Carmignac's Note
The countdown
June 2018
Close to a decade of unconventional central bank intervention in the financial markets made what was once irrational look sensible. Investors no longer needed to worry about the business cycle, inflation, stock valuations or even risk concentration, as sovereign debt purchases by central banks were what ultimately determined financial asset prices. The carefully-timed policies implemented by the various monetary authorities to compress interest rates suppressed market volatility. They also created a crowding-out effect that kept credit spreads tight and stock markets humming. There was equally little concern over how sharply the fiscal tightening imposed on governments after the 2008 financial meltdown skewed the distribution of income and wealth to holders of capital – and away from wage- and salary-earners. That growing gap has unquestionably been a major driver of political insurgency these past two years on both sides of the Atlantic. Protest movements critical of the free-market order are now pressuring governments to tone down their fiscal virtue and finally loosen the purse strings.
The political challenge to EU discipline recently posed by Italy’s anti-establishment parties can accordingly be viewed as one of many European echoes to the America First mentality. The Italian echo has already generated significant financial market stress. After flocking almost unanimously to the risks “sponsored” by central banks, investors now suddenly find themselves on quite shaky ground. For the time being, though, the global economy is still growing at a decent pace, corporate earnings remain enviably high and central banks have been sticking to very dovish policies. Together, those factors still constitute a reassuring safety net for investors.
But the day that such macroeconomic and monetary policy support starts to fade away, financial markets will be subject to real-life stress tests – and so, by the way, will active asset management styles. Both flagging economic growth and mounting unease among central bankers are already observable. That means that the countdown is on.
Italy’s troubles are symptomatic of broader eurozone vulnerability
This time is not different
The main economic indicators released in May substantiate our message of an upcoming slowdown in global growth, as explained in Carmignac’s Note from last month, “Beneath the fury, the economic cycle”. Despite Trump’s tax reform, capital expenditure has yet to pick up in the United States, while consumer spending is now progressing at a slower tempo. In the euro area, while economic indicators are still at elevated levels, there has likewise been a clear loss of momentum these past two months. The same goes for Japan.
And this time, our contention that the business cycle will soon go into reverse is being borne out by “conventional” symptoms that had been off the radar during the near-decade of market distortion caused by monetary policy. Not only have cyclical, industrial, and heavily indebted companies seriously underperformed in the stock market since the start of the year, but we are also seeing the first upward pressure on prices – prompting economists (in the United States at any rate) to lift their inflation expectations and pushing up bond yields.
The maverick Uncle Sam
The current US administration has been playing fast and loose with more than just established practice in foreign trade and geopolitics.
President Trump’s fiscal spending goals will inevitably require the Federal government to borrow a great deal more, just when the Federal Reserve is shifting gears – shrinking its balance sheet instead of swelling it by purchasing US Treasuries as it did from 2009 to 2015. The regrettable conjunction of those two policy moves has undoubtedly contributed mightily to the upward trend in US yields.
Meanwhile, on the other side of the Atlantic, the ECB is continuing to buy large quantities of European sovereign debt even as the economy improves. A further, essential point is that the eurozone countries have so far held to their virtuous deficit-reduction policies. As a result, 10-year bond yields have been as much as 2.5 percentage points lower in Germany than in the US and, up until Italy’s recent political bombshell, there had been ongoing, remarkable convergence in yields across the currency bloc.
Virtue under pressure
The US presidential election and the UK Brexit referendum had sparked fears about the eurozone’s future in 2016, but Emmanuel Macron’s 2017 victory at the polls in France stemmed the centrifugal forces at work in the currency bloc. Elected on a programme for reforming both the French economy and European governance, the new president seemed to offer – in the nick of time – a credible alternative to a hazardous return to the past.
One year later, no party in Europe, however fervent about national sovereignty, is explicitly calling for ditching the euro, and the obstacles encountered by Britain at the Brexit negotiating table aren’t exactly encouraging secessionist leanings elsewhere. Moreover, the entire eurozone is now enjoying healthy economic growth. But the embers of breakup are still smouldering. Across the continent, public opinion remains highly divided. Many citizens are still receptive to demands for an end to fiscal discipline, not only because they favour a more just distribution of national wealth, but also because they have bought into the “my country first” credo.
The economic upswing has concealed the eurozone’s persistent structural weaknesses
The eurozone is still far from agreement on whether to introduce a common budget in order to give national fiscal policy-makers more room to manoeuvre during the next slowdown
Those sources of tension are particularly palpable in Italy. Not only does the country suffer from chronic political instability, but it has an abiding economic Achilles’ heel: the preponderance of small businesses which, while often very dynamic, are ill-equipped to invest in new technology and higher productivity. Capital spending – further discouraged by top-heavy regulation and stiff taxes – has been insufficient for the last twenty years, with the result that average disposable income is lower in Italy today than it was prior to the crisis, while income inequality remains stubbornly high.
Italy’s troubles are symptomatic of broader eurozone vulnerability. With the help of a highly protective central bank and, lately, of a booming economy, a few structural reforms have admittedly been carried out: starting in 2011 in Italy, for example, and much more recently in France. But the reforms have yet to restore those countries to competitive strength or to make a serious dent in their national debt. The fiscal leeway for their governments therefore remains quite limited – and would prove woefully inadequate in the face of an economic downturn. Any increase in government spending to steady a slowing economy would be interpreted in financial markets as a worrisome decline in solvency.
In a way, the latest events in Italy have thrown a key risk into stark relief: investors could rapidly switch to treating sovereign debt from the eurozone periphery as they would corporate bonds, using credit analysis to determine the level of yields they demand. That vulnerability is only heightened by the fact that the European Union has also failed to make headway with institutional reform. The eurozone is still far from agreement on whether to introduce a common budget in order to give national fiscal policy-makers more room to manoeuvre when and if government spending may be required. That means that there would be very few stabilising levers for policy-makers to pull to counter a near-term economic slowdown in Europe. The convergence process of the past few years could thus soon be confronted with harsh economic realities.
The coming months will therefore be crucial for asset allocation. Making the right macroeconomic calls is more important for active fund managers today than it has been for many years.
Source: Bloomberg, 31/05/2018