The Death Of The European Bond Market

As we recently noted, thanks to the overwhelming dominance of the BoJ, the Japanese government bond market is “for all intent and purpose” dead. As the chart below shows, that is the lesson that Europe has learned also. Since the Greek bailout, bond trading volumes (and thus liquidity) has collapsed to practically zero. Of course, this is ignored by the mainstream media, instead focusing on the ‘low’ yields of that nation’s debt as indicative of ‘recovery’ around the corner and a market that knows better. Instead it is simply a measure of the domestic banks meager pricing at the margin of a bond market that reflects nothing but a shell of its former self. The pattern is similar (though not so terrible) for Spanish and Italian debt as the entire European bond market devolves into OMT-driven farce.

 

 

(h/t @fmirw)


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/9OqLONmqjKM/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Frontrunning: November 21

  • When it fails, do more of it – Bank of Japan hints at extending ultra-loose monetary policy (FT)
  • PBOC Says No Longer in China’s Interest to Increase Reserves (BBG)
  • Fed casts about for endgame on easy-money policy  (Hilsenrath)
  • Big trucks still rule Detroit in energy-conscious era (Reuters)
  • Debt Limit Rise May Not Be Needed Until June, CBO Says (BBG)
  • Some Insurance Regulators Turn Down White House Invitation (WSJ)
  • Say Goodbye to the Car Salesman (WSJ)
  • U.S. drone kills senior militant in Pakistani seminary (Reuters)
  • French business sector contracts sharply (FT)
  • How Germany’s taxman used stolen data to squeeze Switzerland (Reuters)
  • Fed casts about for endgame on easy-money policy (WSJ)
  • France, Italy call for full-time Eurogroup chief (Reuters)
  • Bank of England stresses it in no rush to raise interest rates (Reuters)
  • ECB Board Considering Publishing Minutes of Policy Meetings (WSJ)
  • Drop in Traffic Takes Toll on Investors in Private Roads (WSJ)
  • US budget talks generate cautious optimism (FT)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* Investigators looking into how a government funding decision got to investors early are struggling over how to distinguish between illegal insider tips and accurate predictions based on research and analysis.

* The U.S. and Afghanistan said they ironed out the final disputes over the agreement on long-term American presence, just hours before the Loya Jirga assembly was convening to consider the deal.

* Federal Reserve officials, mindful of a still-fragile economy, are laboring to devise a strategy to avoid another round of market turmoil when they pull back on one of their signature easy-money programs in the months ahead.

* A complex bet in the foreign-exchange market backfired on Goldman Sachs Group Inc during the third quarter, contributing to a revenue slump that prompted senior executives to defend the firm’s trading strategy.

* Blackstone Group is about to unleash a seasoned turnaround specialist on some of the private equity giant’s 77 companies.

* A complex bet in the foreign exchange market backfired on Goldman Sachs during the third quarter, contributing to a revenue slump that prompted senior executives to defend the firm’s trading strategy.

* A preliminary gauge of China’s manufacturing activity showed a mild weakening of growth momentum in November, weighed down by sluggish new export orders, and suggesting the third-quarter rebound in the world’s second-largest economy may be losing steam.

* The White House won’t support plans to recapitalize Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac because they don’t address core concerns over having two large entities dominate the nation’s $10 trillion mortgage market, said the president’s top economic adviser.

* One morning this month, agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation showed up unannounced at the home of a New York-based currencies trader for Deutsche Bank AG.

The agents showed him transcripts of an electronic chat in which the trader appeared to boast about trying to manipulate foreign exchange markets, according to people familiar with the incident.

 

FT

Chancellor George Osborne pressed Brussels last year to spare the Co-operative Bank from tougher rules applied to big listed banks.

France’s socialist government has promised reforms in the country’s onerous tax system but has stopped short of pledging tax cuts.

Shale gas fracking is unlikely to succeed in Europe because the continent lacks the right mix of land rights and infrastructure, according to the head of trading at power company Eon .

Authorities in France have placed the French unit of Swedish furniture retailer Ikea and its two top executives under formal investigation over allegations of illegally gathering data on employees and clients.

Coal miner Bumi’s plan to overhaul its ownership end boardroom conflicts hit a hurdle after the company’s chairman missed a deadline to show he had lined up financing for a key part of the restructuring deal.

Private equity firm KKR & Co LP has taken control of Winoa in a debt restructuring deal after the French steel abrasives maker’s previous private equity owner refused to inject cash.

 

NYT

* The Federal Reserve Open Market Committee wrestled at its most recent meeting with ways of supporting an economy that still needs help.

* Shareholders are putting AT&T and Verizon Wireless on notice: Tell the public more about the companies’ role in government surveillance efforts or risk a ding to the bottom line.

* State insurance commissioners met with President Obama and said insurers and states would have to decide to extend non-compliant health plans for one more year.

* Opposing portrayals of Michael Steinberg, a former trader at SAC Capital Advisors, emerged during opening statements at his criminal insider trading trial in Federal District Court.

* Rupert Murdoch, chairman of News Corporation and 21st Century Fox, and Wendi Deng Murdoch agreed to end their 14-year marriage.

* Neil MacBride, the former U.S. attorney in Alexandria, Virginia, will join Davis Polk & Wardwell as a partner, the firm will announce on Thursday.

* The Tribune Company, owner of The Chicago Tribune and The Los Angeles Times, will lay off 700 employees at those newspapers and the six others it owns, it said in memos to the staff on Wednesday.

* An ambitious plan to revise the system for taxing multinational corporations, released on Tuesday by the Senate Finance Committee chairman, Max Baucus, would hit technology companies and large pharmaceutical companies especially hard.

* A measure of consumer spending rose more than expected in October as households bought a range of goods, suggesting positive momentum in the economy early in the fourth quarter.

* The New York Times on Wednesday announced a reorganization of its Washington bureau, including the elevation of Carolyn Ryan to bureau chief and the start of two new
ventures.

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

* The Royal Canadian Mounted Police is alleging that Nigel Wright, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s former chief of staff, breached the Criminal Code for his part in an extensive Conservative operation to contain the Senate expenses scandal.

* The British Columbia government has announced a new action plan for patients with mental-health challenges, a response to a declaration by Vancouver’s mayor and police chief that the city faces a crisis in handling people with severe, untreated mental illness.

Reports in the business section:

* Suncor Energy Inc, which last month approved a new multi-billion-dollar oil sands mine, plans to spend over $1 billion more in 2014 than it expects in 2013.

* Cliffs Natural Resources Inc announced on Wednesday that it would stop developing the Ring of Fire mineral deposit in Northern Ontario, dealing a blow to the provincial government’s plans to tap the resource-rich area and grow the local economy.

NATIONAL POST

* Toronto Mayor Rob Ford’s new, smaller office will have nine members in it, his fifth chief of staff in three years confirmed Wednesday. The office does not include David Price, his former director of logistics and operations and friend of Doug Ford who has had a controversial run at city hall.

* The Canadian prime minister’s senior staff worked with top Tory senators to whitewash a Senate report into Mike Duffy’s contested expenses after unsuccessfully trying to shape an independent audit, new Royal Canadian Mounted Police documents allege.

FINANCIAL POST

* Alberta pocketed just $26 million in its biggest land auction in two years, diffusing hype that a forgotten corner of the province holds the next big oil and gas play.

* The long-delayed rotation away from a reliance on consumer spending as Canada’s economic engine to stronger exports and business investment just isn’t happening – much to the chagrin of Stephen Poloz, the Bank of Canada governor who previously ran Export Development Canada.

 

China

CHINA SECURITIES JOURNAL

– The timely introduction of crude oil futures will boost China’s capital market liberalization, said a commentary in the paper.

SECURITIES TIMES

– China’s State Council plans to consolidate the registration of all immovable property under one department to ease the bureaucratic burden for enterprises, said Li Keqiang, the country’s premier at a meeting on Wednesday. Currently, registration of immovable property is overseen by many different departments.

SHANGHAI SECURITIES NEWS

– China’s National Development and Reform Commission plans to introduce ecological conservation indicators to better assess the interplay of economic development and damage to the environment, said Xu Shaoshi, director of the commission, recently. Relevant government departments will be instructed.

CHINA DAILY

– China appointed spokesmen for its seven military branches on Wednesday to increase operational transparency. The spokesmen are mainly drawn from the public relations departments in related branches and will release information about key activities and respond to public concerns, said sources with knowledge of the matter.

PEOPLE’S DAILY

– If tangible benefits are not felt by Chinese people and if a more equitable social environment is not created, then reform will lose its significance, said a commentary in the paper which acts as the party’s mouthpiece.

 

Fly On The Wall 7:00 AM Market Snapshot

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

Advance Auto Parts (AAP) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse
BreitBurn Energy (BBEP) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at RW Baird
Crestwood Midstream (CMLP) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at RW Baird
Green Mountain (GMCR) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Janney Capital
Hillshire Brands (HSH) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at BMO Capital
Leap Wireless (LEAP) upgraded to Hold from Sell at Deutsche Bank
Mechel (MTL) upgraded to Buy from Sell at Citigroup
Plains All American (PAA) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at RW Baird
Rayonier (RYN) upgraded to Hold from Sell at Deutsche Bank
Summit Midstream (SMLP) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at RW Baird
Westar Energy (WR) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS

Downgrades

Allianz SE (AZSEY) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Citigroup
Amicus Therapeutics (FOLD) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Janney Capital
Amicus Therapeutics (FOLD) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at JPMorgan
Consolidated Edison (ED) downgraded to Underperform from Hold at Jefferies
J.M. Smucker (SJM) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at JPMorgan
Philip Morris (PM) downgraded to Neutral from Conviction Buy at Goldman
Pioneer Natural (PXD) downgraded to Perform from Outperform at Oppenheimer
Qualcomm (QCOM) downgraded to Outperform from Strong Buy at Raymond James
Quintiles (Q) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank
Republic Services (RSG) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Goldman

