Tuesday, October 31, 2023

5 things to start your day

Good morning. The Federal Reserve is likely to hold interest rates, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is set to head back to Israel, and

Good morning. The Federal Reserve is likely to hold interest rates, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is set to head back to Israel, and Bayer ordered to pay $332 million in the latest weedkiller verdict. Here's what people are talking about.

Rate Hold

The Federal Reserve is poised to hold interest rates steady at a 22-year high for a second meeting, while leaving open the possibility of another hike as soon as December with economic growth staying resilient. Powell has signaled that Fed leaders would prefer to wait to evaluate the impact of past increases on the economy as they near the end of their rate-hiking campaign. "It will be kind of a hawkish pause," said Thomas Simons, senior economist at Jefferies LLC. 

Israel Latest

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is set to head back to Israel after dozens were reported killed and wounded at a Gaza refugee camp, stoking concerns about the mounting toll from weeks of fighting. Health officials in the Hamas-controlled territory said the Jabaliya camp was hit by a series of Israeli airstrikes. Israel's military said it targeted Hamas infrastructure in the area and killed a senior leader of the organization, which is designated as a terrorist group by the US and European Union.

Weedkiller Verdict

Bayer AG's Monsanto unit was ordered by a California jury to pay $332 million to a former land surveyor who blamed his cancer on his use of the company's controversial Roundup weedkiller – the third trial loss this month for the company. Jurors in state court in San Diego on Tuesday awarded Michael Dennis, 57, a total of $7 million in actual damages and $325 million in punitive damages over his claims 35 years of using Roundup on his lawns and gardens caused his non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.

Oligarchs Return

Mikhail Fridman and Petr Aven epitomized the Russian oligarchs who used their fortunes to integrate into the global economy and shake off association with President Vladimir Putin's regime. Now the wheel of fortune is turning full circle. Fridman has fled to Moscow from London via Israel, bitterly unhappy with life as a sanctioned businessman in Britain since Putin ordered Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Aven may also have to weigh a return to Russia from Latvia, where authorities are threatening to revoke his passport.

Coming Up…

European equity futures edged up ahead of the Fed's interest rate decision. Much of the region celebrates the All Saints holiday. Fabio Panetta starts his six-year term as Bank of Italy governor and ECB Governing Council member. Expected data include UK manufacturing PMI figures. GSK, Aston Martin and Tenaris are among companies scheduled to report earnings.

What We've Been Reading

This is what's caught our eye over the past 24 hours:

And finally, this is what Simon is interested in this morning

Yields and risk assets face rising risks from the Treasury Department's borrowing report Wednesday.

The BOJ's underwhelming move Tuesday has taken some of the pressure off global rates, with US 10-year yields lower on the session. That puts the ball back in Treasury's court on whether yields resume their upwards trend this week, with the remainder of its quarterly refunding announcement on Wednesday.

We got their borrowing estimates on Monday. The total was lower than expected, but it is still the largest amount borrowed in the fourth quarter. However, it's the split between bills and bonds (by bonds here I mean all debt more than one-year maturity) that has the most significant near-term implications for liquidity and longer-term yields.

Bloomberg

Issuance has been skewed towards bills this year, which has limited the liquidity impact on risk assets as money market funds (MMFs) have been able to absorb them by using inert liquidity already parked in the reverse repo (RRP) facility at the Fed. But bills are now over 20% of total debt outstanding, normally towards the higher end of where the Treasury prefers it.

The Treasury has stated it will remain above 20% for now, but it will gradually skew issuance away from bills. MMFs cannot directly buy longer-term debt, so the buying will shift to higher-velocity holders of reserves, e.g. households. This will extract liquidity from of the system, leaving stocks and other risk assets more vulnerable (read more here).

The Treasury's account at the Fed (the TGA) will be increasingly pivotal here. Treasury aims for this to be $750 billion at the end of 4Q and 1Q (it's ~$850 billion at the moment). Currently it is de facto backed by bill issuance.

