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Weekly Market Update – 18th June 2021
Investment markets and key developments over the past week
- While US shares fell over the last week as the Fed surprised on the hawkish side and Chinese shares also fell, Eurozone and Japanese shares rose benefitting from reopening and having central banks that are a long way behind the Fed. Australian shares also had a strong week rising to a new record high although this was led by IT, health, retail and telcos offsetting weakness in resources stocks. Bond yields also rose reversing some of their recent decline. Oil and metal prices fell not helped by a rebound in the US dollar, but the iron ore price rose. The rebound in the US dollar also weighed on the $A.
- The drumbeat of central banks looking to start slowing monetary stimulus continued over the last week with the Fed surprisingly hawkish and the RBA heading in that direction albeit slowly. But it’s still way to early to get bearish. It started amongst developed country central banks several months back with the Bank of Canada, then the Bank of England followed by the RBNZ and the Bank of Korea. The Fed has been gradually getting there in relation to tapering its QE program, but it was more evident in the past week with the Fed more upbeat on the outlook and this showed up in the median expectation of Fed officials now showing two rate hikes in 2023 from zero after their March meeting. See the next chart. While Fed Chair Powell played down the importance of the so-called dots and noted that substantial further progress was “still a way away” he did say that the Fed is now “talking about talking about tapering.” views are that formal taper talk is likely to start at next month’s Fed meeting with actual tapering likely to start late this year or early next and that 2023 for the first Fed hike is a reasonable expectation.
Source: Bloomberg, AMP Capital
- Meanwhile in Australia, the minutes from the last RBA meeting and a speech by RBA Governor Lowe didn’t really offer anything new on the economic outlook but it did provide some insight in terms of how they are approaching their July decisions regarding whether or not to extend their yield target and their bond buying program. In terms of the former, views are that the RBA is unlikely to extend its yield target from the April 2024 bond to the November 2024 bond because there is now a very high probability of a rate hike in the next three years thanks to the continuing stronger than expected recovery as evident in the May jobs report. In fact, it’s likely to still see the first-rate hike as being in 2023 and after the strong jobs numbers there is a risk it may come in late 2022. In terms of the bond buying program the RBA has already ruled out ending it in September but strong growth points to some sort of tapering of it. The base case is that the RBA will reduce its bond buying program to $50bn over six months (under its option III) but note that this could be combined with its option IV to adopt an open-ended approach with more frequent reviews. The latter has the benefit of being able to better calibrate to the needs of the economy and also to what other central banks (namely the Fed) are doing in terms of quantitative easing. So the exit path for the RBA from ultra-easy monetary policy looks like this: ending the Term Funding Facility for banks this month; leaving the bond yield target focussed on the April 2024 bond; tapering the bond buying program from September; possibly ending the bond yield target next year; ahead of a first rate hike in 2023 (or maybe late 2022).
- The shift to tapering and a pull forward in first rate hikes may cause bouts of nervousness in markets but note that tapering is not monetary tightening (it’s just slower easing) and rate hikes are still a fair way off in most developed countries. It’s also worth noting that through the last US taper from December 2013 to September/October 2014 shares rose. And in recent cycles the first Fed rate hike has caused a dip in US shares, but the bull market then resumed and continues until rates become onerously tight, which in this cycle may be several years away. The recent shift in tone from central banks is unlikely to signal that they are backing away from their commitments to getting inflation sustainably back in their inflation targets – rather it reflects the reality that as recovery has been stronger than expected they may meet their objectives earlier than previously expected. So, the post Fed meeting market reaction that has seen investors reversing some cyclical bets and inflation hedges is likely an overreaction. Finally, it’s noteworthy that the ECB and Bank of Japan are lagging well behind and rightly so as their recoveries have lagged and their inflation rates are much lower.
- The G7 meeting represented another step down the path to a cold war between liberal democracies and autocracies underpinned by the US returning to working more closely with its allies. While it was relatively mild it may have been a contributor to China’s reported decision to send military aircraft into Taiwan’s air defence identification zone. Three points regarding this and investment markets: first it all highlights the increased importance of geopolitics for investment markets; second it’s worth remembering that adverse geopolitical events are often very hard to predict in terms of their happening and their impact on markets; and third the US/Soviet cold war had its testing moments but wasn’t negative for investment markets in a secular sense in the post WW2 period.