Initiations

Agrium (AGU) initiated with an Outperform at Raymond James
Allscripts (MDRX) initiated with a Buy at Deutsche Bank
AmerisourceBergen (ABC) initiated with a Hold at Deutsche Bank
athenahealth (ATHN) initiated with a Buy at Deutsche Bank
CVS Caremark (CVS) initiated with a Hold at Deutsche Bank
Cardinal Health (CAH) initiated with a Hold at Deutsche Bank
Catamaran (CTRX) initiated with a Hold at Deutsche Bank
Cerner (CERN) initiated with a Buy at Deutsche Bank
Charles River Labs (CRL) initiated with a Hold at Deutsche Bank
Check Point (CHKP) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays
Computer Programs (CPSI) initiated with a Hold at Deutsche Bank
Covance (CVD) initiated with a Hold at Deutsche Bank
EverBank Financial (EVER) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays
Express Scripts (ESRX) initiated with a Hold at Deutsche Bank
Facebook (FB) initiated with an Outperform at FBR Capital
Fortinet (FTNT) initiated with an Equal Weight at Barclays
Gartner (IT) initiated with a Market Perform at FBR Capital
Honda (HMC) initiated with a Buy at Jefferies
Imperva (IMPV) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays
LinkedIn (LNKD) initiated with a Market Perform at FBR Capital
McKesson (MCK) initiated with a Buy at Deutsche Bank
MedAssets (MDAS) initiated with a Buy at Deutsche Bank
Medidata Solutions (MDSO) initiated with a Buy at Deutsche Bank
Monster Worldwide (MWW) initiated with an Outperform at FBR Capital
Quality Systems (QSII) initiated with a Sell at Deutsche Bank
Radware (RDWR) initiated with an Outperform at Imperial Capital
Rite Aid (RAD) initiated with a Buy at Deutsche Bank
Sorrento Therapeutics (SRNE) initiated with a Buy at CRT Capital
Thomson Reuters (TRI) initiated with an Outperform at FBR Capital
Walgreens (WAG) initiated with a Buy at Deutsche Bank

HOT STOCKS

Johnson Controls (JCI) announced 3-year, $3.65B share repurchase program, $800M ASR
Green Mountain (GMCR) authorized additional $1B share repurchase plan
KKR (KKR) to acquire Winoa Group from LBO France, terms not disclosed

EARNINGS

Companies that beat consensus earnings expectations last night and today include: Spectrum Brands (SPB), Pactera (PACT), Taomee (TAOM), Jiayuan.com (DATE), China Distance Education (DL), L Brands (LTD), Jack in the Box (JACK), Williams-Sonoma (WSM), ValueVision (VVTV), Bazaarvoice (BV), Green Mountain (GMCR)

Companies that missed consensus earnings expectations include:
Sears Holdings (SHLD), Post Holdings (POST), Planar Systems (PLNR)

Companies that mat
ched consensus earnings expectations include:
Stage Stores (SSI)

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

  • Credit Suisse Group (CS) said it had begun a program to ring-fence its Swiss banking business from riskier investment banking operations in the U.S. and U.K., part of a plan to address concerns about institutions that are deemed too big to fail, the Wall Street Journal reports
  • China Mobile (CHL) plans to introduce a new brand for mobile services on December 18, raising expectations of an imminent start to its iPhone (AAPL) sales in the country, the Wall Street Journal reports
  • Janet Yellen will take an important step today toward becoming the first woman to lead the Federal Reserve, with the Senate Banking Committee expected to back the nomination and clear her path to lead the central bank, Reuters reports
  • U.S. regulators are considering whether to give banks more time to comply with the Volcker rule, which bans them from gambling with their own money, Reuters reports
  • Vodafone Group (VOD), set to receive $130B for exiting the U.S., will focus on expanding wireless networks even as potential buyers may be sizing up the company for a bid, said CEO Vittorio Colao, Bloomberg reports
  • Bank of America (BAC) told a judge in federal court in Manhattan it shouldn’t pay any penalty in a U.S. lawsuit accusing it of selling defective loans to Fannie Mae (FNMA) and Freddie Mac (FMCC). The government argued that the bank should pay the maximum penalty of $863M. The bank said it should pay $1.1M at the most, Bloomberg reports

SYNDICATE

Air Lease (AL) files to sell 10.14M common shares for holders
Arthur J. Gallagher (AJG) announces $200M at-the-market equity program
Attunity Ltd (ATTU) files to sell common stock
Broadway Financial (BYFC) files to offer 17.96M common shares for holders
Cardiovascular Systems (CSII) 2.61M share Secondary priced at $30.00
Ceragon Networks (CRNT) 14M share Secondary priced at $2.40
Cinedigm Digital (CIDM) files to sell 2.9M common shares for holders
Evogene (EVGN) 5M share Secondary priced at $14.75
Forestar Group (FOR) files to sell 5.4M tangible equity units
FreeSeas (FREE) files to sell 75M shares of common stock for holders
Navigator Holdings (NVGS) 12M share IPO priced at $19.00
Sequans (SQNS) 12.5M share Spot Secondary priced at $1.80


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/_7q1Z5TZhrs/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Just The Right Amount Of Bad Overnight News Offsets Latest Taper Tantrum

Following yesterday’s latest Taper Tantrum, it was critical to get a smattering of bad global overnight news to provide the ammunition for the algos that not all in the world is fine and the easy monetary policy will continue indefinitely pushing stocks ever higher at the expense of the global economy. Sure enough first China, and then Europe complied, following the biggest China Flash PMI miss and drop in 6 months, followed shortly thereafter by a miss and a drop in the Eurozone Composite PMI down from 51.9 to 51.5, below expectations of an increase to 52.0, primarily on the back of a decline in the Service PMI from 51.6 to 50.9, with 51.9 expected even as the Mfg PMI rose modestly from 51.3 to 51.5. The country breakdown showed a significant deterioration in France and an improvement in Germany.

This is broken down in the chart below:

But the biggest overnight driver by a wide margin was the Yen, which tumbled nearly 100 pips and the USDJPY hit an overnight high of just over 100.90, which pushed the Nikkei up by almost 2%, and kept the futures well bid. However, what has confused algos in recent trading is the expected denial by Draghi of a negative interest rate, which while good for the EURJPY that drives the ES, what is the flipside is that this means less easing by the ECB, and thus interpreting the data does not result in a clear BTFD signal. Which may be a problem because should stocks close red today it will be the first 4 day drop in who knows how long.

Looking at the day ahead, the US data calendar features initial jobless claims, PPI and the Philly Fed survey. Elsewhere the Senate Banking Committee has scheduled a vote today on the nomination of Janet Yellen to be the next Fed chair. Democrats hold a two-vote lead on the 22-member committee. The Fed’s Bullard speaks again today, together with Lacker and Powell.

Overnight headline bulletin from Bloomberg and Ran:

  • Euribor curve reversed some of the bull flattening observed yesterday following reports that the ECB said to weigh -0.1% deposit rate if more easing needed, with  Draghi today stating that negative rates discussed in last meeting and no news since then. EUR also benefited from the latest comments by the head of the central bank.
  • RBA Stevens said that the RBA remains open-minded on currency intervention.
  • USD/JPY continues to test 101.00 level, supported by favourable interest rate differential flows and comments by BOJ’s Kuroda who said that the BOJ has room to  conduct more easing.
  • Stocks traded lower in Europe this morning as market participants reacted to the release of the FOMC meeting minutes and also digested the release of somewhat mixed Eurozone PMI data.
  • Treasuries little changed, 10Y yield highest since mid-September, 2/10 steepest since August after Fed minutes yesterday signaled tapering possible “at next few meetings.”
  • Pimco predicts 10Y yields will be capped near 3% into 2015 even with the Fed beginning to trim asset purchases as early as January
  • Euro-area manufacturing expanded for a fifth month in November, while Chinese factory output growth cooled; Germany’s PMI manufacturing 52.5 vs 52 est., services 54.5 vs 53 est.
  • A measure of new orders at U.K. factories rose to the highest in almost two decades in November and expectations for the next three months improved, the Confederation of British Industry said
  • The Bank of Japan will need to postpone the time-frame for achieving a 2% inflation target as it refrains from enlarging its asset-purchase program, economists forecast in a Bloomberg News survey
  • States and insurers are hoping to bypass the troubled Obamacare exchanges, a sign of skepticism that the Obama administration will meet its goal by the end of November to fix the technical problems plaguing the web site
  • If they miss the deadline, millions of Americans may find themselves without health insurance next year.
  • Sovereign yields higher, EU peripheral spreads tighten. Japan stocks higher while other Asian markets decline; Asian stocks excluding China, European stocks fall, U.S. equity-index futures gain. WTI crude, copper lower; gold gains

 

Main US events:

  • US: Initial jobless claims, cons 335k (14:30)
  • US: Fed’s Powell (15:45), Lacker (18:30), Bullard (19:00)

Market Recap from RanSquawk

Stocks traded lower this morning as market participants reacted to the release of the FOMC meeting minutes and also digested the release of somewhat mixed Eurozone PMI data. Still, as the session progressed, stocks managed to move off their worst levels, with flows into riskier assets encouraged by lower trading bonds and also comments by Merkel who said that Europe needs to boost growth. Nevertheless, US equity futures have outperformed their European counterparts, with some of the outperformance attributed to analysts at GS who stated that the S&P 500 will rise 6% and reach 1900 at year-end 2014 and that US GDP growth will accelerate to 3% in 2014. In other news, even though the BoJ voted unanimously to keep monetary policy unchanged, the Nikkei 225 index advanced to its highest level since May 23rd, supported by broad based JPY weakness which stemmed from favourable interest rate differential flows. The move higher by the pair and the domestic stock index was also aided by the latest foreign investors’ net buying data of Japanese equities which jumped to some USD 13bln worth last week, the biggest amount in seven months. Of note, AUD came under broad based selling pressure this morning, with AUD/USD breaking below the 100DMA line in the process after RBA’s Stevens said that the RBA remains open-minded on currency intervention. Going forward, market participants will get to digest the latest weekly jobs report, PPI and also Philadelphia Fed Business Outlook reports.

Asian Headlines

The BoJ votes unanimously to keep monetary policy unchanged; BoJ’s Kiuchi proposed ending 2% target in mid-term to long term; proposal defeated by 8-1 vote. The BoJ said will make policy adjustments as needed will ease until 2% inflation is stable and expects Japan’s moderate recovery going forward. They added that uncertainties remain high for Japan’s economy and Japan CPI is likely to rise gradually. This morning, BOJ’s Kuroda said that the BOJ has room to conduct more easing and to adjust policy without hesitation as needed.

Chinese HSBC Manufacturing PMI (Nov) M/M 50.4 vs. Exp. 50.8 (Prev. 50.9); New Export Orders (Nov) 49.4 (Prev. 51.3); 3 month low.

– HSBC economist Hongbin Qu said China’s growth momentum softened a little in November, as the HSBC Flash China

Manufacturing PMI moderated due to the weak new export orders and slowing pace of restocking activities.

Goldman Sachs also raises China 2014 GDP forecast to 7.8% from 7.7%; raises India 2014 GDP growth forecast to 5.5% from 5.4%. Goldman Sachs upgrades China and Taiwan stocks to overweight adding that the MSCI AXJ is to gain 13% in dollar terms in 2014.

EU & UK Headlines

ECB’s Draghi says negative rates discussed in last policy meeting and no news since then.

– ECB did not act because it sees deflation risk materializing in Euro area, still expects inflation to return gradually to levels below but close to 2%.

– One concern is effect of rate cut on some countries.

– Is aware rate cut has raised some concerns.

– ECB cut rates to restore appropriate safety margins.

Eurozone Composite PMI (Nov A) M/M 51.5 vs Exp. 52.0 (Prev. 51.9)
Eurozone Serv
ices PMI (Nov A) M/M 50.9 vs Exp. 51.9 (Prev. 51.6)
Eurozone Manufacturing PMI (Nov A) M/M 51.5 vs Exp. 51.5 (Prev. 51.3)

German Services PMI (Nov A) M/M 54.5 vs Exp. 53.0 (Prev. 52.9)
German Manufacturing PMI (Nov A) M/M 52.5 vs Exp. 52.0 (Prev. 51.7)

French Services PMI (Nov P) M/M 48.8 vs Exp. 51.0 (Prev. 50.9) – 4 month low
French Manufacturing PMI (Nov P) M/M 47.8 vs Exp. 49.5 (Prev. 49.1) – 6 month low

France and Spain successfully tapped markets this morning, both selling at the top end of expected range. The DMO also sold GBP 4.75bln of 1.75% 2019 Gilt which led to immediate weakness given the lacklustre bidding data and higher than prev. tail.

UK CBI Trends Total Orders (Nov) M/M 11 vs Exp. 1 (Prev. -4) – Highest since 1995.

UK Public Sector Net Borrowing (Oct) M/M 6.4bln vs Exp. 5.1bln (Prev. 9.4bln, Rev 8.6bln) – UK budget deficit narrows as sales taxes and stamp duty increase.

– UK Public Finances (PSNCR) (Oct) M/M -16.8bln vs Prev. -0.6bln (Rev. -0.5bln)

– UK PSNB ex Interventions (Oct) M/M 8.1bln vs Exp. 7.5bln (Prev. 11.1bln, Rev. 10.3bln)

Barclays month-end extensions: Sterling Aggr (+0.06y)

Barclays month-end extensions: Euro Aggr (+0.04y)

US Headlines

Analysts at GS who stated that the S&P 500 will rise 6% and reach 1900 at year-end 2014 and that US GDP growth will accelerate to 3% in 2014. Also, buybacks and dividends will grow by 25% to USD 960bln and account for 45% of cash usage by S&P 500 firms in 2014, the highest share since 2007.

PIMCO’s Crescenzi sees 10y Treasury Yield near 3% and a Fed taper by March.

Barclays month-end extensions: Treasuries (+0.10y) – Of note, although the avg. is around 0.06y, larger than avg. increase had been expected given the 3y, 10y and 30y refunding auctions last week.

Equities

The positive sentiment that was evident overnight in Asia which also saw the Nikkei 225 index finish up at its highest level since May 23rd failed to carry over into the European session, where stocks traded lower as markets reacted to the FOMC minutes and mixed EU PMIs. The cautious sentiment supported the more defensive sectors, with health care and utilities outperforming. On a more positive note, analysts at Goldman Sachs stated that buybacks and dividends will grow by 25% to USD 960bln and account for 45% of cash usage by S&P 500 firms in 2014, the highest share since 2007.

Goldman Sachs FX-trading revenue has fallen during Q3 following a wrong-way bet in the FX market for USD/JPY, press reports indicated that the bank lost more than USD 1bln on currency trades during the third quarter.

FX

USD/JPY advanced to its highest level since early July, supported by favourable interest rate differential flows as market participants reacted to the release of the latest FOMC meeting minutes which noted that Fed taper is likely in coming months on better data and that most FOMC members said that IOER cut could be worth considering. AUD came under broad based selling pressure this morning, with AUD/USD breaking below the 100DMA line in the process after RBA’s Stevens said  that the RBA remains open-minded on currency intervention. Despite the aggressive selling pressure, the move lower failed to erase touted 0.9250 barrier level. Consequent AUD weakness saw EUR/AUD move above its 100DMA line and to its highest level since late October, which when combined with firmer trading EUR/JPY cross ensured that despite mixed EU PMIs, EUR/USD moved back to unchanged on the session.

 

Commodities

Iran and world powers have ended their first session after less ten minutes, however, ‘this was just a brief introductory session’ according to one diplomat in Geneva. It was later reported by an Iranian negotiator that talks are now entering a critical phase.

According to an Iranian news agency, paramilitary forces have concluded their maneuvers on an island near the strategic oil tanker shipping lanes through the Strait of Hormuz.

BofAML sees oil prices curbed by a stronger USD and weaker growth.

Libya’s crude output expected at 250,000 bpd tomorrow with the nations EL Feel oil field at full output tomorrow of 83,000 bpd according to a NOC spokesman.

China refined copper imports up 26.85% Y/Y at 292,620 tonnes according to customs. October refined copper exports up 14.39% Y/Y at 14,601 tonnes.

October primary aluminium exports up 112.32% Y/Y at 9,296 tonnes. Primary aluminium imports up 1.79% Y/Y at 49,789 tonnes. Refined zinc imports up 125.6% Y/Y at 74,391 tonnes. Refined nickel and alloy imports down 12.66% Y/Y at 15,315 tonnes.

Russian Gold and Forex Reserve (Nov 15) W/W 507.7bln vs Prev. 510.8bln.

China September gold output at 37.642 tons, according to China gold association.

 

SocGen’s recap of key macro and FX events:

It didn’t take much for the EUR and euribor futures to respond to the headline that the ECB is considering a “mini deposit rate-cut” if more easing is needed. The central bank described inflation risks as “balanced” after the refi rate cut to 0.25% last month so unless it feels it is underestimating the downside pressure on prices in the December forecasts, a deposit rate cut should not be imminent. The amount banks have on deposit with the ECB has dropped from over EUR800bn at the peak in 2012 to EUR43.8bn as of last week. The minutes of the Fomc meeting released yesterday stated that tapering could happen at one of the next few meetings, though as ever the timing will be dependent on better data (our call is March-14). Most Fomc participants said a cut in the IOER could be worth considering. The USD strengthened across the board in Asia with USD/JPY motoring to a 100.85 high and 10y swaps reaching 2.86%.

The door to lower deposit rate in the euro area has been wide open since the early summer and technically the ECB has assured us that it is technically ready to deploy this weapon. Given the discord on the governing council, it is perhaps the highest and realistically achievable as the central bank digs deeper into its emergency toolbox. How potent a mini deposit rate cut to -0.10% from 0.00% turns out to be (for the EUR and the economy) may emerge right before we cross that bridge if overseas money market funds reduce their EUR denominated security holdings. But so far, the price action suggests it is the only tool that is genuinely striking fear into the heart of EUR bulls. The remarks on the deposit rate were sourced to two people with “official knowledge of the debate” and this now ostensibly puts the onus on the speech of ECB president Draghi at 11:00 cet in Berlin (attended by German Chancellor Merkel). Without the central bank jawboning, and despite a stronger than expected start to Q4 for US retails sales, EUR/USD would have logged an eight successive day of gains yesterday. The outside day after a close below 1.3488 constitutes a sell signal. Short-term support runs at 1.3383/75.

Flash eurozone PMI data are forecast to show small declines in manufacturing and services activity in November, though the indices should stay comfortably above the 50-level signalling expansion. Spain will auction 2017 benchmark paper and France is preparing to sell 2016 and 2018 OATs. US data today are forecast to show a fall in initial claims to 335k, whilst annual PPI inflation is expected to have stayed unchanged at 0.3%. A drop to 15.0 from 19.8 is pencilled in for the Philly Fed survey.

DB’s Jim Reid concludes the overnight recap:

Markets skidded a little yesterday as the late US session yesterday proved that the taper does matter, the only debate for markets is really how much it matters. The S&P 500 dropped around 10 points (close -0.36%) after the latest FOMC minutes were perhaps on the hawkish side as it was difficult to rule out the December taper on the streng
th of what was released. Indeed the committee openly discussed how they “could decide to slow the pace of purchases at one of its next few meetings.” As DB’s Joe Lavorgna points out, at the time of the meeting payrolls appeared to be losing some momentum with September at just 148k, and with concerns about the economic consequences of the government shutdown. So they now have arguably less to worry about than they did at this meeting. We still think they won’t taper until March at the earliest but Joe thinks the strong payroll number that he expects in 2 weeks could be enough to pull the trigger. It will be a fascinating run up to Christmas. To taper ahead of YE would likely be negative for markets as there hasn’t been enough consistently strong data for markets to calmly accept a handover from the huge external support to organic growth. As we said we don’t think it happens and therefore markets will probably be higher/tighter at year end but it’s a closer call than it was 2 weeks ago.

Aside from the tapering debate, the FOMC minutes revealed that the Fed continues to grapple with strengthening forward guidance as a means of driving a psychological wedge between QE tapering and eventual rate hikes. But despite all the recent talk of lowering the unemployment threshold for rate hikes, it was somewhat surprising that only “a couple of participants” favoured reducing the 6.5% threshold. Indeed a number of other participants raised concerns about what a move would do in terms of market perceptions of the durability of the FOMC’s commitment to the thresholds. There was also some discussion about setting a quantitative floor for inflation, under which the Fed would not hike rates, but again the benefits of doing this were considered “uncertain and likely to be rather modest”. The Committee also discussed a reduction of interest on excess reserves as a means of signalling lower-forlonger, but the benefits were judged to be “small”. So for now it seems we are left with Yellen/Bernanke’s assurances that Fed policy will remain accommodative for some time to come even after QE begins to moderate, and that rate hike thresholds are not necessarily triggers for action.

