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  BCA Research’s Foreign Exchange Strategy service expects the Fed’s tapering of asset purchases to be a non-event for the US dollar. While the Fed is still considering tapering asset purchases (and would very likely do so) by year-end, other…
As expected, the Norges Bank delivered its first rate hike on Thursday, bringing its benchmark policy rate to 0.25%. It is the first developed market central bank to raise rates in the post-COVID-19 crisis period. The central bank statement revealed that…
Dear client, There will be no weekly bulletin next week. Instead, I will be hosting a webcast, with my colleague, Matt Gertken, titled “Currencies And Geopolitics: A Discussion.” I hope you will tune in so that we can have an interactive session. Also, we will be revamping the traditional backsections that FX has been publishing and will send a mockup in the coming weeks. Feedback on the new format will be greatly appreciated. Finally, I hosted a webcast this week with Japanese clients titled “A Guide To Currency Management For Japanese Corporates.” For those who are interested but were unable to attend, I encourage you to consult your sales representative for a replay. Kind regards, Chester Highlights The Fed will taper asset purchases this year, but it could be a non-event for the US dollar. The reason is that the Fed is lagging other G10 central banks in tapering asset purchases. Many will end QE even before the Fed begins tapering. The two big exceptions are the ECB and the BoJ. But while dovish monetary policy is well priced into both the interest rate curve and their currencies, upside surprises are not. Most global central banks will remain data dependent. So the key to gauging the move in currencies is to observe (and forecast) economic data. On that front, the current evidence is that US growth is robust, but is losing momentum to other developed markets. Volatility in currencies will be on the rise. We went long CHF/NZD on this basis last week and maintain long yen positions. But our bias is that any rally in the DXY will fizzle out at the 94-95 level. Feature This week was a busy one for central bankers. We kicked off with the Riksbank on Tuesday, the Bank of Japan and the Federal Reserve on Wednesday, and concluded with the Swiss National Bank, the Bank of England, and the Norges bank on Thursday. The highlight was the Fed, but the general message from most central banks is that less monetary accommodation will be forthcoming, as economic activity picks up. Most central bankers also admitted that inflation was proving a bit more sticky than initially anticipated. The key question therefore for currency strategists is whether the Federal Reserve will be more or less orthodox with monetary policy, compared to other developed market central banks, and what that means for the dollar. Our bias is that while the Fed was slightly more hawkish this week, it will continue to lag other G10 central banks in curtailing monetary accommodation. The Message From The FOMC Chart I-1The Market Has Priced Fed Hawkishness The key development from the Fed meeting this week was an upgrade to the dot plot. Half of the committee now expects at least one interest rate hike in 2022, with perhaps 7-8 hikes by the end of 2024. This is a more aggressive path of interest rate increases compared to the June FOMC meeting. The Fed also suggested tapering could begin at the next policy meeting and end towards the middle of next year, in time for rate increases. The immediate market response to the FOMC meeting did certainly suggest a hawkish undertone. The two-year US Treasury yield rose by 4 bps, which boosted the DXY index from a low of 93 to a high of 93.5 (intraday). Stocks rose and the 10-year Treasury yield edged mildly lower. The 30/2-year Treasury slope flattened by almost 10 bps. In our view, this was a rather muted response. For one, most of these moves are fading as we go to press. More importantly, going into the meeting, the market was already priced for a liftoff in 2022. This will suggest that the market was well positioned for Fed tapering at a minimum, and possibly an upgrade to the dots (Chart I-1). The Message From Other Central Banks While the Fed is still considering tapering asset purchases (and would very likely do so) by year-end, other central banks are well ahead in exiting emergency monetary settings. Just this week: The Norges bank hiked interest rates by 25 bps. We are particularly bullish on the krone, as highlighted in our Norwegian Method report; The Riskbank will end asset purchases this year. Its balance sheet is slated to be flat for 2022. It also closed all lending facilities launched during the pandemic. The offer for USD loans via the Fed’s swap facility will expire this month; The Bank of England kept monetary policy unchanged, but has already purchased £852bn of its £895bn target for government and corporate bonds. In fact, two of its members voted this week to reduce this target by £35bn, which would have effectively ended QE on a majority vote; The Swiss National Bank said in its introductory statement that it is fighting against an expensive franc, but modestly upgraded its inflation forecasts for 2022; The sole dovish central bank (aside from the SNB) was the Bank of Japan, but with elections on the horizon, and the possibility (or not) of a big fiscal package, their policy stance made sense.  