The investment
climate has proven extremely difficult for investors to navigate. Fed tapering and better world growth was to
lead to higher interest rates. Yet interest
rates for the developed world have fallen sharply in recent weeks. Aggressive quantitative easing by the Bank
of Japan was widely understood to be yen negative, yet the yen is the only
currency to have been stronger than the dollar in January. Toward
the emerging markets, investors were to take a more differentiated
approach. Countries with large current account
deficit were particularly vulnerable, yet it appears that the entire asset
class was tarred with the same brush.
Reports suggest that ETF for Mexican equities (EWW) showed the largest outflow,
which seems counter-intuitive, especially since the higher wages and economic
slowdown in China appear to work to its benefit.
We identify, discuss
and assess nine event risks of global investors in the week ahead.
Emerging Markets
(High Risk): The MSCI Emerging
Market equity index peaked in 2011 and is off a little more than 20% since
then. Last month, it fell 6%. Investors’ post-2009 love affair with emerging
markets is over. The fact of the matter
is that most were emerging markets 20 years ago and are likely to be emerging
markets 20 years from now. There were
two attractors—liquidity and structural reforms and we suspect, as is their wont,
investors have tended to emphasis the latter and under appreciate the
former. One clear implication is that real
interest rates will have to rise through most of the emerging market
universe. And this will have negative
knock-on effects for growth.
However, due to some structural reforms, including more
flexible currency regimes, somewhat deeper capital markets, and the
accumulation of reserves, which can be understood as a type of self-insurance,
many emerging market countries are better able to cope with a capital
outflows. The key to whether investor
panic leads to a crisis seems to be largely a function of the response by
policy makers. The IMF/World Bank and
the US Treasury have urged developing countries to take advantage of the
signals to strengthen their own policy reaction. They might as well be shouting in the
wind.
Portfolio Allocation
(High Risk): In addition to
sizeable outflows from emerging market funds that have been widely reported,
there have been three other notable portfolio adjustments. First, anecdotal reports indicate that in
recent weeks, several large asset managers have shifted from stocks to
bonds. In this context, we note that US
Treasuries had their single best month in January since the middle of
2012. To the extent there is foreign
investment component, we note that due to relative volatilities, foreign fixed
income investment tends to carry a higher hedge ratio than foreign equity
investments. Second, after strong
foreign interests in recent months that has helped drive Spain and Italian
rates to record lows, some large asset managers have reportedly begun adjusting
positions on valuation grounds. Third,
Japanese investor appetite for foreign bonds that was evident in the second
half of 2013 appears to have waned in
January, as they turned net sellers again.
For their part, foreign investors have slowed their purchases of
Japanese shares.
Trade Promotion
Authority (Low Risk): Within
24-hours of President Obama’s State of the Union Speech in which he called on
Congress to grant him Trade Promotion Authority to complete the negotiations
for Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment
Partnership, Senate Majority Leader Reid underscored his opposition. Even
though the risk that TPP, which was initially to be completed last year, is
further delayed is high, the risk to investors appears minimal. Yet, it speaks volumes about the outlook for
fresh initiatives ahead of the November election and the consequence of the
erosion of support for President Obama.
Note that this follows the recent refusal by Congress to ratify the long
planned increase in the IMF’s quota.
Some observers talk about a new wave of isolationism in the US, but
sometimes in the past, isolationism was a shroud to cover unilateralism.
China (Near-term Low
Risk): The Lunar New Year celebration will keep
China out of the spotlight in the coming week. It will report the service sector PMI reading
first thing Monday in Beijing, but other than that, it will likely be out of
the news in the coming days. The
official manufacturing PMI was reported at 50.5, which was in line with
expectations, but is the lowest reading since last July. Output hit a four month low and new orders
slipped to six month lows, though both are still above the 50 boom/bust level. Employment and export orders were below
50.
Reserve Bank of
Australia (Medium Risk): The RBA is
the first of the three central bank meetings from the high income
countries. There is little doubt that
policy is on hold with the cash rate at a record low 2.5%. The credit expansion, the somewhat higher
than expected CPI inflation figures, and
the roughly 8% decline in a trade-weighted measure of the Australian dollar
over the last four months remove the sense of urgency to cut rate further. At the same time, the weakness of the labor
market, the softness in producer prices (pipeline inflation?) and the erosion
of the terms of trade, means the RBA is unlikely to close the door completely
on another rate cut, which now seems more likely in Q2 than Q1. We attribute a medium risk to the prospect of
a more neutral sounding RBA statement. We
note that central bank officials have cited $0.8500 and $0.8000 as targets for
the exchange rate.
Bank of England (Low
Risk): The Bank of England is
securely on the sidelines. BOE Governor
Carney has already indicated that the next step in the evolution of forward
guidance will be announced with the quarterly inflation report on February
12. Contrary to claims that Carney is
jettisoning the forward guidance, we expect the BOE to drive home the point
that the 7.0% unemployment rate was a threshold not a trigger for tighter
policy. In effect, the BOE will say, we
re-examined the economic conditions in light of the threshold being approached
and we continue to judge the economy as recovering but still in need to very
low interest rates. The September short
sterling futures contract rallied in January and the implied yield is 16 bp
lower than it was in late-December at an implied yield of about 64 bp. It can
fall toward 50 bp bank rate on dovish comments and data that suggest the
economic activity is leveling off, which is expected to be seen in the PMI
reports in the coming days.
Euro Area PMI (Low Risk): The flash readings steal much
of the thunder from the final reports that are out in week ahead. The focus will be on Spain and Italy for
signs of continued recovery. The manufacturing
PMI for the euro area is at its best level since 2011, which has lifted the
composite as well. The service sector
has lagged, though the flash reading put it at four month highs. We note that the criticism of the lack of
progress reform in the German service sector appears to be on the rise.
ECB Meeting (High
Risk): The two pillars of ECB
monetary policy, money supply and inflation, disappointed on the downside. This has spurred speculation that the ECB
will take action at its meeting on February 6.
A large German bank has forecast a small cut in the 25 bp repo rate and,
more important, a move to a negative deposit rate. Others have predicted an end to the efforts to
sterilize the SMP purchases. Since
EONIA has traded above the repo rate, we think a repo rate cut is largely
immaterial. Cutting the 75 bp lending
rate would be more significant in capping the increase in EONIA. A
negative deposit rate could be potentially very disruptive as it puts the ECB
in unprecedented territory. Even Japan through
its deflationary years never adopted a negative deposit rate.
The
ECB does not need to open the can of worms by formally ending its sterilization
of the SMP sovereign bond purchases. It
would likely be highly controversial as some (read Germany and its creditor
allies) may see it is an illegal monetization of sovereign debt. It can take a stay with its more passive of
failing to attract enough interest in its sterilization operations. This would be less controversial but
effective in providing more liquidity on a weekly basis. We see ECB officials more concerned about
lending to the SME sector. In one of
the more important discussions at Davos, Draghi indicated a willingness to
consider buying bank bonds, backed by loans to households and SMEs. Though it does not appear imminent, development
along these lines seem more promising.
US Jobs Data (High
Risk): The market generally anticipates
a dramatic recovery in non-farm payrolls in January after the disappointing 74k
increase in December. However, there is substantial risk that the
frigid temperatures in the Midwest, South and Northeast will make for another
disappointing report. Last month, we
noted how well the ADP estimates had anticipated the official data, just in
time for the large miss (ADP Jan estimates was 238k, while the private sector
NFP grew by only 87k). Having been
burned last month, investors will likely put less weight on it this time. The market will quickly look at the weather
distortions and make adjustment accordingly.
Before the Fed meets again (mid-March), it will see another jobs report,
so the policy implications of a disappointing report may not be that great. Most investors
and observers see the bar relatively high against the Fed deviating from the tapering
strategy outlined by the FOMC in December.
There is also substantial risk that without emergency unemployment
benefits being extended there may be an unusually large decline in the
unemployment rate as more people leave the labor market. Arguably the Fed’s forward guidance
anticipates this possibility by saying rates will remain low even after unemployment
falls through the 6.5% threshold.
While the employment report is the last major
event of the week, at the start of the week, the US reports January auto
sales. The consensus calls for a 15.7 mln unit
selling pace after the disappointing 15.3 mln unit pace in December. If true, this would put the January sales
above the average in H2 13. However, there
is risk of disappointment due to weather disruptions and this would weigh on
the retail sales report (January 13), which already are looking soft even
excluding auto sales. Lastly, the debt
ceiling debt poses headline risk, though distortions to the short-dated T-bills
appears to have eased somewhat.
Nine Event Risks in the Week Ahead
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
February 02, 2014
Rating: