There’s an interesting similarity to the 1999 backdrop: A Federal Reserve (and global central bank community) way too timid in implementing a “tightening cycle” despite bubbling asset markets. Fed funds began 1999 at 4.75%, after rates were slashed 75 bps late in 1998 in response to the Russia/LTCM financial crisis. Despite clearly overheated securities markets, rates ended 1999 at 5.5% - the same level they were for much of 1998. The Fed was content to let the speculative Bubble run, with memories of the previous year’s near financial meltdown clear in their minds. Moreover, Y2K uncertainties provided a convenient excuse to accommodate the raging Bubble.
There’s at least one huge difference to 1999. The 10-year Treasury yield began ‘99 at 4.65% and ended the year at 6.44%. Ten-year yields ended Friday’s session at 2.16%, down 29 bps so far in 2017 and near lows since the election. Astounding amounts of government debt have been issued globally since 1999. Radical central bank measures ensured prices of these securities inflated to unprecedented levels (even in the face of endless supply). Historically low yields are a global phenomenon. German bund yields closed the week at 27 bps and French yields closed at 71 bps. It’s worth noting some current 10-year sovereign debt yields: negative 27 bps in Switzerland, 31 bps in Finland, 40 bps in Sweden, 48 bps in Netherlands, 53 bps in Denmark, 54 bps in Austria and 64 bps in Belgium.
MSCI's all-country world stock index ended the week at a record high. Both the UK FTSE (up 5.7% y-t-d) and German DAX (up 11.7%) equities indices traded Friday at new highs. European equities have been powering higher. The French CAC 40 has gained 9.9% y-t-d, Spain’s IBEX 35 16.6%, and Italy’s MIB 8.8%.
June 2 – Bloomberg (Katherine Chiglinsky): “Mohamed El-Erian, Allianz SE’s chief economic adviser, said the rally in stocks and high-yield bonds is part of a ‘liquidity trade,’ based on optimism that central bank stimulus efforts and the accumulation of corporate profits will sustain market gains. ‘That is what you’re betting on,’ El-Erian said Friday in an interview on Bloomberg Television. ‘You’re not betting on the Trump rally anymore. You’re not betting on the reflation trade anymore.’”
The “Trump Trade” provided convenient cover for what has been for some time a strengthening speculative Liquidity Trade. The histrionic bond market reaction to the weaker payroll data was telling. The long-bond surged a full point, with yields dropping five bps to the lows since November. If the issue were a weakening economy, one was challenged to see it in the reaction within the risk markets. Investment-grade corporate debt (LQD) gained about 0.5% Friday to trade to the high since November. Even junk debt (HYG) posted a small gain to trade to an almost 18-month high. The NDX jumped 1.1% Friday, with the Nasdaq Composite up 1.0% - both to record highs. The Semiconductors gained 1.0% (near year-2000 highs), and the Morgan Stanley High Tech index rose almost 1% to an all-time high. The Biotechs rose 1.9% to a 2017 high (up 20% y-t-d).
It’s worth noting that gold gained 1% on Liquidity Trade Friday, increasing 2017 gains to a notable 11%. Crude’s 1.5% Friday decline (down 4.3% for the week) was not inconsistent with Liquidity Trade dynamics. Shale exploration and extraction are thriving on easy “money.” And when it comes to Liquidity analysis, Bitcoin has earned a place at the table. Bitcoin rose $160 this week to $2,430, boosting its y-t-d gain to a remarkable 155%.
A Friday ZeroHedge article asked the relevant question: “BoJ, ECB Balance Sheets Exceed the Fed’s For First Time Ever - What Happens Next?” The over $1.0 TN global QE injections during the first four months of the year argue for “Peak QE.” The ZeroHedge article includes a chart of the G3 (Fed, BOJ, ECB) balance sheet that correlates closely with U.S. stocks going back to 2009. It’s worth noting that G3 balance sheets will soon reach $14.0 TN, up from less than $6.0 TN in early-2009 (after initial crisis-period QE). “Now what?”, indeed. Near zero rates and unprecedented “money printing” have inflated asset price Bubbles around the globe. What happens when stimulus is removed? This is by now a conspicuous problem, though markets are confident that central bankers have no stomach for finding out how big of a problem. The Liquidity Trade is premised on global central bankers being trapped in ultra-easy “money” (including ongoing printing).
May 30 – Bloomberg (Jeanna Smialek and Matthew Boesler): “Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard said soft inflation could cause her to reassess the path forward for monetary policy should it linger, even as the global economic outlook brightens and U.S. growth looks poised to rebound. ‘If the soft inflation data persist, that would be concerning and, ultimately, could lead me to reassess the appropriate path of policy,’ Brainard said… ‘I see some tension between signs that the economy is in the neighborhood of full employment and indications that the tentative progress we had seen on inflation may be slowing,’ Brainard said. ‘If the tension between the progress on employment and the lack of progress on inflation persists, it may lead me to reassess the expected path of the federal funds rate in the future, although it is premature to make that call today.”
This is exactly the type of dovish diffidence that feeds market speculation. The Fed needs to find a backbone and move forward in the direction of normalization without reacting to the normal ebb and flow of securities markets, inflation data and economic performance. Moreover, central bankers should jettison this notion of no tolerance for recessions or bear markets – both precious Capitalistic system cleansing mechanisms. Clearly, central bankers have come to exert profound effects on securities and asset prices. Recent history has as well demonstrated that their capacity to manipulate an index of consumer prices is suspect at best. Prolonging ultra-easy money will surely exacerbate global overcapacity (i.e. additional Chinese capacity and U.S. shale investment).