But if its size is maintained as the Treasury expects and issuance moves away from bills, or the RRP becomes too low, then it will be increasingly backed by longer-term debt that will deplete higher-velocity reserves and pose a serious headwind for risk assets.

Simon White is a macro strategist for Bloomberg News, based in London.

Brussels Edition: Targeting Russian diamonds

New EU sanctions could affect up to €5 billion in Russian trade

Welcome to the Brussels Edition, Bloomberg's daily briefing on what matters most in the heart of the European Union.

A potential new round of EU sanctions designed to target the Kremlin for its war against Ukraine could affect up to €5 billion in trade. Goods that might be hit by export restrictions include diamonds, welding machines, chemicals, technologies for military use and software licenses, we've been told. The diamond ban would be contingent on a G-7 agreement to track and trace the precious stones across borders, which is expected to be finalized soon. The package of measures, which would be the 12th since Russia's invasion, is also expected to add more than 100 individuals and four dozen entities to sanctions lists. While such penalties have failed to end the war, they have destroyed the standing of many wealthy Russians abroad.

Lyubov Pronina and Alberto Nardelli

What's Happening

Rate Views | The ECB would need to see a "very dramatic turnaround" in the region's economic prospects to lower interest rates, Governing Council member Martins Kazaks told us yesterday after data showed euro-zone inflation plunged to its lowest level in more than two years. His colleague Francois Villeroy de Galhau said the central bank was fully justified in pressing pause on hikes last week.

Climate Countdown | An influential alliance that includes several EU countries has backed the global phaseout of fossil fuels, potentially pitting it against China at the COP28 climate summit in November. The High Ambition Coalition said the summit should conclude to end new coal production and the expansion of existing mines, and to reduce methane emissions to near zero.

Balkan Pushback | Serbia's leader Aleksandar Vucic pushed back against the call by Commission President Ursula von der Leyen for his country to deliver on a "de-facto" recognition of Kosovo. On her trip through the Balkan region, von der Leyen said in Pristina on Monday that Serbia and Kosovo must move decisively to normalize relations to join the EU.

Privacy Crackdown | Meta Platforms is set to be hit by a Europe-wide ban on leveraging the trove of personal data of Facebook and Instagram users to target them with ads — a move the social network giant says ignores its recent moves to give people more control. The curbs will extend temporary measures already in place in Norway.

High Charges | Apple could be forced to cut its App Store fees for developers after the Dutch Authority for Consumers & Markets said that its commissions violate the bloc's rules. The Dutch regulator said Apple's set-up unfairly targets companies offering subscription services, such as Match Group's dating app Tinder, which has to pay high commission rates on in-app sales.

Around Europe

NATO Aspirations | Sweden still expects Hungary to ratify its NATO application before Turkey and is focused on making sure that Ankara doesn't hold up the Nordic country's accession to the western military alliance, Foreign Minister Tobias Billstrom said yesterday. While Hungary's government has submitted its ratification bill to parliament more than a year ago, no vote has been scheduled.

Spanish Telecom | Spain is considering whether to shield its "most strategic" company from foreign takeovers in what could be its most significant protectionist move in more than a decade. The government is weighing a potential stake purchase in Madrid-based Telefonica nearly two months after state-controlled Saudi Arabia Telecom announced plans to buy 9.9% of the company. 

German Challenges | Some of Germany's biggest industrial firms have started to make deep and lasting cuts in an acknowledgment that higher energy costs and muted economic growth require structural changes. Companies including BASF and Volkswagen are adjusting to this new reality after profiting for decades off of cheap Russian gas, low interest rates and China's insatiable demand for German goods.

British Return | London's luxury food emporium Fortnum & Mason has started delivering to customers in the EU again nearly two years after it stopped exporting to the bloc due to Brexit-related red tape. It now has a warehouse in Belgium and a dedicated EU website. Before the halt, EU deliveries represented over 15% of Fortnum & Mason's online sales. 

Flight Constraints | Dutch flag carrier KLM will have to reduce its European route network by 17 daily flights for the summer season following slot constraints at the main Amsterdam airport, CEO Marjan Rintel told us. The Dutch government plans to cut annual flights at Schiphol by 10% to reduce noise pollution, a measure that airlines say undercuts its position as one of Europe's premier transfer airports.

Chart of the Day

Euro-area inflation slowed to its lowest level in more than two years as the region's economy shrank following an unprecedented ramp-up in interest rates, according to Eurostat data. Consumer prices rose year-on-year 2.9% in October — down from the previous month's 4.3% and better than the 3.1% median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of analysts. Meanwhile, the third-quarter gross domestic product fell 0.1% — missing estimates for stagnation. Yesterday's data show that while the ECB's 10 back-to-back rate hikes are helping to bring inflation back toward the 2% goal, they're also taking a toll on households and firms by sending loan costs sharply up.

Today's Agenda

All times CET

  • 11:30 a.m. Commission President von der Leyen press conference in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg, Nordic prime ministers and foreign ministers hold Nordic Council in Oslo
  • Commission Vice President Vera Jourova speaks at AI Safety and Security Summit in London

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Halloween hangover No. 16 — the US keeps getting all the treats

As the world mops up after this year's night of fancy dress costumes and far too much sugar, it's worth pondering a Halloween landmark for m

Halloween Havoc

As the world mops up after this year's night of fancy dress costumes and far too much sugar, it's worth pondering a Halloween landmark for markets. I have otherwise fond memories of Oct. 31, 2007 — I went trick-or-treating with my then three-year-old daughter and her best friend, both of whom were dressed as Dorothy from the Wizard of Oz, which was fun, and the Red Sox had just won their second World Series of the century. Back in the financial world which I inhabited during my working days, however, it turned out to be a landmark.

World markets peaked at Halloween 2007. They fell the following day, largely on a warning that Citigroup Inc. might have to cut its dividend. We didn't even know the half of it. A financial meltdown that would sweep the planet and a savage bear market lay ahead. But although we now know that crisis as a "global"one, at this point it appears to have excluded the US, at least judging by stock markets.

Using MSCI indexes, this is the 16th Halloween in succession that markets outside the US, and particularly the emerging markets, have closed lower than on the witching night in 2007. In the US, however, stocks are almost triple where they were then, and that's helped pull up broad world markets as well. But what a contrast:

It's easy to explain this with grand political theories about US superiority, but most of them don't work. Globalization should have helped everyone. Other economies have grown far faster, and not just China. And in any case, the perception in the US is that the country has slid behind and entered a slump in those years; how else to explain the fact that nearly half the population has twice voted to make the country "great again?"

Looking at valuation, we find that it's been a massive driver. For the seven years leading up to Halloween 2007, non-US stocks steadily outperformed as they eroded the valuation gap. The strength of the US tech sector means that the country's stock market as a whole should command a higher multiple. The extent of that US premium was absurd by 2000, at the top of the dot-com bubble. By Halloween 2007, the rest of the world came as close as it ever would to erasing the premium altogether:

So excessive interference by the Federal Reserve, buying bonds to create demand for stocks, might have helped the US to take off while the rest of the world languished. In the process, this would also have stoked the inequality that is now causing so much pain. 

There is more to it than that. US earnings per share have more than doubled over the last 16 years. For the rest of the world, they're barely changed. That unambiguously implies that US companies must be doing something right. But it's also remarkable that they've done this when many other economies have been growing faster:

Virtually all the narratives that might explain this are discomfiting. They fall into the left-wing school — that holds that US companies have been allowed to merge, jack up margins and exploit workers, thus making profits while the population is miserable — and the libertarian or Austrian school, which would hold that endemic interference with markets has led to malinvestment, moral hazard, and a bubble that must soon blow up.

These ideas aren't mutually exclusive. And both have to incorporate the undeniable fact that a group of companies that all happen to be based in the US have managed to make a lot more money by selling people things that they want since 2007. The Magnificent Seven big tech companies undoubtedly explain some of this difference. 

