Equity’s Epitaph

Each day as more data arrives
And pundits perform their deep dives
The talk of recession
Has forced some to question
How anyone bullish survives
 
But stock bulls have had the last laugh
Just look at a stock market graph
However, fixed income
Has started to look glum
Is this equity’s epitaph?
 
The only thing one can say about the recent data is that there is no clear direction of travel.  For instance, in the past week we have seen better than forecast results from Consumer Confidence, Durable Goods, Chicago PMI and Michigan Confidence while the Richmond Fed, New Home Sales. Building Permits, Personal Income and ISM Manufacturing all printed on the soft side of things.  The biggest data point, PCE, was essentially right on the money, so didn’t alter this equation.  However, perhaps the best way to sum up this mix of data is to look at the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow calculation, and as can be seen in the chart below, it is heading lower.

 

Source: Atlantafed.org

The history of this calculation is that early in the quarter, it has limited predictive ability, but as the quarter ends, which it just did on Friday, it becomes a much better predictor of the actual results to come.  If I were to characterize this statistic it shows that the economy is slowing down but is not yet looking at a recession.

Is this the fabled goldilocks outcome of a soft landing?  Perhaps, but personally, I have my doubts.  To explain, let’s discuss the yield curve for a moment.  As you are all well aware by now, when the yield curve inverts (short end rates are higher than long end rates) that has been a reliable indication that a recession is coming.  We continue to be in that situation and in fact, the current inversion between the 2yr and 10yr Treasury, one of the most common measures, has been inverted for a record long period, more than 16 months.  

However, one thing that is widely misunderstood about the yield curve signal is that it is not a description of a current recession, rather it is a harbinger of a future one.  That recession tends to be coincident with the steepening of the yield curve back to its more normal shape.  And the question right now is, will the yield curve steepen because the front end of the curve sees rates decline, a so-called bull steepener, or because the back end of the curve sees rates rise, a much more uncomfortable situation known as a bear steepener.  

The soft-landing view is that the former is in our future as the Fed will cut rates to help stabilize the economy while 10yr yields hang around the 3.5% – 4.0% level.  It certainly appears that has been a critical piece of the equity market bullish story.  However, the alternative, where long end rates rise despite economic weakness, seems equally probable right now, and based on the bond market’s moves over the past several sessions, may well be taking over the narrative.  In this situation, the Fed continues to see inflationary pressures as too great to ignore and maintains higher for longer.  At the same time, the fiscal profligacy that is evident right now, and shows no signs of ending regardless of the election outcome, starts to bite.  Investors demand ever higher yields to hold Treasuries for any extended length of time and the 10yr rises to 5.0% – 5.5% or higher.

While the Fed’s record of preventing a recession by cutting rates is quite poor (perhaps one positive outcome in their history in 1995), their record of seeing a recession hit when they don’t cut rates, or even raise them to fight stubborn inflation, is even worse.  While two days is not yet a trend, it is certainly important of us to watch how the bond market behaves.  If long end rates start to rise more aggressively, that would be a signal that investors are turning more negative on the future.  It is at this point where we will learn the answer to the question of exactly how the Fed’s reaction function works.  History has shown that the unemployment rate rises with bear steepeners, and that is what forces the Fed to respond by cutting rates.

However, remember, if inflation remains stubbornly high and the Fed decides to cut rates to address unemployment, I believe that is the worst of all worlds.  We would be in a weakening economy with high inflation and a Fed that is far behind the curve amid a government that is spending money with no limits.  In that scenario, which, alas, has a reasonably high probability of occurring, the dollar should decline, bonds will decline (yields rise), commodities will rally, and equities will likely start to rise, but as earnings falter, so will prices.  This is not where we want to go.

We are not there yet, so let’s look at how things played out overnight instead.  Japanese shares continue to rally (+1.1%) with the Nikkei reclaiming the 40K level.  This continues to be on the back of the uber-weak yen (discussed below) as so many companies are exporters and benefit from the weak yen.  However, Chinese shares did not fare as well, edging lower as investors begin to wonder what will come from the Third Plenum due to take place in two weeks’ time.  Elsewhere in the region, there was far more red than green on the screens.  The red seems to have been contagious as all of Europe is under water this morning, with most falling more than -1.0%.  This is not really a data story, rather this seems to be a re-evaluation of this weekend’s French second round elections and growing fears that Marine Le Pen and her RN party are going to win the day.  We just saw a right-wing party take power in the Netherlands and have seen the same throughout Scandinavia.  I continue to be baffled at why investors are more concerned regarding spending by right leaning governments than left leaning ones, but that is clearly the current situation.  As to US futures, at this hour (7:30) they are sliding by -0.45% or so.