Chart I-2Central Bank Holdings Of Government Bonds Elsewhere, the Bank of Canada has already cut its asset purchases in half, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand has ended QE, and the Reserve Bank of Australia has already been tapering asset purchases. In a nutshell, a Fed tapering at this point is well behind the actions of other G10 central banks. This is one key reason why the DXY index has failed to punch above the 94-95 level, and is relapsing as we go to press. From a bird’s eye view, many G10 central banks already have bloated balance sheets and a strong incentive to curtail asset purchases as growth recovers. Within the G10, the US central bank has the smallest holdings of outstanding bonds (Chart I-2). This not only means that, ceteris paribus, the incentive to taper asset purchases is bigger for other central banks, but the scope for the Federal Reserve to ease monetary policy is quite substantial should another shock occur. This might explain why there is unease among other central bankers, to exit emergency settings. Admittedly, this week, traditionally dovish central banks such as the Bank of Japan and the Swiss National Bank kept policy on hold and telegraphed a message that they will keep doing so for the foreseeable future. With a slightly more hawkish Federal Reserve, this should be a negative for these currencies. The same will apply to the ECB (Chart I-3). However, it is important to note that relatively dovish policy settings are well priced into both interest rate curves and their currencies, while upside surprises are not. The market does not expect any interest rate increases in the euro area or Japan before 2024, while it is priced for an aggressive pace of Fed rate hikes (Chart I-4). The starting point for any currency investor is an extremely dovish ECB and BoJ, relative to the Fed. Chart I-3A Pickup In US Yields Has Boosted The Dollar Chart I-4Markets Expect A More Aggressive Fed What Could Change? Global central banks are clearly focused on two goals – the outlook for growth and what that means for their maximum employment objective, and the long-run rate of inflation. These two objectives are interlinked. On the growth front, central bankers are justifiably admitting that the outlook remains clouded due to the Delta variant of COVID-19 and supply disruptions that are muddling the manufacturing outlook. However, it is important to remember that this is a global phenomenon. On a relative basis, there has been a growth rotation from the US to other economies that has historically supported the performance of DM currencies (Chart I-5). The primary reason is that many economies outside the US were in various forms of a lockdown over the last several months. As these economies reopen, so will economic activity. Chart I-5ARelative Growth And Currencies Chart I-5BRelative Growth And Currencies On the inflation front, the most acute problem has been tied to supply bottlenecks and this is not a US-centric problem. Inflation in the euro area, Sweden, the UK, Canada, or New Zealand are all above central bank targets (Table I-1). While all these central banks view the current overshoot as temporary, most have already pared back emergency monetary settings, as we highlighted above. Table I-1Inflation In The G10 The key takeaway is that most central banks view inflation risks as symmetric, while the Fed has telegraphed it is willing to tolerate an inflation overshoot following downturns (Chart I-6). During the Fed’s last two meetings, it has been clear that there is a limit to how much of an overshoot they will tolerate. However, it still suggests that the Fed remains well behind the inflation curve, with one of the most negative 2-year rates in the G10 (Chart I-7). Chart I-6The Fed And Inflation Overshoots Chart I-7Real Yields In The US Are Very Low In a nutshell, if our bias turns out to be correct that growth does recover more earnestly outside the US, and other central banks remain more orthodox than the Fed, this will be a headwind for a stronger US dollar. A Final Note On Canada Canada re-elected a Liberal minority government on September 20. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s bet on a majority government, given an astute handling of the pandemic, and massive fiscal stimulus, failed. The implication is a continuation of the status quo in Canada. The good news is that the status quo is actually bullish for the loonie. As we highlighted in our recent report, minority governments tend to be positive for the loonie, while majority governments generally nudge the CAD lower post election (Chart I-8). The rationale is that fiscal policy is slated to stay easy, but not overly so, providing gentle room for the BoC to hike interest rates. Easy fiscal but tighter monetary policy is usually bullish for a currency. Chart I-8Historically, The CAD Likes A Minority Government Given our view on the US dollar, we expect the CAD/USD to punch above the recent 82-cent high, towards 85 and eventually 90 cents. While this view might take time to play out, both rising relative interest rates in Canada (our base case) and high oil prices will be the key catalysts. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Strategtic View Cyclical Holdings (6-18 months) Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Closed Trades