Especially after Friday’s weaker-than-expected payroll data, the markets will question whether the Fed is about to flinch. Expectations are growing that the FOMC will pull back from an already incredibly cautious rate hike cycle – one that to this point has completely failed to “tighten” financial conditions. Indeed, conditions have further loosened.
I’ve read and listened to analyses warning against the Fed committing a major policy error by tightening into a weakening economy. Yet the Federal Reserve's mistake was waiting way too long to commence the normalization process. At this point, there is great risk in the Fed accommodating late-cycle excesses - including the global securities markets’ Liquidity Trade. Only a meaningful amount of pain will impact what has become a major inflationary/speculative psychology enveloping global securities markets. The Fed needs to bite the bullet and push rates higher.
Discussions continue regarding the Federal Reserve’s decision to shrink its balance sheet. Similar to rate discussions, the markets (for good reason) believe the Fed will refrain from measures that actually tighten financial conditions and impinge booming securities markets. If queried, most sophisticated market professionals would likely respond that they expect the next major change in the Fed’s holdings to be on the upside (another round of QE). Some Fed officials see selling assets as a positive measure that would help reduce excessive monetary accommodation. At this point, balance sheet discussions appear to be backfiring. Believing that the Fed will likely pause rate increases while reducing assets both slowly and very modestly, the markets now see potential Fed balance sheet operations as a bullish development that ensures no actual tightening of financial conditions for many months to come.
Next Thursday’s ECB meeting is widely expected to see a contentious debate regarding the process for winding down extraordinary QE and rate measures. Euro zone economies and inflation trends have bounced back. Ultra-loose financial conditions have worked their magic, although Draghi does not want any change in ECB stimulus to upset the Liquidity Trade. The Germans and others have long ago seen enough and seek to establish a timeline for winding down QE.
The markets assume Draghi will, once again, win the day. This week also saw happenings in China that embolden those believing that Beijing will also continue to win the day, month and year.
May 31 – Bloomberg: “The offshore yuan jumped the most in four months as funding costs surged amid speculation policy makers were supporting the currency in the wake of a surprise sovereign rating downgrade… ‘The sharp gain in the offshore yuan is partially due to the unwinding of short yuan positions because the high offshore yuan funding cost has made the currency too expensive to short,’ said Stephen Innes, senior Asia-Pacific currency trader at Oanda Corp… ‘Bears with short yuan positions would need to cut their exposure.’ The overnight yuan interbank rate in Hong Kong, known as Hibor, surged 15.7 percentage points on Wednesday to 21.08%, the highest since Jan. 6, while the offshore yuan’s overnight deposit rate jumped to 60%.”
May 31 – Bloomberg: “China is dishing out a tough lesson to currency traders and strategists alike: don’t bet against the yuan. The currency jumped its highest level in seven months offshore, extending Wednesday’s gain of 1.2%, despite analyst forecasts for declines this quarter. Surging interbank rates are squeezing bears by driving up the cost of short positions. The rally, which broke months of calm against the dollar, comes as a rebuke to Moody’s…, which downgraded China’s sovereign debt rating last week. The government has made its displeasure clear, calling the move ‘absolutely groundless.’”
On the back of the People’s Bank of China’s forceful interventions, the renminbi traded this week to the strongest level since November. Speculative markets have come to welcome heavy-handed Chinese intervention. The assumption is that Chinese officials are absolutely determined to hold bursting Bubble dynamics at bay.
China is not the only macro worry. Italian bank stocks were hit 4.3% this week. Talk of early elections also pressured Italian bonds. With yields rising 16 bps, the Italian to bund yield spread widened a notable 22 bps this week to a six-week high. It’s also worth mentioning the 4.3% fall in crude and the 9.4% drubbing in natural gas. And there’s the ongoing strength in the yen. The Japanese currency rose 0.8% this week (up 5.9% y-t-d) and has been notably resilient in the face of advancing equities and risk markets. I tend to believe that various macro risks continue to play a prevailing role in stubbornly low global bond yields, a backdrop that along with timid central bankers fuels dangerously speculative risk markets across the globe.
For the Week:
The S&P500 gained 1.0% (up 8.9% y-t-d), and the Dow added 0.6% (up 7.3%). The Utilities rose 1.7% (up 9.2%). The Banks fell 1.6% (down 2.6%), while the Broker/Dealers increased 0.4% (up 4.3%). The Transports rose 1.7% (up 3.2%). The S&P 400 Midcaps gained 1.4% (up 5.5%), and the small cap Russell 2000 jumped 1.7% (up 3.6%). The Nasdaq100 advanced 1.6% (up 20.9%), and the Morgan Stanley High Tech index jumped 2.0% (up 23.8%). The Semiconductors rose 1.7% (up 21.7%). The Biotechs surged 3.4% (up 20%). While bullion gained $12, the HUI gold index fell 1.6% (up 5.0%).
Three-month Treasury bill rates ended the week at 95 bps. Two-year government yields slipped a basis point to 1.29% (up 10bps y-t-d). Five-year T-note yields fell seven bps to 1.72% (down 21bps). Ten-year Treasury yields dropped nine bps to 2.16% (down 29bps). Long bond yields fell 10 bps to 2.81% (down 26bps).
Greek 10-year yields rose eight bps to 5.99% (down 103bps y-t-d). Ten-year Portuguese yields dropped 11 bps to 3.04% (down 71bps). Italian 10-year yields jumped 16 bps to 2.26% (up 45bps). Spain's 10-year yields increased three bps to 1.57% (up 19bps). German bund yields fell six bps to 0.27% (up 7bps). French yields declined five bps to 0.71% (up 3bps). The French to German 10-year bond spread widened one to 44 bps. U.K. 10-year gilt yields added three bps to 1.04% (down 20bps). U.K.'s FTSE equities index was unchanged (up 5.7%).