- The Australia-UK free trade deal is good news for Australian farmers, consumers of British made cars and backpackers but don’t expect a big macro economic boost. It will take at least a year to start up and some of the tariff cuts on red meet exports to the UK may take 10-15 years to be eliminated. At most it may add around 0.2% to GDP spread over a decade, but on an annual basis it will be barely noticeable. More free trade is always better than less though.
- The global downtrend in new coronavirus cases continued over the last week driven by developed countries and a continuing fall in India. The spike in deaths in the charts was due to delayed reporting in India but it’s expected to follow new cases down. However, various countries continue to see a rising trend in new cases including South Africa, South Korea. and in some South American countries.
Source: ourworldindata.org, AMP Capital
- A rising trend in new cases in the UK driven by the Delta variant, particularly among younger unvaccinated people saw England delay the removal of final covid restrictions by four weeks and highlights the danger of reopening too rapidly before herd immunity has been reached. While 63% of the UK population has had at least one vaccine dose that still leaves a big part of the population that has not been vaccinated or has not had a second dose. With the Delta variant being around 60% more transmissible than regular covid and resulting in double the probability of unvaccinated people requiring hospitalisation it may require 80% or so of the population to be fully vaccinated to reach herd immunity rather than the 70%. Fortunately, the big progress the UK has already made in vaccinating should help head off anything like the covid waves seen in the UK over the last year. Key to watch will be hospitalisations and deaths and the UK will be a bit of a test case for other vaccinated countries.
Source: ourworldindata.org, AMP Capital
- Australia continues to see a low number of cases – but some cases of local transmission are still popping up in Melbourne and there has been several in Sydney due to the Delta variant (again linked to the hotel quarantine system) which has seen the return of the mask requirement on public transport.
Source: covid19data.com.au
- So far 22% of people globally and 46% in developed countries have had at least one dose of vaccine. Canada is now at 67%, the UK at 63%, the US at 54%, Europe at 45% and Australia is at 24%. The success of the vaccines continues to be evident in low new cases, hospitalisations and deaths in countries with high levels of vaccination although as noted earlier the UK has had some problems.
Source: ourworldindata.org, AMP Capital
- Australia’s daily vaccination rate remains relatively low at 0.4% of the population (see the thick line in the next chart).
Source: ourworldindata.org, AMP Capital
- The Australian Economic Activity Tracker recovered part of its recent loss over the last week as Victoria’s economy reopened. The US Tracker remains just below its pre-coronavirus level, and the European Tracker is continuing to rise rapidly as Europe reopens.
Source: AMP Capital
Major global economic events and implications
- US data was mostly strong over the past week although momentum may have slowed a bit after the stimulus driven surge of earlier this year. Retail sales were softer than expected in May, but the prior month was revised up and they are likely being impacted by a rotation back to services spending. Housing starts rose by less than expected but are still strong as are home builder conditions. The New York and Philadelphia regions saw manufacturing conditions slow in June but to still strong levels. Producer price inflation accelerated further, and the regional business surveys show price pressures remain high, but strengthening industrial production which rose more than expected in May should ultimately help tame goods price inflation as supply catches up with demand.
- Japanese CPI “inflation” rose in May but only to -0.1% year on year and core inflation remained weak at -0.2%yoy, highlighting that there is not much bleed through from high producer price inflation which is running at +4.9%yoy.
- Chinese May economic activity data was softer than expected but remains consistent with reasonable growth. Port disruptions in China’s Pearl River Delta due to coronavirus cases may impact exports and imports.
- NZ joined Australia in being one of the few developed countries to have GDP above its pre covid level in the March quarter.