Highlights Global Inflation: Most central banks, led by the Fed, have stuck to the narrative that surging inflation is a temporary phenomenon that will not require an aggressive monetary policy response. However, global supply chain disruptions are lasting for much longer than originally expected, while faster realized global inflation is feeding through into higher longer-term consumer inflation expectations, most notably in the US. This raises the risk that the 2021 inflation pickup will prove to be longer lasting, leading to higher global bond yields. Real Bond Yields: Global bond markets have made a collective bet on the “transitory” inflation narrative by driving yields on government bonds, and even the riskier parts of the corporate credit universe like US and European high-yield, below actual inflation. Markets will have to reprice those negative real bond yields higher if inflation proves to be more persistent than expected - particularly with central banks likely to respond with faster tapering and, in some cases, eventual rate hikes. Feature The month of September has often not been kind to financial markets and September 2021 is already providing many reasons for investors to be nervous. Slowing global growth momentum, uncertainty over the Delta variant, yet another US Debt Ceiling debate in D.C. and worries about excessive Chinese corporate leverage and contagion risks from the looming Evergrande default are all valid reasons for market participants to become more risk averse. On top of that, the monetary policy backdrop is threatening to become less overwhelmingly supportive for markets with the Fed set to begin tapering its asset purchases. Chart of the WeekInflation Expected To Slow But Remain Above Bond Yields One other source of angst that markets seem less concerned about is inflation. Markets have generally come around to the view of most major central banks, led by the Fed, that the surge in inflation seen this year has been all pandemic related - base effect comparisons to 2020 and temporary supply chain squeezes – and will not last into 2022. Yet we have seen very strong realized global inflation readings in the August data, beyond the point of maximum base effect comparisons versus a year ago, while supply squeezes and soaring shipping costs are showing no signs of slowing as we approach the fourth quarter. Global bond markets have made a collective bet that current high rates of inflation will prove to be temporary. Developed market bond yields are all trading well below actual inflation, as are riskier fixed income asset classes like US and European high-yield (Chart of the Week). While consensus expectations are calling for some rise in government bond yields in 2022, yields are expected to remain below inflation. Those persistent negative real yield expectations remain the biggest source of vulnerability for global bond markets. If inflation turns out to be “less transitory” than expected, nominal bond yields will need to move higher to reprice both real yields and the risk of more hawkish central bank responses to sustained high inflation. A Persistent Inflation Threat From Supply Chain Disruptions Chart 2A Broad-Based Surge In Global Inflation Our base-case view remains that global inflation will slow in 2022, but not by enough to prevent the major developed market central banks from tapering asset purchases. We expect the Fed to begin buying fewer bonds in January. Central banks that have already begun to slow the pace of quantitative easing (QE) like the Bank of Canada and Bank of England will likely continue to taper as fast, if not even faster, than the Fed. Even the ECB will likely not roll the full amount of the expiring Pandemic Emergency Purchase Program (PEPP) into the existing pre-COVID asset purchase programs, resulting in a mild form of tapering next year. Our view on global inflation has been predicated on an expected shift away from more externally-driven inflation towards more sustainable domestic price pressures stemming from tightening labor markets and the closing of pandemic output gaps (Chart 2). So the mix of inflation in most developed market countries will be more “core” and less “non-core” inflation driven by higher commodity prices and global supply chain disruptions. Yet there is little sign that those non-core inflation pressures are slowing, particular in price gauges most exposed to supply chains like producer price indices (PPI). US PPI inflation climbed to 15-year high of 8.3% on a year-over-year basis in August, while annual growth in the euro area PPI hit 12.1% in July – the fastest pace in the 30-year history of that data series (Chart 3). Surging PPI inflation reflects global price pressures, with import prices expanding at double-digit rates in both the US and Europe. Some of that more externally driven price pressure stems from commodity markets. While the prices for some notable commodities like lumber and iron ore have seen significant retracements from pandemic-era highs over the past several months, more economically sensitive commodities like aluminum and natural gas have all seen very strong price increases (Chart 4). Copper and oil prices are also holding firm, although both are off 2021 highs. Chart 3No Sign Of Slowing Global Inflation At The Producer Level The price momentum of overall commodity price indices like the CRB Raw Industrials has clearly rolled over, but has held up much better than would be expected given signs of slowing global growth. Chart 4Commodity Markets Still More Inflationary Than Disinflationary The current depressed level of the China credit impulse, and the flat year-over-year change of the global PMI, would typically be associated with flat commodity prices rather than the current 34% annual growth rate (Chart 5). A lack of sustained upward pressure on the US dollar is likely helping keep commodity prices, which are priced in dollars, more elevated than expected. Even more important, however, are the low inventories for many commodities relative to firm demand (which largely explains the current surge in aluminum and natural gas prices). This mirrors a broader global economic trend towards companies running lower inventories relative to sales, which