In
this issue:
Have
Chinese Punters Driven Up Global Inflation Expectations?
Animal
Spirits versus Emergent Liquidity Strains?
Has
the Fed “Fallen Behind the Curve”?
Will
the US Federal Reserve raise interest rates in the coming FOMC
meeting in March 14-15?
Has
it been a coincidence for Fed officials to suddenly chime in to
signal a March rate hike?
Last
week, the big guns of the US Federal Reserve, namely presidents of
St. Louis Fed James
Bullard, San Francisco Fed John
Williams, Richmond Fed Jeffrey
Lacker, Cleveland Fed Loretta
Mester, Philadelphia Fed Patrick
Harker, Dallas Fed Robert
Kaplan and NY Fed William
Dudley, likewise Fed Governors Jerome
Powell and Lael
Brainhard and Fed Vice Chair Stanley
Fisher has virtually expressed support for a March interest rate
move.
With
Fed
doves L. Brainhard and W. Dudley joining the hawks, a March hike
could be in the offing.
Fed
fund futures as of March 3 exhibited a 79.7% chance of a March 15
rate hike.
Or
has such seeming coordinated action signified a “signaling channel”
intended to shape the public’s expectations?
Or
has this functioned as a trial balloon to test market’s reaction?
What’s
even more striking has been the speech of Fed Chair Janet Yellen who
denies that the FED has been behind the curve1
This
same approach will continue to drive our policy decisions in the
months and years ahead. With that in mind, our policy aims to support
continued growth of the American economy in pursuit of our
congressionally mandated objectives. We do that, as I have noted,
with an eye always on the risks. To that end, we realize that waiting
too long to scale back some of our support could potentially require
us to raise rates rapidly sometime down the road, which in turn could
risk disrupting financial markets and pushing the economy into
recession. Having said that, I currently see no evidence that the
Federal Reserve has fallen behind the curve, and I therefore continue
to have confidence in our judgment that a gradual removal of
accommodation is likely to be appropriate. However, as I have noted,
unless unanticipated developments adversely affect the economic
outlook, the process of scaling back accommodation likely will not be
as slow as it was during the past couple of years.
Yet
Ms. Yellen seems to be part of the “hawkish” crowd who may likely
vote for a March rate increase.
It
would be natural for any official to refuse acknowledgement of any
errors attributed on them. Any lapses have almost always been blamed
on external or exogenous forces.
Besides,
falling behind the curve will be seen or judged in the context of the
future than today.
Nevertheless,
the rapid buildup in inflationary biases expressed in asset prices,
which seems to have percolated into real economy prices, may have
likely prompted for this abrupt change in sentiment of Fed officials.
US
stocks have virtually been on fire or have been in a virtual meltup
mode.
This
can be seen via the fiery year to date returns by the Dow Jones
Industrials (+6.29%), S&P 500 (+6.44%) and Nasdaq (+9.06%).
Present returns may have already fully priced in whatever highly
optimistic growth expectations that may emerge from Trump’s
policies.
And
a string of record breaking developments have occurred based on price
actions, fund flows and valuations.
Price
actions. The Dow Jones which hit 21,000 last week matched the record
of the
fastest 1,000 point advance which was last attained in 1999.
Including the Russell 2000, all four
major indices were at record highs last week. The S&P 500 has
enjoyed
the longest streak of gains without a 1% correction.
Fund
flows. Mom and pop investors have been piling into the equity markets
mostly via passively managed funds. Based on estimates
by JP Morgan, retails plowed $ 86 billion into equity Exchange
Traded Funds as of February.
Global
investors funneled $62.9 billion into ETFs last February for a
two month $124 billion record net inflows as reported by the ETF
industry.
Goldman
Sachs has warned of extreme complacency as global investors have
discarded
hedges and rushed “headlong into risk”.
Valuations.
Conventional valuation metrics such as Shiller
CAPE ratio, (Tobin’s) Q
ratio and the Buffett
indicator (market cap to GDP) reveals of severe overvaluations.
The Shiller CAPE ratio and the Q ratio have reached 1929 highs! The
trailing twelve months (TTM) PER of the small cap Russell 2000, based
on Wall
Street Journal’s Market Data Center as of March 3, was at a
shocking 240.92! Whereas the Dow Jones Industrials, S&P 500 and
Nasdaq TTMs were at 21.45, 24.9 and 25.78, respectively!
Quality
matters too. High
debt-low quality and low
dividend paying stocks have mainly energized today’s record
breaking streaks.
Overconfidence.