Australian economic events and implications
- Australia saw another surge in jobs in May, resulting in unemployment fall back to is pre coronavirus level and underemployment fall to its lowest level since 2014. And the Jobs Leading Indicator suggests that employment growth is likely to remain solid in the months ahead. The main risk is that the continuing covid scares impact the jobs market – but provided any snap lockdowns are short then the impact should be minimal. More fundamentally it is reasonable to expect some slowing in jobs growth over the next six months given that the labour market has now recovered to pre coronavirus levels and beyond on some measures. But it’s now likely that unemployment will be around 4.8% by year end. Full employment is around 4% but it’s likely that this will be reached in 2023 driving 3% plus wages growth and enabling the RBA to then start raising rates. That of course is still two years away.
Source: Bloomberg, AMP Capital
Source: ABS, AMP Capital
- This is unlikely to happen quickly enough though to head off a tightening in lending standards by APRA with the Council of Financial Regulators (which includes APRA and the RBA) discussing policy responses if household debt growth started to substantially outpace income growth.
- Meanwhile the rate of increase in the minimum wage will pick up in the year ahead but it’s not going to have much impact on overall wages growth. The Fair Work Commission decision to grant a 2.5% increase in the minimum wages is up from last year’s 1.8% rise but won’t be effective until later this year and compares to increases in the pre-pandemic years of around 3% to 3.5%. Assuming around 20% of the workforce is impacted directly or via awards then it will boost average wages growth by just 0.14% compared to the last year.
What to watch over the next week?
- In the US, expect a slight fall in existing home sales (Tuesday) but a slight rise in new home sales (Wednesday), a slight fall but still strong business conditions PMIs (also Wednesday) with possibly some decline in price pressure, continuing strength in durable goods orders (Thursday) and a reasonable rise in personal spending (Friday) reflecting services sector reopening. Core private final consumption spending inflation data (also Friday) is likely to show a further acceleration to 3.5%yoy consistent with the May CPI.
- Eurozone business conditions PMIs (Wednesday) are expected to show a further recovery as will the German IFO and French INSEE (Thursday).
- The Bank of England is expected to leave monetary policy on hold when it meets on Thursday.
- Japanese business conditions PMIs for June (Wednesday) are expected to show a slight improvement.
- In Australia, expect a 0.3% gain in May retail sales and business conditions PMIs (Wednesday) for June to show a slight pull back owing to the Victorian lockdown but to still strong levels.
Outlook for investment markets
- Shares remain vulnerable to a short-term correction with possible triggers being the inflation scare, US taper talk and rising bond yields, coronavirus related setbacks and geopolitical risks. But looking through the inevitable short-term noise, the combination of improving global growth and earnings helped by more stimulus, vaccines and still low interest rates augurs well for shares over the next 12 months.
- Our only recently upwardly revised year-end target for the Australian ASX 200 of 7400 is already looking way too conservative. With the economy continuing to recover faster than expected and this driving stronger than expected earnings growth while interest rates are still low it’s likely the trend in the Australian share market will remain up for at least the next 6-12 months, notwithstanding the risk of short-term corrections. More broadly the surge in the Australian share market and in Eurozone shares are consistent with the view that non-US shares would outperform US shares this year.
- Australian earnings per share more upgrades
Source: Bloomberg, AMP Capital
- Still ultra-low yields and a capital loss from rising bond yields are likely to result in negative returns from bonds over the next 12 months.
- Unlisted commercial property and infrastructure are ultimately likely to benefit from a resumption of the search for yield but the hit to space demand and hence rents from the virus will continue to weigh on near term returns.
- Australian home prices are on track to rise around 18% this year before slowing to around 5% next year, being boosted by ultra-low mortgage rates, economic recovery and FOMO, but expect a progressive slowing in the pace of gains as government home buyer incentives are cut back, fixed mortgage rates rise, macro prudential tightening kicks in and immigration remains down relative to normal.
- Cash and bank deposits are likely to provide very poor returns, given the ultra-low cash rate of just 0.1%. Views remain that the RBA won’t start raising rates until 2023.
- Although the $A is vulnerable to bouts of uncertainty and RBA bond buying and China tensions will keep it lower than otherwise, a rising trend is likely to remain over the next 12 months helped by strong commodity prices and a cyclical decline in the US dollar, probably taking the $A up to around $US0.85 by year end.
Source: AMP CAPITAL ‘Weekly Market Update’
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