The 'what if' spooking
markets: policy success
Send a link to a friend
[August 03, 2016]
By Mike Dolan
LONDON (Reuters) - Voter rebellions? A
protectionist wave? Looming recession? Islamic militancy? Perhaps
the biggest shock to world markets now would be if central banks met
their inflation goals.
After nearly 10 years of near zero or even negative interest rates
and trillions of dollars in new cash stimulus, the world's top
central banks have just about kindled a spluttering, sub-par
expansion with jobs to boot.
But they have failed to get wages growing for large parts of the
population or to sustain consumer price gains above targets of about
2 percent for any length of time.
Financial markets have stopped believing they will - in some cases
not for the remainder of our working lives.
Inflation expectations embedded in interest rate derivatives and
inflation-linked bond markets are below target to at least 2026 and
even, where visible, 2046. Nominal sovereign yields out three and
even five decades into the future for Japan, Germany, Britain,
France and Switzerland are all below these targets too.
Some suspect the extraordinary bond-buying intervention used to
flood banks with all that newly-minted cash - still in full flow in
Japan and the euro zone, and possibly relaunched in Britain this
week - has skewed all pricing to make it unreliable.
But the U.S. Federal Reserve stopped its 'quantitative easing'
almost two years ago and has been no more successful in either
meeting its inflation targets since or in convincing its markets it
will mange to do so over time.
The Fed's favored household inflation gauge - the core Personal
Consumption Expenditures index - has remained stubbornly below a
presumed 2 percent goal now for eight years.
"Inflation expectations at 2 percent would be bordering on
irrational at this point given the Fed's inability or unwillingness
to achieve its target year after year," wrote Morgan Stanley
economist Ted Wiseman, adding his forecast for this year and next
meant there would be a full decade of misses.
Failure to generate enough economic activity to get wage and
inflation expectations rising clearly matters to governments,
households and business for a whole host of reasons - coaxing the
public to buy goods today rather than saving for tomorrow, getting
private firms to invest in future production and innovation, debt
sustainability and even political stability.
And for financial markets, a deeply-embedded belief that central
banks will not meet their targets over the coming decades has led to
extraordinary changes of behavior and herding that mean any sign of
success could be seismic.
With monetary stimuli now looking inadequate on their own,
governments may resort to a combination of budget spending and
monetary pumping to get a grip.
Japan nodded to that tilting policy mix this week with plans for 7.5
trillion yen of new government spending - likely funded by the sale
of 40-year bonds, just after the Bank of Japan said on Friday it
would expand purchases of equities rather than bonds.
That change of policy tack may jar ossifying market expectations.
The 25 basis point rise in 10-year Japanese government yields this
week - the biggest such move in three years - is eye-catching as a
result.
INFLATED ASSETS
But how exposed are world markets to shifting assumptions?
[to top of second column] |
People walk through the lobby of the London Stock Exchange in
London, Britain November 30, 2015. REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett
Equity prices have been nudging record highs again even though underlying
corporate earnings growth has stalled and global money managers polled by
Reuters last month are drifting away, their holdings of bonds and cash exceeding
equities for the first time since the credit crisis seven years ago.
And yet, bonds too have never been more expensive, with record low yields
undermining their critical fixed income function. German 10-year Bunds now have
zero percent coupons and that means any move higher in yields involves
significant losses on this supposedly 'risk free' asset.
Put another way, if markets believed the ECB would meet its near 2 percent
target over those 10 years and 10-year Bund yields at least matched that level,
then Bund holders would suffer a capital hit of over 20 percent.
Fitch estimates that a rapid reversion to just 2011 levels for almost $38
trillion of investment-grade government bonds could crystallize market losses of
as much as $3.8 trillion.
So what gives? An assumption central banks will continue to try but ultimately
fail to meet inflation goals is akin to presuming they'll prevent another
recession but not get enough growth to push up prices.
In that world anaesthetized from the sort of steep equity drawdowns associated
with economic contraction, simple yield plays between assets makes the 3.6
percent dividend on European equity or even the 2 percent on U.S. equivalents
sparkle next to near zero or even negative government bond yields.
Citi's estimate of the global 'equity risk premium' - adding expected growth to
current dividend yields across major developed economies and comparing it to an
average 10-year government bond yield - is a whopping 5.3 percent.
That's far above 25-year averages of 3 percent and most other bull market or
bear market peaks except 2009.
With conservative investors now relying on equity for income and playing bonds
for capital gain, the shock of policy success could be sizeable by squeezing
that ERP from the bottom up and whipping away a prop for already pricey, jaded
stocks.
"Markets are very doubtful that policymakers will be able to meet their
inflation goals," said Citi's global equity strategist Robert Buckland. "The
surprise from here would be that they actually do achieve their goals."
(Additional reporting by Jamie McGeever; editing by John Stonestreet)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |