United States
Highlights Treasuries: Bond investors should maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration and continue to short the 5-year note versus a duration-matched 2/10 barbell. For those investors who want to take an outright long position in US Treasuries, the 2-year Treasury note looks like the best security to choose. Municipal Bonds: This week we upgrade our recommended allocation to municipal bonds from overweight (4 out of 5) to maximum overweight (5 out of 5). Investors who can take advantage of the muni tax exemption should favor municipal bonds over Treasuries and over corporate bonds with the same credit rating and duration. In particular, we recommend that investors focus on long-maturity municipal bonds. Fed: Given our view that inflation will fall during the next 12 months, we still view December 2022 as the most likely liftoff date. However, we will continue to monitor our Five Factors For Fed Liftoff to see if our forecast needs to be revised. Feature Our call for a bear-flattening of the US Treasury curve has worked out well during the past few weeks. Long-maturity Treasury yields have almost risen back to their March highs, and the short-end of the curve has also participated in the recent bout of selling (Chart 1). In light of these moves, it makes sense to re-evaluate our nominal Treasury curve positioning. First, we consider whether, at current yield levels, it still makes sense to run below-benchmark portfolio duration. Second, we consider whether our current recommended yield curve trade (short the 5-year note versus a duration-matched 2/10 barbell) remains the best way to extract returns from changes in the yield curve’s shape. The next section of this report answers these questions by looking at forecasted returns for different Treasury maturities across a variety of plausible economic and monetary policy scenarios. Later in the report we look at municipal bond valuation and provide a quick update on last week’s Fedspeak. Forecasting Treasury Returns Three sources of Treasury bond return need to be considered when creating a forecast. Income Return: The return earned from the bond’s coupon payments. Rolldown Return: The return that a bond accrues simply by moving closer to its maturity date in an unchanged yield curve environment. Capital Gains/Losses: The return earned by a bond due to changes in the level and slope of the yield curve. We like to combine the income and rolldown return into one measure called “carry”. The carry can be thought of as the return an investor will earn in a specific bond if the yield curve remains unchanged throughout the investment horizon. Though carry is not the be all and end all of bond returns, it can be illuminating to look at the yield curve in terms of carry instead of the typical yield-to-maturity. Chart 2 shows the usual par coupon yield curve alongside the 12-month carry for each Treasury security. At present, the steepness of the 3-7 year part of the curve means that bonds of those maturities benefit a lot from rolldown. In fact, we see that a 7-year Treasury note will earn more than a 10-year Treasury note during the next 12 months if the curve remains unchanged. After calculating carry, the next step is to calculate capital gains/losses for each bond. To do this, we create some possible scenarios for future changes in the fed funds rate and assume that the yield curve moves to fully price-in that funds rate path over the course of a 12-month investment horizon.1 Next, we calculate the capital gains/losses for each bond based on the new shape of the yield curve in each scenario. Tables 1A-1D show the results from four different scenarios where the Fed starts to lift rates in December 2022. We then assume that the Fed will lift rates at a pace of 75-100 bps per year and that the funds rate will level-off at a terminal rate of either 2.08% or 2.58%. The 2.08% terminal rate corresponds to the median estimate of the long-run neutral fed funds rate from the New York Fed’s Survey of Market Participants. The 2.58% terminal rate corresponds to the median forecast from the Fed’s Summary of Economic Projections.2 The scenario shown in Table 1B is the closest to our base case. In this scenario, some short-maturity bonds deliver positive returns, but returns are negative for the 5-year maturity and beyond. Also, the 5-year note delivers the worst total return of all the maturities we examine. Unsurprisingly, expected returns for the longer maturities drop significantly if we raise our terminal rate assumption to 2.58% (Tables 1C & 1D). Therefore, any call to short the 5-year note versus the long-end relies on an assumption that the market will trade as though the terminal rate is closer to 2% than to 2.5% during the next 12 months. This is in line with our expectation. Finally, we observe that slowing our pace assumption from 100 bps per year to 75 bps raises expected returns across the board, but the 5-year still performs worse than the other maturities (Table 1A). Due to our expectation that inflation will fall during the next 12 months, a December 2022 liftoff remains our base case.3 However, the market has recently moved to price-in an earlier start to rate hikes. As of last Friday’s close, the fed funds futures curve was priced for liftoff in September 2022 and for a total of 49 bps of tightening by the end of 2022 (Chart 3). Chart 3Market Priced For September 2022 Liftoff Tables 2A-2D incorporate these recent market moves into our forecast by looking at the same scenarios as in