Bond markets are consolidating after yesterday’s rout with Treasury yields unchanged this morning while most of Europe has seen yields edge higher by just one or two basis points.  However, global bond markets have been under pressure all this week and while today may provide a respite, I sense further stress to come.  JGB yields rallied 3bps overnight and are now at their highest level since July 2011.  Alas, these higher Japanese yields have not helped the yen.

In the commodity markets, oil (+0.7%) continues to rally although the current story is focused on Hurricane Beryl which is heading into the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico and likely to shut in some offshore production there for a while, reducing supply.  However, precious metals are under pressure amid a rising dollar though copper (+0.6%) is holding its own on inventory concerns.

Finally, the dollar is firmer this morning against virtually all its counterparts in both G10 and EMG blocs.  The euro (-0.15%), which had rallied a bit on Monday amid hopes that the RN would not capture a majority in France, has given that back as the story ebbs and flows.  But really, JPY (-0.1% today, -1.2% in the past week) is the story as traders gain confidence that the MOF is not ready to respond yet and with US yields climbing, the carry trade continues to be extremely attractive.  Today’s dollar rally is broad, but the large moves are limited with ZAR (-0.6%) the worst performer although there are numerous currencies that have slipped -0.25% or so.  But it’s a dollar thing today.

On the data front, today only brings JOLTS Job Openings data (exp 7.91M) although perhaps more importantly, we hear from Chairman Powell this morning at 9:30.  The thing is, I don’t see any reason for him to have gained confidence that inflation is reliably heading back to target, and until we see Friday’s payroll report, there is no reason to believe that they are concerned about that.  In fact, that brings up the issue that Friday’s data release is likely to be extremely important to the narrative and has the chance to be quite disruptive given the high likelihood that staffing across all desks in the US will be light.  Remember, too, that the UK election will be held on Thursday, so more change is afoot.

Right now, the dollar seems healthy, but there is much to be learned this week and it will help inform how things evolve.

Good luck

Adf

Aghast

The BOJ did
Absolutely nothing new
Can we be surprised?

The last of the key central bank meetings finished last night with the BOJ not only leaving policy on hold, as expected, but not even hinting that changes were in the offing.  Much had been made earlier this month about a comment from Ueda-san that they may soon have enough information to consider policy changes.  This was understood to mean that YCC might be ending soon.  Oops!  If that is going to be the case, it was not evident last night.  Rather, the status quo seems the long-term view in Tokyo right now.  Not surprisingly, the yen suffered accordingly, selling off another -0.5% overnight and is now back at its weakest point (highest dollar) since October 2022 when the BOJ intervened actively.

Also, not surprisingly, after the yen weakened further, we started to hear from the MOF trying to scare the market.  FinMin Shunichi Suzuki once again explained that he would not rule out any actions with respect to the currency market if volatility (read depreciation) increased too much.  But as of yet, there have been no BOJ sightings and I suspect they will not enter the market until 150.00 is breached once again.  Maybe next week.

With central bank meetings now past
The markets’ response has been fast
It seems there’s a pox
On both bonds and stocks
And owners of both are aghast

While further rate hikes may be rare
Investors feel some small despair
No rate cuts are planned
Throughout any land
And bond yields are now on a tear

Turning to the rest of the G10, what was made clear over the past two weeks is that policy rates are not anticipated to fall anytime soon.  While some central banks seemed to finish for sure (ECB, SNB, BOE) others seem like there may be another in the pipeline (Fed, Riksbank, Norgesbank, BOC, RBA), but in no case is there a discussion that inflation has reached a place of comfort for any central bank.  Rather, even those banks on hold seem comfortable that policy rates need to remain at current levels in order to continue to battle the scourge of inflation.  If anything, the hawks from most central banks continue to push for further tightening, although I suspect that will be a difficult hill to climb given the inherent dovishness of most central bank chiefs.

