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Weekly Market Update 27th April 2018

Weekly Market Update

Investment markets and key developments over the past week

  • Shares were flat to up over the last week. Eurozone shares rose 0.5% and Japanese and Australian shares rose 1.4% whereas US shares were flat despite good earnings results and Chinese shares fell 0.1%. Despite a mid-week spike higher, bond yields were flat in the US, down slightly in Europe on some soft country GDP data and up slightly in Australia. The US dollar continued its recovery, and this weighed on commodity prices and the Australian dollar.
  • More good news on the geopolitical front with: US Treasury Secretary Mnuchin going to China to negotiate on trade in what will likely be a long process but one that will ultimately head off a full blown China-US trade war; French President Macron proposing a renegotiation of the Iran nuclear deal, buying a bit of time to head off the US threat to walk away from the deal by 12 May; and ongoing signs of progress regarding North Korea. It’s also likely President Trump will extend the EU’s exemption from aluminium and steel tariffs beyond 1 May when it currently expires, but it may involve the use of quotas.
  • So it’s back to focussing on economic fundamentals, notably the risk of a more aggressive US Federal Reserve (Fed). A few weeks ago the big concern was the flattening US yield curve, partly as investors fretted that a trade war would slow global growth with PMIs softening a bit. But, as always we need to be cautious of the crowd as it’s now swung back to focussing on strong growth and the risk of higher inflation in the US, with the US 10-year bond yield briefly closing above 3% for the first time since 2013 on the back of strong data, rising inflation and rising fears around the Fed. Views remain that the market has been too complacent on the Fed (factoring in just two more hikes this year and one next) when it’s more likely that we’ll see three more hikes this year and another three next year. This will cause ongoing volatility. However, bond yields are only rising because of stronger growth, while US profit growth may be close to peaking (at over 20% year-on-year in the March quarter) it’s likely to continue growing solidly, US monetary policy is a long way from being tight and Europe and Japan are a long way from any monetary tightening. And now with very significant short positions in US bonds, yields aren’t going to go up in a straight line. Also, don’t forget that a 3% US 10-year bond yield implies a real yield of just 1%, which is very low historically. With the forward PE on US shares having fallen to 16.8x it means that the gap between the earnings yield of 5.95% and the 3% 10-year bond yield is still relatively wide at around 3%. In Australia, the earnings yield / bond yield gap is higher at around 3.5%, and in Europe it’s much higher at around 6% and in Japan it’s around 7%. So bond yields can rise a fair bit further before they become a major threat to shares.

Source: Bloomberg, AMP Capital

  • In Australia, APRA has formalised a further tightening in lending standards, at the same time as removing the now redundant 10% investor lending speed limit. Removing the speed limit makes sense, given that investor credit growth was just 2.8% over the year to February, the property market in Sydney and Melbourne has cooled and the speed limit is being replaced by a more fundamental tightening in lending standards including around interest-only lending (last year) and now much tougher requirements around borrowers’ income and expenses and bank attitudes towards borrowers’ total debt to income. Given this and more realistic investor expectations regarding future capital growth, it’s hard to see a resurgence in investor lending, particularly in relation to Sydney and Melbourne. To the contrary, expect that the tighter lending policies and practices will mean a further net tightening in lending conditions, leading to a further slowing in credit growth which in turn will maintain downwards pressure on home prices.
  • No Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) rate hike until sometime in 2020. It had been expected that the RBA would start raising rates in early 2019, but with the further tightening in bank lending standards effectively doing the RBA’s work for it and growth likely to remain below 3% and inflation around 2% for longer, now it is unlikely to see RBA tightening until sometime in 2020. With the Fed likely to continue hiking, this only adds to confidence that the A$ will fall towards US$0.70. And on this front it’s noteworthy that it appears to be breaking below the rising trend line that’s been in place since 2015.
  • The 2018 Federal Budget to be handed down on Tuesday 8th May is likely to look like a pre-election budget aimed at improving the Government’s standing ahead of the next Federal election. A big improvement in the underlying budget position on the back of increased corporate tax revenue, strong employment growth and lower spending is expected to see the deficit for this financial year fall to $17 billion from the $29 billion projected in last year’s Budget. This would allow the projected return to surplus to be brought forward a year to 2019-20, but the Government is likely to “spend” much of the revenue windfall and leave the return to surplus in place for 2020-21. The key elements of this pre-election budget stimulus are likely to be personal tax cuts for low and middle-income earners possibly starting as early as July this year but more likely sometime next year, the dropping of the 0.5% increase in the Medicare levy, more infrastructure projects and maybe some increase in health spending. Financial sector regulation may also get a boost in view of the Royal Commission.
  • The upside of the Australian Government’s Budget strategy is that consumers will be given a shot in the arm at a time of soft wages growth, falling home prices in Sydney and Melbourne and tightening bank lending standards. And the fiscal stimulus will be nowhere near the 2% of GDP seen recently in the US. The downside is that we will still be seeing a record 12 years of budget deficits, with nothing put aside for the next rainy day and there is a risk that the revenue surprise seen lately will prove ephemeral if global growth is threatened and/or employment slows.

