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Macro and bond observations
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Suyash Choudhary (Source: IANS) | 06 Sep, 2022
More pronounced signs of economic breakage
It is evident
now that economic growth is slowing appreciably around the world. While
this is widely acknowledged by now, one suspects the extent of the
eventual slowdown is still not. There seems to be momentum to the
slowdown given the context of more restrictive fiscal policy now and the
fact that central banks will widely keep monetary conditions tighter
for longer.
While China is loosening policy on the margin, there
are multiple constraints here both on the quantum of easing possible
and the net effect of the same. Thus the only (temporary) respite to the
downward momentum to global growth could potentially be from a possible
cessation of war and a consequent sharp correction in energy prices
(this is mentioned as a possible scenario here and not a view).
Barring
that, one would expect the higher momentum data slowdown to eventually
feed into the 'stickier' parts of the world economy. As one example of
this, concurrent data on US housing sales has turned down significantly.
Signs that this is percolating into new construction are very much
there. One would think it a matter of time that the housing slowdown
starts showing up in house prices and from there as a negative wealth
effect for consumers. This in turn may weigh further on discretionary
consumption (including for services) which is already slowing. The
construction slowdown alongside the ongoing manufacturing weakness would
show eventually in the labour market and from there into wages.
The
last of these is the slowest moving piece in the chain just described.
However this is precisely the shoe the Fed is waiting to see drop, and
that is the reason that policy rates will have to be held higher for
longer. An implication of this also is that while sovereign rates may
already have done the heavy-lifting, corporate bond spreads in developed
markets (DMs) appear way too sanguine given the macro context described
here.
One can think about India's own growth momentum in context
of slowdown spreading to stickier parts of the world. We have two
distinct advantages going for us.
One, a long period issue on
local corporate and bank balance sheets is now behind us. This has been a
significant cyclical drag over the past many years which has now turned
into a tailwind.
Two, India's total monetary and fiscal policy
response to Covid has been measured and responsible. This implies that
there is very little overhang to deal with of excess stimulus from the
past unlike in the case of many developed economies. This is also the
main reason behind our view that India needn't follow the US lockstep in
monetary tightening and that we can afford for our effective overnight
rate to peak below 6 per cent in this cycle.
Returning to point,
however, the cycle and policy tailwinds are ensuring that we now grow
more robustly than many other nations around the world. The relative
growth advantage will likely sustain going forward. However, the
absolute growth acceleration that we have witnessed over the past few
months will have to slow reflecting the weakening global growth. This
starts through the export channel, as it already has, and then proceeds
to impact local consumption and investments down the line.
Stabler rate hike expectations in DMs from here Global
rate hike expectations were in constant iteration mode (read being
continually revised upwards) for most of this year till mid-June. Post
that things took a breather. For a while as signs of economic breakage
started to become clearer, markets began running somewhat ahead of
themselves by not just lowering their terminal rate forecasts but in
some cases even building significant rate cuts for late 2023 in some
developed markets. As an example, around mid-July approximately 80 bps
rate cuts were being priced in for the US next year.
Over the
past few weeks, on the back of active central bank pushes against this
idea helped with continued upward pressure on European inflation,
'sense' seems to have returned. This has been evidenced in both terminal
rate pricing going up as well as an expectation now that they will be
at higher levels for longer. This is now more consistent with the
message delivered, as an example, by Fed Chair Powell in his recent
Jackson Hole speech. In Europe, policy tightening expectations had built
in significantly till mid-June but then unwound appreciably on the back
of weaker economic data. However, with inflation concerns going up
further and with ECB seemingly showing firm resolve to contain it, rate
hike expectations have sharply risen again. These gyrations are best
reflected in the movement of German 2-year bond yields over the past few
months. The UK has also seen very sharp recent additions to rate hike
expectations from the market.
Given all of the recent building
back of rate hike expectations, and with clear signs of economic
breakage becoming more pronounced, it is unlikely that incoming data
leads to more than, say, a 25 bps upward change in expectations from the
current levels in most major DMs. Pricing is already for peak rates in
this cycle being significantly higher than what are termed as long term
neutral rates and thus incoming data needs to very sharply surprise for
this to move even higher by a significant step.