Japan's Nikkei 225 equities index surged 2.5% (up 5.6% y-t-d). Japanese 10-year "JGB" yields added a basis point to 0.055% (up 2bps). France's CAC40 was little changed (up 9.9%). The German DAX equities index jumped 1.8% (up 11.7%). Spain's IBEX 35 equities index was unchanged (up 16.6%). Italy's FTSE MIB index declined 1.3% (up 8.8%). EM equities were mixed. Brazil's Bovespa index dropped 2.5% (up 3.8%). Mexico's Bolsa declined 0.7% (up 8.1%). South Korea's Kospi added 0.7% (up 17%). India’s Sensex equities index gained 0.8% (up 17.5%). China’s Shanghai Exchange was little unchanged (unchanged). Turkey's Borsa Istanbul National 100 index rose 1.4% (up 26.5%). Russia's MICEX equities index sank 2.7% (down 15.7%).
Junk bond mutual funds saw inflows of $521 million (from Lipper).
Freddie Mac 30-year fixed mortgage rates slipped a basis point to 3.94% (up 28bps y-o-y). Fifteen-year rates were unchanged at 3.19% (up 27bps). The five-year hybrid ARM rate rose four bps to 3.11% (up 23bps). Bankrate's survey of jumbo mortgage borrowing costs had 30-yr fixed rates down four bps to a seven-month low 4.02% (up 26bps).
Federal Reserve Credit last week declined $13.7bn to $4.421 TN. Over the past year, Fed Credit declined $0.9bn. Fed Credit inflated $1.610 TN, or 57%, over the past 238 weeks. Elsewhere, Fed holdings for foreign owners of Treasury, Agency Debt declined $6.7bn last week to $3.238 TN. "Custody holdings" were up $8bn y-o-y, or 0.2%.
M2 (narrow) "money" supply last week jumped $37.7bn to a record $13.523 TN. "Narrow money" expanded $759bn, or 6.3%, over the past year. For the week, Currency increased $2.5bn. Total Checkable Deposits rose $17.7bn, and Savings Deposits gained $19.3bn. Small Time Deposits added $0.7bn. Retail Money Funds declined $2.1bn.
Total money market fund assets increased $5.0bn to $2.654 TN. Money Funds fell $80bn y-o-y (2.9%).
Total Commercial Paper gained $6.4bn to $994bn. CP declined $73bn y-o-y, or 6.8%.
Currency Watch:
The U.S. dollar index declined 0.7% to 96.72 (down 5.6% y-t-d). For the week on the upside, the New Zealand dollar increased 1.2%, the Swiss franc 1.1%, the euro 0.9%, the Japanese yen 0.8%, the Swedish krona 0.8%, the British pound 0.7%, the South African rand 0.5% and the Brazilian real 0.5%. For the week on the downside, the Mexican peso declined 0.9%, the Norwegian krone 0.5%, the Canadian dollar 0.3%, and the South Korean won 0.1%. The Chinese renminbi gained 0.67% versus the dollar this week (up 2.0% y-t-d).
Commodities Watch:
The Goldman Sachs Commodities Index dropped 2.9% (down 6.1% y-t-d). Spot Gold gained 1.0% to $1,279 (up 11%). Silver rose 1.2% to $17.53 (up 9.7%). Crude dropped $2.14 to $47.66 (down 12%). Gasoline fell 4.0% (down 6%), and Natural Gas sank 9.4% (down 20%). Copper increased 0.3% (up 3%). Wheat declined 2.0% (up 5%). Corn slipped 0.4% (up 6%).
Trump Administration Watch:
May 27 – Reuters (John Irish and Crispian Balmer): “Under pressure from Group of Seven allies, U.S. President Donald Trump backed a pledge to fight protectionism on Saturday, but refused to endorse a global climate change accord… The summit of G7 wealthy nations pitted Trump against the leaders of Germany, France, Britain, Italy, Canada and Japan on several issues, with European diplomats frustrated at having to revisit questions they had hoped were long settled. However, diplomats stressed there was broad agreement on an array of foreign policy problems, including the renewal of a threat to slap further economic sanctions on Russia if its interference in neighboring Ukraine demanded it.”
May 30 – Bloomberg (Arne Delfs and Patrick Donahue): “President Donald Trump blasted Germany anew over trade and defense, ratcheting up a dispute with Chancellor Angela Merkel that risks getting personal and undermining a trans-Atlantic bond that is the bedrock of U.S.-European relations. Trump’s comments came in an early-morning tweet… issued just as Merkel hosted Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Berlin… Modi suggested that India will adhere to the Paris climate accords, while Trump makes up his mind. ‘We have a MASSIVE trade deficit with Germany, plus they pay FAR LESS than they should on NATO & military,’ the U.S. president posted on Twitter. ‘This will change.’”
May 29 – Wall Street Journal (Richard Rubin): “The boldest ideas for changing the nation’s tax code are either dead or on political life support, as the Republican effort in Congress to reshape the tax system moves much more slowly than lawmakers and their allies in business had hoped. The clear winner, so far, is the status quo. Republicans, who control both chambers, are scouring the tax code, searching for ways to offset the deep rate cuts they desire. But their proposals for border adjustment—which would tax imports—and for ending the business interest deduction and making major changes to individual tax breaks for health and retirement have all hit resistance within the party. The only big revenue-raising provision with anything close to Republican consensus is repealing the deduction for state and local taxes, and that idea faces objections from blue-state lawmakers in the party. The GOP’s dreams have collided with interest-group lobbying and the tax system’s reality.”
