in January. With fears that the conflict in Ukraine will exacerbate this trend, a survey of 12-month inflation expectations stood at a record 10.2% in March. While inflation is surprising to the upside, underlying economic data has been on the weaker side. The Swedish new orders-to-inventory ratio has fallen sharply. Consumer confidence also dipped in March, to the lowest point since the Global Financial Crisis. Sweden remains highly sensitive to eurozone economic conditions. As such, it is also in the direct firing range of any economic turbulence in the euro area, though it will also benefit from growth stabilization later this year, should macroeconomic risks abate. SEK is the second most undervalued currency based on our Purchasing Power Parity models and is likely positioned for a coiled spring rebound when the Riksbank eventually turns more hawkish. We are neutral SEK over a 3-month horizon but are bullish longer term. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Cyclical Holdings (6-18 months) Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
Executive Summary To understand the economy and the market we must think of them as non-linear systems which experience sudden phase-shifts. The pandemic introduced phase-shifts in our lives, which led to phase-shifts in our goods demand, which led to phase-shifts in monthly core inflation. As our lives phase-shift back to normality, goods demand will phase-shift back to low growth, and monthly core inflation prints will phase-shift from ‘high phase’ to ‘low phase’. With the 12-month core US inflation rate likely to peak by June at the latest, the long bond yield is likely to peak at some point in April/May, justifying a cyclical overweight position in T-bonds. Go overweight healthcare and biotech versus resources and financials. The leadership of the equity market will once more flip from short-duration sectors to long-duration sectors. Fractal trading watchlist additions: JPY/CHF, non-life insurance versus homebuilders, US homebuilders (XHB), cotton versus platinum, healthcare versus resources, and biotech versus resources. Bottom Line: With the 12-month core US inflation rate likely to peak by June at the latest, the long bond yield is likely to peak at some point in April/May, and the leadership of the equity market will flip back to long-duration sectors such as healthcare and biotech. Feature Inflation is a non-linear system, meaning that you cannot just dial it up or down gradually like the volume on your music system. Instead of gradual changes, non-linear systems suddenly phase-shift from quiet to loud, from cold to hot, from solid to liquid, or from stability to instability (Box I-1). Box 1: A Classic Non-Linear System – A Brick On An Elastic Band To experience the sudden phase-shift in a non-linear system, attach an elastic band to a brick and try pulling it across a table. As you start to pull, the brick doesn’t move because of the friction with the table. But as you increase your pull there comes a tipping point, at which the brick does move and the friction simultaneously decreases, self-reinforcing the brick’s acceleration. Meanwhile, your pull on the elastic continues to increase as you react with a time-lag. The result is that this non-linear system suddenly phase-shifts from stability – the brick doesn’t move – to instability – the brick hits you in the face! Try as hard as you might, it is impossible to pull the brick across the table smoothly. In this non-linear system, the choice is either stability or instability. Back in 2017, in Mission Impossible: 2% Inflation – An Update, I posed a crucial question: “Given that price stability could phase-shift to instability, when should we worry about it?” I answered that “the risk remains low until the next severe downturn – when policymakers may be forced into desperate measures for a desperate situation.” The words proved prescient. Three years later, the desperate situation was a global pandemic, and the desperate measures were economic shutdowns combined with fiscal stimuluses of unprecedented scope and size. A Phase-Shift In Our Lives Produced A Phase-Shift In Inflation Developed economy inflation has just experienced a stark non-linearity. Since 2007, the US core month-on-month inflation rate remained consistently below 3.5 percent.1 Then came the pandemic’s shutdowns combined with policymakers’ massive response, and month-on-month inflation didn’t just rise to above 3.5 percent, it phase-shifted to well over 6 percent. Developed economy inflation has just experienced a stark non-linearity. The remarkable fact is that since 2007, there have been over a hundred monthly core inflation prints below 4 percent, and nine prints above 6 percent, but just one solitary print between 4 and 6 percent! In other words, monthly core inflation shows the classic hallmark of a non-linear system. It can be cold or hot, but not warm (Chart I-1). Chart I-1Monthly Core Inflation Shows The Classic Hallmark Of A Non-Linear System So, what caused the phase-shift in core inflation? The simple answer is a phase-shift in durable goods spending, which itself was caused by the pandemic’s shutdown of services combined with massive fiscal stimulus. Again, this is supported by a remarkable fact. Since 