tv Bloomberg Real Yield Bloomberg December 16, 2017 2:00am-2:30am EST
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jonathan: i'm jonathan ferro. with 30 minutes dedicated the fixed income, this is "bloomberg real yield." ♪ jonathan: goldilocks dominating 2018 again. central banks say yes, predicting high-growth. and a low inflation. tax negotiation's hours away from making a congressional compromise. an easy calm hangs over treasuries. is this the year credit fails to match a massive rally in equity? we begin with the big issue, high-growth and low inflation in 2018. janet yellen: real gdp growth is stronger. the unemployment rate is a bit
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lower, and inflation is essentially unchanged. mario draghi: the strong bills momentum in this significant reduction of economics, gives grounds for greater confidence that inflation will converge towards our inflation aim. yellen: i want to see it move up to 2%. most of my colleagues and i do believe it is being held down by transitory factors, but there is work undone there. draghi: the degree of monetary stimulus therefore remains necessary for underlying inflation pressures to continue to build up and support headline inflation developments over the medium-term. jonathan: joining me today from j.p. morgan asset management is bob michael, the global head of fixed income. lisa coleman, the firm's global
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head of investment great corporate credit. great to have you with us on the program. it is your turn to grill me. bob: don't you worry about that. jonathan: let's talk about goldilocks growth. we have experienced this for so long. high-growth, low inflation, and central banks staying in the game that is positive for risk. does that change the here? bob: what is not to like about it? i love the central banks this week. they acknowledge the higher growth. they acknowledge moderate inflation. when it came came to policy, they are looking the other way. you have got very benign rundown of the balance sheet. almost no rating increases except for the fed. it is great for asset prices. certainly the first half of the year. you throw in any sort of policy stimulus out of washington with tax reform, you have got to go with it. lisa: i agree. from my perspective what is not to like. you have got accommodative conditions. you have great growth. central banks are not raising
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globally, at a rapid pace. you have the fed outlining what they are going to do. i think it is ideal conditions jonathan: it makes sense for high yields to perform? it happens. why not? lisa: with had some very sector specific issues going on, whether it is any retail sector, people are concerned. when you take a step back and look over at defaults are, look at the positive benefits we will see from the tax plan. double with good growth we are in a good environment for high-yield. bob: it is not that high-yield has performed. poorly it has been ok. there is a lot of rotation and equity now. if you're going to own the top of the capital structure of the company, you have to like the bottom. if you have some stimulus from washington coming through, you have to own the bottom. i think that is what we are seeing. jonathan: i spoke to someone from morgan stanley thinks credit might be targeted. that is a warning for the xp market. is that is something you are
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thinking about? bob: i don't see it. i look at credit spreads, at 370 basis points over the pretty generous for the default rate that's about 1%. if you think about some of the tailwind we will see in corporate america next year with tax reform, the reduction in the the tax rate down to 21%, that is really nice for corporate profitability. i think we have a while to go. you typically see high-yield spreads come in through 300 towards 250. jonathan: you sounded less bullish. what is behind the? -- what is behind that? bob: that's a bit worrisome. we've had a good run for a number of years. the central banks are definitely taking the punch bowl away. it is a question of how much longer do i want to ride it? the next couple of quarters for sure. jonathan: 5.5% will not do it in high-yield. will they keep going down?
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if you look at the capital structures and you think the financials will be ok, why be at the top of the stack? lisa: i get the point on equity, but i'm a fixed-income investor. you got to be somewhere. i like high-yield. you know what i like more? you got an improving europe, growth is great. banks that have built of capital. think about where we have come from the banking sector in europe from the crash back in 2008. you have capital ratios just under 15% when the venture -- went the banks recover. why not come down and capital structure? jonathan: cocoas have had a great year. -- more to go? lisa: i think it is the weight of money. think about where we are in terms of negative yields. you have a large sloth of the market trading get negative yields. probably about 18%. even if you look at the central banks starting to correct that policy, we have looked at forward rates.
