For central bankers, tighter financial conditions may be an ally
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[June 15, 2022] By
Tommy Wilkes and Dhara Ranasinghe
LONDON (Reuters) -Slumping stocks and
surging bond yields are rapidly crimping global financial conditions,
yet given their effect on dampening economic growth and eventually
inflation, the moves might be welcomed by the Federal Reserve and other
central banks.
Financial conditions is the umbrella phrase for how metrics such as
exchange rates, equity swings and borrowing costs affect the
availability of funding for households and businesses. Tighter
conditions are widely seen as heralding a growth slowdown and
vice-versa.
So the recent sell-off in global markets - driven by signs of
faster-than-anticipated interest rate rises in the United States and
Europe - is contributing to a sharp contraction in financial conditions.
The widely used Goldman Sachs U.S. financial conditions index (FCI)
shows a 100 basis points (bps) tightening this month alone. The last
time the U.S. FCI contracted as sharply was during the February-March
2020 COVID-linked sell-off, Goldman data shows.
Goldman's rule of thumb is that a persistent 100 bps FCI tightening
slows GDP by about one percentage point after a year, in turn slowing
inflation by roughly 0.1 percentage point.
The contraction picked up speed amid a markets sell-off that took U.S.
Treasury yields to the highest in over a decade, confirmed a bear market
in U.S. shares and sent yield premia on top-grade U.S. corporate debt to
the highest in years..
Yields have soared too in Europe, where rate expectations have repriced
higher and interbank lending rates saw their biggest daily rise in over
10 years on Tuesday.
But while the FCI tightening appears alarming, it may not be for central
banks, which face inflation at multi-decade highs; in fact the latest
sell-off was sparked by above-forecast U.S. inflation for May of 8.1%.
All the more so because, as BlueBay Asset Management CIO Mark Dowding
points out, Goldman's FCI remains in line with its 30-year average of
around 99.8. Another FCI compiled by the Chicago Fed shows U.S.
conditions well below their 50-year average.
"Central banks are clearly managing their messaging with one eye on
financial conditions and at this point in time they wouldn't want them
to be much easier, that would more likely make them become more
hawkish," Dowding said.
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Pedestrians and a traffic light stop sign are reflected on a
quotation board in Tokyo, Japan February 26, 2021. REUTERS/Kim
Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
An inversion in the U.S. Treasury yield curve this week shows fears are growing
of a recession triggered by aggressive rate hikes.
So if tighter conditions force growth to slow, bring down inflation expectations
and thus enable fewer rate hikes down the line, markets may be doing central
bankers' job for them.
"The looser conditions are today, the greater the risk of higher inflation
tomorrow," said Fahad Kamal, CIO at Kleinwort Hambros.
"The fact they are tightening is a good thing. Conditions are still a long ways
off being tight, they have gone from being crazy loose to just loose."
HOLD IT
What is alarming some observers is the rapid cooling of economies outside the
United States.
Data compiled by Robin Brooks, chief economist at the Institute of International
Finance, shows government borrowing costs, especially for long 30-year
maturities, are rising faster than in the United States.
That signals a "global recession is coming", Brooks said.
The differential between U.S. and foreign bond yields has shrunk to an average
1.09% this month from 1.6% in January, his data shows. The gap was at 0.67% in
July 2020 when central banks were forced to slashed rates as the COVID-19
pandemic hit.
The jump in German yields is particularly notable as the European Central Bank
prepares to raise rates for the first time in 11 years.
Rate-sensitive two-year German yields are up 67 bps in June, the biggest monthly
jump since 1989, while since the start of April they have soared 124 bps,
outpacing a 104 bps rise in U.S. two-year yields.
Equivalent yields in Australia are 150 bps higher and in Britain they are up
around 75 bps since April.
Goldman's global FCI is at the highest since 2009, indicating financial
conditions have tightened by around 335 bps since the start of the year.
(Additional reporting by Sujata Rao and Yoruk BahceliEditing by Sujata Rao and
Mark Potter)
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