As alluded to above, markets hit a bit of turbulence late in the US session but it was also interesting to see the 7bp selloff in 10yr UST yields in the several hours prior to the release of FOMC minutes. It’s not exactly clear what drove this but the Twitter-sphere was awash with talk of a “bombshell” in the FOMC minutes – which didn’t eventuate. The +12bp intraday move (+9bp on the day) in UST yields was almost as large in magnitude as the +15bp selloff following the bumper October payrolls report two Fridays ago. LATAM EM did predictably poorly as the UST selloff took hold, and EM credit spreads closed at the wides. US credit held in reasonably well but Gold dropped 2.5% and we’re currently not too far away (around 4%) from retesting the June lows of $1200/oz. The stronger dollar drove some of the weakness in EURUSD (-0.73%) but a Bloomberg report suggesting that the ECB was weighing a negative deposit rate was responsible for much of the drop. The Bloomberg report did not contain too much other detail and cited two anonymous ECB sources. But it does come after a lot of recent public commentary from ECB officials suggesting additional stimulus is a policy option. Talk of negative interest rates wasn’t just confined to the ECB yesterday. The Fed’s Bullard, who is considered a bit of a bellwether on the FOMC, commented that he would like to study the possibility of negative rates on reserves as an incentive to stimulate bank lending. Bullard also mentioned that a December taper was definitely on the table if we get a strong November jobs report.

Turning to Asia, this month’s global flash PMIs have gotten off to a softer start following a weaker-than-expected Chinese HSBC manufacturing PMI (50.4 vs 50.8). It’s the first month-on-month drop in the China HSBC PMI in five months but the running three-month average 50.5 is still the highest level since April 2013. Though most Asian equities have reacted negatively to the PMI, Japanese equities are outperforming today (Nikkei +1.6%) after a Japanese government panel recommended that the country’s $1.2trillion Government Pension Investment Fund should diversify its portfolio to more aggressive investments. USDJPY is up 0.4% today. The Bank of Japan policy meeting was pretty much in line with market expectations and the Nikkei and USDJPY were unchanged following the announcement.

Looking at the day ahead, flash Euroarea PMIs will be setting the tone early today. Consensus is expecting a small pickup in both manufacturing and service PMIs including in France where there has been some concern of late. Merkel and Draghi will be speaking in Berlin at a conference. Draghi’s speech is titled. “Strategies for more growth”. The US data calendar features initial jobless claims, PPI and the Philly Fed survey. Elsewhere the Senate Banking Committee has scheduled a vote today on the nomination of Janet Yellen to be the next Fed chair. Democrats hold a two-vote lead on the 22-member committee. The Fed’s Bullard speaks again today, together with Lacker and Powell.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/VvdkCG2tT9A/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Euro Surges As Mario Draghi Scuttles Negative Rate Rumor

Yesterday when a “source” released a rumor about a possible -0.1% European deposite rate, we had a quick assessment.

We were a little off on the timing, but once again spot on in principle, and moments ago Mario Draghi just said that negative rates were discussed in the last policy meeting and there was no news since then, that a rate cut has raised “some concers” and that certainly one should not infer negative rates. In other words, just like in May speculation is one thing, enactment of NIRP – something totally different. And just like that our other assessment of yesterday’s “leak” was also confirmed:

And so now the ECB knows that the most it can get out of the EUR on a NIRP rumor is about 100-150 pips.

Finally, as we observed in “An ECB Negative Deposit Rate? Don’t Hold Your Breath, Says Citi“, this is just what Citi also warned. Some of Draghi’s other comments:

  • DRAGHI SAYS DON’T TRY TO INFER NEGATIVE DEPOSIT RATES
  • DRAGHI SAYS HE IS AWARE RATE CUT HAS RAISED SOME CONCERNS
  • DRAGHI SAYS ONE CONCERN IS EFFECT OF RATE CUT ON SOME COUNTRIES
  • RATE CUT WAS AMID SUSTAINED DOWNWARD DRIFT IN INFLATION
  • DRAGHI SAYS GRADUAL DISINFLATION HAS BEEN BROAD BASED
  • DRAGHI: EURO AREA MAY HAVE PROLONGED PERIOD OF LOW INFLATION
  • DRAGHI: RATE CUT WASN’T BECAUSE ECB SEES DEFLATION RISK

As expected, the EUR pairs surge. Which means we are back to using the “ECB does QE” rumor as the default “forward daily guidance” on the EURUSD and EURJPY closing price.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/NA7ZFh2Uk4Q/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Banks: The Right Thing to Do

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When the US shutdown sent shivers and ripples through the financial markets in October with the fear that the federal government would end up defaulting on the repayment of its debts, the banks decided to set up contingency plans.

It turns out that JP Morgan and other banks decided that in the event of the default on payment then the bank would stand as guarantor to the federal government and end up forking out $5 billion so that its customers would not be at a loss. There are therefore two questions that arise immediately with this statement. First of all just how far can we believe what the banks are telling us and secondly shouldn’t we have let them dig deep into their pockets and pay some of the money back that they have been given since the financial crisis and are still getting to line their vaults from the state even today?

Playing Games

It has been reported that JP Morgan spent $100 million on contingency plans to deal with the growing crisis over the US budget and the federal government shutdown that ended on October 17th 2013. That’s just one of many banks that had $100 million to spend on the updating of computer systems that were intended to deal with fiscal emergencies. Consultants were taken on to create scenarios and hypothetical models to see how the markets would react and how they would deal with it.

They were playing games in the boardrooms, while the people were out of work for 16 days. They were playing at toy soldiers while the federal government was closed and reduced to essential departments and the policymakers and the politicians were chin-wagging over whether they could pass the budget or not and allow the Tea Party to gain a foothold on US politics (although the Tea Party is losing popularity in the US and has dropped since 2010). It comes to something when people are paid to squander money. They have far too much those banksters to know what to do with.

Still, one saving grace is that they will be able to put it to use again on January 15th when government spending comes to an end, unless it gets another green light from Congress. They will have a second shot too on February 7thwhen the easing of the enforcement of the debt limit will also be over in the US. Or probably, the banks will have to spend $100 million apiece again, because the data will be out of date by then and the parameters, coefficients and calculations will no longer hold.

The Right Thing to Do

Chief Executive of JP Morgan Chase & Co Jamie Damon stated “we’re going to fund. It’s the right thing to do”. The right thing to do? Since when did the banks in the US or in any other country do the right thing? Please! Pray do tell!

Bank: JP Morgan prepares for the worst

Bank: JP Morgan prepares for the worst

Are we to believe that the banks have turned over a new leaf and become morally unquestionable? Have the banks decided to do the ‘right thing’ because it’s good for society, or because they will get the benefit of doing so? I can’t see any bank anywhere in the world doing social-charity stunts for the public and the federal government. If they have paid out millions in contingency plans, then their hope is obviously that if they prop up the state, they will be able to demand a higher return on that investment and get ten times their money back through charging interest.

Calculations put the amount of money that JP Morgan would have had to pay out at roughly $5 billion per month. Of course that would be an advance on the federal government and so the latter would have to reimburse the sum plus interest. The US citizens that were being propped up would have nothing more than an advance (with interest because it boils down to a loan) on their salaries that had been cut by the federal government. That means that banks like JP Morgan would be earning on their investment twice. Of course that’s the right thing to do. John Pierpont would be proud of you! It’s hardly suprising that the banks were apparently on the phone every day to the federal government and despite the fact that the conversation was very one-sided, they were begging to negotiate around a table over who would get the best pickings of the US shutdown. It’s surprising that in a country that has no money left, the banks still have tons of it stockpiled somewhere ready to be used when the state collapses (if it hasn’t already).

Economists and bankers have never in the past been able to adequately prepare for the way the markets might react. They rarely see anything coming even when it’s standing there on the doorstep knocking on the door. If the markets were that easy to predict, we would all be rich, wouldn’t we?

October’s fight over the budget (which had nothing to do with the budget and everything to do with politics) is the third fight in the past two years in the US. Back in 2011, the US got downgraded by Standard & Poor’s. Then in 2013 the US budget sequestration took place, with automatic spending cuts (with cuts taking place from 2014 until 2021).

The October fisticuffs between the Republicans and the Democrats was the third one. Third time lucky? Maybe the fourth time lucky; roll on January! Maybe it should have been time for the banks to bail US out for once!

Originally posted: Banks: The Right Thing to Do

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Technical Analysis: Bear Expanding Triangle | Bull Expanding Triangle | Bull Falling Wedge Bear Rising Wedge High & Tight Flag

 


    



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U.S. To Reach Real Debt Limit in March (or June) 2014

By EconMatters


It was just last month that U.S. lawmakers brokered a deal suspending the debt ceiling through February 7 to end the government shutdown, and the Treasury Department could continue borrowing.  After February 7, Treasury will still be able to use the “extraordinary measures” to stave off default.    

 

With the current national debt at an unprecedented $17.1 trillion (One analyst thinks it could double to $34 trillion), any reasonably intelligent person would wonder how long this kicking-the-can band-aid will last.  Both the Bipartisan Policy Center and Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew have estimated that the extraordinary measures would run out in a month or so, i.e. by March, 2014.

 

Now according to a report issued today by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), U.S. may be able to push the debt ceiling deadline to as late as June because the income tax receipts around the April 15 tax deadline may provide more cash cushion to meet scheduled obligations.

 

From CBO:

Overall, the federal government is expected to run a significant deficit for fiscal year 2014….. Given the volume of the government’s daily cash flows and the uncertainty about the magnitude of key transactions…., the Treasury could exhaust its extraordinary measures and authority to borrow as early as March or as late as May or June

 

 

How did America get itself into this predicament?  Slowly but surely… by outspending its revenues.  The chart below from USA Today illustrates Federal Revenues vs. Federal Spending since 1996 (in trillions of current dollar).  

 

Graphic Source: USA Today

 

Meanwhile, OECD is already freaking out about the prospect of a U.S. debt ceiling bind.  In its global economic outlook presentation yesterday, OECD included these three scary charts to demonstrate the dire economic consequence to the U.S. and the rest of the world with a debt ceiling brinkmanship for an entire year.

 

 

 

 

Further Reading: U.S. Structural Jobs Paradigm

 

It is highly improbable that the U.S. Congress would risk their re-election by letting the debt limit gridlock (and government shutdown) go for a whole year.  Nevertheless, I do think OECD is concerned about the negative impact on the already fragile global economy and stock markets, even for just a few weeks.  

 

Mind you that raising the debt ceiling does not resolve the root cause of debt limit breach. To avoid the recurring debt ceiling showdown, Washington has to address how to cut federal spending and/or increase revenues.  Unfortunately, any federal revenue increase, in my view, will involve some kind of tax increase mostly to the middle income class.  And cutting the federal spending seems to be in the constant mode of one step forward, two steps back.