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maybe in the worst case you have another 3% that is no longer negative. where people going to go? they are looking for yield. go to the area you get the best opportunity, which is banks in europe. jonathan: a lot of people have become more constructive about europe. the economy has improved. the ecb is still in the game. i want to think about how difficult it has been to push that positive asset classes across europe, yields just stay low 30 basis point on the german 10-year, multiple expansion in the xp market. it has been a difficult place to push through up -- a positive view. bob: people have got it wrong. i will horrify you. the total yield is 2.5%. because when you swap it back to dollars you are getting the yield of just over 5%. i look at that. i look at what i could do in the
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dollar high-yield market of equivalent credit quality. i might as well take some european high-yield backup 50 basis points, swap it back to dollars. i have got the ecb with a dovish view underwriting the next few quarters for me. i think we are going to seek credit spreads back down toward 2%. i will pick up a couple percent on that. i have been saying all year you cannot be greedy. if you wait, you're going to miss it. we have had a pullback. that is enough. we have had a tremendous rally and all asset classes for a while. but the ecb is the one central bank that is telling us they may extend qe beyond when they said
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the taper would end. they do not foresee raising interest rates anytime in the near future. you think about the minus 4/10ths of 1%. jonathan: there might be a reprice in bunds. yet to recognize there is interest rate risk in the corporate debt market because of this method asset purchase program the ecb has conducted. you are not concerned at all about european credit? they're not stepping up. lisa: think about those negative yielding assets. until that point happens you have to find a place to go to get positive yield. it is corporate credit. the other thing to carry on from that, think about japan. japan has been the big story and continues to be the big story for us. japanese investors still can find value, albeit less than it was over the past couple of years, but they can find value
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by buying u.s. corporate bonds, heading back into japanese yen. jonathan: is 2018 the year they get away from the front and? bob: i think so. i actually think the growth looks wonderful in europe. it will put pressure on the ecb. i think you will see inflation drift a bit higher on the core right in the 1.1% expectation. i don't know they will be able to do a continued qe in the last few months of the year. the focus by midyear will be one when are they going to raise rates? bob michele and special thank you to lisa coleman. next up we focus on emerging markets. this is "bloomberg real yield." ♪ ♪
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jonathan: from the york city, jonathan ferro. this is "bloomberg real yield." at j.p. morgan asset management headquarters for the year that was in the year ahead. in 2017 it was definitely the year for emerging markets. we have seen em credit has ripped higher. with us is bob michele, global head of fixed income, and joining us is pierre-yves bareau, the head of emerging-market debt. when you think about the -- one -- when you think about the things to fear in 2017, one of them was emerging markets. with rethinking thinking about this relationship between the united states and china, the potential for trade wars and the idea you want to stay clear in a big way. that was a bad call. what happened? pierre-yves: growth is good for em.
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people forget that. when you look at history, it's always good. into 2018, it seems it is very conducive. growth is good. moderate inflation is good. commodities is in good shape in china is doing well. it is a good environment for em. jonathan: that investors overestimate the impact of politics? pierre-yves: is something we need to care about in 2018. which it hasn't headwinds coming to em from politics. 40% of the country's will be going through political transition. then, the second challenge will be the central bank normalization of the main central banks. jonathan: it was just treasury yields staying stubbornly low and the dollar was weakened and everyone ended up disappointed. that helped drive em returns. it wasn't about em. it was about elsewhere. bob: there was some of each and those statements. emerging-market debt pieces all
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-- emerging-market teased us all year long. it had the high real yield when he had zero real yields in the developed market. coming out of the trump victory, the emerging-market currencies were a bit undervalued. you can pick up high real yielding a tailwind. i think actually he did not get the trump stimulus. that was clear by the end of the first quarter. the dollar came off and emerging-market debt looks pretty attractive. jonathan: i want to tease out your review on treasuries. the 10-year will not come through. are you still looking for that next year? bob: we go back and forth on this, don't we? you point to the 30-year as rallying over 35 basis points this year. i can point to the entirety -- that is the funding rate of the u.s. government, raising 30 basis point. it surprised us that yields in the long and have not gone up a bit more this year. i think certainly when there was a failure of the administration to get stimulus at the start of
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the year we had a revised expectations. the fed is committed to raising rates at least three more times. we will see what happens when qe winds down and we go from balance sheet expansion to contraction, and the buyers exit the market. i think you will see a bearish steepening of the yield curve next year. jonathan: can you be a treasury bear and an em bull? bob: it is the pace. right now the developed market central banks are being overly cautious and how they normalize policy. pierre-yves: in the past two years they have been hiking with expectations. em has done very well. as long as central banks are telegraphing what they are doing, we have to keep an mind -- keep in mind they have balanced the books a lot. jonathan: where do you have the most conviction around em?
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in my debate emerging-market europe, eastern europe. latam not great, southeast asia very next. -- very mixed. pierre-yves: we see big opportunities next year. we think high-yield it emerging-market. we are more or less away from the 10-year average. that is the value of trading our portfolio. we are targeting the countries where there is upgrading. south africa and central america as well. the second opportunity is countries that are growth related. central europe and asia. it will be more of a challenge next year. carry will be less appealing. jonathan: in terms of the sector breakdown in credit, that a story is technology. technology in emerging markets is something people might not have valued enough. energy mining. is that something you are
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focused on? pierre-yves: that is why we are big in china. contrary to market expectation which is downbeat on china. the reason why we think this slowdown is much more solid in terms of growth. one of the reasons is this industry upgrading. more than 50% of the capex in china is going to technology oriented sectors which may china more robust than the market thinks. jonathan: there has been a bond route in china. why has that not bled to em? pierre-yves: i think people miss that is good news. there is tightening, more defaults, everything that is good news because leveraging is finally happening. china is rebalancing into the newer sectors we were talking about. rebalancing from the supply model to a demand oriented model. consumption is now 70% of gdp growth in china.