2007, the monthly increase in US (real) spending on durables remained consistently below 3.5 percent. Then came the pandemic’s shutdowns and stimulus checks, and the growth in durables demand didn’t just rise to above 3.5 percent, it phase-shifted to well over 8 percent. In other words, the growth in durable goods demand also shows the classic hallmark of a non-linear system. It can be cold or hot, but not warm (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Goods Demand Shows The Classic Hallmark Of A Non-Linear System The connection between the phase-shifts in goods demand and the phase-shifts in core inflation is staring us in the face – because the three separate phase-shifts in inflation have each been associated with a preceding or contemporaneous phase-shift in goods demand, which themselves have been associated with the separate waves of the pandemic (Chart I-3). Chart I-3Phase-Shifts In Core Inflation Have Been Associated With Phase-Shifts In Goods Demand Pulling all of this together, the pandemic introduced phase-shifts in our lives – lockdown or freedom. Which led to phase-shifts in our goods demand – above 8 percent or below 3.5 percent. Which led to phase-shifts in monthly core inflation – above 6 percent or below 4 percent. The key question is, what happens next? Bond Yields Are Close To A Peak As we learn to live with the pandemic, and assuming no imminent ‘super variant’ of the virus, our lives are phase-shifting back to a semblance of normality. Which means that our spending on goods is phase-shifting back to low growth. If anything, the recent overspend on goods implies an imminent corrective underspend. At the same time, it will be difficult to compensate a phase-shift down on goods spending with a phase-shift up on services spending. This is because the consumption of services is constrained by time and biology. There is a limit to how often you can eat out, go to the theatre, or even go on vacation. The upshot is that monthly core inflation prints are likely to phase-shift from ‘high phase’ to ‘low phase’ – even if the monthly headline inflation prints are kept up longer by the commodity price spikes that result from the Ukraine crisis. Monthly core inflation prints are likely to phase-shift from ‘high phase’ to ‘low phase’. Meanwhile central banks and markets focus on the 12-month core inflation rate – which, as an arithmetic identity, is the sum of the last twelve month-on-month inflation rates.2 To establish the 12-month core inflation rate, the crucial question is: how many of the last twelve month-on-month inflation prints will be high phase versus low phase? As just discussed, the new month-on-month core inflation prints are likely to phase-shift to low phase. At the same time, the historic high phase prints will disappear from the last twelve month window. Specifically, by June 2022, the three high phase prints of April, May, and June 2021 – 10 percent, 9 percent, and 10 percent respectively – will no longer be included in the 12-month core inflation rate, with the arithmetic impact of pulling it down sharply (Chart I-4). Chart I-4The High Phase Monthly Inflation Prints Of April, May, And June 2021 Will Disappear From The 12-Month Core US Inflation Rate, Thereby Pulling It Down. Clearly, the bond market anticipates some of this ‘base effect’ on 12-month inflation. This explains why turning points in the bond yield have led by 2-3 months the turning points in the 12-month core inflation rate (Chart I-5). With the 12-month core inflation rate likely to peak by June at the latest, this suggests that – absent some new shock – the long bond yield is likely to peak at some point in April/May. Reinforcing our cyclical overweight position in T-bonds. Chart I-5The Bond Yield Turns About 2-3 Months Before Core Inflation This also carries important implications for equity investors. Rising bond yields favour short-duration equity sectors such as resources and financials versus long-duration equity sectors such as healthcare and biotech. And vice-versa. Indeed, the recent performance of resources versus healthcare and financials versus healthcare is indistinguishable from the bond yield (Chart I-6 and Chart I-7). Chart I-6The Performance of Resources Versus Healthcare Is Indistinguishable From The Bond Yield Chart I-7The Performance of Financials Versus Healthcare Is Indistinguishable From The Bond Yield With bond yields likely to peak soon, the leadership of the equity market will once more flip from short-duration sectors to long-duration sectors. Go overweight healthcare and biotech versus resources and financials. Fractal Trading Watchlist Reinforcing the fundamental analysis in the previous section, the 130-day outperformance of resources versus healthcare and biotech has reached the point of fractal fragility that has marked previous trend exhaustions, suggesting that the recent outperformance of resources is nearing an end. Also new on our watchlist is a commodity pair, cotton versus platinum, whose strong outperformance is vulnerable to reversal. And US homebuilders (XHB), whose recent underperformance is at a potential turning point. There are two new trade recommendations. First, the massive outperformance of world non-life insurance versus homebuilders is at