 

Unlike Fed’s QE which benefits mostly the top rich 1% (and should be ‘tapered’!), federal spending, however wasteful it may be at times, actually does get injected into the real economy. So when billions of federal spending disappears from the economy, it will translate into revenue and employment loss affecting many government contractors and the middle income America.  Furthermore, whate
ver savings from spending cut that may have materialized tends to get sucked away by some money pit colossally mis-managed government program such as ObamaCare, whose bills eventually will need to be footed, again by no other than the middle income class.     

 

While the middle income class has been a major force reshaping America since World War II, I doubt there’s much juice left to help dig the country out of this debt trap.  All in all, 2014 should be a year of several critical decisions for the United States on its debt limit, monetary (QE) program, or maybe Obama would go down in history as the ObamaCare President minting the $1 trillion platinum coin?        


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Obama's "Success Story" Woman Repriced Out Of Obamacare

Submitted by Michael Krieger of Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

Meet Jessica Sanford. Upon the rollout of Obamacare she was 1 of maybe 5 people in the entire nation who was able to access the website and actually sign up through one of the state exchanges. In her case, it was the Washington exchange.

She was so thrilled about her purchase that she wrote a letter to President Barrack Obama expressing her undying gratitude.

Since her letter was quite possibly the only positive letter the Administration received, the President proudly read it aloud during his Obamacare speech on October 21st.

The only problem is that a few days later she was repriced out of Obamacare. So she’s now uninsured again…

 

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/vSltbrvtm-g/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Obama’s “Success Story” Woman Repriced Out Of Obamacare

Submitted by Michael Krieger of Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

Meet Jessica Sanford. Upon the rollout of Obamacare she was 1 of maybe 5 people in the entire nation who was able to access the website and actually sign up through one of the state exchanges. In her case, it was the Washington exchange.

She was so thrilled about her purchase that she wrote a letter to President Barrack Obama expressing her undying gratitude.

Since her letter was quite possibly the only positive letter the Administration received, the President proudly read it aloud during his Obamacare speech on October 21st.

The only problem is that a few days later she was repriced out of Obamacare. So she’s now uninsured again…

 

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/vSltbrvtm-g/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Goldman's Top Ten 2014 Market Themes

The following Top Ten Market Themes, represent the broad list of macro themes from Goldman Sachs' economic outlook that they think will dominate markets in 2014.

  1. Showtime for the US/DM Recovery
  2. Forward guidance harder in an above-trend world
  3. Earn the DM equity risk premium, hedge the risk
  4. Good carry, bad carry
  5. The race to the exit kicks off
  6. Decision time for the ‘high-flyers’
  7. Still not your older brother’s EM…
  8. …but EM differentiation to continue
  9. Commodity downside risks grow
  10. Stable China may be good enough

They summarize their positive growth expectations: if and when the period of stability will give way to bigger directional moves largely depends on how re-accelerating growth forces the hands of central banks to move ahead of everybody else. And, in practice, that boils down to the question of whether the Fed will be able to prevent the short end from selling off; i.e. it's all about the Fed.

Top Ten Market Thesme For 2014

1. Showtime for the US/DM Recovery

  • US growth to accelerate to 3%+
  • Lower growth, but equivalent acceleration in Europe
  • Fiscal drag eases outside Japan
  • DM acceleration the main positive impulse
  • Large output gap still in DM, keeping inflation at bay

Market issues: Our 2013 outlook was dominated by the notion that underlying private sector healing in the US was being masked by significant fiscal drag. As we move into 2014 and that drag eases, we expect the long-awaited shift towards above-trend growth in the US finally to occur, spurred by an acceleration in private consumption and business investment. While the US (and the UK) represents the cleanest version of that story, we forecast a similar acceleration in GDP growth from lower levels in the Euro area. Although growth is likely to remain unbalanced across the Euro area, some fiscal relief and supportive financial conditions should push GDP growth to just above 1% for the year. Japan is the exception to this rule, where increased fiscal drag from the consumption tax hike in the spring is likely to offset other forces for acceleration, leaving growth stable. Nevertheless, our forecast of an improving domestic impulse is to a reasonable degree a DM-wide story. This improving DM impulse should also help EM growth. But with less slack, more inflation and ongoing imbalances, there is less scope for acceleration and the improvement in growth is more externally driven.

An improving global (and US) growth picture is widely forecast but, in our view, also still doubted in the investor community because of the stop-start nature of the recovery hitherto and the possibility of a renewed US fiscal logjam in early 2014. We therefore still see room for markets to price a better cyclical story or, perhaps more accurately, increased confidence that cyclical risk is diminishing. On balance, that should make 2014 another year in which equities and bond yields move higher together. On our forecasts, despite the outperformance of DM assets, our confidence is highest in the US and DM cyclical picture and we still favour assets exposed to that theme. While the growth picture is set to improve – and the ‘volatility’ of growth views may fall – the absolute growth trajectory is only clearly above trend in the US and still perhaps a shade below trend globally. So it is still an open question whether this kind of picture is enough to fuel real outperformance of global cyclical equities – although our bias is clearly to lean in that direction.

2. Forward guidance harder in an above-trend world

  • G4 policy rates still at zero through 2014 as Fed firms up guidance
  • Low and anchored inflation and expectations in the G4 as output gaps linger
  • Above-trend growth will fuel bouts of doubt about easy policy
  • Only a gradual normalisation of real rates

Market issues: Despite the improvement in growth, we expect G4 central banks to continue to signal that rates are set to remain on hold near the zero bound for a prolonged period, faced with low inflation and high unemployment. In the US, our forecast is still for no hikes until 2016 and we expect the commitment to low rates to be reinforced in the next few months. Against that, we expect a gradual tapering in bond purchases to begin, most likely in March. But the broad message from a Fed led by Janet Yellen is likely to be reassurance that financial conditions will remain easy and we expect a common desire among G4 central banks to lean against the kind of rapid tightening in financial conditions that we saw a few months ago. Our new 2017 forecasts reinforce the notion that when US tightening begins it may proceed more rapidly than the market is pricing. This is also consistent with recent Fed research into the optimal path for the Fed funds rate.

The combination of still-easy policy and improving growth should, on balance, be a friendly one for equities and other risky assets, while preventing sharp increases in longterm yields. But, as growth improves, the market is likely to experience bouts of doubt about the firmness of the commitment to forward guidance. The experience of the Bank of England in trying to keep expectations of rate hikes in 2015 at bay is a reminder of the fact that, confronted with above-trend growth, markets will reassess the odds of the macro thresholds being reached, and reprice the path for rate policy accordingly.

We therefore expect to see periods of pressure on rates markets, followed by reassurance from policymakers. As a result, the dance between improving growth and rising rates is likely to remain a key axis in 2014. This is particularly true during periods in which a dovish view is well reflected and the front-end risk premium is low (US 1y1y OIS is back at 27bp). It is the ‘belly’ of the curve – the point at which tightening is likely to occur – that looks most vulnerable to this kind of volatility. Without a shift in front-end rate views, it may be hard to push long-term yields rapidly higher. But even with anchored policy rates, the improving growth profile is likely to put moderate but steady upward pressure on longerdated US and European yields at a pace that is somewhat faster than the forwards. So, while we would look for assets with exposure to the growth recovery, our bias is to avoid areas with significant vulnerability to higher rates.

3. Earn the DM equity risk premium, hedge the risk

  • Lower risk premia across assets than last year
  • DM equity risk premium narrower but still historically high
  • Multiple expansion possible from above-average levels if real rates stay low
  • But earnings growth may need to pick up some of the burden
  • Rising bond yields would close the equity-bond gap from the other side

Market issues: Over the past few years, we have seen very large risk premium compression across a wide range of areas. While not at 2007 levels, credit spreads have narrowed to below long-term averages and asset market volatility has fallen. Even in a friendly growth and policy environment such as the one we anticipate, this is likely to make for lower return prospects (although more appealing in a volatility-adjusted sense). In equities, in particular, the key question we confront is whether a rally can continue given above-average multiples. We think it can. In part, this is because moderate earnings growth should continue as top-lin
e growth does more of the running relative to margins. But the equity risk premium remains historically high. Put simply, if real 10-year US yields remain at or under 1% for the next couple of years, as the forwards are pricing, and if our forecast of above-trend growth is also correct, we think it would be hard to justify an unusually large spread for earnings yields to real bond yields. Multiples could then legitimately be higher – and higher-than-average – but in a context where the real risk-free rate was unusually low.

This broad story is also likely to play out in European equity markets, where arguably there is a greater risk premium embedded relative to the US, and the scope for margin expansion is also greater. While we worry about the lack of a resolution to the deeper institutional and debt sustainability issues, we doubt these will come more sharply into focus in an environment of improving growth. Given low inflation and a policy easing bias, this could help European equities – including banks – more than the currency.

The key risk to that story – beyond the failure of the growth recovery to materialise – is that real bond yields do not stay low and that the equity risk premium closes through pressure on bond markets. Our own forecasts see the risk premium closing from both sides. So we continue to like strategies that involve earning the DM equity risk premium through long equity positions, while trying to protect against the risk that US yields increase more rapidly than we or the markets expect, or that the market worries again about Fed exit. While short bond positions are the most direct form of that exposure (including towards the front end), we have highlighted the advantage of finding assets that are likely to reward investors even without a sharp move in rates, but that may move more rapidly with such a move. Long USD positions against gold, and some EM and commodity currencies fall into that camp.

4. Good carry, bad carry

  • Higher growth, anchored inflation supportive of low volatility on average
  • Risk premium more obvious lower down the capital structure
  • But spikes in rate volatility are the primary risk to carry strategies
  • Variations in carry not perfectly aligned with fundamental risk

Market issues: Our 2014 forecast of improving but still slightly below-trend global growth and anchored inflation describes an environment in which overall volatility may justifiably be lower. Markets have already moved a long way in this direction, but equity volatility has certainly been lower in prior cycles and forward pricing of volatility is still firmly higher than spot levels. In an environment of subdued macro volatility, the desire to earn carry is likely to remain strong, particularly if it remains hard to envisage significant upside to the growth picture. As always, the primary challenge is to identify places where the reward clearly exceeds these – and other – risks. Given how far spreads have compressed, that may require moving down the capital structure and more deeply into illiquid areas than before. Parts of high yield (HY) credit and subordinated debt for banks offer some of that profile.