Turning home,
rate hike expectations with respect to RBI seem to also now be
stabilising. To recap, these expectations had become quite unanchored
post the inter-meeting hike in May. While we had held on to our view of
peak effective rates in this cycle at sub-6 per cent (basis our reading
of the current global macro cycle as well as India's total, relatively
modest, post Covid policy response), market pricing was far in excess of
this at 'peak fear' after the May event. However, now here as well
market seems to be converging towards a peak repo rate of 6-6.25 per
cent which is much closer to what we have been thinking. Our view of
peak effective overnight rate of 5.75 per cent is consistent with a
terminal repo of 6 per cent with overnight rates round the SDF, 25 bps
below.
Tighter global financial conditions and possible implications While
DM sovereign rates may be more range bound from here, this doesn't mean
that we are done with tightening in global financial conditions. As
rates stay tighter for longer in the face of economic breakage, this may
get evidenced more in the usual risk off trades like stronger DM
currencies and wider corporate bond spreads (DM corporate bond spreads
are still relatively well behaved and seem to have significant room to
expand). Many emerging market (EM) bond yields are also like 'spread'
assets for global capital. Thus a tighter for longer policy environment
in DMs will entail stricter financial conditions and hence a widening of
spreads. This may impact yields in many EMs as well.
Over the
first half of the year when the world was readjusting its expectation of
global monetary tightening, the linkage to Indian bonds was largely
through interest rate swaps rather than outright bond selling by foreign
investors in a big way. Most of the capital outflows were instead from
the equities markets. This probably reflects the fact that active
foreign interest has been missing from Indian bonds over the past few
years and hence the amount of rebalancing out may also consequently be
lower. Portfolio rebalancing on possible another bout of risk aversion
ahead may not impact India's bonds significantly. Also with spread
between bond and swap having opened up (5 year government bond yields
were around 60 bps over 5 year swap yields at the time of writing),
there is room for this to compress without significantly impacting
underlying bond yields.
However, this doesn't mean that local
bonds are immune to global financial conditions tightening. This needs
to be still respected, in our view. As an example, lately the local bond
market is abuzz with expectations that India is on the cusp of being
included in at least one of the large global sovereign bond indices. The
argument heard is that this time around this is on 'pull' from
investors desiring some diversification to their EM exposures. Hence it
may go through even without associated facilitators that required leeway
on taxation which apparently our policymakers were against. The
expectation is that the while flows associated with actual index
inclusion may take some time, and the weight assigned to Indian bonds in
the index itself would only gradually go up, other 'fast money' flow
may pre-empt this and already start coming in. Basis this expectation,
one has seen a bull flattening over the past few sessions thereby
further flattening the 5 to 10 year yield spread, as local participants
have taken positions in longer duration bonds anticipating this
announcement.
We have no idea how far this can stretch in the
near term. However, nothing changes to our underlying view that if
there's one point of concern that bond markets ought to have over the
medium term, it is the amount of duration supply. This is both on
account of higher than pre-pandemic averages on likely fiscal deficit
over the next few years as well as a shift higher in annual bond
maturities over the next many years from what was the case in the past.
Even adjusted for nominal growth in participant balance sheets, this is a
significant step up in duration supply and likely needs support from a
demand standpoint. Absent offshore investors, RBI would have eventually
stepped in to buy bonds as a means to expand its balance sheet. With
index inclusion, offshore investors will buy bonds and RBI will get the
dollars to expand balance sheet. Then RBI wouldn't need to buy bonds.
Either way, over the medium term, the eventual effect on bond yields may
be similar.
Thus the issue of duration absorption may still
persist after the initial euphoria on index inclusion subsides. Also
this would be in what is a tighter global financing environment. In
India too even as our peak rate expectations are in place, we would
expect RBI to hold them there for longer. Thus investors should continue
to want higher risk premia from yields for holding higher duration over
the medium term. Also given how unforgiving the global environment is,
we don't want to be too 'tactical' with our portfolio strategies by
trying to chase the bull flattening. All told then, we continue to find
the most value in 4 -5 year government bonds.
(Suyash Choudhary is Head, Fixed Income, IDFC AMC)
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Customs Exchange Rates |
Currency |
Import |
Export |
US Dollar
|
84.35
|
82.60 |
UK Pound
|
106.35
|
102.90 |
Euro
|
92.50
|
89.35 |
Japanese
Yen |
55.05 |
53.40 |
As on 12 Oct, 2024 |
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