the point of fractal fragility that has consistently marked previous turning points (Chart I-8). Hence, go short non-life insurance versus homebuilders, setting a profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 14 percent. Second, the strong underperformance of the Japanese yen is also at the point of fractal fragility that has marked several previous turning points (Chart I-9). Accordingly, go long JPY/CHF, setting a profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 4 percent. Please note that our full watchlist of 19 investments that are experiencing or approaching turning points is now available on our website: cpt.bcaresearch.com Chart I-8The Massive Outperformance Of Non-Life Insurance Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart I-9Go Long JPY/CHF The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Is Vulnerable To Reversal The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Is Vulnerable To Reversal Cotton’s Outperformance Is Vulnerable To Reversal US Homebuilders’ Underperformance Is At A Potential Turning Point Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Annualized month-on-month inflation rate. 2 Strictly speaking, the 12-month inflation rate is the geometric product of the last 12 month-on-month inflation rates. Chart I-1The Strong Trend In The 18-Month-Out US Interest Rate Future Is Fragile Chart I-2The Strong Trend In The 3 Year T-Bond Is Fragile Chart I-3AUD/KRW Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart I-4Canada Versus Japan Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart I-5Canada's TSX-60's Outperformance Might Be Over Chart I-6US Healthcare Providers Vs. Software Approaching A Reversal Chart I-7The Euro's Underperformance Could Be Approaching a Resistance Level Chart I-8A Potential Switching Point From Tobacco Into Cannabis Chart I-9Bitcoin's 65-Day Fractal Support Is Holding For Now Chart I-10Biotech Approaching A Major Buy Chart I-11CAD/SEK Reversal Has Started Chart I-12Financials Versus Industrials Is Reversing Chart I-13Norway's Outperformance Could End Chart I-14Greece's Brief Outperformance Has Ended Chart I-15BRL/NZD At A Resistance Point Chart I-16The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart I-17The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart I-18Cotton's Outperformance Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart I-19US Homebuilders' Underperformance Is At A Potential Turning Point Fractal Trading System Fractal Trades 6-Month Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Executive Summary Our recommended model bond portfolio outperformed its custom index by a robust +48bps in Q1/2022 – an impressive performance given the significant uncertainties stemming from the Ukraine war, surging commodity prices and hawkish central banks. This outperformance came entirely from the rates side of the portfolio (+52bps) as global government bond yields surged, driven by a large underweight to US Treasuries. The credit side of the portfolio was largely unchanged versus the benchmark (-4bps). Looking ahead, we see global bond yields as being more rangebound over the next six months. A lot of rate hikes in 2022 are already discounted (most notably in the US) and global inflation is likely to decelerate in Q2 & Q3. As the global monetary tightening cycle evolves, positioning more defensively in global credit, rather than duration management, will provide the better opportunity to generate alpha in bond portfolios. GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Recommended Positioning For The Next Six Months Bottom Line: In our model bond portfolio, we are downgrading US investment grade corporates to underweight, and reducing high-yield exposure in the US and Europe to neutral. We are also reducing inflation-linked bond allocations in the US and euro area to underweight versus nominals. Feature The first three months were horrific for global bond markets. The Bloomberg Global Aggregate index delivered a total return of -6.2%, the second worst quarter since 1990. No sector, from government bonds to corporate debt to emerging market spread product, was immune to the pressures from soaring energy prices, war-driven uncertainty and hawkish central bankers belated responding to the worst bout of global inflation since the 1970s. Related Report Global Fixed Income StrategyOur Model Bond Portfolio Strategy To Begin 2022: Choosing Our Battles Wisely That toxic cocktail for bond returns may lose some potency in the coming months if a de-escalation of the Ukraine tensions can be reached. However, the bigger drivers of bond market volatility – high global inflation and the monetary tightening necessary to combat it – are more likely to linger for longer than expected. Government bond yields are unlikely to fall much in this environment. Increasingly, global credit spreads, especially for corporate debt in the US, will face intensifying widening pressure as central banks rapidly dial back pandemic-era monetary accommodation, led by the US Federal Reserve. With that in mind, we present our quarterly review of the BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy (GFIS) model bond portfolio for the first quarter of 2022. We also present our recommended positioning for the portfolio for the next six months, as well as portfolio return expectations for our base case and alternative investment scenarios. As a reminder to existing readers (and to new clients), the model portfolio is a part of our service that complements the usual macro analysis of global fixed income markets. The portfolio is how we communicate our opinion on the relative attractiveness between government bond and spread product sectors. We do this by applying actual percentage weightings to each of our recommendations within a fully invested hypothetical bond portfolio. Q1/2022 Model Bond Portfolio Performance: Regional Allocation Drives Outperformance Chart 1Q1/2022 Performance: Big Gains From Rising Bond Yields The total return for the GFIS model portfolio (hedged into US dollars) in the third quarter was -4.6%, outperforming the custom benchmark index by +48bps (Chart 1).1 In terms of the specific breakdown between the government bond and spread product allocations in our model portfolio, the former generated +52bps of outperformance versus our custom benchmark index while the latter underperformed by -4bps. In an extremely negative quarter for fixed income both in terms of the breadth and depth of losses, our regional allocation choices helped us continue generating outperformance after we transitioned to a neutral overall portfolio duration stance in mid-February. Throughout the quarter, we maintained a significant underweight on US Treasuries in the portfolio, even after we tactically upgraded our duration tilt. We expected US government debt to still underperform that of other developed markets, even in an environment where the rise in global bond yields was due for a breather. Our rationale worked – admittedly helped by the inflationary shock of the Russian invasion of Ukraine - with the US Treasury part of our portfolio generating a whopping +63bps of outperformance (Table 1). Table 1GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2022 Overall Return Attribution Meanwhile, our biggest government bond overweights were in Europe, a market we expected to perform defensively in a portfolio context. We were obviously caught offside on this call as energy prices and inflation expectations in Europe surged in response to the Ukraine conflict. In total, our portfolio lost -30bps in active return terms in euro area government bonds, with the losses spread evenly between the core and periphery. We did staunch the bleeding somewhat by reducing our allocation to the periphery in the last two weeks of the quarter and using the proceeds to fund an increased allocation to European investment grade corporates. The European corporate index spread has tightened -23bps since that switch. Turning to the credit side of the portfolio, the most successful position was our underweight tilt on emerging market (EM) USD-denominated corporates (+10bps) and sovereigns (+9bps) during a catastrophic quarter for EM risky assets driven by the conflict as well as weakness in the Chinese economy. We sustained losses from our overweight on US CMBS (-11bps) which was broadly offset by gains from our underweight on US MBS (+10bps). Lastly, while we were hurt by the sell-off in euro area high-yield (-13bps), where we were overweight to start 2022, we did scale back some of that exposure towards the end of the quarter when markets started to discount the risk of a “worst case” scenario of direct NATO intervention in Ukraine. The bar charts showing the total and relative returns for each individual government bond market and spread product sector in our model portfolio are presented in Charts 2 & 3. Chart 2GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2022 Government Bond Performance Attribution Chart 3GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2022 Spread Product Performance Attribution By Sector Biggest Outperformers: Underweight US Treasuries with a maturity greater than 10 years (+23bps) Underweight UK Gilts with a maturity greater than 10 years (+14bps) Underweight US treasuries with a maturity between 3 and 5 years (+12bps) Biggest Underperformers: Overweight euro area high-yield corporates (-13bps) Overweight US CMBS (-11bps) Overweight Spanish Bonos (-5bps) Chart 4 presents the ranked benchmark index returns of the individual countries and spread product sectors in the GFIS model bond portfolio for Q1/2022. Returns are hedged into US dollars (we do not take active currency risk in this portfolio) and adjusted to reflect duration differences between each country/sector and the overall custom benchmark index for the model portfolio. We have also color coded the bars in each chart to reflect our recommended investment stance for each market during Q1 (red for underweight, dark green for overweight, gray for neutral). Chart 4Ranking The Winners & Losers From The GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Universe In Q1/2022 Ideally, we would look to see more green bars on the left side of the chart where market returns are highest, and more red bars on the right side of the chart were returns are lowest. That pattern largely held true in Q1/2022, especially at the tail ends of the chart. During a quarter where all the major asset classes in our portfolio lost money on a hedged and