Threw in the Towel

There once was a banker named Powell
Who fought, prices, high with a growl
Then going got tough
So he said, “enough”
And basically, threw in the towel
 
His problem’s inflation’s alive
And truthfully, starting to thrive
The worry is he
Will soon say that three
Percent’s the rate for which he’ll strive

 

With several days to digest the latest FOMC meeting results, and more importantly, the Powell press conference, my take is the Chairman recognizes that to get to 2.0% is going to be extremely painful, too painful politically during this fraught election cycle.  And so, while he tried very hard to convince us all that the Fed was going to get to 2.0%, he stressed it will “take time”.  The subtext of that is, it’s not going to happen in the next several years, at least, and this poet’s view is it may not happen again for decades.  The key to recognizing this subtle shift is to understand that despite increased forecasts for both growth and inflation, the Fed remains hell-bent on cutting interest rates.  Even the neo-Keynesian views which the Fed follows would not prescribe rate cuts in the current economic situation.  But rate cuts are clearly on the table, at least for now.

This begs the question, why is he so determined to cut interest rates with the economy growing above trend?  At this stage, the explanation that makes the most sense to me is…too much debt that needs to be refinanced in the coming years.

Consider, current estimates for total debt around the world are on the order of $350 trillion.  That compares to global GDP of just under $100 trillion.  Many estimates indicate that the average maturity of that debt is about 5 years which means that something on the order of $70 trillion of debt needs to be refinanced each year.  Now, the US portion of that debt is estimated at about $100 trillion, of which ~$34.5 trillion is Treasury debt, and the rest is made up of corporate, mortgage, municipal and private debt.  Remember, too, that total US GDP is currently about $28 trillion as of the end of February (according to the FRED database from the St Louis Fed), so the ratio here is similar to the global ratio.  [Note, this does not include unfunded mandates like Social Security and Medicare, just loans and bonds outstanding.]

Here’s the problem, we have all heard about the fact that the US debt service has climbed above $1 trillion per annum and given the underlying principle is growing, that debt service is growing as well.  In addition, on the private side, there is a huge proportion of corporate debt that has become a serious problem for banks and investors, notably the loans made for commercial real estate, but personal and credit card debt as well.  The Fed cannot look at this situation and conclude that higher rates, or even higher for longer, is going to help all the debtors.  And if the debtors default…that is going to be an economic disaster of epic proportions.Add it up and the only logical answer is Powell is going to gaslight everyone with the idea that the Fed is going to remain vigilant regarding inflation.  And they will right up until the time when the pain becomes too great, or too imminent and they cut.  I think that we are seeing the first signals from markets this is going to be the case from both gold and bitcoin.  But if I am correct, and the Fed cuts despite still elevated inflation readings, look for the dollar to decline sharply, at least initially until other central banks cut as well, look for bonds to fall sharply and look for hard assets to rally.  As to stocks, I expect that initially it will be seen as a positive and juice the rally, but that over time, stocks will begin to lag hard assets.  Quite frankly, this looks like it is a 2024 event, so perhaps if that first cut really comes in June, the summer is going to be far more interesting than anybody at the Fed would like to see.

Kanda told us all
“We are always prepared” to
Prevent yen weakness
 
Meanwhile in Beijing
The central bank responded
Nothing to see here

 

“The current weakening of the yen is not in line with fundamentals and is clearly driven by speculation. We will take appropriate action against excessive fluctuations, without ruling out any options.”  So said Masato Kanda, the current Mr Yen at the MOF.  It seems possible, if not likely, the yen’s decline in the wake of the BOJ move last week came as a bit of a surprise.  This morning, the yen (+0.1%) has edged away from its lows from last week, but USDJPY remains above the 151 level and very close to the level when the MOF/BOJ intervened in October 2022.  Adding to the pressure was Friday’s very surprising sharp decline in the CNY, which many in the market took to mean the PBOC was comfortable with a weaker yuan. 

Economically, a weaker yuan seems to make sense, but the PBOC’s concern is that it could lead to increased capital outflows, something which they are desperate to prevent.  As such, last night, the CNY fixing was nearly 1200 points stronger than expected, with the dollar rate below 7.10, and we saw significant dollar selling by the large Chinese banks.  Apparently, Friday’s movement was a bit too much.  I suspect that these two currencies will continue to track each other at this point with both currently at levels which, in the past, have been demarcation lines for intervention.   

Here’s a conspiratorial thought, perhaps the Fed’s dovishness is a response to the weakness in the yen and Powell’s best effort to help the BOJ avoid having to intervene again.  The thing about intervention is it, by definition, represents a failure of monetary policy, at least in the market’s eyes.  And in the end, all G10 central banks are in constant communication.