Tables 1A-1D but assuming a September 2022 liftoff instead of December. The results are not all that different. Expected returns are worse across the board, but the 5-year still looks like the worst spot on the curve unless the market starts to price-in a higher terminal rate. Investment Conclusions Most of the scenarios we examined had negative expected returns for most maturities. We therefore still think it makes sense to keep portfolio duration low. Further, in every scenario the best expected returns can be found in the shorter maturities. In fact, the 2-year Treasury note offers positive returns in every scenario we examined. An outright long position in the 2-year Treasury note looks like a decent trade for investors forced to hold bonds. As for the yield curve, our results suggest that we should continue with our current positioning: short the 5-year note versus a duration-matched 2/10 barbell. The 5-year note performs worst in every scenario that assumes a 2.08% terminal rate. While it’s conceivable that investors will eventually push their terminal rate expectations higher, we think this is more likely to occur once the Fed has already lifted rates a few times. Bottom Line: Bond investors should maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration and continue to short the 5-year note versus a duration-matched 2/10 barbell. For those investors who want to take an outright long position in US Treasuries, the 2-year Treasury note looks like the best security to choose. The Duration Drift In Municipal Bond Valuations One under-discussed aspect of municipal bonds is that the securities tend to pay higher coupons than other bonds. That is, the bonds will often be issued with coupon rates well above prevailing yields. Investors therefore must pay a higher price to purchase the bonds, but they receive more return in the form of coupon payments. This feature of municipal bonds has important implications for how we should value them. For example, while the average maturity of the Municipal Bond index is much higher than the average maturity of the Treasury index, the muni index’s higher coupon rate makes its average duration significantly lower (Chart 4). This means that any valuation measure that compares a municipal bond’s yield with the yield of another bond with the same maturity will be unflattering for the muni. Chart 4Munis Pay High Coupons, Have Low Durations Further, since Treasury securities and corporate bonds tend to issue at par, the coupon rates paid by those securities have fallen alongside yields during the past few decades. Meanwhile, municipal bond coupons have been relatively stable (Chart 4, panel 3). This means that, over time, municipal bond durations have fallen significantly compared to the durations of other US bond sectors. A fair valuation measure would compare municipal bond yields with equivalent-duration Treasury yields and that is exactly what we’ve done. Chart 5A shows the spread between General Obligation (GO) muni bond yields and equivalent-duration Treasury yields. Chart 5B shows the spreads expressed as percentile ranks. For example, a percentile rank of 50% means that the spread is at its historical median, a percentile rank of 10% means the spread has only been tighter 10% of the time. Chart 5AGO Muni/Treasury Spreads I Chart 5BGO Muni/Treasury Spreads II The first thing that jumps out from our analysis is that municipal bonds are not that expensive. Shorter-maturity spreads were tighter than current levels as recently as 2019/20 and the long-maturity (17-year+) spread is positive, despite the muni tax exemption. In terms of percentile rank, spreads for all GO maturity buckets are only just below the historical median. However, spreads traded much tighter prior to the 2008 financial crisis and it may not be reasonable to expect munis to return to those tight mid-2000 valuations. Charts 6A and 6B repeat the exercise from Charts 5A and 5B but for Revenue bonds instead of GOs. The message is similar. Muni valuations are not that stretched compared to history, and investors can earn a before-tax spread pick-up in munis versus Treasuries if they focus on the long maturities. Chart 6ARevenue Muni/Treasury Spreads I Chart 6BRevenue Muni/Treasury Spreads II In fact, municipal bonds offer a before-tax yield advantage versus Treasuries for Revenue bonds beyond the 12-year maturity point and for GO bonds beyond the 17-year maturity point. Further, the breakeven tax rate for 12-17 year GOs versus Treasuries is a mere 1% and the breakeven tax rate for 8-12 year Revenue bonds is only 8%. Investors facing a tax rate above the breakeven rate will earn an after-tax yield pick-up in munis versus duration-matched Treasuries (Table 3). Table 3Muni/Treasury And Muni/Credit Yield Ratios Of course, municipal bonds also carry a small credit risk premium relative to duration-matched Treasuries. The GO and Revenue indexes have average credit ratings of Aa1/Aa2 and Aa3/A1, respectively, compared to a Aaa rating for US Treasuries. But we can control for credit risk as well by comparing municipal bonds to the US Credit Index and matching both the duration and credit rating. Even this comparison looks favorable for municipal bonds. Once again, long-maturity munis offer a before-tax yield advantage compared to credit rating and duration-matched US Credit. Meanwhile, breakeven tax rates for other maturities are low enough to attract most investors. Bottom Line: This week we upgrade our recommended allocation to municipal bonds from overweight (4 out of 5) to maximum overweight (5 out of 5). Investors who can take advantage of the muni tax exemption should favor municipal bonds over Treasuries and over corporate bonds with the same credit rating and duration. In particular, we recommend that investors focus on long-maturity municipal bonds, noting that the relatively low duration of these bonds makes them attractive relative to other bonds with similar risk profiles. Five Fed Factors A lot of Fedspeak hit the tape last week. Of particular interest were an interview with Chair Jay Powell on Friday and speeches by Fed Governors Randy Quarles and Chris Waller on Wednesday and Tuesday. One takeaway from their remarks is that a tapering announcement at the next FOMC meeting is very likely, with net asset purchases expected to hit zero by the middle of next year. The market, however, seems to have already taken the taper announcement on board. The more interesting aspects of the speeches were the discussions about how the Fed will decide when to lift rates and how elevated inflation readings may or may not influence that decision. We’ve noted in prior reports that five factors will determine when the Fed finally decides to lift rates, and last week’s comments gave us confidence that we’re on the right track. We run through our Five Factors For Fed Liftoff below, with some additional comments on why each factor is important (Table 4). Table 4Five Factors For Fed Liftoff 1. The Unemployment Rate The Fed has officially pledged through its forward guidance not to lift rates until “maximum employment” is reached. While the exact definition of “maximum employment” can be debated, there is widespread agreement that it includes an unemployment rate below its current adjusted level of 4.9%.4 More specifically, we inferred from the September Summary of Economic Projections that most FOMC participants view an unemployment rate of around 3.8% as consistent with “maximum employment” (Chart 7).5 Chart 7Defining "Maximum Employment" We expect that the Fed will refrain from lifting rates until the unemployment rate reaches 3.8%. 2. Labor Force Participation We explored the debate about labor force participation in a recent report.6 In short, there are some policymakers who believe that “maximum employment” cannot be achieved until the labor force participation rate has returned to pre-COVID levels. There are others, however, who think that an aging population and the recent uptick in retirements make such a return impossible. Randy Quarles, for example: I expect that as conditions normalize, [the labor force participation rate] will pick up, but it is unlikely to return to its February 2020 level. One reason is that a disproportionate number of older workers responded to the initial shock of the COVID event by retiring, which may be an area where participation and employment struggle to retrace lost ground.7 In his speech, Governor Waller also mentioned “2 million jobs” that will be lost forever due to retirements.8 While many policymakers cite increased retirements as a reason why the overall labor force participation rate will remain permanently lower, there is much broader agreement that a reasonable definition of “maximum employment” should include the prime-age (25-54) labor force participation rate being much closer to its February 2020 level (Chart 7, bottom panel). We think the Fed will refrain from lifting rates until the prime-age (25-54) labor force participation rate is close to its February 2020 level. 3. Wage Growth Accelerating wages are a tried-and-true signal that the labor market is running hot. While wage growth is rising quickly right now (Chart 8), there is a strong sense that this is due to pandemic-related labor supply shortages and that wage growth will moderate as pandemic fears (and labor shortages) wane. Chart 8Wage Growth What will be more important is what wage growth looks like when the unemployment rate is close to the Fed’s target of 3.8%. At that point, accelerating wages will give the Fed a strong signal that a 3.8% unemployment rate really does constitute “maximum employment”. 4. Non-Transitory Inflation Of our five factors, this is admittedly the most difficult to pin down. However, Governor Quarles did a good job of explaining non-transitory inflation in last week’s speech: The fundamental dilemma that we face at the Fed now is this: Demand, augmented by unprecedented fiscal stimulus, has been outstripping a temporarily disrupted supply, leading to high inflation. But the fundamental productive capacity of our economy as it existed just before COVID – and, thus, the ability to satisfy that demand without inflation – remains largely as it was, constraining demand now, to bring it into line with a transiently interrupted supply, would be premature. Essentially, Quarles is saying that the Fed does not want to respond to a pandemic-related supply shock by lifting rates and curtailing aggregate demand. The Fed only wants to tighten policy if it sees an increase in broad-based inflationary pressures that will not be contained naturally by a return to more normal aggregate supply conditions. Accelerating wages would be one signal of such broad-based inflationary pressures, as would be measures of core inflation excluding those sectors that have been most impacted by the pandemic supply disruptions (Chart 9). Lastly, we could also look at indicators of inflation’s breadth across its different components, which have recently spiked to concerning levels (Chart 10). Chart 9Non-Covid Inflation Chart 