Wednesday, June 3, 2015
15.06.03 daily
Since late last month, after Yellen's comment, US dollar turn around to appreciate and oil price to somewhat tumble and these caused emerging market assets to be dismal. But, last night was different. Though bond yield soaring seems to be caused by rate hike tantrum, US dollar appeared depreciation against euro in line with weakness at German bunds. Otherwise, oil price did not decelerated.
However, this picture is not abnormal in light of the case of 1994's. When Greenspan hiked fed funds rate rapidly, US dollar was not appreciated. Consumer prices maintained at low level and the economy excluding US, especially in Euro area, accelerated more than US, so EUR could be appreciated against US dollar.
And now? It looks like that case. Despite ECB continue QE, the economic indicators including inflation already started to improve since late last year when stress test for euro area's banks ended.
In this environment, it's sure that emerging market sovereign credit shows strong movement. In eastern europe, my coverage area now, the sovereign spread narrowed last night despite of US treasury yield increase under the burden of Fed rate hike that could drain liquidity from emerging market. The reason would be two. One is other liquidity conditions depends on ECB or BOJ should underpin global liquidity conditions. Another one is emerging markets' fundamentals are somewhat solid contrary to market consensus from bearish oil market views. If bear market of oil was already done, short-cover in oil-related countries would continue further. And without oil matters, we should re-valuate emerging countries' economic environments.
Geopolitical problems especially in Russia seems to be weakening since mid-last month, and about Greece woes, governors in Euro area could find clues, I think.
If then, market conditions since last year could turn around from deflation to inflation. And in this ample liquidity conditions, even if Fed start to hike the rate, should spur global economy toward reflation not secular stagnation.
In this environment, the condition for investment to emerging sovereign credit bond could be improved, I think.
In some countries in eastern europe, however, have some political problems.
It includes Turkey and Poland. But in Turkey, after this week's vote, capital inflows could be possible contrary to market consensus because this issue has been recognized in financial market for too long time. And in Poland, this could provide the opportunity for relative value trading, for example against Hungarian assets.
The worst country was Ukraine rather than Turkey or Russia. But, the sovereign spread in Ukraine narrowed recently and rapidly. It could provide a chance to get profit further.
In Russia and Turkey, from mid last month, financial market including fx, sovereign credit and local bond market show short-cover ended and bear market restarts.
But, I don't think this kind of bear market to be continued further. This is the chance to invest in emerging market, I think.
Monday, December 8, 2014
Thoughts...14.12.08
US treasury rate re raised over 2.3 percent again. The rate bottomed up at the 2.3 and increased up about two months ago. And then as you know rate started to decline rapidly as the woes about deflation in Euro area were intensified. The rate reached under 2.0 percent at once and many market participants anticipated re decline in US treasury yield again.
However 10 year yield remain about 2.3 for some time due to two possibilities or concerns between to drag down to deflation like or by Europe and own reflation except for deteriorating external environment.
As the oil price dropped because the OPEC committee failed to decrease their supply, US rate decline under 2.3 again. In line with this, US TIPS breakeven dropped to 1.8 as well.
I thought the bull market does not finish yet. The rates seem to lower than 2.0 again under mitigated inflation expectation. Namely secular stagnation scenario including savings glut, constraints of zero bound interest rate, a lack of safety asset such as governments bond and slowing demand due to income inequality seems to be real for some time. If then, the rates will continue to be lower and lower by next year at least.
On the other hand, I have been somewhat doubtful about this, too. Because I look at the possibility of super cycle on equity market in US. And it would be so called reflation under tempered inflation. Recently I consider lowering oil prices as a way to boost the economy on the aggregate supply side contrary to secular stagnation scenario based on aggregate demand side.
So I've thought if we have long position on bonds we should be very cautious whether the rate could be turn up.
And then last weekend?
The US 10 year rate came to over 2.3 percent. And how can we see this?
Thursday, December 4, 2014
US, lower oil prices...
For the consumer, we see the recent drop in gasoline prices as equivalent to a roughly USD 75 bil. tax cut. Based on a simple back-of-the-envelop calculation, corroborated with a VAR analysis, we think the impact of lower energy prices through this channel should be a benefit of about 0.3pp on GDP growth over the coming year. The total positive "tax cut" effect for the whole economy may be as much as +0.4pp.
However, the energy sector is more important to the US economy than it once was due to the shale boom. Based on the recent drop in prices, our analysts anticipate slowing, but still positive growth in production during 2015. Energy related capex should also slow a bit. The GDP growth headwind from this shift should be around 0.1pp over the next year, mainly seen in a slightly wider petroleum trade deficit that would otherwise occur.
The net effect of lower energy prices on employment should be positive. We do not anticipate job losses in the energy sector to move the needle significantly on aggregate employment outcomes. While energy sector jobs have grown at a rapid rate, they remain a small share of total US employment. Any energy industry job losses due to lower oil prices would probably be more than made up for with diffuse growth-induced job gains elsewhere.
