What s next? A macro view of 2018

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Transcription:

What s next? A macro view of 2018 Hong Kong 12 January 2018 John Greenwood Chief Economist, Invesco Ltd This document is intended only for 2018 Invesco Roadshow in Hong Kong. This is not an invitation to subscribe for shares in a fund nor is it to be construed as an offer to buy or sell any financial instruments. Nor does this constitute a recommendation of the suitability of any investment strategy for a particular investor. Circulation, disclosure, or dissemination of all or any part of this document

Outline Economic & investment outlook 1 2 3 4 US: Mr Trump s programme and Fed QT Europe: Recovery gaining momentum, except UK Why is inflation below target in so many countries? Bubbles and the Business Cycle 2

1. US: Mr Trump s programme and Fed QT

Donald Trump s economic programme Trump s Contract with the American Voter Tax reforms Trade reforms Regulatory reforms Energy reforms Infrastructure Immigration reforms Health care reforms Cut Personal and Corporate Income Tax to boost growth and repatriate capital from abroad. Withdrawn from TPP; renegotiate NAFTA? Limit Offshoring; stop currency manipulation ; stop below-market, subsidized steel imports. Reduce regulatory burden (currently $2 trillion); reduce restrictions on US business. Lift restrictions on shale, oil, natural gas and clean coal. Allow Keystone & XL pipelines to go ahead to lower energy prices. PPPs & private investment to spur $1 trillion over 10 years thousands of jobs in construction, steel, water, energy etc. Plan relies on private sector financing with tax credits, not government debt. Trump will cancel contributions to UN climate change. End funding to sanctuary cities and corporate-driven immigration system; enforce deportation. Repeal/Repair/Replace Obamacare to reduce part-time jobs. Source: Real Clear Policy, 30 October 2016, updated to 22 February 2017. $ = US. TPP = Trans-Pacific Partnership; NAFTA = North American Free Trade Agreement; PPPs = Public-Private Partnership. 4

Initial optimism of Trump victory has faded Index of US soft data Source: Macrobond as at 21 November 2017. 5

Jan-03 Jan-04 Jan-05 Jan-06 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 Jan-10 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 Jan-15 Jan-16 Jan-17 Jan-18 Jan-19 Jan-20 Jan-21 Trillions US Monetary Policy Normalization Fed Funds Rate Increases and Balance Sheet Shrinkage $5.0 $4.5 $4.0 $3.5 $3.0 $2.5 $2.0 $1.5 $1.0 $0.5 $0.0 Fed Total Assets Fed Funds Rate 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 (%) Source: Macrobond; Federal Reserve 14 June 2017 and Invesco calculations; interest rates from the Fed s Summary of Economic Projections, 20 September 2017. 6

2. Eurozone: Recovering momentum, except UK

Eurozone real GDP growth rising to 2.0% level Eurozone real GDP GDP % yoy (LHS) GDP Annualised (RHS) Source: Thomson Datastream as at 4 December 2017. Shaded areas = recessions. 8

Increase in Eurozone headline inflation was due mainly to commodity prices Eurozone inflation indicators (% yoy) Producer prices Headline CPI Core CPI Source: Thomson Datastream as at 4 December 2017. 9

Jan-03 Jan-04 Jan-05 Jan-06 Jan-07 Jan-08 Jan-09 Jan-10 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 Jan-15 Jan-16 Jan-17 Jan-18 Jan-19 Jan-20 Jan-21 Trillions European Monetary Policy Normalization ECB Deposit Rate and Balance Sheet Tapering 6 5 4 ECB TOTAL ASSETS 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 3 1.5 1.0 (%) 2 1 ECB DEPOSIT RATE 0.5 0.0-0.5 0-1.0 Source: Macrobond; ECB Monetary Policy Decision 26 October 2017 and Invesco calculations. 10

UK s rising import prices impacting goods prices in CPI UK: Import prices & sterling TWI (% yoy, 3mma) Import prices (LHS) Sterling TWI (RHS, Inv.) Goods prices (LHS) Source: Thomson Datastream as at 4 December 2017. TWI = Trade-weighted Index. 11

UK: Money & Credit growth had surged before the Brexit vote UK: M4x and lending to households and private non-financial corporations (% yoy) M4x Lending to Household sector Lending to Private Non-Financial Corporations Source: Thomson Datastream as at 4 December 2017. 12

3. Why is inflation below target in so many economies?

Core inflation of major economies falling well below 2% target Major economies core CPI inflation (% yoy) Semi-annual data JAPAN GST 2.0% TARGET US EZ JAPAN Source: Macrobond as at 4 December 2017. 14

US measures of core inflation mostly below target US: Different measures of core inflation (% yoy) TRIMMED MEAN CORE STICKY CPI CORE PCE CORE CPI Source: Thomson Datastream as at 4 December 2017. 15

Eurozone has escaped from deflation, but CPI inflation is still below target Euro-area CPI inflation (% yoy) HEADLINE CPI CORE CPI Source: Thomson Datastream as at 4 December 2017. 16

Japanese history based on consumer prices Japan: Consumer price inflation since 1958 (% yoy) GST 3% 1989 GST 5% 1997 GST 8% 2014 1960-85: 6.3% p.a. 1992-2017: 0.2% p.a. Source: Thomson Datastream as at 4 December 2017. 17

Since the 2008 crisis, inflation has slowed across the entire OECD & G7 OECD & G7 CPI inflation (% yoy) Av CPI 3.6% yoy Av CPI 1.6% yoy Source: Thomson Datastream as at 4 December 2017. 18

1. Does fiscal spending cause inflation? A lesson from Ronald Reagan Federal Budget Balance as % GDP Consumer Price Inflation % yoy 1980-1.3% Mar-80 14.8% 1981-2.8% Jan-81 11.8% 1986-5.9% Dec-86 1.1% Source: Thomson Datastream 22 February 2017. Deficits calculated as Federal outlays less expenditures as % GDP. 19

Can fiscal policy be expansionary? Only three ways to finance government spending: 1. Taxation 2. Borrowing 3. Printing Money (= financing through the banking system) If taxes are increased, this will adversely affect private sector spending If the government borrows, this will at some point crowd out private sector borrowing and spending However, if the increased government spending is financed through the printing of money, then it will have some prospect of boosting nominal and real GDP Example: China s CNY 4 trillion fiscal stimulus, 2008 09 ($586 billion), aided by 25% M2 growth Counter-example: Japan s fiscal stimulus programs since 1990, not accompanied by monetary upswings Source: Invesco Research, September 2016. 20

China s Fiscal Stimulus of 2008 09: RMB 4.0 trillion China: Domestic credit & M2 (% yoy) Domestic credit M2 Av 25% Source: Thomson Datastream as at 4 December 2017. 21

US EMPLOYMENT COST INDEX %YOY 2. The US Phillips Curve is not working: Tight labour market not pushing up wages 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 US UNEMPLOYMENT RATE (%) ACTUAL DATA, 2009-17 "TYPICAL" PHILLIPS CURVE Source: Invesco as at 14 December 2017. 22

Inflation is part of the Business Cycle Monetary conditions Asset prices Economic activity Goods & service prices 23

Inflation is a monetary phenomenon US money & credit growth remain subdued US: Growth of shadow banks & M2 (% yoy) SHADOW BANKS M2 M2 + SHADOW BANKS Source: Thomson Datastream as at 4 December 2017. 24

Across the OECD since 2008, money and credit growth have slowed, so has inflation OECD* Money Growth & Inflation (YoY change %, 1995 2016) 1995 2008 Av. Money Growth: 8.7% yoy 2009 16 Av. 6.5% yoy Av CPI 3.6% yoy Av. 1.6% yoy Source: Thomson Datastream as at 4 December 2017. *The OECD comprises 35 member countries across North and South America, Europe and Asia-Pacific. 25

