Investment markets and key developments over the past week

 

Share markets were mixed over the last week with US shares down 0.5% and Eurozone shares down 1.1% on renewed worries about Italy’s budget, but Japanese shares rose 1%. Chinese shares rose 0.8% and Australian shares rose 0.2%. Bond yields were little changed except in Italy, where they rose on budget concerns. Oil prices rose after OPEC left output unchanged, but metal and iron prices fell. The US$ rose, particularly as the euro fell on renewed Italian budget worries, and this saw the A$ slip back to around US$0.72.

Although US, Japanese and Chinese shares performed well in September, Australian shares fell 1.8% after reaching a ten year high in August as defensives, consumer stocks, financials and high yielding stocks fell, not helped by rising bond yields.

While markets saw a relief rally in response to the latest tranche of US/China tariffs being less than feared, it’s clear the US trade threat is far from over. The proposed fifth round of US/China trade talks didn’t happen. China has released a defence of its position and is going down its own path on the trade issue by announcing more big tariff cuts and reducing non-tariff barriers and seeking to offset the impact of US tariff hikes by policy stimulus rather than engaging with the US on its gripes. And tensions between the US and China appear to be broadening, with the Trump Administration accusing China of interfering in the mid-term elections and some low-level signs that military tensions may be rising too. Our view remains that while the tariffs actually implemented so far are relatively small, further escalation in the US/China trade conflict is likely with a negotiated solution still a way off. There has been good news in that Canada has joined Mexico and the US in a revamped NAFTA deal, but the US and Japan are now to enter new trade talks with President Trump clearly wanting concessions from Japan, whilst French President Macron said he would not agree to a new EU trade deal with the US unless the US commits to the Paris climate agreement. So, trade will remain a periodic issue for markets.

The US Federal Reserve (Fed) provided no surprises, hiking rates by another 0.25%, describing the economy as strong and indicating that further gradual rate increases are likely. While the Fed is no longer describing monetary policy as “accommodative”, it’s far from tight either and Fed officials’ interest rate expectations point to rates rising above the Fed’s estimate of the long-run neutral rate which is currently at 3%. We expect another hike in December and three more hikes next year. Market expectations remain too dovish. Continuing US rate hikes mean ongoing downwards pressure on the A$ and the risk of more out-of-cycle rate hikes by Australian banks to the extent global borrowing costs rise. President Trump’s criticism of Fed rate hikes are clearly not having any impact though, with Powell indicating the Fed’s focus is keeping the economy healthy and not on politics.

The issues around Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination to the US Supreme Court add to the risk that the Republicans will lose control of the Senate as well as the House. While this will not change our views around President Trump and his economic policy – there is a good chance he will get impeached but there still wouldn’t be enough votes in the Senate to remove him from office and Congress won’t change or reverse his economic policies – it will be something that markets will worry about in the run-up to and after the mid-term elections on 6th November.

Italy targeting a higher budget deficit – a negative for the euro and Italian assets, but not as bad as feared. News that the Italian Government will target a 2019 budget deficit of 2.4% of GDP has pushed the euro down and is a negative for Italian shares and bonds. 2.4% is not low enough to reduce Italy’s public debt-to-GDP ratio and will lead to some conflict with the European Commission. However, it’s far less than the 5-6% of GDP feared a few months ago and is not high enough to see the rest of Europe pressure Italy too much (particularly as France and Germany don’t want to fuel Italian anti-euro populist sentiment). Rather, the rest of Europe is likely to leave market forces via higher Italian bond yields to discipline Italy. So not good for Italian bonds but not a disaster for the Eurozone.

 

Major global economic events and implications

 

US data remains strong, with a new 18 year high in consumer confidence, strong consumer spending and durable goods orders and rising imports. Meanwhile, core inflation in August remained at the Fed’s 2% target, indicating no need for the Fed to get more aggressive in raising rates.

Eurozone economic sentiment slipped in September, but remains strong and private lending continues to accelerate. Meanwhile, core inflation fell back to just 0.9% year-on-year supporting the view that European Central Bank rate hikes are a long way off.

The Japanese labour market remained strong in August, industrial production rose and core inflation in Tokyo edged up to 0.6% year-on-year, but it’s still a long way from the Bank of Japan’s 2% target.

 

Australian economic events and implications

 

In Australia, there was good news on the budget, but the risks around house prices appear to be mounting and rising petrol prices pose a threat to consumer spending power. First, the good news from the last week:

 

  • The 2017-18 budget deficit came in at $10 billion, which is $8 billionn less than expected in May. While part of this owes to spending delays, the Government has announced more spending ahead and risks remain around wages growth, it nevertheless indicates that the Government has some scope to provide more stimulus ahead of the next election.
  • And ABS job vacancy data remains very strong, up 16.5% year-on-year, albeit it did slow down a lot in the 3 months to August.

 

Against this though:

 

  • The risks around the housing market are continuing to mount, with more banks withdrawing from SMSF lending and signs of a crackdown on property investors with multiple mortgages, as the banks move to comprehensive credit reporting (i.e. sharing information on customer debts) and focusing on total debt-to-income ratios. The latter is significant, given estimates that nearly 1.5 million investment properties are held by investors with more than one property.
  • Credit growth to property investors remains very weak as tighter lending standards and falling investor demand impact.

 

Source: RBA, AMP Capital

Source: RBA, AMP Capital

 

Petrol prices over the last week have pushed higher on global oil supply concerns, with more upside likely as supply from Iran and potentially Venezuela is cut at a time of strong global demand and low stockpiles. The weekly Australian household petrol bill is now running over $10 a week higher than a year ago. So, while higher petrol prices (if sustained) will add to headline inflation, they will also cut into household spending power and dampen spending elsewhere, which will keep underlying inflation down.

 

Source: Bloomberg, AMP Capital

Source: Bloomberg, AMP Capital

 

For the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), these considerations largely offset each other for now, so we see no reason to change our view that it will remain on hold for a lengthy period. I am even tempted to the Reserve Bank of New Zealand approach, that the next move in rates “could be up or down”.

 

What to watch over the next week?

 

In the US, it’s back to focussing on jobs and wages, with September labour market data due Friday expected to show another strong 190,000 gain in jobs and unemployment falling to 3.8%, but wages growth slipping back to 2.8% year-on-year, albeit maintaining a gradual rising trend. In other data, expect the September ISM manufacturing index (Monday) to fall back to a still strong reading of 60, the non-manufacturing ISM index (Wednesday) to remain around 58 and the trade deficit (Friday) to worsen.

Eurozone unemployment (Monday) is expected to fall to 8.1%.

The Japanese September quarter Tankan business conditions survey (Monday) is expected to remain solid.

In Australia, the RBA will yet again leave interest rates on hold when it meets on Tuesday. While recent economic growth and jobs data has been good, we are still waiting for inflation and wages growth to pick up and the slide in home prices risks accelerating as banks tighten lending standards, which in turn threatens consumer spending and wider economic growth. As a result, it would be dangerous to raise rates and we don’t see the RBA hiking until 2020 at the earliest and still can’t rule out the next move being a cut. Meanwhile, on the data front expect CoreLogic data (Tuesday) to show another fall in home prices for September, August building approvals (Wednesday) to show a 2% bounce, the trade surplus (Thursday) to fall slightly to $1.4 billion and retail sales (Friday) to rise 0.2%.

 

Outlook for markets

 

We continue to see the trend in shares remaining up, as global growth remains solid helping drive good earnings growth and monetary policy remains easy. However, the risk of a correction over the next month or so still remains significant given the threats around trade, emerging market contagion, ongoing Fed rate hikes, the Mueller inquiry in the US, the US mid-term elections and Italian budget negotiations. Property price weakness and approaching election uncertainty add to the risks around the Australian share market.

Low yields are likely to drive low returns from bonds, with Australian bonds outperforming global bonds.

Unlisted commercial property and infrastructure are still likely to benefit from the search for yield, but it is waning.

National capital city residential property prices are expected to slow further with Sydney and Melbourne property prices likely to fall another 10% or so, but Perth and Darwin property prices bottoming out, and Hobart, Adelaide, Canberra and Brisbane seeing moderate gains.

Cash and bank deposits are likely to continue to provide poor returns, with term deposit rates running around 2.2%.

While the A$ is working off very negative short positions, it’s still likely to fall to around US$0.70 and maybe into the high US$0.60s as the gap between the RBA’s cash rate and the US Fed Funds rate pushes further into negative territory as the US economy booms relative to Australia. Being short the A$ remains a good hedge against things going wrong in the global economy.

 

Source : AMP Capital 28 September 2018

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