duration-matched basis, we outperformed by selectively underweighting the worst performers. Notably, we were underweight UK Gilts (-1280bps) and EM Sovereigns (-1103bps) on the extreme right side of the chart. We were also underweight US Treasuries (-531bps) which, despite being in the middle of Chart 4, contributed hugely to our portfolio outperformance due to their large market cap weighting in the benchmark index. Broadly, this means that, except for Europe and Australia, our highest conviction calls worked in our favor during the quarter. Bottom Line: Our model bond portfolio outperformed its benchmark index in the third quarter of the year by +48bps – a positive result coming largely from underweight positions in US Treasuries, UK Gilts, and EM credit. Changes To Our Model Bond Portfolio Allocations The uncertainty stemming from the Russia/Ukraine conflict led us to temporarily neutralize many of the recommended exposures in the model bond portfolio. We not only moved to neutral on overall portfolio duration, we also neutralized individual country yield curve tilts and inflation-linked bond allocations. While the situation remains fluid, the worst-case scenarios of the conflict expanding beyond the borders of Ukraine appear to have been avoided. This leads us to reconsider where to once again take active risks on the rates side of the portfolio. Chart 5Our Duration Indicator Calling For Slowing Global Yield Momentum Duration On overall portfolio duration, we are maintaining a neutral (“at benchmark”) stance in the portfolio. Our Global Duration Indicator is currently signaling that the strong upward momentum of global bond yields should fade over the next few months (Chart 5). Slowing global growth expectations – a trend that was already in place prior to the Ukraine conflict - are the major reason why our Duration Indicator has turned lower. The war-fueled surge in energy prices has helped push global bond yields higher through rising inflation breakevens, which also prompted central banks – most notably the Fed and the Bank of England (BoE)- to signal a need for a faster pace of interest rate hikes in 2022 despite softening growth momentum. Looking ahead, that strong link between oil prices and bond yields will not be broken until there is some sort of de-escalation of the Ukraine conflict, which does not appear imminent. This supports a near-term neutral overall duration stance. Yield Curve Allocations In terms of yield curve exposure, we see some opportunities to adjust allocations (Chart 6). US curves have inverted and UK curves are flirting with inversion as markets are pricing in more Fed/BoE tightening, while curves in Germany and France have bear-steepened with longer-term inflation expectations going up faster than shorter-term interest rate expectations. In the US and UK, the yield curve flattening also reflects the “front loading” of Fed/BoE rate hike expectations. Overnight index swap (OIS) curves are pricing in 190bps of rate hikes in the US, and 134bps in the UK, by the end of 2022. This is followed quickly by rate cuts discounted in H2/2023 and 2024 in both countries. We see it as more likely that both central banks will deliver fewer hikes than discounted in 2022 and but will push rates to higher levels than priced by the end of 2024. That leads us to add a mild steepening bias into our US and UK government bond allocations in the model bond portfolio. We offset that by inserting a flattening bias in the German and French yield curve allocations to keep the overall portfolio duration at 7.5 years, matching that of the custom benchmark index (Chart 7). Chart 6Curve Flattening In The US & UK Is Overdone Chart 7Overall Portfolio Duration: Stay Neutral Chart 8No Change To Our Country Allocations To Begin Q2/22 Country Allocations Turning to our country allocations, we see no need to make major changes right now (Chart 8). We still prefer to maintain an underweight stance on countries that are more likely to see multiple central bank rate hikes in 2022 (the US, UK, Canada) versus those that are less likely (Germany, France, Japan, Australia). We are also staying neutral on Italian and Spanish government bonds with the ECB set to taper the pace of its asset purchases in Q2. Less ECB buying raises the risk that higher yields will be required to entice private sector buyers to buy Italian and Spanish debt with a smaller central bank backstop. Inflation-Linked Bonds Our Comprehensive Breakeven Inflation (CBI) indicators assess the potential for a significant move in 10-year breakeven inflation rates, based on deviations from variables that typically correlate with breakevens like oil prices or survey-based measures of inflation expectations. At the moment, none of the CBIs for the eight countries in our model bond portfolio are below zero (Chart 9), which would be a signal that breakevens are too low and can move higher. Chart 9Inflation-Linked Bond Exposure: Reduce Europe & The US, Increase Canada Canada has the lowest CBI, and last week, we added a tactical trade to go long 10-year Canadian inflation breakevens. We will add that position to our model bond portfolio this week, moving the Canadian “linkers” allocation to overweight versus nominal Canadian government bonds (within an