China Bubble Watch:
May 28 – Financial Times (Leo Lewis, Tom Mitchell and Yuan Yang): “There are few things studied as closely by the Chinese Communist party as how to avoid the fate of its Soviet counterpart. In an internal meeting after he assumed power in 2012, President Xi Jinping said no one in the Soviet Union had been ‘man enough’ to stand up to Mikhail Gorbachev and glasnost. But for Mr Xi another historical event from the same era may warrant more immediate attention. It is just over 30 years since Japan began inflating a property and stock market bubble whose implosion ravaged public confidence, cowed corporations and scarred an economy for decades. China’s priority today is to avoid that fate. It is not a new concern for Beijing. In 2010, as China’s overall indebtedness was approaching 200% of gross domestic product, Mr Xi, then the country’s vice-president, asked scholars at the Central Party School to research the subject… A subsequent paper outlined some of the lessons of the Japanese bubble, including the need for Beijing to raise awareness of financial risks, safeguard ‘economic sovereignty’ and not give in to pressure to change its currency policy. Seven years on, China’s total debt is 250% of GDP and climbing, officials are trying to rein in sky-high real estate prices and the government is still grappling with the aftermath of a stock market bubble that burst in 2015.”
May 29 – Financial Times (Don Weinland and Gabriel Wildau): “A crackdown on China’s $9.4tn shadow banking business is hitting bank share prices and rattling bond markets. The country’s new top banking regulator has already taken several shots at stemming the rapid growth of off-balance-sheet lending at banks since taking control in February. The central bank has also tightened liquidity in the financial system, sparking angst earlier this year. A flurry of rules to discourage banks from using borrowed money to invest in bonds have been issued by the regulator. The sell-off that has followed has pushed bond yields to two-year highs and even led to a rarely seen inversion of the yield curve. The moves have also dented the share prices of Chinese banks — among the world’s largest by market capitalization… ‘It’s been very clear . . . that regulators want to stamp out some of this [shadow banking] activity,’ says the Asia head of a securities unit at a global bank. ‘During that time there’s been lots of inquiries from investors and some concern on what that will look like.’”
June 1 – Financial Times (Gabriel Wildau): “China’s currency headed for its biggest two-day gain against the dollar since January on Thursday afternoon, as the central bank apparently intervened to support the renminbi amid tepid market demand for the Chinese currency. Traders said that large state-owned banks sold dollars aggressively on Wednesday and Thursday. Such concerted trading is usually viewed as a sign that these institutions are acting on behalf of the central bank to prop up demand for the renminbi. The People’s Bank of China’s currency-trading arm last week announced a change to the way it sets renminbi’s daily fix, which is intended to guide trading in the spot market. The change granted the PBoC greater flexibility to push back against what it called ‘irrational expectations’ and guide the renminbi stronger, even when market forces are pushing the other way.”
May 31 – Bloomberg: “A private gauge of Chinese manufacturing fell back into contractionary territory in May, adding to recent evidence that the economy’s strong start to 2017 is leveling off. Caixin Media and Markit Economics manufacturing purchasing managers’ index fell to 49.6 from 50.3 in April, the lowest reading since June 2016 and below the 50.1 median estimate…”
May 29 – Bloomberg (Paul Panckhurst): “Snaking queues of thousands of prospective apartment buyers in Hong Kong signaled authorities have made no progress in cooling a red-hot property market, where prices are at records. People were lining up on Friday and over the weekend at Victoria Skye, a luxury project at the former airport site of Kai Tak, and at the Ocean Pride development by Cheung Kong Property Holdings Ltd. and MTR Corp. ‘Successive moves by the government in recent memory to cool the property market only resulted in it becoming crazier,’ The Standard newspaper said in an editorial… ‘The result is a sea of madness.’”
Europe Watch:
May 30 – Bloomberg (Stefania Spezzati and Blaise Robinson): “Italian markets shuddered at the emerging prospect of early elections. Investors dumped stocks and government debt after ruling Democratic Party leader Matteo Renzi signaled the possibility of a vote in September or October, more than six months ahead of schedule. That pushed the nation’s bond-yield spread over Germany to its highest in almost four weeks today, and the benchmark FTSE MIB stock index to its biggest two-day drop in more than five weeks on Monday, led by banks.”
May 29 – Bloomberg (Alessandro Speciale): “The euro area still needs expansive monetary stimulus to restore stable inflation even as its economy accelerates, European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said. ‘We remain firmly convinced that an extraordinary amount of monetary policy support, including through our forward guidance, is still necessary,’ Draghi told lawmakers… ‘Domestic cost pressures, notably from wages, are still insufficient to support a durable and self-sustaining convergence of inflation toward our medium-term objective.’”
May 31 – Reuters (Balazs Koranyi): “With the euro zone recovery gaining strength, inflation would continue to rise even if the European Central Bank reduced stimulus, Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann said… The comments suggest that Weidmann, a long-time critic of the ECB's exceptional stimulus, considers inflation self- sustaining, one of ECB President Mario Draghi's top criteria before the policy can be removed. ‘The strengthening of the economic recovery makes it increasingly likely that the rise in inflation we have seen since August 2016 is not just a flash in the pan, but that we would have higher inflation rates compared to previous years even under a reduced degree of monetary policy accommodation,’ Weidmann said.”