We warned last year that termites were eating at the ‘search for yield’, particularly given the risk that longer-dated real risk-free rates could move higher. Even more than with long equity positions, this remains the primary risk to many carry strategies. But after a substantial shift already, the vulnerability to shocks here may ironically be lower than a year ago. We have made that argument in FX, where carry has more clearly increased in places and the underperformance of high-carry areas has increased. And we have shown in the EM context that some countries that offer similar carry in FX (or roll-down in rates) have very different fundamental risks.

We remain wary of owning assets for carry purposes where we do not think the underlying asset also has scope to appreciate (or a low risk of depreciation). But there may be scope to fund ‘good carry’ out of ‘bad carry’ areas within asset classes: high-yield credits versus investment grade (IG), and the more vulnerable EM credits and currencies against other comparable carry equivalents (more on this below).

5. The race to the exit kicks off

  • 2014 should see some DM and EM countries begin tightening
  • Market may begin to move away from pricing a ‘synchronised’ exit
  • Separation may become a driver of relative currency moves
  • Non-G4, EM likely to lead

Market issues: 2013 has already seen some EM central banks move to policy tightening. As the US growth picture improves – and the pressure on global rates builds – the focus on who may tighten monetary policy is likely to increase. As we described recently (Global Economics Weekly 13/33), the market is pricing a relatively synchronised exit among the major developed markets, even though their recovery profiles look different. Given that the timing of the first hike has commonly been judged to be some way off, this lack of differentiation is not particularly unusual. But the separation of those who are likely to move early and those who may move later is likely to begin in earnest in 2014.

We currently expect New Zealand, Norway and Sweden to hike first within the G10 in the second half of 2014. We still expect Australia to go against the grain with one more cut in early 2014. Within the G4, we see conditions for exit in the UK arriving earlier (but still in late 2015) than the others, and we expect more easing from the Bank of Japan – most likely in April. There is also the prospect of a further shift towards easing in the Euro area through LTROs and perhaps a deposit rate cut, especially if deflationary forces are stronger than forecast. These patterns are partly reflected by the market, but market pricing of the change in policy rates between now and the end of 2016 in the US, UK, Euro area, Sweden, Canada and Australia is still quite tightly clustered.

In general, our G4 forecasts are more dovish than the market, while our non-G4 views are not. We also expect Israel, Korea, Malaysia, Thailand and the Philippines within the EM universe to begin a tightening cycle in the second half of 2014. Our views on Israel and Korea in particular are more hawkish than the forwards in the next year or two. The growing separation of monetary policy profiles will likely be an increasingly important driver of relative currency moves. For instance, the logical upshot of our view of fresh easing by the BoJ (including purchases of equity ETFs) versus Fed tapering is support for another leg of $/Yen downside and Nikkei (and Topix) upside. A more positive view of the NZD versus the AUD is likely to be reinforced, and we may even see some of the weakness in the NOK and SEK from this year begin to reverse.

6. Decision time for the ‘high-flyers’

  • Stronger US, global recovery may highlight domestic imbalances elsewhere
  • Smaller economies with housing/credit booms may face them more actively
  • Fear of FX strength a constraint, but one that may be softening

Market issues: A number of smaller open economies have imported easy monetary policy from the US and Europe in recent years, in part to offset currency strength and in part to compensate for a weaker external environment. In a number of these places (Norway, Switzerland, Israel, Canada and, to a lesser extent, New Zealand and Sweden), house prices have appreciated and/or credit growth has pick
ed up. Central banks have generally tolerated those signs of emerging pressure given the external growth risks and the desire to avoid currency strength through a tighter policy stance. As the developed market growth picture improves, some of these ‘high flyers’ may reassess the balance of risks on this front.

Macro-prudential tightening has been the instrument of choice so far, but these dynamics could lead to a faster switch towards earlier interest rate tightening than in other places, consistent with the previous theme. The currency has played an important role in the assessments of central banks in most of these places. For several of them, the ideal combination would be for rates to be higher and currencies weaker. Israel and Canada arguably fall into this camp, as perhaps do Switzerland and New Zealand. The question in these economies is whether improving growth in the US and Europe is sufficient to alleviate the upward pressure on their currencies, thereby increasing the room for domestic policy rate hikes. For Sweden and Norway, the need for currency weakness is less clear, so the issue may be a more straightforward one of whether a tighter policy stance overall is needed. Of course, paying rates in some of these areas where our views are hawkish is complicated by negative carry and the downward drag of the G4 zero-rate environment. Short positions relative to receiving in places where we have a dovish view are one way to offset the carry cost, although this introduces other risks.

7. Still not your older brother’s EM…

  • Despite asset shifts, further need to address imbalances in several countries
  • Bouts of pressure on EM FX and rates likely
  • China and rate risks are better known, so pressure may be less acute
  • But EM unlikely to gain as much from global growth/low rates as they used to

Market issues: 2013 has proved to be a tough year for EM assets. 2014 is unlikely to see the same level of broad-based pressure. The combination of a sharp downgrade to expectations of China growth and risk alongside the worries about a hawkish Fed during the summer ‘taper tantrum’ are unlikely to be repeated with the same level of intensity. Moreover, after the initial shock and deleveraging and a significant repricing of assets, the fundamental vulnerabilities are lower. We still do not believe, however, that the adjustments in many places are complete.

EM FX is the asset class where we are most cautious, and the bouts of pressure in US rate markets are likely to be reflected here most directly. Although forward FX carry is now generally higher – and hence shorts are more costly – in several countries, we think it does not offer enough protection relative to the fundamental depreciation risks. And the need for depreciation comes not just from US rate adjustment but from the need to improve current account deficits.

Long-term yields in EM should continue to head north as curves steepen in the DM world. EM front ends are also likely to be at risk given the sensitivity to FX depreciation and US long rates in EM central bank reaction functions. But markets are pricing more tightening than we think central banks will deliver in many places – such as Turkey, South Africa and Brazil – and there may be periods in the year when the risk-reward for receiving rates in specific places improves. There may also be scope to combine receivers with long USD positions against EM currencies to offset some of the risks.

EM equities are better placed relative to other EM assets. The acceleration in DM growth should continue to help EM activity and, in an equity-friendly environment globally, EM equities (in local currency) should move higher in 2014 outside of the bouts of pressure on EM FX and rates. But given the continuing need to address domestic and external imbalances, it is harder to make the case for EM equity outperformance relative to DM, which has tended to characterise environments of accelerating global growth over the past decade. At the aggregate level, EM credit is likely to continue to perform broadly in line with equities – as it has this year – but differentiation across credits is likely to increase (see the next theme).

8. …but EM differentiation to continue

  • Penalties continue for CA deficits, low DM exposure, low GES, overheating
  • Not only the obvious candidates that need weaker currencies
  • Differentiation even among the most vulnerable as policy response varies

Market issues: 2013 saw countries with high current account deficits, high inflation, weak institutions and limited DM exposure punished much more heavily than the ‘DMs of EMs’, which had stronger current accounts and institutions, underheated economies and greater DM exposure. This is still likely to be the primary axis of differentiation in coming months, but in 2014 we would also expect to see greater differentiation within both these categories.

Within the most vulnerable countries, we could potentially see a greater separation between countries with credible tightening policies (Brazil, India) and those where imbalances are allowed to grow (Turkey). Places with hitherto sound, but deteriorating current account balances (Thailand and Malaysia) may be more affected, although they should be helped by the DM recovery; and the downside risks on commodities (which we discuss next) may exacerbate pressure on the commodity producers (South Africa and Chile). The EMs most likely to benefit from stronger DM demand (without being hurt by the higher rates that come in its train) are the underheated economies of Central and Eastern Europe (Poland, Czech Republic and Hungary), where we expect to see inflation-less accelerations, and Korea and Taiwan in North Asia.

There is also likely to be increased focus on the small number of countries showing more classic EM-style problems. The macro environment in Venezuela is deteriorating rapidly and we expect a large devaluation and further credit pressure. Argentina’s macro backdrop is also unfriendly. And we continue to think that Ukraine will choose to devalue and seek external support in the coming months. Given the idiosyncrasies in each case, our central case is that these issues will not create much contagion. But they may make the market less patient than in the past with any signs that others are flirting with more heterodox policy paths. And we do think there is insufficient credit risk premium priced into some higher-debt EM countries, both absolutely and compared with lower-debt EM and perhaps also the peripheral European economies.

9. Commodity downside risks grow

  • Lower prices in metals, beans, gold – at least later in 2014
  • Oil more stable but with downside risk
  • Shale still supporting demand pick-up from global recovery
  • Commodity producers still adjusting to the ‘new reality’

Market issues: Last year we pointed to the ongoing shift in our commodity views, ultimately towards downside price risk. The impact of supply responses to the period of extraordinary price pressure continues to flow through the system. And we are forecasting significant declines (15%+) through 2014 in gold, copper, iron ore and soybeans. Energy prices clearly matter most for the global outlook. Here ou
r views are more stable, although downside risk is growing over time and production losses out of Libya/Iran and other geopolitical risk is now playing a large role in keeping prices high. Relative to the past, shifting oil dynamics – especially increased shale production in the US – remain a key positive, in the sense that energy price constraints are unlikely to short-circuit an acceleration towards trend global growth. That continues to be an advantage for the recovery relative to the previous cycle.

Translating these downside pressures in commodities into market views is complicated by two factors. First, we expect these pressures mostly to become visible later in 2014. On that basis, it may be difficult to position early given the natural volatility going into an improving growth picture. Second, for iron ore in particular – where our downside view is strongest – direct trading is difficult. However, we do think the shifts in these markets add to the downside pressures on several of the commodity currencies, including the AUD (iron ore, copper), ZAR (gold), CLP (copper) and perhaps BRL (soybeans, iron ore).

These pressures are also likely to reinforce some of the other core themes discussed here – loosening what has been a key constraint on DM and global growth in recent years, keeping inflation subdued and preventing long rates from rising much above forwards. On the flipside, meaningful downside moves in oil and gold prices would alleviate some of the concerns around inflation and current account deficits in EMs such as India and Turkey.

10. Stable China may be good enough

  • China growth expectations have reset lower
  • Stable but unimpressive growth may be enough to reassure for now
  • Improving external backdrop may see market overlook medium-term risks
  • More support for Asian economies and markets, especially equities

Market issues: Expectations of Chinese growth have reset meaningfully lower as some of the medium-term problems around credit growth, shadow financing and local governance have been widely recognised over the past year. Some of these issues continue to linger: the risks from the credit overhang remain and policymakers are unlikely to be comfortable allowing growth to accelerate much. But the deep deceleration of mid-2013 has reversed and even our forecast of essentially flat growth (of about 7.5%) may be enough to comfort investors relative to their worst fears. The details from the recent Third Party Plenum were also more encouraging about the prospects for further market liberalisation and rural/land reform, and have boosted market sentiment.

At this juncture, the market pricing of China’s growth prospects is negative enough that this stability, alongside an improving external impulse, may be enough to be reassuring. Our China ‘risk factor’ has substantially underperformed market perceptions of US and Euro-related risks this year. If the market were to relax about China growth risk, this would help improve the case for EM equities and credit, and make long USD positions more risky. Our views on each of these areas remain a balancing act, as previous themes have elaborated, but this is one of the reasons why we are less negative across the board on EM assets, and why there is more need to discriminate across asset classes and countries. And so we are more open to China-sensitive exposures than last year, especially when they have other desirable features. We also think the continued strength of inflows will keep the CNY and CNH under upward pressure.


    



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Goldman’s Top Ten 2014 Market Themes

The following Top Ten Market Themes, represent the broad list of macro themes from Goldman Sachs' economic outlook that they think will dominate markets in 2014.

  1. Showtime for the US/DM Recovery
  2. Forward guidance harder in an above-trend world
  3. Earn the DM equity risk premium, hedge the risk
  4. Good carry, bad carry
  5. The race to the exit kicks off
  6. Decision time for the ‘high-flyers’
  7. Still not your older brother’s EM…
  8. …but EM differentiation to continue
  9. Commodity downside risks grow
  10. Stable China may be good enough

They summarize their positive growth expectations: if and when the period of stability will give way to bigger directional moves largely depends on how re-accelerating growth forces the hands of central banks to move ahead of everybody else. And, in practice, that boils down to the question of whether the Fed will be able to prevent the short end from selling off; i.e. it's all about the Fed.

Top Ten Market Thesme For 2014

1. Showtime for the US/DM Recovery

  • US growth to accelerate to 3%+
  • Lower growth, but equivalent acceleration in Europe
  • Fiscal drag eases outside Japan
  • DM acceleration the main positive impulse
  • Large output gap still in DM, keeping inflation at bay

Market issues: Our 2013 outlook was dominated by the notion that underlying private sector healing in the US was being masked by significant fiscal drag. As we move into 2014 and that drag eases, we expect the long-awaited shift towards above-trend growth in the US finally to occur, spurred by an acceleration in private consumption and business investment. While the US (and the UK) represents the cleanest version of that story, we forecast a similar acceleration in GDP growth from lower levels in the Euro area. Although growth is likely to remain unbalanced across the Euro area, some fiscal relief and supportive financial conditions should push GDP growth to just above 1% for the year. Japan is the exception to this rule, where increased fiscal drag from the consumption tax hike in the spring is likely to offset other forces for acceleration, leaving growth stable. Nevertheless, our forecast of an improving domestic impulse is to a reasonable degree a DM-wide story. This improving DM impulse should also help EM growth. But with less slack, more inflation and ongoing imbalances, there is less scope for acceleration and the improvement in growth is more externally driven.

An improving global (and US) growth picture is widely forecast but, in our view, also still doubted in the investor community because of the stop-start nature of the recovery hitherto and the possibility of a renewed US fiscal logjam in early 2014. We therefore still see room for markets to price a better cyclical story or, perhaps more accurately, increased confidence that cyclical risk is diminishing. On balance, that should make 2014 another year in which equities and bond yields move higher together. On our forecasts, despite the outperformance of DM assets, our confidence is highest in the US and DM cyclical picture and we still favour assets exposed to that theme. While the growth picture is set to improve – and the ‘volatility’ of growth views may fall – the absolute growth trajectory is only clearly above trend in the US and still perhaps a shade below trend globally. So it is still an open question whether this kind of picture is enough to fuel real outperformance of global cyclical equities – although our bias is clearly to lean in that direction.

2. Forward guidance harder in an above-trend world

  • G4 policy rates still at zero through 2014 as Fed firms up guidance
  • Low and anchored inflation and expectations in the G4 as output gaps linger
  • Above-trend growth will fuel bouts of doubt about easy policy
  • Only a gradual normalisation of real rates

Market issues: Despite the improvement in growth, we expect G4 central banks to continue to signal that rates are set to remain on hold near the zero bound for a prolonged period, faced with low inflation and high unemployment. In the US, our forecast is still for no hikes until 2016 and we expect the commitment to low rates to be reinforced in the next few months. Against that, we expect a gradual tapering in bond purchases to begin, most likely in March. But the broad message from a Fed led by Janet Yellen is likely to be reassurance that financial conditions will remain easy and we expect a common desire among G4 central banks to lean against the kind of rapid tightening in financial conditions that we saw a few months ago. Our new 2017 forecasts reinforce the notion that when US tightening begins it may proceed more rapidly than the market is pricing. This is also consistent with recent Fed research into the optimal path for the Fed funds rate.

The combination of still-easy policy and improving growth should, on balance, be a friendly one for equities and other risky assets, while preventing sharp increases in longterm yields. But, as growth improves, the market is likely to experience bouts of doubt about the firmness of the commitment to forward guidance. The experience of the Bank of England in trying to keep expectations of rate hikes in 2015 at bay is a reminder of the fact that, confronted with above-trend growth, markets will reassess the odds of the macro thresholds being reached, and reprice the path for rate policy accordingly.

We therefore expect to see periods of pressure on rates markets, followed by reassurance from policymakers. As a result, the dance between improving growth and rising rates is likely to remain a key axis in 2014. This is particularly true during periods in which a dovish view is well reflected and the front-end risk premium is low (US 1y1y OIS is back at 27bp). It is the ‘belly’ of the curve – the point at which tightening is likely to occur – that looks most vulnerable to this kind of volatility. Without a shift in front-end rate views, it may be hard to push long-term yields rapidly higher. But even with anchored policy rates, the improving growth profile is likely to put moderate but steady upward pressure on longerdated US and European yields at a pace that is somewhat faster than the forwards. So, while we would look for assets with exposure to the growth recovery, our bias is to avoid areas with significant vulnerability to higher rates.

3. Earn the DM equity risk premium, hedge the risk

  • Lower risk premia across assets than last year
  • DM equity risk premium narrower but still historically high
  • Multiple expansion possible from above-average levels if real rates stay low
  • But earnings growth may need to pick up some of the burden
  • Rising bond yields would close the equity-bond gap from the other side

Market issues: Over the past few years, we have seen very large risk premium compression across a wide range of areas. While not at 2007 levels, credit spreads have narrowed to below long-term averages and asset market volatility has fallen. Even in a friendly growth and policy environment such as the one we anticipate, this is likely to make for lower return prospects (although more appealing in a volatility-adjusted sense). In equities, in particular, the key question we confront is whether a rally can continue given above-average multiples. We think it can. In part, this is because moderate earnings growth should continue as top-line growth does more of the running relative to margins. But the equity risk premium remains historically high. Put simply, if real 10-year US yields remain at or under 1% for the next couple of years, as the forwards are pricing, and if our forecast of above-trend growth is also correct, we think it would be hard to justify an unusually large spread for earnings yields to real bond yields. Multiples could then legitimately be higher – and higher-than-average – but in a context where the real risk-free rate was unusually low.

This broad story is also likely to play out in European equity markets, where arguably there is a greater risk premium embedded relative to the US, and the scope for margin expansion is also greater. While we worry about the lack of a resolution to the deeper institutional and debt sustainability issues, we doubt these will come more sharply into focus in an environment of improving growth. Given low inflation and a policy easing bias, this could help European equities – including banks – more than the currency.

The key risk to that story – beyond the failure of the growth recovery to materialise – is that real bond yields do not stay low and that the equity risk premium closes through pressure on bond markets. Our own forecasts see the risk premium closing from both sides. So we continue to like strategies that involve earning the DM equity risk premium through long equity positions, while trying to protect against the risk that US yields increase more rapidly than we or the markets expect, or that the market worries again about Fed exit. While short bond positions are the most direct form of that exposure (including towards the front end), we have highlighted the advantage of finding assets that are likely to reward investors even without a sharp move in rates, but that may move more rapidly with such a move. Long USD positions against gold, and some EM and commodity currencies fall into that camp.

4. Good carry, bad carry

  • Higher growth, anchored inflation supportive of low volatility on average
  • Risk premium more obvious lower down the capital structure
  • But spikes in rate volatility are the primary risk to carry strategies
  • Variations in carry not perfectly aligned with fundamental risk

Market issues: Our 2014 forecast of improving but still slightly below-trend global growth and anchored inflation describes an environment in which overall volatility may justifiably be lower. Markets have already moved a long way in this direction, but equity volatility has certainly been lower in prior cycles and forward pricing of volatility is still firmly higher than spot levels. In an environment of subdued macro volatility, the desire to earn carry is likely to remain strong, particularly if it remains hard to envisage significant upside to the growth picture. As always, the primary challenge is to identify places where the reward clearly exceeds these – and other – risks. Given how far spreads have compressed, that may require moving down the capital structure and more deeply into illiquid areas than before. Parts of high yield (HY) credit and subordinated debt for banks offer some of that profile.

We warned last year that termites were eating at the ‘search for yield’, particularly given the risk that longer-dated real risk-free rates could move higher. Even more than with long equity positions, this remains the primary risk to many carry strategies. But after a substantial shift already, the vulnerability to shocks here may ironically be lower than a year ago. We have made that argument in FX, where carry has more clearly increased in places and the underperformance of high-carry areas has increased. And we have shown in the EM context that some countries that offer similar carry in FX (or roll-down in rates) have very different fundamental risks.

We remain wary of owning assets for carry purposes where we do not think the underlying asset also has scope to appreciate (or a low risk of depreciation). But there may be scope to fund ‘good carry’ out of ‘bad carry’ areas within asset classes: high-yield credits versus investment grade (IG), and the more vulnerable EM credits and currencies against other comparable carry equivalents (more on this below).

