The bond, or not the bond, that is the question: Whether ‘tis nobler for the Fed to consider That long-term yields have offered outrageous fortune, Or to take Arms against a Sea of inflation And in opposing it: hike rates yet again
(with deepest apologies to William Shakespeare)
For some reason, the ongoing cacophony of Fedspeak regarding whether the rise in long-term yields is helping the Fed in their efforts, or whether it is merely incidental, brought this famous soliloquy to mind. We have had no less than eight different Fed speakers from the time Dallas Fed president Logan first mentioned the idea several weeks ago through yesterday discuss the subject with the majority continuing to latch on to the benefits for the Fed, although some dismiss the issue. Now, in any definition of financial conditions I have ever seen, long-term yields are part of the construction, so it is perfectly reasonable to take them into account. Clearly, the Fed is aware of this as QE was created entirely to ease financial conditions and consisted of simply buying bonds to lower long-term yields. However, now that the Fed is in QT mode, their ability to control the long end of the curve has vanished. In fact, if anything it is simply pushing those yields higher by removing themselves, a price-insensitive buyer, from the mix.
The problem for Chairman Powell is that whatever the Fed’s reaction function is with respect to data, the market’s reaction function to any hint that the Fed has finished tightening policy is well understood by one and all; BUY STONKS!! The reason I believe this is a concern for Powell and co. is that they fear a rally in equities will signal an all-clear on the inflation front. And it is abundantly clear that there is nobody on the FOMC who is prepared to claim victory over inflation. That is exclusively the stance of the CNBC bulls and the administration sycophants who are paid to make that case specifically. Reality, however, continues to demonstrate that inflation remains a feature of our everyday lives and I suspect that the FOMC mostly understands that. Remember, too, that the Fed is data dependent, or so they say, which implies that they are not in a position to anticipate the death of inflation, rather they will only accept that premise when they see the body.
Where does this leave us now? I suspect that the ongoing dance between the Fed and the markets with respect to the future of inflation will continue to play out for at least another year. In fact, nothing has changed my view that inflation will remain well above their 2.0% target for the foreseeable future, likely finding a new home in the 3.5% +/- range. And as long as Powell is Fed Chair, I see no indication he is willing to reverse course. While the Fed may not hike rates again, certainly the market does not believe that is going to be the case with just a 9.6% probability of a hike in December now priced, I find it extremely difficult to believe they will cut rates anytime soon absent clear signs that we are already in a recession.
Though soft-landing bulls have all scoffed The fact that the data was soft In China implies It cannot surprise If growth worldwide can’t stay aloft
So, is a recession coming soon to an economy near you? That is the $64 trillion question and one where there are myriad views expressed daily. The most recent inkling that economic activity is slowing more sharply than had previously been thought was the surprisingly weak Chinese trade data, where not only did their trade surplus decline substantially (to a still robust $56.5B) but exports fell in absolute terms, they did not merely rise more slowly than imports. The implication is that global growth is slowing more rapidly than the narrative explains.
We already know that Europe is in a world of trouble with Germany the current sick man of the continent, but we also have seen the latest Atlanta Fed GDPNow data showing that growth in the US is slowing as well with the latest reading at 1.2%. The UK is struggling as are many Asian nations, notably South Korea and Taiwan, or at least their export industries which are the key economic drivers there.
Another clue is the recent sharp decline in the price of oil, which has fallen -5.0% this week and ~-10% in the past month. Clearly, a part of this price decline is based on the growing belief (hope?) that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will not spread into a wider Middle East conflagration that affects oil production. But part of this is the fact that oil inventories are building as are gasoline and diesel inventories with the result that prices are falling sharply. Given it wasn’t that long ago when there were shortages in these products, it appears that demand is falling sharply as well. Remember, diesel fuel is what drives the world as essentially no industry or commerce could continue without its use. The fact that less is being used is a clear signal of slowing activity.
Putting it all together shows that amidst what appears to be a slowing global growth impulse, markets are pricing out further central bank monetary policy tightening. Equity markets have been looking at the second part of that equation, less tightening and potential easing, while ignoring the first part, slower growth leading to lower profits. It is very easy, at least for me, to accept the idea that markets have not yet understood that slower economic activity will lead to lower profits and subsequently, lower equity prices. Alas, I understand that sequence so remain quite cautious overall.
Ok, how has this translated overnight? Well, after a modest rally in the US yesterday, equity markets in Asia were a bit softer, declining on the order of -0.35% while European bourses are edging slightly higher this morning, maybe +0.1%. US futures at this hour (7:45) are basically unchanged as we all await Chairman Powell’s dulcet tones at 10:15 this morning.
Bond yields are also quiet this morning with Treasuries (+2bps) one of the larger movers as European sovereigns are almost all unchanged right now. It seems that the market has found a new temporary home around the 4.60% level and the yield curve inversion continues to deepen, now at -36bps. JGB yields, which have fallen from their recent YCC-tweak induced highs, have edged up overnight by 3bps, but are at 0.85%, still far from the 1.00% target or cap or concept, whatever they are calling it now.
We already know that oil is under pressure, having fallen sharply yesterday and another -1.2% this morning. In fact, at $76.35/bbl, it is trading at its lowest level since mid-July. Gold, too, has been suffering, down -0.3% this morning and drifting further away from the $2000/oz level as those Middle East fears seem to dissipate. Copper and aluminum are also under pressure on the slowing growth story worldwide. Foodstuffs, however, are generally bid lately, as we can all discern every time we go grocery shopping.
Finally, the dollar is back to its dominant ways again, rallying vs. almost all its counterparts in both the G10 and EMG blocs. USDJPY is marching back toward 151 this morning, the euro is back below 1.07 and the pound back below 1.23. Meanwhile, in the EMG space, ZAR (-1.1%) is the laggard although it has competition from CLP (-0.9%), KRW (-0.7%) and HUF (-0.7%) as virtually the entire bloc is under pressure. In fact, CNY (-0.15%) is about the best performer as the PBOC continues to prevent any significant further declines.
Aside from Powell’s speech this morning, we hear from Williams, Barr and Jefferson, but there is absolutely no data to be released. Given the dearth of new data on the calendar, this week is going to continue to be all about the Fedspeak. In fact, Powell speaks again tomorrow and there are 5 more speakers as well by Friday, so rather than data, this week is about parsing language. Of course, Powell will set the tone today, and I am confident he will continue to push back on the idea the Fed is done. But we shall see.
In the end, it still seems to me that a higher dollar is the path of least resistance. Manage accordingly.
Good luck
Adf