Out bottom-up analysis suggests a net positive impact of lower oil prices on GDP growth of around 0.2 to 0.3pp over the coming year. A cross-check with the Fed's FRB/US model suggests a slightly smaller, but still positive, effect. While modest in size, we think this tailwind should offset much but not all of the growth drag from the stronger dollar and a slightly dimmer global growth outlook.
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Europe's outlook
At a time when Euro area growth has been weak, inflation has fallen to close to zero. While we expect inflation to remain undesirably weak for some time, we nevertheless think the risk of a sustained period of outright deflation across the Euro area is limited, for two reasons.
First, reflecting the structural rigidities in Euro area labor markets and despite high levels of unemployment, domestic cost pressures in the Euro area remain consistent with low but positive inflation.
Second, the cross-country evidence suggests that deflation is rare and difficult to generate among countries that set monetary policy independently.
Given weak growth and weak inflation, we expect the ECB to maintain Euro area overnight rates at close to their current levels until 3Q2017. We also expect the ECB to announce further easing measures in the coming months, extending and deepening the T-LTRO, covered bond and ABS purchase programmes that it has already announced. However, reflecting the high (political) fixed cost of adopting sovereign QE, we continue to ascribe a probability of around 1/3 to the ECB engaging in a large-scale sovereign purchase programme.
A key risk to our forecast - one that would almost certainly prompt the ECB to engage in large-scale sovereign purchases - is the possibility that falling inflation expectations become entrenched in wage- and price-setting behavior, provoking a self-fulfilling dynamic of area-wide price deflation.
Monday, November 24, 2014
Secular Stagnation in US?
This outlook is more optimistic than the "secular stagnation" view put forward by Havard economist Lawrence Summers one year ago. He suggested that the economy may be in a situation where the "neutral" real interest rate is deeply negative and may remain low for a long time to come, preventing a return to full employment.
We agree that the nuetral real interest rate has likely been negative in recent years. But we see a number of reasons to view this as more cyclical than secular.
First, the pickup in growth over the last year suggests that the earlier weakness was primarily due to long-lasting but ultimately temporary headwinds, such as household deleveraging and fiscal drag. Of course, the growth acceleration has come with zero rates and it is still early, so the pickup is only weak evidence against secular stagnation.
Second, our estimates of the nuetral rate are negative at present but projected to normalize as the economy returns to full employment.
Third, the secular stagnation view contrasts with the historical record. In a sample of 19 countries stretching back mostly to the 1800s, we find that the average 2% US real rate of the postwar period looks reasonably representative of the longer-term historical record.
It is still early days and we only view these considerations as preliminary evidence against secular stagnation. Moreover, many of the policy implications may still be valid if the weakness is more cyclical than secular, including the need for continued accommodative policy. Finally, other parts of the world - for example, Europe - may be better candidates for secualr stagnation. But for the United States, we are more optimistic.
Friday, November 21, 2014
Q&A with Japanese Investors
Thursday, November 20, 2014
EM including China
Inflation also is sliding across the remainder of EM Asia, fueling expectations for rate cuts more broadly. In India, inflation fell below 6% yoy in October, the lowest since the new CPI index was introduced three years ago. Nonetheless, we expect the RBI to remain on hold. The reputational risk of missing the 6% inflation target by January 2016 would be damaging, and the RBI will need more data to be convinced that food disinflation is structural and that core is not reaccelerating.
The chances of a rate cut in Korea have increased as well. Last week the BOK kept its policy rate on hold after easing 25bp in October. However, the central bank's statement was dovish, based on concerns over near-term growth and a potential loss of competitiveness from the weaker yen. Nonetheless, we are maintaining our forecase for a stable 2% policy rate. Growth is expected to pick up and the rise in the trade-weighted KRW has been much more muted that the move against the JPY. Moreover, the BOK is more likely to respond to additional yen weakness with FX intervention than a rate cut.
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Europe...Japanisation?
In one's interview, there have been two phases of the stagnation that characterized the "lost decades" with very different underlying problems : initially, deleveraging post the bursting asset bubble in the early 1990s, followed by a rapid decline in the working-age population over the recent decades.
The notion of "Japanese-style" deflation also often seems misunderstood. He clarifies that while Japan has experienced the more malign so-called "deflationary spiral" in which price declines lead to further prices declines and, ultimately, a vicious, demand destroying spiral. He believes that drivers of this deflation were related to - but not the same as - the drivers of stagnation, with wage flexibility playing a prominent role.
With all of that in mind, he emphasizes that Japan's underlying problems in recent decades are very different from the fundamental challenge facing the Euro area today - the lack of economic integration. So in some sense, the Japanese experience has little insight to offer to the Euro area. But the key lesson Europe can take from Japan is that focusing on fixing the underlying problems is the only path to recovery. In his view, framing Japanese and Euro area problems in terms of the monetary phenomenon of deflation rather than fundamental drivers gives the misguided impression that the problems can be solved by monetary policy. He does not hold out much hope that monetary policy can improve the outlook for the Euro area economy.