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china is a much better footing --than people think. jonathan: i should be bearish on old economy china exposure? pierre-yves: china is a big factor for em. not everything in em. we are coming to a tighter level right now. the big thing this year will be differentiation. one factor will be politics. you have the big value opportunities in local markets. a lot of countries are beyond -- 10% of the yield. the election will matter. jonathan: i'm assuming you share his confidence around emerging markets? bob: i do. i'm impressed with the way china policymakers have handled things. we want them to rein in credit credit a bit. in
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we talked to about how they snuck in a decorative rate hike on the yields of the fed. they are doing all the right things. if they are doing the right things, and you got this stimulus coming out of the developed central banks, you are going to have a pretty good environment for emerging-market debt. jonathan: they delivered a rate hike on christmas day as well. bob michele, pierre-yves bareau, thank you for joining us. next up we have a look ahead to 2018. before we get there, a check on where bonds have been this week. twos, tends, and 30's. it is a flatter yield curve on the front and rally. bob give us the annual bond market awards next from j.p. morgan asset management. this is "bloomberg real yield." ♪ ♪
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floor. it is time for the final spread. coming up over the next week there will be u.s. economic data released. it will have bitcoin futures. we won't deal with that right now. a boj decision, regional elections in catalonia, and all eyes in washington for a potential government shutdown. what i want to do with bob michele what i want to do with that's what i want to do with bob michele is something he does every year, the bond market awards. i think it is absolutely brilliant. bob: we are going to have some fun now. jonathan: we're going to rattle through them. you chose bond of the year. can you walk me through bond of the year? bob: in distorted markets you have to look for something that is most distorted. i went with the violia zeroes. a triple-b rated issue. forget about the fact that money -- that they borrowed money for three years.
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they actually got lender's to pay them money to take their money. it had a yield of -3 basis points. if that is not a sign of distorted markets, i don't know what it. jonathan: lifetime achievement award? bob: got to give it to janet yellen. i actually think she is a really cool lady. she got into the fed. she helped normalize policy, and she is also the fed chair in 40 years to have a term without a recession happen. jonathan: comeback player of the year? bob: lots of potential candidates. it has got to be developed market government bonds. every time i am on, you keep telling me they have not gone up in yield. i said we were going to have it. they should have. done they know growth is where -- don't they know growth is where it is accelerating? jonathan: is it going to happen next year? bob: certainly by this time next year because the distortion by the central banks is not going
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to be there. central bank balance sheet expansion terms to contraction. jonathan: unsung hero? bob: another good one. the yield curve. it has to be. the front end of the market went up in yield. if you're a short-term investor, looks great. what about if you're a long-term investor? you made some money. jonathan: most valuable player of the year? i want to spend some time on this. bob: most valuable player, i went with quantitative ease. there is a number of ways to look at it. if this were january 1, 2017, we could've put all the sectors and asset classes on the wall, throw darts at them in the portfolio would have been up in value. are we just good dart throwers? or is there something bigger going on? the fact that central banks keep printing money, $160 billion a month. it comes into the market, it ripples through. it means you don't get corrections.
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the equity market has not corrected more than 3% this year. jonathan: are we approaching an inflection point next year as far as qe is concerned? will the size of the balance sheet remain powerful? bob: it will remain powerful, but because the inflow will turn down, i think that is something for the markets to digest. the way the central banks have laid it out with the ecb doing $30 billion over the next nine months, the fed stepping up its rundown to $20 billion a month in january, did steps of every -- it stepped down every quarter. we will see with the bank of japan does. balance sheet goes from expansion to contraction. when you have a correction in the market, say the summer of 2018, you will not have that big pool of money printed double come in and support bonds and then spillover into everything. jonathan: when we do this this time next year, the two-year in germany will not be yielding -70 basis points?
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bob: i don't believe it will. it may still be negative. jonathan: my special thanks to j.p. morgan asset management's bob michele, lisa coleman, and pierre-yves bareau. my special thanks to them for letting us do a full hour for bloomberg radio and on bloomberg tv right here from new york. i will see you next friday at 12:30 p.m. new york time. 5:30 in london. this was "bloomberg real yield." this is bloomberg. ♪ scarlet: i am scarlet fu.
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this is "bloomberg etf iq." ♪ scarlet: as bitcoin goes mainstream, we speak with a team that claims to be the ishares of crytpofinance. with wall street behind the curve on etf jpmorgan is claiming in the hedge fund etf space. what are the processes as the bull market continues? there is value and deep value. which explains why retailers make up trd
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