has been exacerbated by the economic uncertainties of the COVID-19 pandemic. The US overall business inventory-to-sales ratio is now at the lowest level in the history of the series (Chart 6). Chart 5Commodity Price Inflation Peaking, But Not Slowing Much Chart 6Supply Squeezes Are Likely To Persist Before the pandemic, firms have gotten away with running very lean inventories because of globalized supply chains that allow firms to maintain the minimum amount of inventory to meet demand. Yet “just-in-time” inventory management only works when suppliers can deliver raw materials or finished goods in a timely fashion at low cost. The pandemic has blown up that model, making it much harder to deliver products and materials from critical countries like China. Global shipping costs have exploded higher and are showing no signs of slowing (bottom panel), while supplier delivery times remain well above historical averages according to measures like the US ISM index. Those higher costs are feeding through into overall inflation measures, particularly for the components most exposed to supply chain disruption. In Chart 7, we show a breakdown of the overall CPI inflation data for the US, euro area, UK and Canada. The groupings shown in the chart are based on an analysis done by the Bank of Canada back in August to measure pandemic impacts on Canadian inflation.1 The top panel of the chart shows the contribution to overall inflation for elements most exposed to supply constraints (like autos and durable goods). The second panel of the chart shows the contribution from sectors more exposed to increased demand as economies reopen from pandemic restrictions, like dining at restaurants and travel. The remaining panels of the chart show the contributions from energy prices and all other components not covered in the top three panels. Chart 7Fed's Transitory Narrative At Risk From Lingering Supply Chain Disruption Chart 8High US Inflation May Not Prove To Be So Transitory The conclusion from our chart is that supply disruptions have added more to US and Canadian inflation so far in 2021, while reopening demand has been more meaningful for UK and US inflation. The pickup in euro area inflation has been mostly an energy price story, although reopening demand has started to contribute to the rising trend of overall inflation. The implication from this analysis is that persistent supply chain disruptions could become a bigger issue for future inflation – and monetary policy decisions – in the US and Canada. The acceleration of US realized inflation in 2021 has already begun to broaden out from the most volatile components, according to measures like the Dallas Fed Trimmed Mean PCE (Chart 8). Faster inflation is also feeding through into higher US consumer inflation expectations according to surveys from the New York Fed and the University of Michigan. Those increases are not deemed to be temporary, with longer-term inflation expectations now moving higher. The New York Fed’s survey shows that inflation is expected to be 4% over the next three years, two full percentage points above the Fed’s target, which must be ringing some alarm bells on the FOMC. Chart 9European Consumers Are Waking Up To Higher Inflation Consumer inflation expectations are also starting to perk up outside the US. The YouGov/Citigroup survey shows an expectation of UK inflation over the next 5-10 years of 3.5%, while the Bank of England/Kantar survey is at 3% over the next five years (Chart 9, top panel). Both are above the Bank of England’s 2% inflation target. The European Commission confidence surveys have shown a sharp increase in the net share of respondents expecting higher inflation in the coming months (bottom panel), while the Bundesbank’s August consumer survey shows that Germans now expect 3.5% inflation over the next 12 months, up from 2% back in March. Bottom Line: Supply chain disruptions are lasting for much longer than originally expected, while faster realized global inflation is feeding through into higher longer-term consumer inflation expectations, most notably in the US. This raises the risk that the 2021 inflation pickup will last much longer than expected and force a bond-bearish repricing of future interest rate expectations. Negative Real Yields – The Achilles Heel For Bond Markets It is clear that supply chain disruptions are having a more lasting effect on global inflation than investors, and policymakers, expected earlier this year. Yet while both market-based and survey-based measures of inflation expectations are moving higher, interest rate markets are still pricing in a very dovish future path for policy rates of the major developed market central banks. For example, our 24-month discounters, which measure the change in interest rates over the next two years discounted in overnight index swap (OIS) curves, show that only 71bps, 61bps and 13bps of rate hikes are expected in the US, UK and euro area, respectively, by September 2023 (Chart 10). This continues a trend that we have highlighted in recent reports – the persistence of negative real interest rate expectations in the developed markets that is also keeping real bond yields in sub-0% territory. In the US, the OIS forward curve shows that the first Fed rate hike is expected in early 2023 with a very slow pace of rate increases over the following 2-3 years (Chart 11). The funds rate is expected to level off at 1.75% and stay there through 2030. At the same time, the CPI swap forward curve has inflation falling steadily over the next couple of years, but leveling off around 2.35% for the rest of the upcoming decade. Combining those two forward projections