Major global economic events and implications

  • US data over the last week was mostly strong. Underlying durable goods were softer than expected but April business conditions PMIs, home sales, home prices and consumer confidence all rose, jobless claims fell and the goods trade deficit narrowed. The March quarter employment cost index rose 0.8% quarter-on-quarter and 2.7% year-on-year, its fastest pace since before the GFC, indicating wages growth is continuing to accelerate. While March quarter GDP growth was 2.3% annualised, adjusting for weak seasonality in the March quarter indicates an above trend pace of around 3%. The US earnings reporting season is now 53% done and is very strong. 78% of results to date have beaten on earnings and 69% have beaten on sales. Companies reporting to date have seen earnings growth of 27% year-on-year, so overall earnings growth is on track to come in above 20%, with the bulk of the strength coming from underlying conditions and about 7 percentage points coming from tax cuts.
  • As expected the European Central Bank (ECB) left monetary policy on hold, remaining on track towards a tapering in QE in the final quarter but with no rate hike likely until mid-2019 at the earliest. If anything, ECB President Draghi sounded a bit dovish. There is no quick exit from easy money here. Business conditions PMIs and economic confidence stabilised in April, in contrast to German and French business confidence readings that slipped a bit further. The ECB’s latest bank survey showed easier lending conditions and rising loan demand though. Overall Europe looks good, and with the Euro now falling again this will take a bit of pressure off, but it’s not enough to speed up the ECB.
  • The Bank of Japan also made no changes to monetary policy as expected and lowered its expectations around inflation. While March labour market and industrial production data were strong and the April manufacturing conditions PMI improved slightly, core national inflation at just 0.5% year-on-year (and now just 0.3% in Tokyo) indicates that there will be no quick exit from easy money in Japan.
  • China moving to stimulate? China’s latest Politburo meeting was interesting, with talk of stimulating domestic demand with no reference to deleveraging. It’s premature to expect a significant stimulus growth is not weak enough (6.8% in the March quarter) and the Government is still aware of issues around debt but it reinforces the view that a significant slowing will not be tolerated. Taken together with either stronger or stable PMIs in the US, Europe and Japan in April, it adds to confidence global growth will remain strong.

Australian economic events and implications

  • Australian inflation remains in the slow lane consistent with the RBA remaining on hold. While the March quarter saw large rises in prices for health, education and utilities, weak pricing power is continuing to keep inflation at or just below the bottom of the 2-3% inflation target. Signs of weak underlying inflation remain evident in falling prices for clothing, furnishing, household goods, communication and recreation with private sector inflation excluding volatile items running at just 1.1% year-on-year. There is no case for RBA tightening here.