May 31 – Reuters (Balazs Koranyi and Francesco Canepa): “European Central Bank policymakers are set to take a more benign view of the economy when they meet on June 8 and will even discuss dropping some of their pledges to ramp up stimulus if needed, four sources with direct knowledge of the discussions told Reuters. With economic growth clearly shifting into higher gear, rate setters are ready to acknowledge the improvement by dropping a long-standing reference to downside risks in the bank's post-meeting opening statement, calling risks largely balanced... Growth indicators have been outperforming expectations all year. But they disagree on how quickly the ECB should change its policy stance, including its guidance, with countries on the currency bloc's periphery fearing that a sharp shift in its communication could induce self-defeating market turbulence, they added. ‘After the French election the political risk is clearly down and economic indicators are by and large positive, so it's time to acknowledge this,’ said one Governing Council member…”
June 1 – Bloomberg (Piotr Skolimowski and Alessandro Speciale): “The European Central Bank is starting to debate whether to reflect the euro area’s improving economic prospects in its policy guidance, Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann said. Speaking just hours before the ECB begins its self-imposed quiet period ahead of next week’s monetary policy meeting, Weidmann said the strengthening recovery makes it increasingly likely that the rise in the inflation rate isn’t ‘just a flash in the pan.’ Inflation would still accelerate more than in the previous years even if some of the stimulus were removed, he said, adding the ECB should consider the impact of its policies on bank profitability.”
May 30 – Wall Street Journal (Tom Fairless): “A Berlin-based law professor has filed a cease-and-desist request aimed at quickly ending Germany’s involvement in bond purchases by the European Central Bank, a surprise legal move that underlines mounting German anger over the ECB’s easy-money policies. The request for a legal injunction, sent to Germany’s top court, shows the lengths to which some Germans are prepared to go to derail a €2.3 trillion ($2.57 trillion) stimulus program they accuse of subsidizing southern European governments and hurting German savers, pensioners and smaller companies.”
Brexit Watch:
May 31 – Reuters (Guy Faulconbridge and Paul Sandle): “Prime Minister Theresa May could lose control of parliament in Britain's June 8 election, according to a projection by polling company YouGov, raising the prospect of political turmoil just as formal Brexit talks begin. The YouGov model suggested May would lose 20 seats and her 17-seat working majority in the 650-seat British parliament, though other models show May winning a big majority of as much as 142 seats and a Kantar poll showed her lead widening. If the YouGov model turns out to be accurate, May would be well short of the 326 seats needed to form a government tasked with the complicated talks…”
June 1 – Reuters (Guy Faulconbridge and Kylie MacLellan): “British Prime Minister Theresa May's gamble on a snap election was under question on Thursday after a YouGov opinion poll showed her Conservative Party's lead had fallen to a fresh low of 3 percentage points just a week before voting begins. A failure to win the June 8 election with a large majority would weaken May just as formal Brexit talks are due to begin while the loss of her majority in parliament would pitch British politics into turmoil. In the strongest signal yet that the election is much closer than previously thought, May's lead has collapsed from 24 points since she surprised both rivals and financial markets on April 18 by calling the election…”
Global Bubble Watch:
May 31 – Bloomberg (Emily Cadman): “Australian house prices fell in May for the first time in 17 months, in an early sign lending restrictions are starting to damp demand. Home values in Australia’s state and territory capitals fell 1.1% last month from April… Still, prices across the combined capitals were 8.3% higher than a year ago. The monthly decline comes after regulators tightened lending curbs amid fears of a housing bubble, and the nation’s banks raised interest rates -- especially for interest-only loans which are popular with property investors seeking to take advantage of tax breaks.”
May 29 – CNBC (Arjun Kharpal): “Nearly $4 billion has been wiped off of the value of bitcoin in the past four days after a correction that has seen the cryptocurrency's price fall almost 19% from its recent record high. On May 24, bitcoin hit an all-time high of $2.791.69. But on Monday, the digital currency was trading at an intra-day high of $2,267.73, marking a more than $520 drop or 18.7% decline since the record high…”
Federal Reserve Watch:
May 31 – Reuters (Jonathan Spicer): “The Federal Reserve sent a strong signal… that it will raise interest rates this month and soon begin shedding some of its $4.5 trillion in bond holdings, despite some weak recent U.S. inflation readings. Fed Governor Jerome Powell, an influential policymaker and among the last to speak publicly before a mid-June policy meeting, said the U.S. economy was ‘healthy’ and the central bank should continue to edge toward a more normal footing after nearly a decade of crisis-era stimulus.”
May 30 – Wall Street Journal (Nick Timiraos): “Federal Reserve officials are set to raise short-term interest rates at their meeting in two weeks but could defer the following expected rate move in September if Congress roils markets by delaying action on raising the federal government’s debt ceiling. The possibility that Congress and the White House might have trouble reaching agreement in September to raise the federal debt limit and approve government funding for the year beginning Oct. 1 has surfaced as a new source of uncertainty in recent weeks. Since raising rates in March, many officials have said they probably would want to lift rates twice more, likely in June and September. After that, some officials have said they might pause rate increases to start the process of slowly shrinking the Fed’s $4.5 trillion portfolio of bonds and other assets at year-end before resuming rate increases in 2018.”
May 30 – Bloomberg (Jeanna Smialek and Matthew Boesler): “Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard said soft inflation could cause her to reassess the path forward for monetary policy should it linger, even as the global economic outlook brightens and U.S. growth looks poised to rebound. ‘If the soft inflation data persist, that would be concerning and, ultimately, could lead me to reassess the appropriate path of policy,’ Brainard said… She said her baseline expectation is that ‘it likely will be appropriate soon to adjust the federal funds rate’ and start shrinking the balance sheet.”
May 29 – Bloomberg (Alessandro Speciale): “Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco President John Williams sees a ‘much smaller’ Fed balance sheet in about five years, at the end of an unwinding process that could start with a ‘baby step’ later this year. ‘How big will the balance sheet be five years from now, when this has all happened?’ Williams said… ‘That is something we haven’t decided on. It will be much smaller than today.’ Policy makers are coalescing around a plan for gradually reducing the central bank’s $4.5 trillion in assets with a predictable process aimed at minimizing market reactions.”
