Obliteration

The chance of a much wider war
Is something we need to plan for
Thus, havens ought be
A key thing we’ll see
Demanded, as prices will soar
 
The thing is that war and inflation
Have partnered through history’s duration
While prices may rise
Most nations surmise
That’s better than obliteration

 

The weekend just passed saw what could be the next step to a wider war in the Middle East after Iran launched a massive air assault on Israel.  While it seems to have been fully repelled, with limited damage and injury, the world is waiting on tenterhooks to see if there will be a counterattack by the Israelis.  In a different time, with a different set of leaders around the world, perhaps the next steps would be talks and negotiations designed to stop the madness.  But in the current world, with the current global leadership, there is no sign that anyone is capable of driving that particular outcome.

With this in mind, I think it is important to remember one very real truism, war is inflationary.  It always has been, and it always will be.  Consider that every nation at war will spend as much as they can to produce and procure the weaponry they need to combat that war.  And they will borrow the money as that is the fastest way to move that process forward.  Second, scarcities will develop across an economy as inputs that would otherwise have gone toward ordinary consumer goods will be repurposed and commandeered toward the war effort.  The upshot is that demand will rise while supply will dimmish, a perfect recipe for inflation.

If we take that set of generalities and apply it to today’s situation, the starting point is already sticky high inflation with a massive debt load, at least in the US.  Elsewhere in the world, inflation appears to be starting to ebb, although the numbers remain well above the near-universal 2.0% target.  On the debt question, pretty much everybody has too much of that!  Of course, the situation in the US is the most important because it is the nation that is likely going to be financing a large proportion of any increase in hostilities despite the recent comments that the US will not take part in any Israeli retaliation.

Ultimately, though, even if we see a de-escalation of this situation, nations everywhere are going to be building up their war making capabilities given the overall level of uncertainty in the current world.  While Russia/Ukraine continues apace, and Israel is still fighting in Gaza, those are simply the issues that make the headlines.  Fighting continues throughout Africa (Nigeria, South Sudan Mali, Somalia, Congo) as well as in Iraq, Syria, Yemen and Pakistan.  This may be one of the least reported and most consistent drivers of global inflation that exists.  All I’m saying is that the combination of the current geopolitical situation and the still lingering effects from pandemic era policies has virtually ensured that inflation is not going to fall, at least not very far.  That means that haven assets and hard assets, often the same assets, remain high on the list of investments that are likely to perform well going forward.  Keep that in mind as you establish both your planning and your hedging.

With those cheery thoughts in mind, let’s see how markets have handled the next step up this escalator. Friday’s US equity market declines, which some have attributed to tax selling (today is Tax Day after all) was followed by weakness throughout most of Asia.  The exception was mainland China, which saw the CSI 300 rise 2.1%.  But elsewhere in the time zone, red was the color of the day, with Japan (-0.75%), HK (-0.75%), Australia (-0.5%), South Korea (-0.5%) and virtually every other regional equity market declining.  It seems that investors there are not so sanguine about a war in the Middle East.  

In Europe, though, as there is rising hope that things won’t get worse in the Middle East, equity markets are rebounding with most major indices higher by between 0.5% and 1.0%.  While that may be an optimistic reading of the situation, it is spreading as we have also seen early some gains in commodity prices back off.  The one exception here is the UK (-0.5%), but there is no obvious catalyst that is different for the outcome.  As I always say, sometimes markets are simply perverse.  Lastly, US futures markets are pointing higher as well, about 0.4% across the board at this hour (7:00).

Turning to the bond markets, it appears that inflation fears are greater than haven demand this morning. Treasury yields are higher by 5bps after a modest decline on Friday, while European sovereigns are seeing similar gains in yield, between 5bps and 7bps across the board.  While I understand the Treasury reaction given rising inflation expectations according to the Michigan Survey data released Friday, the European one is more confusing.  Even uber-hawk Robert Holtzmann agreed that a cut in June is likely, although future moves will be data dependent, and he is the most hawkish member of the ECB.  While inflation data throughout Europe has been declining, perhaps the bond markets are telling us they don’t believe that will continue.  Something doesn’t jibe with the recent comments and price action, and in that case, I always assume the pricing is correct.

In the commodity markets, oil (-0.8%) is lagging today as the ebbing fears of a wider Middle East conflict weigh on the black sticky stuff.  With that in mind, remember that oil prices are higher by nearly 4% over the past month, so this bull run does not appear dead yet.  However, metals remain in demand as we are seeing gains across gold (+0.7%), silver (+2.1%), copper (+1.2%) and aluminum (+2.1%).  I believe this story remains a combination of supply concerns as well as stories about excess demand from China, where copper stockpiles have been growing rapidly.  While it is not clear why they are buying copper, it is just one of several metals, notably gold, that China has been acquiring aggressively over the past months.  I maintain that this space has much further to run higher.

Finally, the dollar is under pressure this morning, although not universally so.  While the bulk of the G10 is modestly firmer, on the order of 0.2%, JPY (-0.5%) continues to suffer and is now pushing toward 154.00.  The last time USDJPY traded at this level was June 1990.  However, as long as the monetary policies between the US and Japan remain on divergent paths, the only thing that will stop this is concerted intervention, and the US seems unlikely to take part in such a move.  In the EMG bloc, the dollar is also on its back foot with MXN (+0.5%) the leading gainer and most of the rest of these currencies higher by much smaller amounts.  I would note CNY has rallied a touch after the PBOC withdrew CNY70 billion of liquidity as part of their money market operations today.  The Chinese are caught between the need for more stimulus to support the economy and the fear that more stimulus will lead to lower rates and capital flight, something which they have worked very hard to prevent.

On the data front, as exciting as last week was, this week should have some pretty good follow-ups.

TodayEmpire state Mfg Index-9.0
 Retail Sales0.3%
 -ex autos0.4%
 Business Inventories0.3%
TuesdayHousing Starts1.48M
 Building Permits1.514M
 IP0.4%
 Capacity Utilization78.5%
WednesdayFed’s Beige Book 
ThursdayInitial Claims214K
 Continuing Claims1820K
 Philly Fed0.8
 Existing Home Sales4.2M
 Leading Indicators-0.%

Source: tradingeconomics.com

As well as this, we hear from eleven more Fed speakers, including Chairman Powell tomorrow afternoon at the IMF spring meetings.  It will be quite interesting to hear how he handles the three consecutive hotter than expected CPI prints and whether there is going to be a subtle change in tone.  If he were to ignore it, I think that will be quite negative for bonds as it becomes a clearer indication that the 2% target is dead.

The thing about the 2% target is if the Fed abandons it, you can be sure that every other central bank will do the same.  That means that more rate cuts will be coming more quickly.  That, my friends, is a recipe for higher inflation, higher commodity prices and a much weaker bond market.  As to the dollar in that scenario, my take is it will still be the proverbial ‘cleanest shirt in the dirty laundry’ and will hold its own.

Good luck

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