overall underweight allocation to Canada in the model bond portfolio). On the other side of our CBI rankings are countries where the CBIs are well above zero and breakevens are more stretched: Germany, Italy, France and the US. We are currently neutral inflation-linked bonds in those four countries, but strictly as a hedge against the war-fueled risks of further increases in oil prices. Now, however, 10-year breakevens have widened to levels that already factor in more expensive oil, even with oil prices struggling to break out to new highs. As a result, we are downgrading the allocation to linkers in Germany, Italy, France and the US to underweight within the model bond portfolio (Chart 10). Corporate Bonds The most meaningful changes we are making to our model bond portfolio, and in our strategic investment recommendations, are to our corporate bond allocations: We are downgrading US investment grade corporate bond exposure from neutral to underweight (2 out of 5) We are downgrading US high-yield corporate bond exposure from overweight to neutral (3 out of 5) We are also downgrading euro area high-yield exposure from overweight to neutral (3 out of 5) Credit spreads across the developed market and EM space have fully unwound the surge seen after Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24 (Chart 11). We had turned more cautious on global spread product exposure in early March because of the war-fueled shock to energy prices and investor sentiment. We viewed this as a bigger issue for European and EM credit, with Europe heavily reliant on Russian energy supplies and EM market liquidity impacted by bans on trading of Russian assets. We therefore reduced exposures to European high-yield and EM hard currency debt in the model bond portfolio. Chart 10Our Inflation-Linked Bond Country Allocations Now, while markets have become more sanguine about the prospects of a long war that can more directly draw in Western forces, a bigger threat to financial market stability has emerged – more aggressive tightening of global monetary policy led by the Fed. Chart 11Global Credit Spreads Have Returned To Pre-Invasion Levels Chart 12Global Monetary Backdrop Turning More Negative For Credit Already, the move away from quantitative easing by the Fed, ECB and BoE has led to a negative impulse for global credit returns (Chart 12). Excess returns for the Bloomberg Global Corporate and High-Yield indices are now essentially flat on a year-over-year basis, and the riskiest credit tiers of both indices are seeing the greater spread widening (bottom panel). Another indicator of tightening monetary policy, the flat US Treasury curve, is also signaling a poor environment for US credit market returns. Our colleagues at our sister service, BCA Research US Bond Strategy, have noted that when the 2-year/10-year US Treasury curve flattens below +25bps, the odds of US investment grade credit outperforming duration-matched Treasuries decline sharply. Dating back to 1973, the average excess return (over Treasuries) for the Bloomberg US investment grade index over the twelve months after the 2/10 curve flattens below +25bps is -0.56%. The 2/10 US Treasury curve is now inverted at -3bps, even with the Fed having only delivered a single +25bp rate hike so far in the current cycle. This is a highly unusual occurrence, as the Treasury curve typically inverts after the Fed has delivered multiple rate hikes in a tightening cycle. Bond investors are clearly “front-running” the Fed in discounting aggressive rate hikes in 2022 in response to US inflation near 8%. We think the Fed will deliver fewer hikes than markets are discounting this year, but will do more in 2023 and 2024. Yet the message from the now-inverted yield curve, and what it means for corporate bond performance, is too powerful to ignore. This underpins our decision to downgrade our recommended allocation to US investment grade to underweight. We do not, however, see a need to move the allocations for other corporate bond markets as aggressively. The credit spread widening seen so far in 2022 in the US and Europe – a trend that was already in place before the start of the Ukraine war – has restored more value to European corporate spreads compared to US equivalents. That can be seen when looking at our preferred measure of spread valuations, 12-month breakeven spreads.2 The historical percentile ranking of the 12-month breakeven spread is 63% for euro area investment grade and a much lower 23% for US investment grade (Chart 13). The absolute level of the euro area ranking justifies maintaining an overweight stance on euro area investment grade, both in absolute terms and relative to US investment grade. A smaller gap exists for high-yield, where the euro area 12-month breakeven spread percentile ranking is 50% versus 33% in the US. Those lower percentile rankings justify no higher than a neutral allocation to high-yield on either side of the Atlantic. On the surface, maintaining a higher allocation to US high-yield over US investment grade does appear counter-intuitive in an environment where the US Treasury curve is inverted and investors are growing increasingly worried that the Fed will need to engineer a major growth slowdown to cool inflation. However, that