What to watch over the next week?

  • In the US, the Fed (Wednesday) is expected leave interest rates on hold but indicate that it remains on track to continue raising interest rates gradually on the back of strong growth and rising inflation. Market expectations for just two more rate hikes this year remain too complacent and it is likely to see three more this year with the next move in June. Data showing a rise in the March core private consumption deflator inflation (Monday) to 1.9% year-on-year, continued strength in employment (Friday) with April payrolls likely to rise by 190,000 and wages growth edging up to 2.8% year-on-year are expected to provide support for continued Fed tightening. In other data, expect solid gains in household income and spending (Monday), a rise in pending home sales (Tuesday) and continuing strength in the ISM manufacturing conditions index (Tuesday) and non-manufacturing conditions index (Thursday). Meanwhile, the March quarter earnings reporting season will continue.
  • In the Eurozone, March quarter GDP (Wednesday) is expected to have increased by 0.4% quarter-on-quarter, seeing annual growth slip slightly to 2.6% year-on-year and March unemployment (also Wednesday) is expected to fall further to 8.4%. However, April core inflation (Thursday) is likely to have remained unchanged at 1% year-on-year.
  • Chinese business conditions PMIs (due Monday and Wednesday) are expected to edge down a bit but remain around 51 for manufacturing consistent with growth running around 6.5-6.8% year on year.
  • In Australia, the Reserve Bank is expected to leave interest rates on hold for a record 21 months in a row when it meets on Tuesday. Strong business confidence, improving non-mining investment, solid global growth and the RBA’s own growth and inflation forecasts argue against a rate cut, but risks around consumer spending, tightening bank lending standards, weak wages growth and inflation, the slowing Sydney and Melbourne property markets and the still too high A$ argue against a rate hike. It is unlikely to see the RBA commencing a tightening cycle until sometime in 2020 and another rate cut cannot be ruled out. The RBA is expected to make only minor changes to its 2018 forecasts in its Statement of Monetary Policy (Friday), with a slight rise in its underlying inflation forecast to 2% and a downgrade in its growth forecast to 3%, but these are unlikely to affect the outlook for interest rates.
  • Meanwhile on the data front in Australia, expect: credit growth (Monday) to remain moderate; CoreLogic data for March to show continuing weakness in home prices (Tuesday) led by Sydney; a 2% or so bounce in building approvals for March (Thursday); and a March trade surplus of around $1 billion (also Thursday). Business conditions PMIs for April are likely to remain solid.

Outlook for markets

  • Volatility in share markets is likely to remain high, as US inflation and interest rates move up and as issues around President Trump, trade, the Mueller inquiry, etc, continue to impact ahead of the US mid-term elections in November. However, the medium-term trend in share markets is likely to remain up as global recession is unlikely and earnings growth remains strong globally and solid in Australia.
  • Low yields and capital losses from rising bond yields are likely to drive low returns from bonds. Australian bonds are likely to outperform global bonds helped by the relatively dovish RBA in contrast to the Fed.
  • Unlisted commercial property and infrastructure are still likely to benefit from the search for yield by investors, but it is waning, and listed variants remain vulnerable to rising bond yields.
  • National capital city residential property price gains are expected to slow further as the air continues to come out of the Sydney and Melbourne property boom and prices fall by another 5% this year, but Perth and Darwin bottom out, Adelaide and Brisbane see moderate gains and Hobart booms.
  • Cash and bank deposits are likely to continue to provide poor returns, with term deposit rates running around 2.2%.
  • The A$ is likely to fall towards US$0.70 as the gap between the RBA’s cash rate and the US Fed Funds rate pushes further into negative territory. Solid commodity prices should provide a floor for the A$ though in contrast to early last decade when the interest rate gap was negative and the A$ fell below US$0.50.

Source: AMP CAPITAL ‘Weekly Market Update’

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Published On: April 30th, 2018Categories: FinSec Post, Market Update