comes up with an implied path for the real fed funds rate that is persistently negative for the next ten years, “settling” at -0.6% by the end of the decade. Chart 10Bond Markets Exposed To More Hawkish Central Banks Chart 11US Real Yields Priced For Extended Fed Dovishness An even more deeply negative real rate path is discounted in the euro area forward curves. The ECB is expected to begin lifting rates in 2023, eventually moving out of negative (nominal) territory in 2026 before climbing to +0.5% by 2030 (Chart 12). Euro area CPI swaps are priced for a fall in inflation back below 2% over the next two years, eventually stabilizing at 1.75% over the latter half of the next decade. The real ECB policy rate is therefore expected to settle at -1.25% by 2030. In the UK, markets are discounting much of what has been seen in the years since the 2008 financial crisis – a Bank of England that does very little with interest rates. The central bank is expected to begin lifting rates in 2023, but only a handful of rate hikes are expected in the following years with Bank Rate only climbing to 1% and settling there for most of the upcoming decade. The UK CPI swap curve is discounting relatively high inflation over the next decade, settling at 3.6% in 2030. Thus, the market is discounting a long-run real Bank of England policy rate of -2.6%. This pricing of negative real policy rates so far into the future goes a long way to explain why longer-term real government bond yields have also been consistently negative in the US, Germany, UK and elsewhere in the developed markets. That can be seen in Charts 11, 12 and 13, where we have added the 10-year inflation-linked (real) bond yield for US TIPS, French OATis and UK index-linked Gilts. In all three cases, the 10-year real yield has “gravitated” towards the realized path of the real policy rate – the nominal rate minus headline CPI inflation – over the past two decades. Chart 12Negative Real Rates Forever In Europe? Chart 13BoE Not Expected To Do Much Over The Next Decade Chart 14Nominal Yields Will Move Higher If Negative Real Yields Persist Persistent low government bond yields, both in nominal and inflation-adjusted terms, have resulted in lower yields across the global fixed income markets as investors have been forced to take on more risk to find acceptable yields. This has resulted in a situation where nominal yields on riskier assets like US high-yield corporate bonds and Italian government debt are trading below prevailing headline inflation rates in the US and Europe (Chart 14). Bond investors would likely only be comfortable accepting such negative real yields on the riskier parts of the fixed income universe if a) inflation was expected to decline, and/or b) real yields on risk-free government bonds were expected to stay negative for longer as central banks stay dovish. In either case, the “bet” made by investors is that the inflation surge seen this year will indeed prove to be transitory, as central banks are forecasting. If that benign outlook proves to be incorrect and inflation stays resilient for longer – potentially because of the risk of lingering supply chain disruptions described earlier in this report - nominal bond yields will have to reprice higher to account for faster realized inflation (and, most likely, rising inflation expectations). This process will start in government bond markets, as global central banks will be forced to respond to stubbornly high inflation by turning more hawkish, first with faster tapering of QE bond buying and, later, with interest rate hikes. We continue to see persistent negative real yields as the biggest source of risk in developed economy bond markets over the next couple of years. Those yields discount a benign path for both inflation and future monetary policy that is looking increasingly less likely – especially with tightening labor markets and rising consumer inflation expectations already forcing central banks, led by the Fed, to move incrementally towards less accommodative policy settings. Bottom Line: Global bond markets have made a collective bet on the “transitory” inflation narrative by driving yields on government bonds, and even the riskier parts of the corporate credit universe like US and European high-yield, below actual inflation. Markets will have to reprice those negative real bond yields higher if inflation proves to be more persistent than expected - particularly with central banks likely to respond with faster tapering and, in some cases, eventual rate hikes. Stay below-benchmark on overall global duration exposure in fixed income portfolios.   Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 We have attempted to match the groupings shown in the Bank of Canada analysis as much as possible for the other countries, although there are some minor differences based on how each country’s consumer price index sub-indices are defined. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
The Turkish central bank surprised investors with a 100-basis point rate cut on Thursday, bringing the one-week repo rate down to 18%. The decision comes despite rising inflation. Headline CPI has been steadily climbing since late-2019 and reached 19.25% in…
The Bank of England kept policy unchanged at its meeting on Thursday. Instead, it revised down its Q3 growth outlook to 2.1% from last month’s 2.9%. However, it highlighted that this revision largely reflects the dampening effect of supply constraints on…
The Fed’s policy normalization process is likely to produce a slight hawkish surprise. The central bank will probably raise interest rates earlier and faster than current market expectations (see Country Focus). We do not expect this process to be a source of…
As expected, the FOMC did not make any changes to its policy rate or pace of asset purchases at its meeting on Wednesday. However, the Fed sent a strong signal that tapering is on the horizon. The statement indicated that “if progress continues broadly as…
As expected, Sweden’s central bank maintained a dovish tone and kept policy unchanged following its meeting on Tuesday. The Riksbank acknowledged that Swedish inflation surprised to the upside relative to its July forecast. As anticipated by our European…
Highlights Investment Grade: Investment grade corporate bond total returns will be close to zero or negative during the next 12 months. The bonds are also likely to outperform duration-matched Treasuries during that period, but excess returns are probably capped at 85 bps. High-Yield: High-yield total returns will fall between -0.29% and +1.80% during the next 12 months, but with a much higher likelihood of being positive than investment grade corporates. Junk will outperform duration-matched Treasuries by between 0.94% and 1.84%, besting the excess returns earned in investment grade. Inflation & The Fed: The Fed will announce asset purchase tapering before the end of this year, and tapering will proceed at a pace that opens the door to a potential rate hike before the end of 2022. Ultimately, whether the Fed lifts rates in 2022 will depend on trends in core CPI excluding COVID-impacted services and autos, along with wage growth and inflation expectations. Feature Chart 1Valuations Are Stretched There are two broad factors that must be considered when deciding whether to favor corporate bonds over Treasuries in a US bond portfolio: (i) The cyclical macroeconomic environment and (ii) valuation. The problem is that, as it stands today, these two factors are sending contrasting signals. The cyclical macroeconomic environment is consistent with strong positive excess returns for spread product versus Treasuries. However, corporate bond spreads and yields are extremely low relative to history (Chart 1). We view the slope of the yield curve as the single best indicator of the cyclical macro environment and have shown in prior research that corporate bonds tend to deliver positive excess returns versus Treasuries when the 3-year/10-year Treasury slope is above 50 bps, even when corporate spreads are tight.1 At present, the 3-year/10-year slope sits at 90 bps and our bias will be toward an overweight allocation to corporates until the slope breaks below 50 bps. A flatter yield curve is negative for corporate bond performance because it suggests that monetary conditions are less accommodative. It also makes it more likely that an unforeseen shock will lead to yield curve inversion, a highly reliable recession indicator. While the macro environment is consistent with continued corporate bond outperformance versus Treasuries, valuation suggests that we should anticipate lower returns than usual from corporate bonds. Table 1 shows annualized corporate bond excess returns during each of the past six cycles. Additionally, it splits each cycle into three phases based on the slope of the 3-year/10-year Treasury curve. Phase 1 of the cycle lasts from the end of the prior recession until the slope breaks below 50 bps. Phase 2 encompasses the period when the slope is between 0 bps and 50 bps. Phase 3 lasts from when the yield curve inverts until the start of the next recession. Table 1Corporate Bond Excess Returns In Different Phases Of The Cycle The first conclusion to draw from Table 1 is that excess returns tend to be lower in Phase 2 than in Phase 1 and lower in Phase 3 than in Phase 2. Second, we see that investment grade corporates have returned an annualized 7.55% in excess of duration-matched Treasuries so far this cycle and high-yield corporates have delivered 15.15% of outperformance. These figures are well above even those seen in prior Phase 1 periods. Based on this, an expectation for lower – but still positive – excess corporate bond returns seems like a reasonable base case for the next 6-12 months. Table 2 is identical to Table 1 except that it shows total returns instead of excess returns. We observe that, so far this cycle, junk bond total returns have outpaced prior Phase 1 periods. Investment grade total returns have been slightly lower given the greater exposure to interest rate risk of those securities. Table 2Corporate Bond Total Returns In Different Phases Of The Cycle As noted above, our expectation is that corporate bonds will outperform Treasuries during the next 6-12 months, but that both excess returns and total returns will take a step down. The next section of this report presents a scenario analysis that puts some more specific numbers on the sorts of excess and total corporate bond returns investors might expect to earn during the next year. Corporate Bond Returns: Scenario Analysis Methodology To run our scenario analysis for investment grade corporate bond returns we use the following equations: Excess Return = OAS0  – D0 (dOAS) Total Return = OAS0+ TSY0 – D0 (dOAS+dTSY) Where: Excess Return = The expected corporate index excess return versus duration-matched Treasuries during the next 12 months Total Return = The expected corporate index total return during the next 12 months OAS0 = Today’s average index option-adjusted spread D0 = Today’s average index duration TSY0 = Today’s Treasury yield that matches the duration of the corporate index dOAS = The expected change in the index option-adjusted spread during the next 12 months dTSY = The expected change in the duration-matched Treasury yield