A Roadmap for the Upcoming U.S. Treasury Bull Market

Similar documents
Market Insight: Turn Down the News Volume, Listen to the Market

Gundlach s Forecast for 2016

Spotlight on : 10-2 Yield Curve

ECONOMIC AND MARKET ENVIRONMENT THIRD QUARTER 2018

General Economic Outlook Recession! Will it be Short and Shallow?

An End Has a Start: Keeping an Eye on Recession Indicators

BCA 4Q 2018 Review and 2019 Outlook Russ Allen, CIO. Summary Outlook

Mid-Year 2018 Outlook

may reveal new opportunities

10.2 Recent Shocks to the Macroeconomy Introduction. Housing Prices. Chapter 10 The Great Recession: A First Look

Hurricanes End 83-Month Employment Expansion

Cost Shocks in the AD/ AS Model

The yellow highlighted areas are bear markets with NO recession.

Overall M&A Market Commentary

Red Skies at Night, Sailors' Delight Red Skies in the Morning, Sailors Take Warning

The Song Remains the Same? Higher Rates Don t Typically Kill Bull Markets

Market Commentary. Q Review. Market & Economic Review Fourth Quarter 2018

ECONOMIC AND MARKET COMMENTARY OUR MISSION

Albert Edwards Dollar Appreciation and a Global Recession

Global Bond Markets to Enter New Phase in 2018

The Young-at-Heart Economy

Recession Risk Remains Low

Defensive Equities BARROW. Advisor Insights FUNDS. Playing the Second Half of the Business Cycle with. Low and Slow Growth

Knee Deep In An Earnings Recession

Spotlight: The Economic Cycle. April 30, 2018

Happy Birthday!...but will the Fed spoil the party?

Where Is the Global Economy Going?

August Macro Update: Slowing Growth in Employment and Consumption

2019 Schwab Market Outlook

Positioning Equity Portfolios for When Rates Rise

Is The Market Predicting A Recession?

Q SMALL BALANCE MULTIFAMILY INVESTMENT TRENDS REPORT BY ARBOR

Advisory Service. Trends. January 2019 Research Report

Investment opportunities in the late-expansion stage of the business cycle

Third Quarter Market Review

Market Focus. Credit cycle: rising default rate. Where do we stand in the default rate cycle? Credit fundamentals are deteriorating

The U.S. Economic Outlook Bob Murphy Boston College

Forecasting the Next Recession

- US Industrial Production -

Normalizing Monetary Policy

Yields Will Signal The End Of The Bull Market

Fourth Quarter Market Outlook. Jason Bulinski, CFA Donald A. Powell, CFA Joseph Styrna, CFA

Economic and Capital Market Update November 2017

Table 1: Economic Growth Measures

Getting ahead of the (yield) curve

Taking Stock of the Market s Mood

Insights. Year Ahead: 2019 Part I: High Anxiety?

Perspective. Economic and Market. Despite Weak U.S. Growth Overheat Pressures are Mounting

Chapter 11 The Determination of Aggregate Output, the Price Level, and the Interest Rate

Financial Highlights

Economic recovery dashboard

Petrodollars, the Savings Bust, and the U.S. Current Account Deficit

The Economy Is Fine. Trade War Rhetoric Is The Main Risk

Predicting a US recession: has the yield curve lost its relevance?

EFFICIENT PORTFOLIO UPDATE

Perspectives JAN Market Preview: U.S. Economy

Finding High-Quality Companies Today

HOUSING REPORT SOUTHEAST MICHIGAN YEAR END 2018

Performance Notes First Quarter 2015

Stock Risks to Watch: Choose Your Bear Market Dashboard

2014 Annual Review & Outlook

The Business-Cycle Peak of March 2001

Curve Ball - Is the Yield Curve Still a Dependable Signal?

MLPs Will Weather the Storm

CIF Sector Recommendation Report (Fall 2012)

Florida: An Economic Overview

THE ECONOMY AND CAPITAL MARKETS

Solid Sales Growth and Margins At New Highs Drive 3Q17 Results

YIELD CURVE INVERSION: A CLEAR BUT UNLIKELY DANGER

The Big Picture August 17, 2018

March 16, Dear Investors:

Is the Flattening Yield Curve Sending a Message?

Recession Risk Remains Low

Overall M&A Market Commentary

Rocky Mountain ECONOMIST: Labor force participation rates have fallen sharply THE

The Mid-Year Economic Forecast. June 20, 2018

HOPE FOR ROTATION. So, let me talk a little about each of these. Tariffs. Tariffs are restrictions to trade; they are a tax and they cause inflation.

Recession Risk Low, But Starting To Rise

The Yield Curve and Recession Forecasting

Yes, We Can Reduce the Unemployment Rate

QUARTERLY FUND HIGHLIGHTS

ECON 3010 Intermediate Macroeconomics Chapter 10

Genus Short-Term Bond Fund ANNUAL MANAGEMENT REPORT OF FUND PERFORMANCE For the year ended December 31, 2018

THE 1987 CRASH: A NOT SO HAPPY ANNIVERSARY

Job creation continues, and the unemployment rate has dropped to 5% Earnings are expected to grow about 5% to 8% for 2016

Investment Perspectives. From The Global Investment Committee

A Recession Is Not On The Way

Eric C. Elbell, CFA, CAIA Area Senior Vice President. Kyongdo Min, CPA, CFA Area Vice President. April 11, 2018

2018 Employment Was The Second Best Since 2000

Market Bulletin. 1Q18 earnings update: A tailwind from taxes. April 27, In brief. Volatility shows up to the party

Gundlach: The Goldilocks Era is Over

The Flattening Yield Curve -- Is It Different this Time?

Interpreting Treasury Yield Trends Sam Park October 2004

Is City National Rochdale s investment outlook still positive? Large Cap Core 6%-9%

VIEW FROM A. VIEW FROM A MILE HIGH: Tapering the Era of Cap Rate Compression. NOVEMBER 2013 July 2013

b. Financial innovation and/or financial liberalization (the elimination of restrictions on financial markets) can cause financial firms to go on a

Florida: An Economic Overview

Quarterly Chartbook. June 30, What happened, where are we now, and what do we expect?

Since early 2011, an important financial metric known as the yield curve has

Investment Market Risk Metrics August 2011

Transcription:

A Roadmap for the Upcoming U.S. Treasury Bull Market October 8, 2018 by Eric Hickman Advisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives With the economic expansion nine months from being the longest in U.S. history, the yield curve nearly flat and housing market indicators peaking earlier this year, it doesn t take much imagination to see what s next: a recession and falling interest rate cycle i.e., a U.S. Treasury bull market. This article studies the history of these cycles and offers a roadmap for the upcoming one. The history There have been three major U.S. Treasury bull markets coinciding with recessions in the last 30 years (orange boxed areas in the chart below). They all look remarkably similar and the periods leading up to them look a lot like now. Page 1, 2018 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.

First, in all of them, the two-year yield peaked within a month of the last Fed raise in the raising cycle. On average, the 30-year yield peaked about seven months before the two-year peak (albeit with a wide range, from one and a half months to 1.4 years) while the Fed was still raising rates. In general, this happens because Fed policy reacts to a narrow view of the economy, half of which is old news. The Fed is primarily concerned with stable prices (inflation) and employment. Employment is a coincident indicator of the economy, but inflation reliably lags it, often by more than a year. At these yield peaks, the 30-year yield will start falling as financial assets or leading economic indicators start to erode, but inflation tends to still rise (see inflation peaks in chart above) which keeps the Fed, and its closely-linked two-year yield, rising for a longer time. Second, these bull markets began far before their accompanying recession did. The bull markets started an average of 1.8 years before. This happens because the start of a recession is marked by a Page 2, 2018 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.