5. The race to the exit kicks off

  • 2014 should see some DM and EM countries begin tightening
  • Market may begin to move away from pricing a ‘synchronised’ exit
  • Separation may become a driver of relative currency moves
  • Non-G4, EM likely to lead

Market issues: 2013 has already seen some EM central banks move to policy tightening. As the US growth picture improves – and the pressure on global rates builds – the focus on who may tighten monetary policy is likely to increase. As we described recently (Global Economics Weekly 13/33), the market is pricing a relatively synchronised exit among the major developed markets, even though their recovery profiles look different. Given that the timing of the first hike has commonly been judged to be some way off, this lack of differentiation is not particularly unusual. But the separation of those who are likely to move early and those who may move later is likely to begin in earnest in 2014.

We currently expect New Zealand, Norway and Sweden to hike first within the G10 in the second half of 2014. We still expect Australia to go against the grain with one more cut in early 2014. Within the G4, we see conditions for exit in the UK arriving earlier (but still in late 2015) than the others, and we expect more easing from the Bank of Japan – most likely in April. There is also the prospect of a further shift towards easing in the Euro area through LTROs and perhaps a deposit rate cut, especially if deflationary forces are stronger than forecast. These patterns are partly reflected by the market, but market pricing of the change in policy rates between now and the end of 2016 in the US, UK, Euro area, Sweden, Canada and Australia is still quite tightly clustered.

In general, our G4 forecasts are more dovish than the market, while our non-G4 views are not. We also expect Israel, Korea, Malaysia, Thailand and the Philippines within the EM universe to begin a tightening cycle in the second half of 2014. Our views on Israel and Korea in particular are more hawkish than the forwards in the next year or two. The growing separation of monetary policy profiles will likely be an increasingly important driver of relative currency moves. For instance, the logical upshot of our view of fresh easing by the BoJ (including purchases of equity ETFs) versus Fed tapering is support for another leg of $/Yen downside and Nikkei (and Topix) upside. A more positive view of the NZD versus the AUD is likely to be reinforced, and we may even see some of the weakness in the NOK and SEK from this year begin to reverse.

6. Decision time for the ‘high-flyers’

  • Stronger US, global recovery may highlight domestic imbalances elsewhere
  • Smaller economies with housing/credit booms may face them more actively
  • Fear of FX strength a constraint, but one that may be softening

Market issues: A number of smaller open economies have imported easy monetary policy from the US and Europe in recent years, in part to offset currency strength and in part to compensate for a weaker external environment. In a number of these places (Norway, Switzerland, Israel, Canada and, to a lesser extent, New Zealand and Sweden), house prices have appreciated and/or credit growth has picked up. Central banks have generally tolerated those signs of emerging pressure given the external growth risks and the desire to avoid currency strength through a tighter policy stance. As the developed market growth picture improves, some of these ‘high flyers’ may reassess the balance of risks on this front.

Macro-prudential tightening has been the instrument of choice so far, but these dynamics could lead to a faster switch towards earlier interest rate tightening than in other places, consistent with the previous theme. The currency has played an important role in the assessments of central banks in most of these places. For several of them, the ideal combination would be for rates to be higher and currencies weaker. Israel and Canada arguably fall into this camp, as perhaps do Switzerland and New Zealand. The question in these economies is whether improving growth in the US and Europe is sufficient to alleviate the upward pressure on their currencies, thereby increasing the room for domestic policy rate hikes. For Sweden and Norway, the need for currency weakness is less clear, so the issue may be a more straightforward one of whether a tighter policy stance overall is needed. Of course, paying rates in some of these areas where our views are hawkish is complicated by negative carry and the downward drag of the G4 zero-rate environment. Short positions relative to receiving in places where we have a dovish view are one way to offset the carry cost, although this introduces other risks.

7. Still not your older brother’s EM…

  • Despite asset shifts, further need to address imbalances in several countries
  • Bouts of pressure on EM FX and rates likely
  • China and rate risks are better known, so pressure may be less acute
  • But EM unlikely to gain as much from global growth/low rates as they used to

Market issues: 2013 has proved to be a tough year for EM assets. 2014 is unlikely to see the same level of broad-based pressure. The combination of a sharp downgrade to expectations of China growth and risk alongside the worries about a hawkish Fed during the summer ‘taper tantrum’ are unlikely to be repeated with the same level of intensity. Moreover, after the initial shock and deleveraging and a significant repricing of assets, the fundamental vulnerabilities are lower. We still do not believe, however, that the adjustments in many places are complete.

EM FX is the asset class where we are most cautious, and the bouts of pressure in US rate markets are likely to be reflected here most directly. Although forward FX carry is now generally higher – and hence shorts are more costly – in several countries, we think it does not offer enough protection relative to the fundamental depreciation risks. And the need for depreciation comes not just from US rate adjustment but from the need to improve current account deficits.

Long-term yields in EM should continue to head north as curves steepen in the DM world. EM front ends are also likely to be at risk given the sensitivity to FX depreciation and US long rates in EM central bank reaction functions. But markets are pricing more tightening than we think central banks will deliver in many places – such as Turkey, South Africa and Brazil – and there may be periods in the year when the risk-reward for receiving rates in specific places improves. There may also be scope to combine receivers with long USD positions against EM currencies to offset some of the risks.

EM equities are better placed relative to other EM assets. The acceleration in DM growth should continue to help EM activity and, in an equity-friendly environment globally, EM equities (in local currency) should move higher in 2014 outside of the bouts of pressure on EM FX and rates. But given the continuing need to address domestic and external imbalances, it is harder to make the case for EM equity outperformance relative to DM, which has tended to characterise environments of accelerating global growth over the past decade. At the aggregate level, EM credit is likely to continue to perform broadly in line with equities – as it has this year – but differentiation across credits is likely to increase (see the next theme).

8. …but EM differentiation to continue

  • Penalties continue for CA deficits, low DM exposure, low GES, overheating
  • Not only the obvious candidates that need weaker currencies
  • Differentiation even among the most vulnerable as policy response varies

Market issues: 2013 saw countries with high current account deficits, high inflation, weak institutions and limited DM exposure punished much more heavily than the ‘DMs of EMs’, which had stronger current accounts and institutions, underheated economies and greater DM exposure. This is still likely to be the primary axis of differentiation in coming months, but in 2014 we would also expect to see greater differentiation within both these categories.

Within the most vulnerable countries, we could potentially see a greater separation between countries with credible tightening policies (Brazil, India) and those where imbalances are allowed to grow (Turkey). Places with hitherto sound, but deteriorating current account balances (Thailand and Malaysia) may be more affected, although they should be helped by the DM recovery; and the downside risks on commodities (which we discuss next) may exacerbate pressure on the commodity producers (South Africa and Chile). The EMs most likely to benefit from stronger DM demand (without being hurt by the higher rates that come in its train) are the underheated economies of Central and Eastern Europe (Poland, Czech Republic and Hungary), where we expect to see inflation-less accelerations, and Korea and Taiwan in North Asia.

There is also likely to be increased focus on the small number of countries showing more classic EM-style problems. The macro environment in Venezuela is deteriorating rapidly and we expect a large devaluation and further credit pressure. Argentina’s macro backdrop is also unfriendly. And we continue to think that Ukraine will choose to devalue and seek external support in the coming months. Given the idiosyncrasies in each case, our central case is that these issues will not create much contagion. But they may make the market less patient than in the past with any signs that others are flirting with more heterodox policy paths. And we do think there is insufficient credit risk premium priced into some higher-debt EM countries, both absolutely and compared with lower-debt EM and perhaps also the peripheral European economies.

9. Commodity downside risks grow

  • Lower prices in metals, beans, gold – at least later in 2014
  • Oil more stable but with downside risk
  • Shale still supporting demand pick-up from global recovery
  • Commodity producers still adjusting to the ‘new reality’

Market issues: Last year we pointed to the ongoing shift in our commodity views, ultimately towards downside price risk. The impact of supply responses to the period of extraordinary price pressure continues to flow through the system. And we are forecasting significant declines (15%+) through 2014 in gold, copper, iron ore and soybeans. Energy prices clearly matter most for the global outlook. Here our views are more stable, although downside risk is growing over time and production losses out of Libya/Iran and other geopolitical risk is now playing a large role in keeping prices high. Relative to the past, shifting oil dynamics – especially increased shale production in the US – remain a key positive, in the sense that energy price constraints are unlikely to short-circuit an acceleration towards trend global growth. That continues to be an advantage for the recovery relative to the previous cycle.

Translating these downside pressures in commodities into market views is complicated by two factors. First, we expect these pressures mostly to become visible later in 2014. On that basis, it may be difficult to position early given the natural volatility going into an improving growth picture. Second, for iron ore in particular – where our downside view is strongest – direct trading is difficult. However, we do think the shifts in these markets add to the downside pressures on several of the commodity currencies, including the AUD (iron ore, copper), ZAR (gold), CLP (copper) and perhaps BRL (soybeans, iron ore).

These pressures are also likely to reinforce some of the other core themes discussed here – loosening what has been a key constraint on DM and global growth in recent years, keeping inflation subdued and preventing long rates from rising much above forwards. On the flipside, meaningful downside moves in oil and gold prices would alleviate some of the concerns around inflation and current account deficits in EMs such as India and Turkey.

10. Stable China may be good enough

  • China growth expectations have reset lower
  • Stable but unimpressive growth may be enough to reassure for now
  • Improving external backdrop may see market overlook medium-term risks
  • More support for Asian economies and markets, especially equities

Market issues: Expectations of Chinese growth have reset meaningfully lower as some of the medium-term problems around credit growth, shadow financing and local governance have been widely recognised over the past year. Some of these issues continue to linger: the risks from the credit overhang remain and policymakers are unlikely to be comfortable allowing growth to accelerate much. But the deep deceleration of mid-2013 has reversed and even our forecast of essentially flat growth (of about 7.5%) may be enough to comfort investors relative to their worst fears. The details from the recent Third Party Plenum were also more encouraging about the prospects for further market liberalisation and rural/land reform, and have boosted market sentiment.

At this juncture, the market pricing of China’s growth prospects is negative enough that this stability, alongside an improving external impulse, may be enough to be reassuring. Our China ‘risk factor’ has substantially underperformed market perceptions of US and Euro-related risks this year. If the market were to relax about China growth risk, this would help improve the case for EM equities and credit, and make long USD positions more risky. Our views on each of these areas remain a balancing act, as previous themes have elaborated, but this is one of the reasons why we are less negative across the board on EM assets, and why there is more need to discriminate across asset classes and countries. And so we are more open to China-sensitive exposures than last year, especially when they have other desirable features. We also think the continued strength of inflows will keep the CNY and CNH under upward pressure.


    



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