Ok, let’s survey the markets overnight.  All the currency activity seemed to put a damper on equity investors as Asia saw weakness across the board with Japan (Nikkei -1.2%) falling, although still above 40K, and both Hong Kong and mainland shares in the red.  In Europe this morning, red is also the predominant color, although the declines are more muted, ranging from -0.1% (DAX) to -0.4% (CAC).  Finally, US futures, at this hour (7:00) are also slipping lower, down 0.25% on average.

In the bond market, Treasury yields are backing up 3bps this morning, bouncing off the critical 4.20% technical level again.  As well, in Europe, sovereign yields are rising between 2bps and 3bps across the board.  There has been no data of note, but we have heard a bit more from ECB bankers with a surprising comment from Austria’s Holtzmann that he saw no reason for rate cuts at all.  That is an outlier view!  And despite what is happening in the FX markets, JGB yields remain unchanged yet again.

Turning to commodities, oil (+0.3%) is edging higher this morning as, after a strong rally early in the month and a small correction, it appears that $80/bbl is a new floor for the price.  In the metals markets, after last week’s pressure lower, this morning both precious (gold +0.3%) and base (copper +0.1%) metals are edging higher.  There has not been much in the way of news driving things in this session.

Finally, the dollar is a touch softer this morning, but that is after a strong week last week.  We’ve already touched on the Asian currencies, and it is true the entire bloc, which had been under pressure, is a bit stronger this morning.  But we are seeing strength across the board with G10 currencies higher on the order of 0.2% and most EMG currencies firmer by between 0.1% and 0.2%.  So, while the movement is broad, it is not very deep.  I maintain this is all about US yields and the fact that despite Powell’s newfound dovishness, the Fed remains the tightest of the bunch.

On the data front, there is a lot of information to be released, but I suspect all eyes will be on Friday’s PCE data.  

TodayChicago Fed Nat’l Activity-0.9
 New Home Sales680K
TuesDurable Goods1.0%
 -ex Transport0.4%
 Case Shiller Home Prices6.8%
 Consumer Confidence106.7
ThursdayInitial Claims215K
 Continuing Claims1808K
 Q4 GDP3.2%
 Chicago PMI46.0
 Michigan Sentiment76.5
FridayPersonal Income0.4%
 Personal Spending0.4%
 PCE0.4% (2.4% Y/Y)
 Core PCE0.3% (2.8% Y/Y)
Source: tradingeconomics.com

In addition to that menu, Fed speakers will be about with five scheduled including Chairman Powell on Friday morning.  Remember, too, that Friday is a holiday, Good Friday, with market liquidity likely to be somewhat impaired as Europe will be skeleton staffed.  As well, it is month end, so my take is if Powell veers from the script, or perhaps reinforces the dovish theme, we could see an outsized move.  Just beware.

Recent activities by the BOJ and PBOC indicate that the market has found a sore spot for the central banks.  If the data this week doesn’t cooperate, meaning it remains stronger than forecast, it will be very interesting to hear what Chairman Powell has to say on Friday.  Cagily, he speaks after the PCE data, so he will be able to respond.  But especially if that data comes in hot, we are likely to see more volatile markets going forward.  However, today, it is hard to get too excited.

Good luck

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Central Banks Fear

The one thing that’s been crystal clear
Is yields have exploded this year
The question at hand
Since this wasn’t planned
Is what, most, do central banks fear?

For Jay and the FOMC
The joblessness rate is the key
For Christine its growth
And prices, as both
Refuse to respond to her plea

While the bond market has taken a respite from its headlong rush to higher yields, there is no evidence we have seen the top.  Rather, it feels very much like the market has positioned itself for the next leg higher in yields, potentially to kick off after tomorrow’s FOMC meeting.  If you recall, the last Fedspeak on the topic was by Chairman Powell and he was essentially dismissive of the issue as a non-event.  The consistent story has been that higher yields in the back end of the curve is a sign that the economy is picking up and they are doing their job properly, in other words it is a vote of confidence in the Fed.  And he was unambiguous in his discussion regarding the potential to tighten policy; it ain’t gonna happen for at least two to three more years, which is their timeline as to when the employment situation will recover to pre-Covid levels.  Remember, Powell has been explicit that he will not be satisfied until another 10 million jobs have been created and filled.

It has been this intense focus on the employment situation that has driven the Fed narrative that neither inflation or higher yields are of consequence for now or the foreseeable future.  Thus, all the positive US data, both economic and vaccine related, has served to increase expectations of a strong economic rebound consistently supported by front end interest rates remaining at zero.

But the interplay between rising yields and the speed of the recovery remains open to question.  In addition, there is the question of just how high yields can go before the Treasury gets uncomfortable that financing all this deficit spending is going to become problematic.  After all, if yields continue to rise, at some point the cost of carrying all the debt is going to become quite painful for the government.

In fact, it is this issue that has been a key feature of many forecasts of market behavior for the rest of this year and next; at some point, probably sooner rather than later, the Fed is going to step in and cap yields.  But what if the Treasury is looking at this problem from a different perspective, not what actual yields are, but the size of their debt service relative to the economy?  On that measure, despite a more than doubling of Treasury debt outstanding since 2007, interest expense is currently a smaller percentage of GDP than it was back then.  It is important to remember that Treasury debt matures monthly, not just T-bills, but also old notes and bonds, and when those notes and bonds were issued, ZIRP didn’t exist so many carry coupons much higher than the current replacements.  The upshot is that debt service costs have been declining despite the growth in the nominal amount of debt outstanding and are forecast to continue declining for the next 3 years according to the CBO.  So, maybe, Jay is serious that he is unworried about the current level of yields in the 10-year bucket and beyond.

If this thesis is correct, the implications for other markets going forward are significantly different than I believe many are currently considering.  For instance, a further rise in yields will start to have a significant negative impact on equity prices as all of the discounted cash flow models that currently assume zero rates forever to justify the current level of valuations will come crashing back to reality and there will be a realization that price-earnings multiples are unsustainable at current levels.  As well, the dollar bearish theme will likely get destroyed, as it is predicated on the idea that real yields will decline with rising inflation and capped yields.  If yields are not capped, but instead respond to rising inflation expectations by going higher unchecked, the dollar will be a huge beneficiary.  Precious metals?  They will suffer, although base metals should hold their own as growth will support demand and supply continues to be lacking, especially new supply.  And I would be wary of EMG debt as that rising dollar will wreak havoc on emerging market economies.

Perhaps it is the last thing that will cause the Fed to blink, since if the rest of the world slides into another recession amid increased demand for dollars, history has shown the Fed will ease policy to halt that slide.  Of course, for the past thirty years, any significant decline in the US equity market has been sufficient to get the Fed to ease policy, with Q4 2018 the most recent pre-pandemic episode.  But that means those valuations will compress, at least somewhat, before the Fed responds.

Add it all up and we have the opportunity for significantly more volatility in markets going forward, something hedgers need to heed.

As to today, ahead of the Retail Sales release this morning, and of course the FOMC tomorrow, markets are continuing in their quiet consolidation overall, though with a modest risk-on bias.

Equity market screens are all green with gains in Asia (Nikkei +0.5%, Hang Seng +0.7%, Shanghai +0.8%) and Europe (DAX +0.5%, CAC +0.1%, FTSE 100 +0.5%) pretty solid everywhere.  US futures are showing gains in the NASDAQ (+0.5%), but little movement in the other two indices.

Bond markets are also quietly higher, with very modest yield declines in Treasuries (-0.5bps), Bunds (-0.5bps) and Gilts (-1.0bp).  In fact, looking at my screen shows only Italian BTP’s (+1.9bps) and Greek 10-years (+2.8bps) falling as both nations impose stricter lockdowns.  Even JGB’s (-1.0bp) are a bit firmer as market participants await the BOJ’s policy framework Friday.

Commodity prices are under a bit of pressure this morning with oil (-1.3%) leading the way but base metals pretty much all lower as well.  As to the precious metals, they are little changed on the day and are the market with, perhaps, the keenest interest in the Fed meeting tomorrow.  If yields are going to continue to climb unabated, gold and silver will decline.

Finally, the dollar is having a mixed session as well, with a pretty equal split of gainers and losers against the greenback.  In the G10, SEK (+0.3%) and CHF (+0.3%) lead the way higher although both appear to be continuing a consolidation move of the past week.  On the downside, GBP (-0.3%) is the laggard after the EU brought new legal action against the UK on a Brexit related matter.  As to the rest of the space, the movements have been even smaller and essentially irrelevant.

In Emerging Markets, TRY (+0.8%) is the leading gainer as bets grow that the central bank will be raising rates later this week.  Next in line was KRW (+0.6%) which benefitted from large net inflows into the bond market, but after that, things are much less interesting.  On the downside, while there are a number of currencies that have declined this morning, the movements, all 0.2% or less, just don’t need a rationale, they are simply trading activity.

Data wise, we see Retail Sales this morning (exp -0.5%, 0.1% ex autos) a far cry from last month’s stimulus check induced jump of 5.3%.  We also see IP (0.3%) and Capacity Utilization (75.5%) a little later, but the reality is that if Retail Sales is uninteresting, markets are likely to continue to drift until tomorrow’s FOMC meeting.

For today, there seems very little likely to occur, but beware the Fed, if they really are going to allow yields to rise further, we could see some real changes in viewpoint for both equity markets and the dollar.

Good luck and stay safe
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