May 31 – Reuters (Piotr Skolimowski and Alessandro Speciale): “San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank President John C. Williams said… he sees a total of three interest rate increases for this year as his baseline scenario, but views four hikes as also being appropriate if the U.S. economy gets an unexpected boost. ‘There is potential for upside occurrences in the economy. One big question mark is if there is big fiscal stimulus or other changes in the outlook that we see the economy is doing better than we thought,’ said Williams…”
U.S. Bubble Watch:
May 29 – Financial Times (Dambisa Moyo): “Virtually every class of US debt — sovereign, corporate, unsecured household/personal, auto loans and student debt — is at record highs. Americans now owe $1tn in credit card debt, and a roughly equivalent amount of student loans and auto-loans which, like the subprime mortgage quality that set off the 2008 financial crisis, are of largely low credit quality (and therefore high risk). US companies have added $7.8tn of debt since 2010 and their ability to cover interest payments is at its weakest since 2008… With total public and private debt obligations estimated at 350% of gross domestic product, the US Congressional Budget Office has recently described the path of US debt (and deficits) as almost doubling over the next 30 years. But this is not just a US phenomenon. Globally, the picture is similarly precarious, with debt stubbornly high in Europe, rising in Asia and surging across broader emerging markets. A decade on from the beginning of the financial crisis, the world has the makings of a fresh debt crisis.”
May 30 – Bloomberg (Dani Burger): “Investment managers are doubling down on the hottest stocks of 2017 -- and it’s paying off. Funds tracked by Bank of America Corp. own the highest percentage of technology stocks on record compared to their benchmark. It’s a sector that’s carried U.S. stocks to new highs, leading the S&P 500 Index with a nearly 20% gain in 2017. And it’s giving active managers a boost they haven’t seen in more than two years.”
May 29 – Financial Times (Ben McLannahan): “Big banks are throttling back from the $1.2tn US car loan market, fearing that consumers have taken on more debt than they can handle. Lenders piled into the sector in the years after the financial crisis, as low defaults and an improving economy encouraged them to focus on a market that performed relatively well as mortgages soured. Total loans across the industry rose to $1.17tn at the end of the first quarter… up almost 70% from a trough in 2010. But data released last week by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation showed the first sequential drop in car loans outstanding at commercial banks in at least six years.”
May 30 – CNBC (Lauren Thomas): “U.S. home prices rose slightly less than what was anticipated for the month of March, according to new data from the S&P/Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index. But the gains were enough to reach a 33-month high, climbing at the strongest rate in nearly three years. This, as inventory of homes for sale remains ‘unusually low,’ the group said. The national home price index increased 5.8% in March… Meanwhile, the widely tracked 20-city home price index rose 5.9% from a year ago in March, the most since July 2014. The latest data… shows that home prices continued their impressive rise, across the country, over the past 12 months. Home prices had hit a record in September, and the pace of growth accelerated ever since then.”
May 31 – Bloomberg (Elizabeth Campbell): “Illinois leaders will blow past a deadline that will leave the state careening toward the third straight year without a budget. The Illinois House isn’t voting on a budget on Wednesday, which means the gridlock-prone government won’t pass a spending plan by midnight. That means approving a budget -- a usually routine task that has eluded the state for 700 days -- will become even more difficult because a three-fifths majority will be required… ‘We are probably approaching that point of impaired ability to function at basic level,’ said John Humphrey, the Chicago-based head of credit research for Gurtin Municipal Bond Management…”
May 31 – Reuters (Lucia Mutikani): “Contracts to buy previously owned U.S. homes fell for a second straight month in April amid a supply squeeze, but the housing market recovery remains supported by a strong labor market. The National Association of Realtors said… its Pending Home Sales Index, based on contracts signed last month, dropped 1.3% to 109.8… Coming on the heels of recent data showing a drop in home building and sales of both new and previously owned homes, the decrease in contracts suggests a moderation in housing activity.”
Japan Watch:
May 29 – Bloomberg (Keiko Ujikane): “Japan’s jobless rate remained at the lowest in more than two decades last month, and retail sales rose from March, climbing for a fourth month. Retail sales rose 1.4% from March, and were up 3.2% compared to April last year. The unemployment rate for April was 2.8%, the same as the forecast.”
May 30 – Bloomberg (Keiko Ujikane): “Japan’s industrial output rebounded in April, hitting the highest level since 2008, as overseas demand continued to support the nation’s economic recovery. Industrial production increased 4.0% (forecast +4.2%) in April from March, when it fell 1.9%.”
May 31 – Reuters (Leika Kihara): “Bank of Japan board member Yutaka Harada said… he expected inflation to accelerate as the country's jobless rate approached 2%. ‘Inflation accelerates sharply when the jobless rate approaches 2%. Japan's jobless rate has already fallen to 2.8%. If this trend continues and the jobless rate falls further, there's no doubt prices will rise,’ Harada said…”
EM Watch:
May 29 – Bloomberg (Natasha Doff): “Investors reaping handsome returns on emerging-market currencies this year might do well to heed a warning once made by Harvard economist Jeffrey Frankel, who likened carry trading to ‘picking up pennies in front of a steam roller.’ Economic theory -- and history -- suggest the strategy of borrowing where interest rates are low to invest in high-yielding currencies is prone to the risk of a sharp reversal when too many investors pile into the trade. Strategists at Bank of America Merrill Lynch warned last week that sentiment on emerging-market currencies is already reaching ‘exuberant levels.’ Saxo Bank A/S’s chief currency strategist says now is the time to take profits. Investors from BlackRock Inc. to Man Group Plc have poured money into emerging-market currencies this year to profit from interest as high as 12% compared with rates close to zero in the U.S. and European Union. The strategy has produced an average return of 7.5% since the beginning of the year…”
Geopolitical Watch:
June 2 – Bloomberg (Jennifer A Dlouhy): “The response to President Donald Trump’s announcement he was exiting the Paris climate accord and wanted to renegotiate on his terms was immediate: The leaders of France, Germany and Italy said no. On Wall Street, corporate executives pilloried the businessman president. Goldman Sachs’ CEO tweeted for the first time, calling the move a setback for the world. Tesla Inc.’s Elon Musk and Bob Iger of Walt Disney Co. quit a White House advisory council in protest. Even the mayor of Pittsburgh -- a city Trump highlighted as a beneficiary of his decision to turn his back on the global pact -- vowed to abide by the Paris agreement. Trump’s decision leaves him more alienated than ever, isolated on the world stage and increasingly embattled at home.”