10CPI Breadth Has Spiked 5. Inflation Expectations Inflation expectations are also critical to monitor. While all Fed participants seem to agree that inflation will fall during the next year, there is also widespread agreement that if high inflation causes inflation expectations to rise to uncomfortably high levels, then the Fed will be forced to act. Chris Waller: A critical aspect of our new framework is to allow inflation to run above our 2 percent target (so that it averages 2 percent), but we should do this only if inflation expectations are consistent with our 2 percent target. If inflation expectations become unanchored, the credibility of our inflation target is at risk, and we likely would need to take action to re-anchor expectations at our 2 percent target. At present, inflation expectations remain well-anchored near levels consistent with the Fed’s target (Chart 11). In particular, we like to track the 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate targeting a range of 2.3% to 2.5% as consistent with the Fed’s target. Incidentally, Governor Waller also flagged TIPS breakeven inflation rates as his “preferred” measure of inflation expectations in last week’s speech. Chart 11Inflation Expectations Remain Well-Anchored The Fed will move much more quickly toward rate hikes if the 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate moves above 2.5%. Bottom Line: Given our view that inflation will fall during the next 12 months, we still view December 2022 as the most likely liftoff date. However, we will continue to monitor our Five Factors For Fed Liftoff to see if our forecast needs to be revised. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 All of our scenarios use a 12-month investment horizon and assume a term premium of 0 bps. 2 In both cases we assume that the fed funds rate trades 8 bps above its lower-bound, as is currently the case. 3 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Right Price, Wrong Reason”, dated October 19, 2021. 4 We adjust the unemployment rate for distortions in the number of people employed but absent from work. Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Overreaction”, dated July 13, 2021 for further details. 5 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Damage Assessment”, dated September 28, 2021. 6 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “2022 Will Be All About Inflation”, dated September 14, 2021. 7 https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/quarles20211020a.htm 8 https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/waller20211019a.htm Recommended Portfolio Specification Other Recommendations Treasury Index Returns Spread Product Returns
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Highlights Energy Prices & Bond Yields: Surging energy prices are lifting inflation expectations in the US and Europe, while at the same time dampening consumer confidence amid diminished perceptions of real purchasing power. These conflicting trends are putting central banks in a tricky spot in the near-term, but tightening labor markets will force a more enduring need for dialing back global monetary accommodation in 2022, led by the Fed and the Bank of England. Stay below-benchmark on global duration exposure, favoring euro area government debt over US Treasuries and UK Gilts. High-Yield: Trans-Atlantic junk bond performance has diverged of late, with euro area spreads widening versus the US. This is a temporary distortion created by the pop in oil prices, with the Energy sector that benefits from higher oil prices representing a far greater share of the high-yield universe in the US compared to Europe. Maintain an overweight stance on European high-yield corporates. Feature Chart of the WeekGlobal Bond Yield Breakout? It is not easy being an inflation-targeting central bank these days. Soaring energy prices, with the Brent crude benchmark price climbing to a 3-year high of $86/bbl last week and natural gas prices up nearly four-fold year-to-date in Europe. These moves are adding upward pressure to inflation rates already elevated because of disrupted supply chains and rising labor costs. Government bond yields in the developed markets are moving higher in response, driven by rising inflation breakevens and increasing central bank hawkishness that is causing a stir in negative real yields (Chart of the Week). Among the three most important developed economy central banks - the Fed, the ECB and the Bank of England (BoE) – the most forceful signaling of a need for tighter policy is surprisingly coming from Threadneedle Street in London, home to one of the most dovish central banks since the 2008 crisis. Numerous BoE officials, including Governor Andrew Bailey, have strongly hinted that UK rate hikes could begin as soon as next month’s policy meeting. Fed officials have suggested a similar timetable for the start of the QE taper. By contrast, members of the ECB Governing Council have paid lip service to the recent sharp pickup in euro area inflation but, for the most part, have stuck to the view that it will not last long enough to justify a policy response. The relative hawkishness among “The Big Three” central banks fits with our current recommended strategy on global duration exposure, staying below-benchmark, and country allocation, with the largest underweights to US Treasuries and UK Gilts. Should Central Banks Focus More On Inflation Or Growth? Monetary policymakers are in a difficult spot at the moment. Rising energy prices have breathed new