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U-Turn
Episode 417th November 2023 • Macro Minutes • RBC Capital Markets
00:00:00 00:18:19

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The trends in markets since June - higher yields, lower equities, wider credit spreads - pulled a sharp U-turn over the past week. Lower bond yields have provided the impetus for a decent equity and credit rally. Listen to hear about where bond yields are headed from here and what it means for the equity market.

Participants:

  • Jason Daw (Desk Strategy), Head of North America Rates Strategy
  • Blake Gwinn (Desk Strategy), Head of US Rates Strategy
  • Michael Reid (Desk Strategy), US Economist
  • Lori Calvasina (Research), Head of U.S. Equity Strategy

Research Analyst opinions are their published views, independent of those expressed by Desk Analysts

Transcripts

Jason Daw:

Hello and welcome to Macro Minutes. During each episode, we'll be joined by RBC Capital Markets experts to provide high conviction insights on the latest developments in financial markets and the global economy. Please listen to the end of this recording for important disclosures.

Jason Daw:

Hi everyone, and welcome to this edition of Macro Minutes called U-Turn. I'm Jason Daw, your host for today's call, which we're recording at 9:00 AM Eastern time on November the seventh. The trends in markets that we've seen since June, higher yields, lower equities, wider credit spreads. These pulled the Sharp U-turn over the past week, the US 10 year yield. It's down 40 basis points from the highs and has provided the impetus for a decent equity and credit rally. On today's call, myself and Blake are going to speak about our views on duration, which are not widely different, but focus on different aspects of fundamentals and technicals. Later, Michael's going to enlighten us on the US economy, and Lori is going to tell us what this all means for the equity market. So the bond market is the tail wagging the dog at the moment, so we're going to get into the weeds on duration with Blake kicking it off and then followed by myself.

Blake Gwinn:

Great, thanks Jason. So as you hinted in the opening there, I mean the narrative shift in price action this last week has really been kind of wild. What I want to do, I just want to really quickly hit on the three main developments in the US last week that were at the center of all this. First was treasuries refunding announcement, which was one of the most highly watched refunding announcements that I can remember, at least in my career. The tail risks around supply and demand certainly relaxed a bit on that announcement. Treasury came out with a slightly smaller deficit forecast than expected. They pulled back a bit on long end issuance, but we didn't necessarily see that announcement or that pullback as a game changer. As we noted in the piece that we put out after the funding announcement. Our modal view on true premium from here continues to be fairly benign, but we still see the risks around it is skewed to the upside To that point, there's going to be a lot of eyes on the three year tenure and 30 year options this week.

I think even if we have kind of priced in the overall stock of supply coming, there's still the possibility that these flows, flow effects as markets have any difficulty digesting the supply still puts 'em upside pressure on yields. So a lot of people watching those auctions this week on the FOMC meeting markets has interpreted the meeting as modestly dovish. But I think that interpretation mostly relies on this assumption that there was really any set of circumstances in which Powell would've come out and talked up the September FOMC dots. I think the Fed speak into the meeting, including Powell himself, who we heard extensively from were all pretty clear that the bar to hiking again was very, very high. So I think not confirming that additional hike in the September dots, which is really what markets were focusing on, especially with only one meeting left in that forecast horizon, really shouldn't have come as much of a surprise to market.

So we didn't really see that quite as dovish, at least relative to expectations as the market did. The third point beside the quarterly refunding and FMC was obviously the data. Mike's going to talk about this a bit more later, but I did just want to say that 150 K jobs isn't exactly the sign of an imminent recession that I think many commentators on Friday seem to be making it out to be. Just two quick observations I'll make again Michael talk about the data a little bit more later. The three month moving average for n fp is still higher than it was at the September FMC meeting. And remember at that meeting, FM c FM C members were all boosting their economic forecasts and dot pop projections. And the other thing as for ISM numbers both on service and manufacturing side, both of the prints this last week represented only the fourth lowest prints of last year.

So really the doomsday commentary that surrounded a lot of the data this week I think was a bit overdone. We're not trying to write any of last week's data off. I mean it was absolutely soft on multiple fronts and certainly going to provide some fuel to the Fed that clearly is looking for a reason not to hike again. But again, in our view that was already largely consensus, but I think everyone needs to take a bit of a deep breath. Only seven days ago, our client conversations were all largely hammer hand ringing over the back to back to back back strength in N-F-P-C-P-I retail sales, GDP, all this concern about supply and demand imbalances, questions about how we're possibly going to get to our year end target for tens at four 50 or challenges to our call for cuts in the back half of next year.

The way the narrative really seemed to be shifting on Friday, it almost felt like we were going to have to start justifying our calls from the other side over the coming weeks basically explaining why we don't have a hard landing or cuts priced into the first half of next year. I do think that's calmed down a little bit. The partial retracement in yield this week have taken a little bit of the pressure off of those conversations that were really taking up late on Friday afternoon, but still it's pretty clear that there has been a pretty sizable shift in the narrative. Just to sum up before I pass it on, we don't necessarily disagree with the direction of rape moves last week. I do think the violence of the rally was significantly exaggerated by stop outs, a very crowded short positioning. But for us it's really more the degree to which the narrative seemed to flipped from this kind of soft landing.

to show signs of slowing into:

Jason Daw:

Thanks a lot, Blake. It seems that we agree on kind of the broad thrust of what's happening in the bond market in general. I guess from my standpoint, simplistically, the narrative in the bond market does seem to have changed. Prior to a week ago, it was all about one-way risks. Now it's definitely more balanced. It's not necessarily an uber bullish setup, but a better one than we've had over the past few months. And I think taking a step back, it's important to remember that the surge in yields that we had from June to early October was reinforced by almost a perfect storm of fundamentals and technicals. There was high worries about term premia, big worries about US supply changes to Japan, yield curve control and rapidly rising expectations for Q3 GDP. So this led to one-sided bearish bond market sentiment and a buyer strike from certain segments of the asset management community.