during the next 12 months These equations are obviously simplifications. For example, the impact of convexity is ignored. However, Chart 2 shows that our proxies track actual index returns very closely over time, assuming the estimated yield and spread changes are accurate. Chart 2Estimating IG Returns We use similar equations for assessing high-yield corporate returns, with the additional complication that we must include an assumption for default losses. Excess Return= OAS0 – (DR × (1 - RR)) –D0(dOAS) Total Return= OAS0 + TSY0 – (DR × (1 – RR)) –D0 (dOAS + dTSY) In these equations: DR = The expected issuer-weighted default rate for the next 12 months RR = The expected average recovery rate on defaulted debt for the next 12 months Once again, though these equations are relatively simple, they do a good job of capturing actual returns over time (Chart 3). Chart 3Estimating HY Returns Scenarios With the above equations in hand, we can easily make some educated guesses about future yields, spreads and default losses and translate those assumptions into expected return forecasts. Specifically, we test three different scenarios (bullish, neutral and bearish) for corporate spreads, Treasury yields and default losses. For corporate index spreads, both investment grade and high-yield, our bullish scenario assumes that spreads reach the all-time tight levels seen in the mid-1990s. For investment grade bonds this spread level is 58 bps, 27 bps below the current level. For high-yield bonds this spread level is 233 bps, 41 bps below the current level. Our neutral scenario assumes that index spreads remain at their current levels (85 bps for investment grade and 274 bps for junk). Finally, our bearish scenario assumes that spreads widen back to the average levels seen during the 2017-2019 period (112 bps for investment grade and 369 bps for junk), this implies 27 bps of widening for investment grade and 95 bps of widening for junk. Given our view that bond yields will rise as we approach the next Fed tightening cycle, none of our scenarios assume that Treasury yields will fall during the next 12 months. Our bullish Treasury yield scenario assumes that yields stay flat at current levels. Our neutral Treasury yield scenario assumes that yields follow the path implied by current forward rates, and our bearish Treasury yield scenario assumes that yields rise to levels consistent with fair value estimates assuming the market prices-in a December 2022 Fed liftoff followed by 100 bps of rate hikes per year until the fed funds rate levels-off at 2.08%.2 We use the 7-year and 6-year Treasury yields as our inputs for the investment grade and high-yield scenarios, respectively, as those yields most closely match the interest rate component embedded in the corporate indexes. For default losses, our bullish scenario assumes a 1.8% default rate – consistent with the rate at which defaults are tracking so far this year – and a recovery rate of 50%. Our neutral scenario assumes a 3% default rate and a 40% recovery rate. Our bearish scenario assumes a 4% default rate and 30% recovery rate. Investment Grade Results Table 3 shows the results of our scenario analysis for investment grade corporate bond returns. Table 3Investment Grade Corporate Bond Expected Return Scenarios Starting with excess returns, we think it is most likely that spreads remain near current levels, or perhaps widen a bit, during the next 12 months. We think it’s extremely unlikely that spreads will tighten to the levels seen in the mid-1990s because the average duration of the index is much higher today than it was back then. All else equal, it’s generally true that securities with higher duration also have higher OAS. This means we expect investment grade corporate bond excess returns to be between -153 bps and +85 bps during the next 12 months, probably closer to +85 bps. Obviously, this represents a significant step down from the +550 bps earned during the past year. In fact, even the most bullish scenario where spreads tighten back to all-time lows only implies an excess return of +323 bps, well below the recent rate of outperformance. As for total returns, we estimate that a neutral scenario where the index spread holds steady and Treasury yields follow the forward curve will lead to total returns being close to zero during the next 12 months. In fact, our results suggest that it’s highly likely that investment grade corporate bonds will deliver negative total returns during the next 12 months. Yes, the index is expected to deliver a total return of 1.98% if both the index spread and duration-matched Treasury yield remain at their current levels, but an environment where growth is slow enough to keep Treasury yields flat is much more likely to coincide with spread widening than with steady corporate spreads. For some additional historical perspective, the columns labeled “Historical Percentile Rank” show how the returns in each scenario would rank relative to actual returns earned during the past 31 calendar years. For example, even the most bullish total return scenario of 4.36% ranks at the 27th percentile relative to history. This means that it would only be better than 27% of historical 12-month return observations for that index. High-Yield Results Tables 4A, 4B and 4C summarize the results of our high-yield scenario analysis. Table 4A assumes the bullish scenario for default losses, Table 4B assumes the neutral scenario for default losses and Table 4C assumes the bearish scenario for default losses. Table 4AHigh-Yield Corporate Bond Expected Return Scenarios: Bullish Default Loss Scenario* Table 4BHigh-Yield Corporate Bond Expected