Bond yields constrained by low nominal GDP growth US Nominal GDP & TSY 10y Bond Yield (%) Bond Yields Nominal GDP Source: Thomson Datastream as at 4 December 2017. TSY = Treasury; MAV = Moving Average. 26

Economic growth expectations The lacklustre outlook continues Major economies Real GDP growth forecasts (%) 8 6 4 2 0-2 US Eurozone Japan UK China 2016 2017 2018 Source: Consensus Economics as at 6 November 2017. 27

4. Bubbles and the business cycle

Two types of bubble 1. Rapid credit growth with high leverage 2. Low interest rates high asset prices, and high interest rates low asset prices For illustrative purposes only. 29

Prospects for the Business Cycle in the developed economies Interest rates fall as money accelerates Interest rates low Interest rates normalise Interest rates rise as money tightened Interest rates high Interest rates decline Interest rates fall as money accelerates Bonds Bonds Equities & Risk Assets 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 Cash The business cycle Source: Invesco. For illustrative purposes only. 30

Emerging markets business cycle superimposed on developed markets Developed Markets Interest Rate Cycle Interest rates fall as money accelerates Interest rates low Interest rates normalise Interest rates rise as money tightened Interest rates high Interest rates decline Interest rates fall as money accelerates Emerging 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 Developed Developed economies business cycle Emerging economies business cycle Source: Invesco. For illustrative purposes only. 31

Summary & conclusion INFLATION RATES LOW for a reason FALSE THEORIES OF INFLATION Fiscal policy and budget deficits do not cause inflation; nor do wages (the Phillips Curve) A BETTER THEORY OF INFLATION Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon MONEY GROWTH & THE BUSINESS CYCLE Money drives asset prices, economic activity, and inflation LOW MONEY & CREDIT GROWTH In most developed economies money growth rates have been low. NB it is broad money that drives nominal GDP, not the monetary base, or central bank s balance sheet 32

Important information This document is intended only for 2018 Invesco Roadshow in Hong Kong. This is not an invitation to subscribe for shares in a fund nor is it to be construed as an offer to buy or sell any financial instruments. Nor does this constitute a recommendation of the suitability of any investment strategy for a particular investor. Circulation, disclosure, or dissemination of all or any part of this document This document may contain statements that are not purely historical in nature but are forward-looking statements. These include, among other things, projections, forecasts, estimates of income, yield or return or future performance targets. These forward-looking statements are based upon certain assumptions, some of which are described herein. Actual events are difficult to predict and may substantially differ from those assumed. All forward-looking statements included herein are based on information available on the date hereof and Invesco assumes no duty to update any forward-looking statement. Accordingly, there can be no assurance that estimated returns or projections can be realised, that forward-looking statements will materialise or that actual returns or results will not be materially lower than those presented. All material presented is compiled from sources believed to be reliable and current, but accuracy cannot be guaranteed. As with all investments there are associated inherent risks. Please obtain and review all financial material carefully before investing. The opinions expressed are based on current market conditions and are subject to change without notice. These opinions may differ from those of other Invesco investment professionals. It is not an offer to buy or sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any security or instrument or to participate in any investment strategy to any person in any jurisdiction in which such an offer or solicitation is not authorized or to any person to whom it would be unlawful to market such an offer or solicitation. This document should not be distributed to retail clients who are resident in jurisdiction where its distribution is not authorized or is unlawful. It should not be relied upon as the sole factor in an investment making decision. Circulation, disclosure, or dissemination of all or any part of this document to any unauthorized person is prohibited. This document is issued in Hong Kong by Invesco Hong Kong Limited 景順投資管理有限公司, 41/F, Champion Tower, 3 Garden Road, Central, Hong Kong. 33