My Diary 367--- Economic Decoupling and Financial Coupling; Good Policy Responses Needed; Diversification in Recession
January 17, 2008
Two bombs in Wednesday and global equity markets moved down 1.5% in whole, while Asian stocks saw the greatest decrease (Nikkei plunged 3.4%). Equities in emerging markets have given back all their gains since the start of the credit turmoil and now stand at their mid-summer levels. Stocks are now beginning to question the prospects of a recession and the Fed has now admitted they have been wrong about the economy and they are prepared to move aggressively (better late than never).
What are bombs? The big banks/brokerages keep announcing bigger writedowns and then acquire more outside capital at generous levels only to have the whole process start all over again. Markets got their first take on the
Here now, news flows, data points and asset pricing have combined to create an increasingly depressed outlook for
Economic Decoupling and Financial Coupling
Economic reports in these two weeks will help answer two important questions --- 1) whether consumer spending is rolling over in the major economies after a surprisingly strong showing in Oct and Nov, including December retail sales in the
Beyond the two questions, the latest wave of global headline inflation has crested at near 4% yoy, assuming oil prices do not turn higher. The late 2007 surge in global inflation was not due solely to energy and food prices. Core inflation also edged higher. Global core inflation reached 2.3% yoy in November, the highest since 2002. However, the energy price movement was a mixed signal as lower fuel prices may buoy consumers spending, while the weak demand that has allowed inventories to build lately may signal that the economy is already weaker than expected.
Nowadays, many investors are hoping the fast-growing economies in Asia and elsewhere can offset
Bottom-line: The argument of economic decoupling has waned substantially in recent weeks, while financial market coupling is likely to remain high.
Good Policy Responses Needed
Overnight, the Beige Book showed that
A positive note is from the policy front, as the potential for a coordinated policy response from both the Fed and from the Federal Gov in the shape of tax cuts/or tax rebate may have a significant impact. In an election year, it would seem unlikely that the Democratic would stand in the way of a policy response to prevent a serious US recession. With all the policy levers being pulled to boost growth, there is a high probability that equities start to look past the trough and gain traction on a 2H08/1H09 reflation story.
Furthermore, a major distinction from the last recession post the TMT bubble, is the ever present build up of liquidity in Asia and the Middle East. When the tech bubble burst 2001, the entire global economy was simultaneously impacted and there were no bright spots to take up the slack. The world is in a different environment this time around. Asian growth remains robust and with oil up at these levels, the Middle East is generating huge amounts of Dollar reserves that have to be put to work. SWFs are in the process of underpinning the financial sector with substantial cash injections and the recouple / decouple debate, whether Asian economies can continue to grow strongly in face of a big slow down in US growth remains open.
Finally, the valuation argument is also a major factor. Judged by the yield curve, the market has been way ahead of the Fed in this cycle and I would argue that at current levels the maket may have priced in a mild US recession scenario. Its true, when sentiment deteriorates, liquidity dries up and assets are looking for safe haven, valuations do not matter. However, the markets have been in that environment for nearly 6 months now and we may see some relief.
Bottom-line: I do believe that the front end of the curve will be 50bps lower in the next 3-6 months, and if US consumers can still hold up their purchsing power and inflation comes down, the V-shaped stock market rebound is not far away from us after a continuous policy easing.
Diversification in Recession
The recent fund manager survey done by Merrill Lynch came up with two important results --- 1) it is the first time that institutional investors have really started to recognize that the credit crunch could lead to a global recession; 2) the vast majority of investors expect corporate operating margins to deteriorate over the next 12 months. Such a macro outlook is starting to make an impact on asset allocation as PMs have cut back their overweight stance on equities dramatically over the past five months. At the same time, they have aggressively built up their cash balances. Given their assessment of the relative value between the two assets, it seems likely that investors and asset allocators are still more inclined to put that cash back to work in equities rather than bonds.
Moreover, at the global sector level, it is more a question on what fund managers do not want to own. Financials and consumer discretionary (such as retail) are the only sectors recording a net underweight position in January. The 'most overvalued' sector this month is the global materials sector and one of the 'most undervalued' is the pharmaceuticals sector.
Interestingly, recession or not in the
Bottom-line: Diversification is the key to staying defensive, and being defensive will help cushion the impact on portfolio investments in case the US does get hit by a recession. And Asian currencies may be an important factor in asset allocation this year.
Good night, my dear friends!