Another one is more optimistic about the ability of policy activism to lead to a stronger Euro area economic and asset market recovery than what Japan experienced. But she emphasizes that demand-boosting monetary and fiscal policies alone will not be a panacea for the Euro area.
And someone sees a near-to-medium term path for the Euro area that is not dissimilar to Japan's past experience - very low but still positive growth and potentially some bouts of benign, and more malign deflation, even though the causes of these developments are, in large part, different from those in Japan. He also maintains that - similar to the Japanese experience - the likelihood of a malign deflationary spiral akin to the Great Depression remains remote.
One professor is far more concerned about the outlook for the Euro area. He is perhaps the most optimistic that the combination of the right fiscal and monetary policies, namely, a rolling-back of austerity and full-blown sovereign QE, could jump-start Euro area growth. But he sees little scope for these policy shifts given the large political obstacles to both. In his view, the Euro area remains materially velnerable to a return of a liquidity crisis, a solvency crisis, and even political upheaval should the region continue on its current path.
Even barring this worst-case outcome, another one underscores that Euro stagnation could be more costly to the global economy than was Japan's earlier experience given the Euro area's larger economic weight and stronger financial linkages with the rest of the world.
Finally, one analyst zeroes in on equity market parallels between Japan and Europe. She concludes that despite worrying similarities between recent, lackluster profitability of European companies and Japanese corporates in the 1990s, more reasonable starting valuations suggest that European equity performance is unlikely to repeat Japanese equities' dismal experience in decades past.
Monday, November 17, 2014
Global View Weekly
In the current cycle, we expected weak growth, but for four years running, got even less than that.
Initially, we thought we were just facing a post crisis demand side problem with a large number of economic agents in a continued and under-appreciated need to repair damaged balance sheets. But now, almost six years after the crisis, and still no pickup in growth, it is becoming clearer we are also having a supply-side problem, with much slower growth in both labor supply and productivity. What are the implications of a weak supply side for markets?
Besides giving it a name - secular stagnation - the economists profession has not yet agreed on its cause or on how long it will last, except that it is a reality and that such realities usually do not go away fast. Partial explanation range from the crisis having left capital in all the wrong places and that greater constraints are preventing banks from aggressively helping to reallocate capital, to the possiblity that technology and the web have completed their role in making us more productive and that EM ecomonies are not as effective anymore in importing DM economic know how. It will take a long time before we know all answers. In the meantime, investors have to deal with the reality of much weaker supply side.
The most important impact of a weak supply side, in our mind, is a lower reutrn on capital. For financial assets, this means a lower than normal required IRR; for bonds, a lower real interest rate. In micro, we teach that the equilibrium interest rate is set by the interplay of time preference and the marginal return on investment. In macro, this becomes the intersection of the investment and savings curve. The post-crisis rise in savings and now also a lower return on capital thus produce a much lower interest rate.
Wednesday, November 12, 2014
14.11.12 US Economy about Disinflaton
While these forces are likely to be roughly offsetting, we place somewhat greater confidence in the disinflationary pressures for two reasons.
First, it is difficult to be sure about how much slack remains. Second, the relationship between slack and price inflation is subject to substantial uncertainty. Indeed, mojor US cities with lower unemployment rate have only modestly higher core inflation on average, and many do not follow the expected pattern. In contrast, pass-through from a stronger dollar to cheaper import prices or from lower energy input costs to prices of airline fares, for example, is usually more mechnical.
These competing pressures are likely to appear in different categories of the core price indeces. Reduced slack should contribute upward pressure primarily to the prices of services, while a stronger dollar should contribute downward pressure primarily to the prices of goods such as apparel and new vehicles. We incorporate these findings in our bottom-up inflation model, which now projects flat to slightly lower core inflation over the next year.
Despite the recent decline in market measures of inflation expectations, we do not think that another year of 1.5% core inflation would constitute a substantial threat to the anchoring of long-term inflation expectations. But it would at the very least complicate Fed officials' intension to hike the funds rate sometime in mid-2015 or a bit later.
Moreover, the consequences of an average miss on either side of our forecast would probably be asymmetric. A quicker acceleration to the target would likely shift liftoff forward by at most one quarter from our September 2015 baseline, while a more substantial decline might delay liftoff by significantly more.
Tuesday, March 4, 2014
14.03.04 : Changed the Position toward Almost Neutral
I mitigate both of duration and overweight on long end bonds to almost neutral against BM by short selling KTB 10yr futures (and buying some 3yr futures).
Monday, March 3, 2014
14.03.03 KTB market review : Next BOK Chairman : Dove or Hawk?
Weak exports data in Feb. underpinned bullish market for bonds. Daily average exports decreased below 2 bil. USD and this is recognized that worsening external indicators affected Korean exports economies.
Ahead of auctions of 3yr and 30yr treasuries, bond markets came back to last Friday's level.
But I ain't sympathetic about this. Indeed the expectation of additional policy rate cut could mitigate in short term, amplifying downside risk of local bond markets.