May 31 – Reuters (Guy Faulconbridge and Paul Sandle): “Prime Minister Theresa May could lose control of parliament in Britain's June 8 election, according to a projection by polling company YouGov, raising the prospect of political turmoil just as formal Brexit talks begin. The YouGov model suggested May would lose 20 seats and her 17-seat working majority in the 650-seat British parliament, though other models show May winning a big majority of as much as 142 seats and a Kantar poll showed her lead widening. If the YouGov model turns out to be accurate, May would be well short of the 326 seats needed to form a government tasked with the complicated talks…”
June 1 – Reuters (Guy Faulconbridge and Kylie MacLellan): “British Prime Minister Theresa May's gamble on a snap election was under question on Thursday after a YouGov opinion poll showed her Conservative Party's lead had fallen to a fresh low of 3 percentage points just a week before voting begins. A failure to win the June 8 election with a large majority would weaken May just as formal Brexit talks are due to begin while the loss of her majority in parliament would pitch British politics into turmoil. In the strongest signal yet that the election is much closer than previously thought, May's lead has collapsed from 24 points since she surprised both rivals and financial markets on April 18 by calling the election…”
Global Bubble Watch:
May 31 – Bloomberg (Emily Cadman): “Australian house prices fell in May for the first time in 17 months, in an early sign lending restrictions are starting to damp demand. Home values in Australia’s state and territory capitals fell 1.1% last month from April… Still, prices across the combined capitals were 8.3% higher than a year ago. The monthly decline comes after regulators tightened lending curbs amid fears of a housing bubble, and the nation’s banks raised interest rates -- especially for interest-only loans which are popular with property investors seeking to take advantage of tax breaks.”
May 29 – CNBC (Arjun Kharpal): “Nearly $4 billion has been wiped off of the value of bitcoin in the past four days after a correction that has seen the cryptocurrency's price fall almost 19% from its recent record high. On May 24, bitcoin hit an all-time high of $2.791.69. But on Monday, the digital currency was trading at an intra-day high of $2,267.73, marking a more than $520 drop or 18.7% decline since the record high…”
Federal Reserve Watch:
May 31 – Reuters (Jonathan Spicer): “The Federal Reserve sent a strong signal… that it will raise interest rates this month and soon begin shedding some of its $4.5 trillion in bond holdings, despite some weak recent U.S. inflation readings. Fed Governor Jerome Powell, an influential policymaker and among the last to speak publicly before a mid-June policy meeting, said the U.S. economy was ‘healthy’ and the central bank should continue to edge toward a more normal footing after nearly a decade of crisis-era stimulus.”
May 30 – Wall Street Journal (Nick Timiraos): “Federal Reserve officials are set to raise short-term interest rates at their meeting in two weeks but could defer the following expected rate move in September if Congress roils markets by delaying action on raising the federal government’s debt ceiling. The possibility that Congress and the White House might have trouble reaching agreement in September to raise the federal debt limit and approve government funding for the year beginning Oct. 1 has surfaced as a new source of uncertainty in recent weeks. Since raising rates in March, many officials have said they probably would want to lift rates twice more, likely in June and September. After that, some officials have said they might pause rate increases to start the process of slowly shrinking the Fed’s $4.5 trillion portfolio of bonds and other assets at year-end before resuming rate increases in 2018.”
May 30 – Bloomberg (Jeanna Smialek and Matthew Boesler): “Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard said soft inflation could cause her to reassess the path forward for monetary policy should it linger, even as the global economic outlook brightens and U.S. growth looks poised to rebound. ‘If the soft inflation data persist, that would be concerning and, ultimately, could lead me to reassess the appropriate path of policy,’ Brainard said… She said her baseline expectation is that ‘it likely will be appropriate soon to adjust the federal funds rate’ and start shrinking the balance sheet.”
May 29 – Bloomberg (Alessandro Speciale): “Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco President John Williams sees a ‘much smaller’ Fed balance sheet in about five years, at the end of an unwinding process that could start with a ‘baby step’ later this year. ‘How big will the balance sheet be five years from now, when this has all happened?’ Williams said… ‘That is something we haven’t decided on. It will be much smaller than today.’ Policy makers are coalescing around a plan for gradually reducing the central bank’s $4.5 trillion in assets with a predictable process aimed at minimizing market reactions.”
May 31 – Reuters (Piotr Skolimowski and Alessandro Speciale): “San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank President John C. Williams said… he sees a total of three interest rate increases for this year as his baseline scenario, but views four hikes as also being appropriate if the U.S. economy gets an unexpected boost. ‘There is potential for upside occurrences in the economy. One big question mark is if there is big fiscal stimulus or other changes in the outlook that we see the economy is doing better than we thought,’ said Williams…”
U.S. Bubble Watch:
May 29 – Financial Times (Dambisa Moyo): “Virtually every class of US debt — sovereign, corporate, unsecured household/personal, auto loans and student debt — is at record highs. Americans now owe $1tn in credit card debt, and a roughly equivalent amount of student loans and auto-loans which, like the subprime mortgage quality that set off the 2008 financial crisis, are of largely low credit quality (and therefore high risk). US companies have added $7.8tn of debt since 2010 and their ability to cover interest payments is at its weakest since 2008… With total public and private debt obligations estimated at 350% of gross domestic product, the US Congressional Budget Office has recently described the path of US debt (and deficits) as almost doubling over the next 30 years. But this is not just a US phenomenon. Globally, the picture is similarly precarious, with debt stubbornly high in Europe, rising in Asia and surging across broader emerging markets. A decade on from the beginning of the financial crisis, the world has the makings of a fresh debt crisis.”