Last week, a photo app developer, Snap
had a sparkling debut—a 44% jump in its share prices. The
company has been burning cash, has no profits and has barely
significant sales and was last valued at a
whopping 78x earnings!
And
it’s not just stocks.
Junk
bonds have become the “best
performing bonds this year” as investors
stampeded into them. Yields of junk bonds as exemplified by BofA
Merrill Lynch US High Yield CCC or BofA
Merrill Lynch US High Yield Effective Yield have plumbed to 2014
lows.
Real
estate prices have almost recaptured the 2007 glory. The S&P
Dow Jones reported that last December, the S&P
CoreLogic Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price NSA index posted a
5.8% yoy gains, the 10-City composite 4.9% and the 20 city composite
5.6%. The S&P/Case-Shiller
20-City Composite Home Price Index can be seen just a stone throw
distance from the 2007 highs.
To
add, prices of Commercial
Real Estate (CRE) are at record highs. Just last February, the
FED had a special mention of heightened risks in the sector:
“Commercial
real estate (CRE) valuations, which have been an area of growing
concern over the past year, rose further, with property prices
continuing to climb and capitalization rates decreasing to
historically low levels”.
And
again it’s more than just asset prices; it’s about inflation
expectations too.
Three
major inflation gauges the 10-Year
Treasury Inflation-Indexed Security, Constant Maturity,
the 5-Year,
5-Year Forward Inflation Expectation Rate and the 10-Year
Breakeven Inflation Rate have been scaling upwards since June
2016 albeit at an accelerated rate. January’s ISM
manufacturing prices (prices paid) have doubled from a year ago!
US
CPI which increased to 2.5% last
January has climbed for the sixth consecutive month to reach its
highest level since 2012.
And
it’s not just the US. Risks appetite has been whetted essentially
everywhere.
In
Asia, major equity bellwethers of Bangladesh,
Pakistan or
Vietnam
continues to carve fresh zeniths. Meanwhile, stock market benchmarks
of Australia,
New Zealand
Taiwan, and
Indonesia have
been testing record heights. Also, major indices of Japan,
Hong Kong,
Korea,
Singapore and
Thailand have
reached 52 week peaks.
Aside
from stocks, the current risk ON climate has been manifested in
bonds.
Asia’s
corporate
debt continues to swell. The premium
between emerging market sovereign debt and US corporate bonds has
been in a compressing trend. And with lowered rates, such has
spurred a
race to sell bonds in the corporate world of emerging markets.
Moreover,
sizzling global property prices have scaled upwards to near 2007
apogee. That’s based on the IMF’s
global real house price index.
And
again, it’s not just asset prices; but real economy prices too.
In
both emerging and developed Asia, rising government CPI or CPI at
elevated levels can be seen in Taiwan,
South
Korea, China,
Sri
Lanka, Myanmar,
Vietnam,
Indonesia
and the Philippines.
On
the other hand, CPI recently jumped in Japan,
Singapore,
New
Zealand, Malaysia,
Thailand
and Mongolia.
From
the perspective above, it’s easy to see the likely factors or
influences that may have altered the perspective of the majority
officials of the US Federal Reserve.
If
the FED has indeed been behind the curve, timid rate hikes will only
further bolster the underlying risk appetites.
And
Ms. Yellen’s observation that this may “potentially
require us to raise rates rapidly sometime down the road” may
become self-fulling prophecy.
Have
Chinese Punters Driven Up Global Inflation Expectations?
Yet
mounting inflationary biases have originated mostly from the massive
expansion of central bank balance sheets.
Assets
of major central banks have rocketed 271% to $17.6 trillion (January
2017) from about $6.5 billion in 2008 (Yardeni.com).
The
ongoing QE programs by Bank of Japan, Bank of England and ECB accrue
to around $2 trillion a year.
On
top of the QEs by the trio have been China’s social financing.
Total Social Financing (TSF) data has spiked to a cumulative $2.7
trillion in 12 months last January, of which bank loans at US $1.8
trillion has accounted for 67% of the lending
by financial institutions, but also by Chinese households and
non-financial entities.
Add
to the above, outside the formal sector financing has been the US
$ 3.8 trillion off-balance sheet assets, which is otherwise known
as the “shadow banking system”.
Since
issued money has to go somewhere, the tsunami of liquidity has only
bolstered shifting episodes of frenzied speculations by the average
Chinese on stocks
(2015) to bonds
to real
estate and to commodities.
Aggregate
trading volume of commodity futures roared to a record 177.4 trillion
yuan ($25.5 trillion) or up 30% yoy in 2016, according to Bloomberg.
This
entails that perhaps much of the price inflation seen in the
commodity spectrum have been from the Chinese speculators. And this
could have been interpreted as “reflation” by most of the world.
To
emphasize, the above central banks infused humongous amounts of
liquidity to the tune of nearly $ 5 trillion last year! And they are
likely to continue with such infusions in 2017. And this excludes
other emerging market central banks that have mimicked their
developed market peers.
Yet
if my suspicion holds true that the perceived “reflation” had
largely been a transmission mechanism from the Chinese punters
indirectly financed by the PBoC, just what would happen to the
“reflation” trade once there could be a pullback in liquidity?
WTIC
and Brent prices appear to be manifesting a topping formation.
Gasoline and gold prices cratered last week, perhaps in response to
the Fed’s hawkishness.
For
instance, given that
energy and transportation have largely influenced the recent spike in
US CPI, then what happens if oil and gasoline prices fumble anew?
Would
the FED reverse course and reintroduce QE?
Animal
Spirits versus Emergent Liquidity Strains?
Curiously,
despite the huge ballooning of credit creation, which can be seen in
the sizeable expansion of assets
of China’s central bank, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC), its
foreign exchange holdings continues to fall (see above).
And
this appears to have been reflected in the decline of the offshore
(CNH) and of the onshore
(CNY) yuan. The falling yuan has popularly been attributed to capital
flight or “capital outflows”
And
despite the repeated injections by the PBoC, Shibor
rates across the curve remains elevated and unstable since the 2H
of 2016. Perhaps part of these may have been from
the 54% surge in bankruptcy cases in 2016. But the liquidity
pressures can be seen, not just in Shibor, but in CNH
Hibor (Hong Kong) rates too.
All
these looks like signs of US dollar liquidity shortage amidst a flood
of liquidity in the yuan. This demonstrates that domestic liquidity
has a much different dynamic than the US dollar liquidity. Maybe the
PBoC has been substituting US dollar illiquidity with yuan liquidity
in the hope to contain tensions from the mismatch.
Yet
once domestic liquidity recedes in China, out
of political design from authorities
or by sheer weight of market forces, it is likely to reverse present
signs of “reflation”. Even more, this could amplify the US dollar
illiquidity strains.
And
US dollar illiquidity may not be confined to China but likewise to
the $9.7
trillion US dollar borrowers outside the US whereby emerging markets
account for a third. Slower economic growth would likely induce
greater demand for the US dollar.
And
should the Fed persist to increase interest rates, China’s US
dollar liquidity dilemma may be amplified.
And
even worst, should a trade war be opened, present liquidity flows
will most likely experience dislocations, hence, liquidity conditions
can be expected to deteriorate
It’s
not just in China. Even amidst the ongoing euphoria in the US
markets, signs of liquidity strains have been present.
LIBOR
rates have been rising across the curve since 2015: overnight,
1-month,
3-month,
6 month,
12 month.
Goldman Sachs estimated
that $28 trillion of loans have been tied to Libor. While LIBOR
rates are way off the highs 2007, the fact they are rising could be a
sign of emergent hidden stress.
The
same rising dynamic applies to the liquidity indicator the TED
spread.
Much
of these had been blamed on the 2a7
reform, but today they seem as mostly imputed to prospective
interest rate actions by the FED.
And
yet, despite higher inflation expectations, yield
spreads have been flattening. An example would be
the 10-2 year spread.
Perhaps
such has affected the rate of growth (% from a year ago) of
commercial
industrial loans, which at 6.7% in January, has tumbled to 2013
lows.
In
addition, hard data seem to have departed from the ebullience
exhibited by survey based “soft” data and the financial markets.
For
instance, US 4Q GDP
slowed to 1.9%. In addition, Atlanta Fed’s GDPNOW marked down
1Q
2017 to 1.8%.
In
Europe, the ECB’s payment and settlement system TARGET2
has now been running a record.
In
January, Germany posted its highest ever inflow. On the obverse side
have been record outflows from Italy and Spain. Spain appears to be
fast catching up with Italy.
It
is not clear whether this is about populist politics or about
Europe’s fragile banking system. It can even be both. France,
Germany and Netherlands are slated to hold national elections
this year.
At
the end of the day, current market activities have been reflecting on
mostly “animal spirits” or the herding effect that has been
lubricated by domestic liquidity and rationalized on hope.
Yet
ultimately, liquidity conditions will likely determine its
sustainability.
1
Chairman
Janet Yellen “From
Adding Accommodation to Scaling It Back” At
The Executives' Club of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois March 3, 2017
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