life into inflation, and inflation expectations, even as global growth momentum has cooled off somewhat. Given the magnitude and breadth of the global energy price surge – even coal prices in China have shot up 120% since late August - it will be difficult for central bankers to “see through” the inflationary implications and worry more about growth (Chart 2). Rising energy prices are likely to extend the current global inflation upturn that has already gone on for longer than expected because of supply-chain disruptions. This raises the risk that consumers could turn more cautious on spending behavior if they have to devote more of their incomes just to fuel their cars or heat their homes. In the US, this dynamic already appears to be playing out. The acceleration of inflation has broadened out, with the Cleveland Fed’s trimmed mean CPI inflation measure (which removes the most volatile components of the CPI) rising to 3.5% in September (Chart 3, top panel). With US consumers seeing higher prices on a wider range of goods and services, they have raised their inflation expectations. The preliminary October University of Michigan US consumer confidence survey showed that 1-year-ahead inflation expectations rose to a 13-year high of 4.8% (middle panel). Chart 2Pouring Gas On Global Inflation The New York Fed’s consumer survey showed a similar 1-year-ahead inflation forecast (5.3%), which is well above the forecast for income growth in 2022 (2.9%). Combining those two measures shows that US consumers implicitly see a contraction in their real incomes over the next 12 months. Chart 3US Consumers Expect A Sharp Decline In Real Purchasing Power This has likely played a big role in the sharp fall in the University of Michigan consumer confidence index since the peak back in June (bottom panel), despite favorable US labor market conditions. US consumer perceptions of inflation appear much greater than the reality of inflation evident in the official price indices. The New York Fed survey also asks US consumers what their 1-year-ahead expectations are for major spending categories, like food or rent (Chart 4). Consumers expect somewhat slower inflation for food (7.0%) and gasoline (5.9%) over the next year, yet they also expect much higher medical care costs (9.4%) and rent (9.7%). For the latter two, those are considerably higher than the latest actual inflation rates seen in the US CPI (2.4% for rent, 0.4% for medical care) or PCE deflator (2.1% for rent, 2.4% for medical care). Taking these survey results at face value, it is likely that US consumers are overestimating how much their real incomes will suffer next year from higher inflation. This is especially true as US household income growth will likely surpass the 2.9% estimate seen in the New York Fed survey. Yet that does not preclude the Fed from starting to turn more hawkish. Central bankers are always on the lookout for signs that higher realized inflation is feeding through into rising inflation expectations, which could require a policy tightening response to prevent an overshoot of inflation targets. The Fed has given itself a bit more leeway in that regard by altering their policy framework to allow temporary deviations of inflation from the central bank targets. The BoE, however, has not given itself the same sort of flexibility, which is why it is now signaling an imminent rate hike in response to survey-based inflation expectations, and breakeven inflation rates on longer-dated index-linked Gilts, climbing to close to 4% (Chart 5). Yet even the Fed, with its Average Inflation Targeting framework, has signaled that a tapering of its bond purchases will likely begin by year-end. Chart 4US Consumer Inflation Expectations Well Above Actual Inflation Markets are looking at the persistence of high inflation and have priced in a more hawkish trajectory for interest rates in the US, UK and even Europe over the next 12-24 months (Chart 6, bottom panel). Chart 5Inflation Weighing On UK & European Consumer Confidence Real bond yields in those regions are also starting to move higher in response to rising rate expectations (third panel) - a bond-bearish dynamic that we have discussed at length in recent reports.1 Between those three, the BoE’s hawkish turn has hammered the Gilt market the hardest. Yet there has definitely been a spillover into rate expectations and bond yields in other countries on the back of the BoE guidance. We have already seen rate hikes from smaller developed market central banks, Norway and New Zealand, over the past month. If a major central bank like the BoE soon follows suit because of overshooting inflation expectations, then markets are justified in thinking that the Fed or even the ECB could be next. Of those “Big 3” central banks, we see the ECB as being the least likely to respond to the current inflation upturn with rate hikes in 2022. There is simply not enough evidence suggesting that the energy/supply-chain driven inflation in the euro area is broadening out into other parts of the economy on a sustainable basis. Furthermore, there is already some degree of monetary tightening “scheduled” in 2022 when the ECB’s pandemic bond purchase program expires in March. The ECB will not want to compound that by moving into rate hiking mode soon after. On the other hand, the Fed will likely see enough further tightening of US labor market conditions to begin hiking rates in the fourth quarter of 2022 (Chart 7). In the UK, After next month’s likely rate hike, the BoE will need to deliver