same high inflation helps to maintain a fast enough pace of nominal economic growth to limit the default risk for riskier borrowers. Moody’s estimates that the default rate for high-yield corporates will reach 3.1% in the US and 2.6% in Europe by year-end. Using those estimates, we can calculate a default-adjusted spread, or the current high-yield spread minus one-year-ahead expected default losses. That spread is currently 134bps in the US and 206bps in Europe, both well above the low end of the long-run range and closer to the long-run average (Chart 14). Those are levels that are consistent with a neutral allocation to high-yield in both regions, as current spreads offer a decent cushion in an environment of relatively low default risk. Chart 13More Attractive Spread Levels In Europe Vs. US Chart 14Low Default Risk Helps Support High-Yield Valuations Chart 15Persistent Headwinds To EM Credit Performance Emerging Markets Finally, we continue to see more reasons to be cautious on EM USD-denominated credit, given the lack of support from typical fundamental drivers (Chart 15). Weak Chinese growth, slowing commodity price momentum (on a year-over-year basis), and a firm US dollar are all factors that weigh on EM economic growth and the ability to service hard-currency debt. We are maintaining an underweight allocation to EM USD-denominated sovereign and corporate debt in our model bond portfolio. Indications that China is ready to introduce more fiscal and monetary stimulus, and/or if the Fed’s messaging turned less hawkish – and less US dollar bullish – would be the signals necessary for us to consider an EM upgrade. Summing It All Up The full list of our recommended portfolio allocations after making all of the above changes can be seen in Table 2. The changes leave the portfolio with the following high-level characteristics: Table 2GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Recommended Positioning For The Next Six Months Chart 16Overall Portfolio Allocation: Underweight Spread Product Vs Governments the overall duration exposure remains at-benchmark (i.e. neutral) the portfolio has now flipped to an underweight stance on the exposure of spread product to government bonds, equal to four percentage points of the portfolio (Chart 16) the tracking error of the portfolio, or its expected volatility in excess of that of the benchmark, is 80bps – a level similar to that before the changes were made and still well below our self-imposed 100bps tracking error limit (Chart 17) the portfolio now has a yield below that of the custom benchmark index, equal to 2.51% (Chart 18). Chart 17Overall Portfolio Risk: Moderate Chart 18Overall Portfolio Yield: Below-Benchmark The changes leave the portfolio much more exposed to a widening of global credit spreads than a rise in government bond yields – a desired outcome with bond yields already discounting a lot of tightening but credit spreads still at historically tight levels. Bottom Line: As the global monetary tightening cycle evolves, positioning more defensively in global credit, rather than duration management, will provide the better opportunity to generate alpha in bond portfolios. We are expressing that by cutting the exposure to corporate bonds in our model bond portfolio. Portfolio Scenario Analysis For The Next Six Months After making all the specific changes to our model portfolio weightings, which can be seen in the tables on pages 23-25, we now turn to our regular quarterly scenario analysis to determine the return expectations for the portfolio for the next six months. On the credit side of the portfolio, we use risk-factor-based regression models to forecast future yield changes for global spread product sectors as a function of four major factors - the VIX, oil prices, the US dollar and the fed funds rate (Table 3A). For the government bond side of the portfolio, we avoid using regression models and instead use a yield-beta driven framework, taking forecasts for changes in US Treasury yields and translating those in changes in non-US bond yields by applying a historical yield beta (Table 3B). Table 3AFactor Regressions Used To Estimate Spread Product Yield Changes Table 3BEstimated Government Bond Yield Betas To US Treasuries For our scenario analysis over the next six months, we use a base case scenario plus two alternate “tail risk” scenarios. In the current environment, our scenarios center around developments in the Ukraine/Russia conflict and the impacts on uncertainty and commodity-fueled inflation. Base Case There is no further escalation of the Ukraine/Russia conflict, possibly resulting in a temporary ceasefire. Oil prices pull back on a lower war risk premium, helping lower inflation expectations. Global realized inflation peaks during Q2/2022, alongside some moderation of global growth in lagged response to high energy prices. Within that slower pace of global growth, the US outperforms Europe while Chinese growth remains weak because of COVID lockdowns (although that will eventually lead to more stimulus from Chinese policymakers). The Fed delivers 100bps of rate hikes by July, starting with a 50bp increase at the May meeting, before pausing at the September meeting in response to slowing US inflation and growth. There