May 30 – Bloomberg (Dani Burger): “Investment managers are doubling down on the hottest stocks of 2017 -- and it’s paying off. Funds tracked by Bank of America Corp. own the highest percentage of technology stocks on record compared to their benchmark. It’s a sector that’s carried U.S. stocks to new highs, leading the S&P 500 Index with a nearly 20% gain in 2017. And it’s giving active managers a boost they haven’t seen in more than two years.”
May 29 – Financial Times (Ben McLannahan): “Big banks are throttling back from the $1.2tn US car loan market, fearing that consumers have taken on more debt than they can handle. Lenders piled into the sector in the years after the financial crisis, as low defaults and an improving economy encouraged them to focus on a market that performed relatively well as mortgages soured. Total loans across the industry rose to $1.17tn at the end of the first quarter… up almost 70% from a trough in 2010. But data released last week by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation showed the first sequential drop in car loans outstanding at commercial banks in at least six years.”
May 30 – CNBC (Lauren Thomas): “U.S. home prices rose slightly less than what was anticipated for the month of March, according to new data from the S&P/Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index. But the gains were enough to reach a 33-month high, climbing at the strongest rate in nearly three years. This, as inventory of homes for sale remains ‘unusually low,’ the group said. The national home price index increased 5.8% in March… Meanwhile, the widely tracked 20-city home price index rose 5.9% from a year ago in March, the most since July 2014. The latest data… shows that home prices continued their impressive rise, across the country, over the past 12 months. Home prices had hit a record in September, and the pace of growth accelerated ever since then.”
May 31 – Bloomberg (Elizabeth Campbell): “Illinois leaders will blow past a deadline that will leave the state careening toward the third straight year without a budget. The Illinois House isn’t voting on a budget on Wednesday, which means the gridlock-prone government won’t pass a spending plan by midnight. That means approving a budget -- a usually routine task that has eluded the state for 700 days -- will become even more difficult because a three-fifths majority will be required… ‘We are probably approaching that point of impaired ability to function at basic level,’ said John Humphrey, the Chicago-based head of credit research for Gurtin Municipal Bond Management…”
May 31 – Reuters (Lucia Mutikani): “Contracts to buy previously owned U.S. homes fell for a second straight month in April amid a supply squeeze, but the housing market recovery remains supported by a strong labor market. The National Association of Realtors said… its Pending Home Sales Index, based on contracts signed last month, dropped 1.3% to 109.8… Coming on the heels of recent data showing a drop in home building and sales of both new and previously owned homes, the decrease in contracts suggests a moderation in housing activity.”
Japan Watch:
May 29 – Bloomberg (Keiko Ujikane): “Japan’s jobless rate remained at the lowest in more than two decades last month, and retail sales rose from March, climbing for a fourth month. Retail sales rose 1.4% from March, and were up 3.2% compared to April last year. The unemployment rate for April was 2.8%, the same as the forecast.”
May 30 – Bloomberg (Keiko Ujikane): “Japan’s industrial output rebounded in April, hitting the highest level since 2008, as overseas demand continued to support the nation’s economic recovery. Industrial production increased 4.0% (forecast +4.2%) in April from March, when it fell 1.9%.”
May 31 – Reuters (Leika Kihara): “Bank of Japan board member Yutaka Harada said… he expected inflation to accelerate as the country's jobless rate approached 2%. ‘Inflation accelerates sharply when the jobless rate approaches 2%. Japan's jobless rate has already fallen to 2.8%. If this trend continues and the jobless rate falls further, there's no doubt prices will rise,’ Harada said…”
EM Watch:
May 29 – Bloomberg (Natasha Doff): “Investors reaping handsome returns on emerging-market currencies this year might do well to heed a warning once made by Harvard economist Jeffrey Frankel, who likened carry trading to ‘picking up pennies in front of a steam roller.’ Economic theory -- and history -- suggest the strategy of borrowing where interest rates are low to invest in high-yielding currencies is prone to the risk of a sharp reversal when too many investors pile into the trade. Strategists at Bank of America Merrill Lynch warned last week that sentiment on emerging-market currencies is already reaching ‘exuberant levels.’ Saxo Bank A/S’s chief currency strategist says now is the time to take profits. Investors from BlackRock Inc. to Man Group Plc have poured money into emerging-market currencies this year to profit from interest as high as 12% compared with rates close to zero in the U.S. and European Union. The strategy has produced an average return of 7.5% since the beginning of the year…”
Geopolitical Watch:
June 2 – Bloomberg (Jennifer A Dlouhy): “The response to President Donald Trump’s announcement he was exiting the Paris climate accord and wanted to renegotiate on his terms was immediate: The leaders of France, Germany and Italy said no. On Wall Street, corporate executives pilloried the businessman president. Goldman Sachs’ CEO tweeted for the first time, calling the move a setback for the world. Tesla Inc.’s Elon Musk and Bob Iger of Walt Disney Co. quit a White House advisory council in protest. Even the mayor of Pittsburgh -- a city Trump highlighted as a beneficiary of his decision to turn his back on the global pact -- vowed to abide by the Paris agreement. Trump’s decision leaves him more alienated than ever, isolated on the world stage and increasingly embattled at home.”