Return Scenarios: Neutral Default Loss Scenario* Table 4CHigh-Yield Corporate Bond Expected Return Scenarios: Bearish Default Loss Scenario* Looking at excess returns, the first result that jumps out is that even the most bullish scenario leads to an expected 12-month excess return of +3.43%, this would be equivalent to the median return earned during the past 31 calendar years. In our view, it’s more likely that excess returns will be in the +0.94% to +1.84% range during the next 12 months. This is consistent with flat spreads and a range for default losses between our neutral and bullish scenarios. Our sense is that junk bonds are less likely to deliver negative total returns than investment grade bonds. Though even the most bullish scenario puts expected junk total returns at +4.54%, consistent with the 39th percentile relative to history. Investment Implications To summarize, our expectation is that investment grade corporate bond total returns will be close to zero or negative during the next 12 months. The bonds are also likely to outperform duration-matched Treasuries during that period, but excess returns are probably capped at 85 bps. Our best guess places high-yield total returns at between -0.29% and +1.80%, but with a much higher likelihood of earning positive total returns than a position in investment grade. We estimate that excess junk returns will fall between +0.94% and +1.84%, above returns earned in investment grade. In general, the message is that investors should remain overweight corporate bonds versus Treasuries, but should retain a preference for high-yield over investment grade and should expect to earn far lower returns than were earned during the past year. Given low expected returns, investors should also seek out creative ways of adding additional spread to a bond portfolio. We offered some suggestions in a recent report.3 CPI Update And FOMC Preview This week’s FOMC meeting could be significant for bond markets. First off, there is a possibility that the Fed will announce a timeline for tapering its asset purchases. Our sense is that last month’s weak employment report probably delays this announcement, but we still expect it to come before the end of the year. We expect that the actual tapering of purchases will start in January 2022 and that net Fed purchases will reach zero by Q3 of next year. More broadly, we continue to think that the market is already priced for a tapering announcement in 2021. In other words, any information about asset purchases probably won’t move bond yields that much. What will move bond yields is any hint about when the Fed thinks it may want to start lifting rates. Such news could come in the form of revisions to the Fed’s interest rate forecasts, or in any information that the Fed provides about the pace of asset purchase tapering. Because the Fed has indicated a strong preference for having net purchases at zero prior to liftoff, any pace of tapering that gets net purchases to zero by the middle of next year opens the door to a possible rate hike before the end of 2022. Of course, the economic data between now and the end of 2022 will have a lot to say about whether the Fed actually starts to hike. In particular, last week’s report made the case that next year’s inflation data will determine when rate hikes begin.4 With that in mind, last week’s CPI release showed a significant deceleration in core inflation, driven by the COVID-impacted service and auto sectors that had previously caused inflation to spike (Chart 4). Interestingly, core inflation excluding COVID-impacted services and autos jumped on the month (Chart 4, bottom panel). From the Fed’s perspective, it ignored the transitory rise of COVID-impacted service and auto inflation on the way up, it will also be inclined to ignore its descent. What will ultimately matter for monetary policy is whether underlying inflationary pressures start to build throughout 2022. It is therefore much more important for us to focus on trends in core inflation excluding the COVID-impacted services and autos, along with wage growth and inflation expectations. Our view is that underlying inflationary pressures will be strong enough for the Fed to lift rates before the end of 2022. This will, in large part, be due to an acceleration of shelter inflation (Chart 5). Owner’s Equivalent Rent and Rent of Primary Residence inflation have already jumped, and leading indicators of shelter inflation like the unemployment rate (Chart 5, panel 3) and the Apartment Market Tightness Index (Chart 5, bottom panel) are consistent with further acceleration. Chart 4Looking For Underlying Inflation Chart 5Shelter Inflation Will Keep Rising Bottom Line: The Fed will announce asset purchase tapering before the end of this year, and tapering will proceed at a pace that opens the door to a potential rate hike before the end of 2022. Ultimately, whether the Fed lifts rates in 2022 will depend on trends in core CPI excluding COVID-impacted services and autos, along with wage growth and inflation expectations.   Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Post-FOMC Credit Environment”, dated June 29, 2021. 2 Last week’s report provides more detail on this fair value analysis. Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “2022 Will Be All About Inflation”, dated September 14, 2021. 3 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Collapsing Credit Risk Premium”, dated July 20, 2021. 4 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “2022 Will Be All About Inflation”, dated September 14, 2021. Recommended Portfolio Specification Other Recommendations Treasury Index Returns Spread Product Returns