is a mild bear flattening of the US Treasury curve, but yields remain broadly unchanged over the full six month scenario period with the Fed not hiking by more than currently discounted. The Brent oil price retreats by -10%, the US dollar modestly appreciates by 2%, the VIX stays close to current levels at 20 and the fed funds rate reaches 1.5%. Escalation Scenario The is no reduction in Ukraine war tensions, with increased Russian aggression resulting in greater NATO military involvement. The risk premium in oil prices increases, delaying the expected peak in global inflation until the second half of 2022. Inflation expectations remain elevated. Global growth weakens more than in the base case scenario because of higher energy prices, but with US growth still outperforming Europe. China’s economy remains weighed down by COVID lockdowns and an inadequate fiscal/monetary/credit policy response. The Fed is forced to be more aggressive because of high inflation expectations, delivering 150bps of hikes by September. The US Treasury curve bear-flattens, but with Treasury yields rising across the curve through wider TIPS breakevens and greater-than-expected rate hikes keeping real yields stable. The Brent oil price rises +25%, the VIX index climbs to 30, the US dollar appreciates by +5% thanks to slowing global growth and a more aggressive move by the Fed to push the funds rate to 2%. De-Escalation Scenario There is a full and lasting ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine. The war risk premium in oil prices collapses, allowing global inflation to peak in Q2 and then decline rapidly. Global growth sentiment improves because of lower energy prices and diminished worries about a wider world war. European growth outperforms US growth (relative to expectations) as European natural gas prices decline. China responds faster than expected to the latest COVID wave with more aggressive policy stimulus. Lower inflation allows the Fed to be more patient on rate hikes, delivering only 75bps of hikes by July before pausing. The Treasury curve moderately bull-steepens, although the absolute decline in nominal Treasury yields is fairly small as lower TIPS breakevens are partially offset by higher real yields (as growth sentiment improves). The Brent oil price falls -20%, the VIX index drifts down to 18, and the US dollar depreciates by -3% as global growth improves and the Fed pushes the funds rate to a less-than-expected 1.25% by July. The excess return scenarios for the model bond portfolio, using the above inputs in our simple quantitative return forecast framework, are shown in Table 4A. The US Treasury yield assumptions are shown in Table 4B. For the more visually inclined, we present charts showing the model inputs and Treasury yield projections in Chart 19 and Chart 20, respectively. Table 4AGFIS Model Bond Portfolio Scenario Analysis For The Next Six Months Table 4BUS Treasury Yield Assumptions For The 6-Month Forward Scenario Analysis Chart 19Risk Factor Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis Chart 20US Treasury Yield Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis Given our neutral overall portfolio duration stance, and the mild changes in nominal bond yields implied by our forecasts, it should not be surprising that the rates side of the portfolio is expected to not contribute any excess return in Q2 and Q3. However, Fed rate hikes – which push up yields on spread product in the forecasting regressions – result in negative credit returns in all scenarios (especially in the cases where the VIX is expected to rise). Thus, the return on the credit side of the model portfolio, where we are now underweight credit risk, will be the main driver of performance, delivering a range of excess return outcomes between +29bps and +53bps. Bottom Line: The next six months will be about locking in the significant gains in our model bond portfolio performance from rising bond yields, and transitioning to outperforming via wider credit spreads in US investment grade and EM hard currency debt. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Shakti Sharma Senior Analyst ShaktiS@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The GFIS model bond portfolio custom benchmark index is the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index, but with allocations to global high-yield corporate debt replacing very high-quality spread product (i.e. AA-rated). We believe this to be more indicative of the typical internal benchmark used by global multi-sector fixed income managers. 2 12-month breakeven spreads compare the option-adjusted spread (OAS) of a credit market or sector to its duration, using Bloomberg bond index data. The breakeven spread is the amount of spread widening that must occur over a one-year horizon to make the total return of a credit instrument equal to that of duration-matched risk-free government debt. GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Recommended Positioning Active Duration Contribution: GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. Custom Performance Benchmark The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Global Fixed Income - Strategic Recommendations* Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months)