But when you think about how these charts might look in another dozen Halloweens from now, it's hard not to be spooked. Now that it's happened, the US collapse after the dot-com bubble burst seems to have been inevitable. Whatever happens to the US stock market in the years ahead, it's hard to avoid the feeling that we should be able to see it coming. And surely a regime of treats for Americans and tricks for everyone else can't endure much longer.

Generational Divide

There's a lot of over-generalization when it comes to demographics, but sometimes the numbers don't lie and there can even be truths in stereotypes.

Case in point: Millennials are embracing bond ETFs to a greater degree than other generations, as muscle memory from the several recessions they have already lived through kicks in. The latest study by Schwab Asset Management shows that ETF investors born from roughly 1981 to 1996 have 45% of their portfolios in fixed income. Those are millennials, aged from 27 years old to 42. That compares to 37% for Generation X — those born from around 1965 to 1980 — and 31% for baby boomers. And it goes exactly in the opposite direction from conventional wisdom, enshrined in the "target date funds" that form the backbone of retirement products, which holds you should increase your bond holdings as you grow older, and that millennials should still be heavily concentrated in equities.

David Botset, Schwab AM's head of equity product management and innovation, chalks it up to conservatism, especially after millennials have witnessed repeated market turmoil — from the Global Financial Crisis to the pandemic onset. "Consider the market cycles they experienced growing up," said Botset. "It makes sense against this backdrop that millennials are drawn to fixed income – particularly at a time when yields are the highest they've been in a decade."

In general, interest in fixed-income is rising, with 51% of millennials planning to invest in bond ETFs next year, versus 45% of their Gen-X counterparts and 40% of baby boomers, the survey — conducted in June and polling 2,200 investors aged from 25 to 75 — showed.  

The wild Treasury swings in past weeks raised the payments to be generated from fixed-income, and ETFs are increasingly a vehicle of choice. "The really exciting thing is because they are generally in their 30s and 40s, they have money to invest," Salim Ramji, global head of iShares and index investments at BlackRock Inc., told Katie Greifeld during Bloomberg Indices' Future of Fixed Income conference in New York last week. Millennials are "effectively defaulting into ETFs as their choice for how to invest in markets."

Another data point sheds further light on this behavior. US consumer confidence dropped to a five-month low in October, with the Conference Board's index falling to 102.6 from an upwardly revised 104.3 in September. "Consumers continued to be preoccupied with rising prices in general, and for grocery and gasoline prices in particular," Dana Peterson, chief economist, said in a statement. "Consumers also expressed concerns about the political situation and higher interest rates."

Delving deeper, the graph below dissects the age range of participants, including those under 35, those 35 to 54, and those older than 55. The pattern is clear: Confidence is still below pre-pandemic levels but the decline is more evident across householders 35 years and up and, as Peterson pointed out, not limited to any one income group.

Overall, people are more cautious as the economy adjusts to high-for-longer rates. That means greater demand for bonds than the data might suggest. "There has been a stark divergence between hard and soft economic data for much of this year," Eliza Winger of Bloomberg Economics wrote in a note. "Consumer sentiment remains depressed even as recent hard data have surprised to the upside. Consumers are concerned about a potential recession, with their families' expected financial situation six months hence continuing to fall, boding poorly for future demand."

What could matter most, however, is the continuation of demand to buy bonds. With central banks trying to withdraw, bond bulls have been looking to identify new buyers. Millennials might just be the ones.   

 Isabelle Lee

Hard Labor

Labor in the US isn't getting any cheaper. This is not just the doing of the Union of Auto Workers, although their success in getting a radically improved pay settlement out of Detroit's "Big Three" carmakers certainly feeds into the zeitgeist. On its own, it's great news if people are being paid more. It improves their living standards, and creates more jobs for others. The issue, of course, is whether workers' extra expenditures will drive inflation. That's altogether tougher to answer.