at least another 50-75bps of additional hikes in 2022 and likely more in 2023 with real policy rates already well below neutral before the latest spike in energy prices. Chart 6Expect Higher Real Yields As Central Banks Turn More Hawkish Chart 7Labor Markets, Not Commodities, Will Dictate Monetary Policy In 2022 With the Fed and BoE set to be far more hawkish than the ECB next year, we see greater risks of government bond yields rising faster, and higher than current forward rates, in the US and UK compared to the euro area (Chart 8). This justifies an overall cautious strategic stance on duration exposure in global bond portfolios. With regards to inflation-linked bonds, however, we recommend only a neutral overall stance. Elevated inflation breakevens have converged to, or even above, central bank inflation targets in all developed market economies (excluding Japan). 10-year UK breakevens, in particular, look very expensive on our fair value model (Chart 9). Chart 8Our Recommended "Big 3" Country Allocations Chart 9Maintain An Overall Neutral Stance On Inflation-Linked Bonds Bottom Line: Our view on the policy decisions of the Big 3 central banks in 2022 informs our strategic (6-18 months) investment strategy within those markets. Stay below-benchmark on overall global duration exposure, favoring euro area government debt over US Treasuries and UK Gilts. Fade The Recent Backup In European High Yield Spreads Chart 10A Slight Pickup In European Junk Spreads Corporate credit markets in the US and Europe have calmed down since the July/August “Delta fueled” selloff with one notable exception – European high-yield (HY). The Bloomberg European HY index spread now sits 39bps above the September low, noticeably diverging from the US HY index spread (Chart 10). We view those wider spreads as a tactical buying opportunity for European junk bonds, both in absolute terms and versus US junk bonds. The recent underperformance appears rooted in soaring European energy prices. The spread widening has been concentrated in European consumer sectors (both cyclicals and non-cyclicals) that would be more exposed to the drain on real incomes from booming natural gas prices. Energy is also a smaller part of the European high-yield index (2%) compared to the US HY index (13%), which helps explain the performance gap with the US – the US index is more exposed to companies that benefit from higher energy prices (Chart 11). Chart 11Sectoral Breakdown Of US & Euro Area High-Yield Indices Over a more medium-term perspective, there is little reason why there should be a meaningful performance difference between US and European HY. The path of spreads and excess returns (versus duration-matched government debt) for the two markets have been highly correlated in recent years (Chart 12). When adjusting European HY returns to allow a proper apples-to-apples comparison to US HY – by hedging European returns into US dollars and controlling for duration differences between the two markets – there has been little sustained difference in returns dating back to 2018. Chart 12Euro Area HY Has Closed The Gap Vs. The US Chart 13Junk Default Rates Will Stay Low In 2022 More fundamentally, there is little difference in default rates that would justify a major divergence of HY spreads on both sides of the Atlantic. Moody’s is forecasting a HY default rate for a rate of 2% in both the US and Europe for 2022 (Chart 13). Such similar default rate expectations make sense with economic growth likely to remain well above trend in 2022 in both the US and Europe. Higher inflation will also boost nominal GDP growth, helping lift corporate revenues and the ability to service debt. From a valuation perspective, there is also little to choose from between European and US HY: The default-adjusted spread, which takes the current HY index spread and subtracts expected default losses over the next twelve months, is 196bps in Europe and 166bps in the US (Chart 14). While those spreads are below the post-2000 mean in both markets, they are still above past valuation extremes. The percentile ranking of 12-month breakeven spreads (the amount of spread widening over one year that would eliminate the yield advantage of HY over duration-matched government bonds) are also similar, 25% for European HY and 26% for US HY (Chart 15). These suggest HY spreads are not particularly “cheap”, from a historical perspective, in either market, but they could move lower to reach previous historical extremes. Chart 14Low Expected Default Losses Supporting HY Valuations Chart 15Overall HY Spreads Are Tight In The US & Europe Chart 16Euro Area Ba-Rated HY Spreads Look More Attractive Summing it all up, there is no discernable reason why European HY should trade at a sustainably wider spread to US HY, outside of the compositional issue related to the weight of the Energy sector in both markets. When breaking down the two markets by credit rating buckets, European Ba-rated corporates even look more attractive versus similarly-rated US corporates, based on 12-month breakeven spread percentile rankings (Chart 16). Bottom Line: Maintain a strategic overweight stance on European high-yield corporates, and tactically position for some relatively better performance of European junk bonds versus US equivalents. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy Report, "What If Higher Inflation Is Not Transitory?", dated September 23, 2021, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades 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