So, what are we to expect if this is the new home for interest rates rather than the ZIRP/NIRP to which we had become accustomed for the past 15 years?  The first thing to consider is that despite the higher rate structure, the financial position of the private sector, at least in the US, remains strong.  Corporates termed out debt and tend toward being cash rich, so for now, they are benefitting from high interest rates as they locked in low financing and are earning the carry.  Many households are in the same position, having refinanced home mortgages at extremely low rates so are not feeling the pain of the recent rise in mortgage rates.  Of course, this has reduced the amount of activity in the housing market and is a problem for first-time buyers, but that is not the majority, so net, the pain is not so great.

However, the US is unique in this situation as most of the rest of the world are beholden to short-term rates in their financing.  This is true in the commercial sector, where bank lending is a far more important part of the capital structure than public debt.  Those loans are floating, which is also true in the household sector where most mortgages elsewhere have 5-year fixed terms and so are already repricing higher and impacting homeowners.  In fact, if you want one reason as to why the US is likely to outperform the rest of the world, this would be a good place to start.  Despite much higher interest rates, the pain is not being felt across much of the US economy while it is being felt acutely throughout Europe and the UK.  

The upshot of this process is that inflation is likely to remain with us for quite a while going forward.  This means that central banks are going to have a great deal of difficulty reversing course absent a major crash in economic activity.  Given the US tends to lead the world’s capital markets, it also means that the combination of continuing gargantuan issuance by the Treasury to finance the never-ending budget deficits along with the stickiness of inflation implies that interest rates need to be higher.  We saw this price action yesterday with 10yr Treasury yields jumping to 4.5%, another new high for the move, and importantly, a larger move than the 2yr yield.  This is the ‘bear steepening’ that I have been writing about, with longer end yields rising faster than shorter yields.  Ultimately, this will be quite a negative for risk assets, especially paper ones, although hard assets ought to benefit.  The world that we knew has changed, so we all need to adjust accordingly.

Turning to the overnight session, yesterday’s US weakness was followed by Japan (-0.5%) but Chinese shares bucked the trend, rising strongly on hopes that the recent data shows the worst is past for the mainland.  That seems odd given the lack of additional stimulus forthcoming from the government, but that is the story.  European shares are mostly a bit lower this morning after flash PMI data was released showing growth in the Eurozone remains elusive.  Germany is still in dire straits with its Manufacturing PMI <40, but the whole of Europe is sub 50 for the past four months at least.  Finally, US futures are bouncing slightly this morning, but that seems like a trading reaction to two consecutive days of sharp losses rather than new optimism.

Other than YK Gilts, which traded at much higher levels back in August, European sovereigns are following Treasury yields to their highest level in more than a decade.  And despite the weak economic story, the fact remains that sticky inflation is the clear driver for now.  Consider that the ECB has essentially explained they have finished raising rates with their policy rate at 4.0% while CPI is running at 5.2% headline and 5.3% core.  Those numbers do not inspire confidence that the ECB has done its job.  I continue to look for higher long-term yields going forward.

Part of the reason for this is that oil (+0.9%) continues to find support.  While it had a couple of days of a modest pullback, we are back above $90/bbl and the news remains bullish the outcome.  The latest is the Russia is halting deliveries of diesel fuel, a particular sore spot as there are already tight supplies around the world, especially here in the US.  I see no reason for oil to decline structurally, and that is going to continue to pressure inflation higher.  Perhaps of more interest is the fact that the metals complex is rallying today, despite the rise in interest rates.  Gold (+0.3%), silver (+1.3%), copper (+0.8%) and aluminum (+1.1%) are all in the green.  Again, I would say that owning hard assets is going to be a better outcome than paper ones.

Finally, the dollar is mixed this morning, showing gains against the euro, pound and yen, but softer vs. the commodity bloc with AUD, NZD, CAD and NOK all firmer this morning.  As well, EMG currencies are having a better session, rising a bit vs. the greenback, but recall, the dollar has had quite a good run lately.  My take is there is a lot of profit-taking as we head into the weekend given the lack of fundamental stories that would undermine the buck.  Nothing has changed my view it has further to rise.

On the data front, the only releases are the flash PMIs here (exp 48.0 Manufacturing, 50.6 Services) and we get our first Fed speaker, Governor Lisa Cook, a confirmed dove.  We have already had a lot of activity this week so I suspect that heading into the weekend, it is going to be a quiet session as traders and investors start to plan for next week’s excitement.

Good luck and good weekend
Adf