The problem with labor data, as with so much else, is that the best and most reliable numbers are the ones that take the longest to prepare. So, Tuesday's publication of the employment cost index for the third quarter, which ended a month ago, is probably more meaningful than the welter of jobs statistics to come during the rest of this week — but it might not have that much market impact. The ECI matters to the Fed because of its completeness; it incorporates benefits and bonuses to get a better picture of how much workers cost their employers and in turn gives a good idea of how much inflation pressure they are creating. 

The gauge found that labor costs increased 1.1% in the third quarter compared to the second. That was higher than expected and brought back unpleasant memories of the ECI announcement for the same quarter of 2021, which came as a major shock and was primarily responsible for shaking the Fed out of its belief that inflation was transitory:

The muscle memory of that incident remains strong enough that the ECI publication prompted a sharp increase in 10-year bond yields. On the verge of dropping below 4.8% just before the release, they rose in short order and by the end of the day had risen to 4.9% instead:

If there were hopes of a pleasant surprise that would allow the Fed to be dovish, they were dashed. But these numbers could still have been much worse. Anna Wong of Bloomberg Economics said the pickup would likely be matched by strong productivity growth for the quarter. "That means policymakers won't be overly alarmed by the ECI print," she said. "Still, upward surprises like this are unwelcome at the Fed, which is unlikely to take the rate-hike option off the table in the near term." 

Weekly claims data are the most up-to-date and could be the most important. Initial claims for jobless insurance continue to fall, implying that layoffs are reducing despite the tightening financial conditions. But continuing claims are rising, suggesting those out of work are finding it harder to get a new job. Much rests on how this resolves:

Apart from Thursday's claims numbers, the remainder of the week will bring data on vacancies and quits in the so-called JOLTS numbers, projected private-sector payrolls from the ADP payroll management group, and then the monthly blunderbuss non-farm payrolls report for October. If these all point strongly in one direction, they might begin to change the calculus for the Fed. And as the central bank is now data-dependent, all of this might even matter more than what Jerome Powell says and does Wednesday.

For this week, however, the more or less universal market judgment is that the latest data isn't hot enough to force the Fed into hiking rates — but also wage growth is still too sticky for Powell and his colleagues to take the option of further tightening off the table. In other words, it leaves "high for longer," if not "higher for longer," as the most plausible scenario. That is increasingly accepted, following a swift change of opinion in the last three months. This chart from Karen Ward, chief market strategist for EMEA at JPMorgan Asset Management, demonstrates how quickly this has taken hold:

Note that the market, on Ward's calculations, is implicitly expecting the fed funds rate to be higher than the Fed's target long-term projection into 2026. It might be more vulnerable to a surprisingly fast easing cycle than to renewed tightening. But that's all to look forward to. 

Survival Tips

Yesterday, I linked to Metallica performing with former members of Lynyrd Skynyrd. Metallica isn't normally my kind of thing, although they're undeniably great in concert, but I greatly respect how they go out of their way to play with older musicians and introduce them to a new audience. In particular, I love that they've made friends with one of my personal heroes, Ray Davies of the Kinks, who was also a local hero from my years living in Crouch End, North London. The Kinks, from neighboring Muswell Hill, played their first gig there, as shown in this great BBC documentary about him.  

Davies was obviously enthused to work with Metallica. Here they are playing All Day and All of the Night with him on stage. The exercise does tend to confirm the contention that the Kinks — not any of the other more obvious candidates who followed them — were the true godfathers for heavy metal. Davies and his brother Dave also wrote a fantastic catalogue of songs for others to cover; try All Day and All of the Night by The Stranglers and Van Halen (who also had an early hit with You Really Got Me), Days by Kirstie McCollDavid Watts by The Jam, Stop Your Sobbing by the Pretenders, Autumn Almanac by Novelty Island, Sunny Afternoon by Jimmy Buffett, and Lola by Madness and Robbie Williams. "Waterloo Sunset" has been done by everyone from David Bowie, Def Leppard, Damon Albarn (who performed it with Davies himself), and Cathy Dennis. Have a listen.

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