decline in real economic activity, yet long-term Treasury yields start to move lower from the mere hint of a slowdown in activity. This is important because many familiar commentators and banks (Ray Dalio, Ben Bernanke, Nouriel Roubini, Mark Zandi, Societe Generale, JP Morgan) are warning of a recession in 2020. This 1.8-year average combined with a mid-2020 recession would suggest a U.S. Treasury bull market beginning around now. Third, the yield peaks in these cycles have a relationship to the terminal level of Fed Funds. The twoyear yield has peaked between 0.02% and 0.43% above the terminal Fed funds rate, the 30-year yield has peaked between 0.05% and 0.47% above the terminal rate. Currently, the market is priced for the Fed to raise rates to 3.0% by mid-2020, then stop. This is another three and a half raises from here (see chart below). The 30-year already yields 3.40% (10/5/2018). If the Fed were to raise to 3.0%, the highest spread would suggest a 3.47% 30-year yield peak, just seven basis points above where it is now. Page 3, 2018 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.

Finally, these bull markets began after extended periods of the Fed raising rates with a flattening yield curve; the 30-year yield rose slower than the two-year yield. On average, the 30-year yield peaked with a 2 s-30 s curve (the 30-year yield minus the two-year yield) at +0.54% notably, before the yield curve inverted. The two-year yield peaked with an average inverted 2-30 curve at -0.43%. The 2-30 curve now (10/5/2018) is near the average 30-year peak at +0.52%. See below: Page 4, 2018 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.

As applied to now I believe we are close, in time and yield, to the peak in the 30-year yield. Barring an interim geopolitical or economic shock, the Fed will continue to raise rates into the middle of next year, and the two-year yield will drift higher to peak around that same time. The next recession will be a cousin of the 1937/38 recession, the first recession following the Great Depression that shocked everyone with its ferocity. The S&P 500 lost 49.8% (2/1937-3/1938) during that recession. Because the Fed was so responsive in the 2008 recession, there are still excesses in the economy that haven t been flushed. The stock market (S&P 500 total return) has returned 18.7% annualized since the 03/2009 low (3/5/2009-10/5/2018). But, its long term average is 10.1% (12/31/1925-09/30/2018) and just 6.1% above the dividend return. The dividend yield of the S&P 500 today is 1.8%. Squaring 18.7% to a 7.9% (6.1% + 1.8%) long-term average is a tremendous mean reversion. Also, China hasn t had a recession since its statistics began in 1992. Even command economies are not exempt from business cycles. It is entirely likely that the next recession will ensnare Page 5, 2018 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.

the world s biggest two economies simultaneously, increasing its severity. The ideal investment to take advantage of the next bull market in U.S. Treasuries is to own the longend of the yield curve first, and when the Fed stops raising rates, transition to a duration equivalent of the two-year to take advantage of the further distance its yield will likely drop. In a prior article, The Case for Leveraged U.S. Treasury Bonds, I explained that without leverage, investors wanting more opportunity from the Treasury market are stuck with longer maturities (i.e., the 30-year U.S. Treasury). Leverage, with its multiplicative effect on returns and volatility, can give any part of the yield curve the same opportunity for a given move in interest rates. In bond lingo, leverage can provide duration equivalence. Because the two-year yield fell much more than the 30-year in these cycles, it would ve been more advantageous to own a duration-equivalent two-year U.S. Treasury position than the 30- year U.S. Treasury. It is counterintuitive, but U.S. Treasury bull markets begin when the economic weather is the sunniest. It happens when the unemployment rate is the lowest and consumer and industrial confidence the highest. By the time a recession is obvious, a good chunk of the move lower in rates will have taken place. Of course, there are no hard and fast rules to make money in finance, but to the extent that this time isn t different, now is the time to get ready for a large opportunity in the U.S Treasury market. A table with the statistics and sources used in this article is available upon request. Eric Hickman is president of Kessler Investment Advisors, an advisory firm located in Denver, Colorado specializing in U.S. Treasury bonds. Page 6, 2018 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.