Now it seems like we're past the strongest points in US GDP, past the worst of supply fears possibly past the peak policy rate discussions past the worst of Japan YCC risks and probably past the worst of the term premium move. So now at a minimum it seems that the balance of risk for the bond market are very different than it was a couple weeks back. And I think this means that the chances of being 50 basis points lower in yields exceeds that of being 50 basis points higher from here. We might need to wait for some of this market to stabilize a little bit after what we saw last week, but I do feel the setup now is to play the market from the long side instead of the short side at least for the next one to three months. And to conclude, I do want to say a few things about Bank of Canada rate cut pricing.

ing larger and sooner cuts in:

Michael Reid:

Great, thanks Jason. As Blake noted, do want to focus on some of the data we saw last week. It's worth mentioning that I think a lot of that is coming from the impact of the UAW strikes. And what I mean is if you look at the payroll gains in particular, it printed below consensus, but if you add in the impact from the u AAW strikes, which was estimated around negative 33,000, we get a print that's right there in line with consensus and still quite strong. And if you look at the details, we continue to see strong growth from healthcare. That's a stalwart that should continue to print strong gains. We're also continuing to see gains in leisure and hospitality and state and local government. I note those two because those still have not returned to pre pandemic levels and there are still around two to three months of gains for those particular sectors in terms of their average growth to reach that level.

So we do see a path forward here where the gains will continue to come in quite high. Yet we do see some weakness in the underlying details. If you look at the unemployment rate, and it's worth noting that ticked up to 3.9% just as a technical matter, BLS does not classify workers who are on strike as unemployed. So the rise we saw in the unemployment rate is coming from other factors. In particular, if you look at the flow of workers who are coming from out of the labor force into the ranks of the unemployed, that is continuing to rise. That just means people who are looking for work are having a harder time finding a job. Additionally, if you look at the continued claims data that also is continuing to rise and another sign that workers who are collecting unemployment insurance right now are having a relatively harder time finding work taking together those two certainly can be lagging indicators.

But one thing that stood out to me as well on this report was the share of workers who have multiple jobs and there that actually rose above the pre covid levels and says to me that consumers are really starting to struggle with some of the price increases we've seen on goods and services. If you look back at the past four months, we have seen real disposable personal income, lagging real spending and that's concerning and we're starting to see consumers continue to draw down savings. The savings rate is near an all time low and we're also seeing an increasing reliance on credit spending. So taken into context, what we are seeing is some underlying weakness, not in the payroll numbers, but in the labor market activity that is going on. And how that fits in with our view is we see continued weakness ahead. Certainly as we head into the holiday season, we expect that the consumer wealth continue to slow here we are expecting for a considerable slowdown in GDP growth, again led by the consumer pulling back.

eading into the first half of:

Jason Daw:

Okay, thank you Michael. In the U-turn theme equities were under pressure but have reversed in the past week. We've heard about the bond market and the US economy. So now over to Laurie to tell us what this all means for the equity market.

Lori Calvasina:

Alright, thanks Jason. So I'll leave the question of whether yields have peaked my fixed income colleagues, but I did want to recap conversations we've been having with equity investors about what's been going on with 10 year yields. And quite simply the biggest question in my meetings last week was whether or not yields have peaked, and if so, what should we buy? We've taken a look in the past at sector performance relative to the s and p 500 over time and then looked at the correlation of those performance with moves with 10 year yields. What the historical playbook says is pretty simple. It says you want to sell energy materials and other cyclicals and buy growth sectors, especially communication and consumer discretionary if you think that yields have peaked. When we talked about the growth sectors that are potential beneficiaries, communication services and consumer discretionary, we've really emphasized that between the two, we do see better valuations in the communications services sector, which does have a number of key internet names, media and entertainment as well.

ally were seen throughout the:

We had a very healthy equity market. One of the things that really caught investors' attention was that we've run a back test against different levels of the earnings yield gap against 12 month forward s and p 500 returns. And even though basically the two are at parity, we're still in an environment where you get pretty strong 12 month forward gains in the s and p 500 over time. There are levels where the earnings yield gap will foretell negative returns in the equity market over the next 12 months, but we simply haven't gotten to those yet. Another chart we've talked about a lot recently looks at how equities do when yields are rising and we found that the s and p 500 continues to post strong gains when surges in the yield are 275 basis points or less, but stocks do tend to fall when the surges are more than that.

es and improves the setup for:

Speaker 5:

This content is based on information available at the time it was recorded and is for informational purposes only. It is not an offer to buy or sell or a solicitation and no recommendations are implied. It is outside the scope of this communication to consider whether it is suitable for you and your financial objectives.

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