tv Bloomberg Real Yield Bloomberg February 15, 2019 1:00pm-1:30pm EST
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jonathan: "real yield." from new york city, bloomberg "real yield" starts right now. coming up, trade talks wrapping up in beijing. president xi hailing great progress. looking to stabilize further signs of slowing growth. chinese credit surgeries. struggling to get a read on the u.s. economy. small cracks begin to emerge. we begin with a big issue, struggling to get a clear read on the u.s. economy. >> i wouldn't take too much based on one data point. >> it will depend on how the economic data unfolds. >> we don't even know the data
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yet because of the shutdown. >> given the bad news. >> there was no so are lining. >> the first time we are starting to see a fading from the tax cut boost. >> it is very possible that we continue to have strong growth in the u.s. have stronge cannot conviction one way or another at this point. jonathan: joining me around the table today is michael temple, doug peeples, and krishna money. krishna, i want to begin with you. doesn't take much to shake confidence and conviction. this week it was the soft retail sales number. to end the week, manufacturing concerns. how hard is it to get a read on the u.s. economy right now? >> i don't think it is really
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that hard. the u.s. economy coming into 2019 had a great deal of momentum, things were slowing down. things cannot slow down so rapidly in such a short period of time. i think we have had these had fix in the past as well, we will get through it. u.s. growth probably stabilizes around 2%. our point in all of this is people who are expecting this -- recession anytime soon are going to be sorely disappointed. five more years. jonathan: what is interesting at someone from morgan university wrote about the confirmation bias. if you look at the economy and you already have your own assumptions on where we are going, this confirms. which goes back to my previous question. it is a little bit more difficult not to get your hands around the deceleration in the u.s. economy.
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i don't think we should be surprised if that happens, that was the whole idea of the fed tightening policy in order to bring the economy back to trend level growth, so that there would not be inflationary pressures. probably the best data point we get, largely because we get it every week, is jobless claims. if you take the employment report instead of the claims, these numbers are really good. we should not expect any recession. i think the tricky part is what is the yield curve telling us? it tells us that we should be on the look at for a recession certainly before the next five years. are your michael, what thoughts, doesn't this validate the federal reserve's current on a terry stance michael: i don't think we have five years until the next recession but i certainly think the fed was concerned things were happening to the u.s. economy that began to alarm it.
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clearly, overseas growth is slower than people are expecting. you see the divergence taking place once again, the fed going to the sidelines. i think they are buying insurance. jonathan: you have to fold in the chinese data as well. soft ppi. the classic 2016 set up. concerns grow about exporting, disinflation to the rest of the world. is that overplayed? don't think so. i think the magnitude is different but the setup is fairly close. the drivers and the magnitude are different, but i ended the day, the global economy started slowing down the middle of 2018, continues to slow down. that will probably be the case. our thesis for the year has been relatively simple. softer growth, better policy. growth on a global basis is softer, much worse in europe and china perhaps, but slowing down in the u.s. policy supported on a global
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basis. if it is not today, eventually it will have to be. ,onathan: we have had five cuts the reserve requirement ratio, since 2018. not a single rate cut on the main mechanism, many would consider the 100 year lending rate to be the big one. no cuts since 2015. is that coming? krishna: before everything is said and done in this easing cycle, and i will classify it as an easing cycle in china, they will throw the kitchen sink in. the structural nature of the chinese economy, expects the chinese economy to slow down. to get it to where they need to be, providing stimulus at various points in the cycle. jonathan: yet, the economy still has not stabilized. doug: let's not kid ourselves. i don't think the price mechanism on credit or interest rates works the same as in other places. if you look on the bloomberg and check out the chinese credit
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impulse indicator, it's been going down for a long time. i agree with krishna. our team out of hong kong was on this pretty early. they are going to change their stance and we are going to see some policy reaction in typical chinese fashion. don't havey think we to worry that that is coming. what we have to worry about is will it work this time? we have gone through a period where chinese credit growth was growing at 25% in order to get 6, 7, 8% gdp growth. that is not a good model. president xi has realize that, and in many of his statements have come out and said we cannot keep doing it that way. the real question will be do they try to stimulate the old-fashioned way, and doesn't work? jonathan: will it work, michael? michael: i'm almost thinking we are looking in the wrong place. jonathan: where should we be looking? michael: europe.
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these guys are right, china has a lot of levers to pull, i don't think they are near the end of bringing down interest rates, providing inflation, can do more fiscal spending. you can argue the marginal benefits have declined, to because they cannot just build another superhighway or high-speed train. what is europe going to do to stimulate its economy? more negative interest rates? that will not work. it has not worked in any meaningful way. are they going to get together and encarnacion around fiscal expansion? i doubt it. we know the ecb has talked about we will see's, and more credit buying likely, but i'm wondering where this goes. can you stimulate growth in europe in a meaningful way? jonathan: that is what was interesting this week, krishna, finally some cracks in the central bank.
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the path to inflation will be shallower. the ecb will need to adapt. that is the most acknowledgment i've heard of the slowdown in europe from an ecb official for months and months. is it too late, do they have enough to do enough? at the: we talked about last time i was here, specifically on this. ,cb has no choice but to ease as aggressively as they can. of move away from that as long as they can, but from a structural standpoint, michael is absolutely right. europe has a far bigger problem than the u.s., for sure, and has less tools than china. being on the wrong side of policy is risky for europe. having said that, they will do an ltro, other things. ascal expansion, we are at better place there than we have been at any point in a while. at the end of the day, the potential for europe is 1%.
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if we get close, we are high-fiving. aboutan: we have talked the structure of the economy in the u.s., europe, asia. we have painted a pretty doubtful picture of what is happening in the global economy. i think the sovereign debt market has moved on that pretty well. the bond market is priced for recession in europe. what fascinates me is the tension in the sovereign space compared to high-yield and credit. not just talking about the u.s., but e.m., asia, and even european investment high-yield grade. i don't see cracks in the assets in the way that you think there should be given the growth act drop. >> the fourth quarter was pretty beautiful -- brutal. jonathan: i agree, but something happened in december, but everything is ok. >> you have charts of their of the u.s. high-yield market. the chinese market does not look quite as promising, so to speak.
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the selloff was more advanced, there has been less of a rally. financial markets, as much as we want them to reflect the real economy, they care about what the fed is likely to do. -- i wasurth quarter going to say when they thought -- i'm going to change that to, when the chair saturday there were going to continue to raise rates, that is when the market came apart. course as he reversed and backtracked, that is when the market started to rally. jonathan: final word, michael. michael: i call it the bond conundrum right now. we have a yield curve that is essentially that close to inversion in the u.s., and everywhere else in the world will be lowering rates. agree with krishna, that that will ultimately be stimulative. stimulativeis how
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will it be, are we at the limits of our ability to stimulate in the traditional way? why isn't credit reflecting it? the reason, i think, is you still have reasonable earnings growth, and you now have balance sheet religion on the part of corporations. dividend cuts to do love her. have not heard that in a long time. now we are in a positive feedback loop for credit, taking cues from the market. from that standpoint, credit risk will probably be fading into the mind of the typical investor. jonathan: we will be talking about that next on the program. everyone is staying with me. coming up, it is the auction block, including italy returning to the bond market after attracting record bids for its debt offering last week. this is bloomberg "real yield." ♪
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jonathan: i'm jonathan ferro. this is bloomberg "real yield." we go to the auction block where we begin with even more european sovereign debt issuance. demand for italian debt rising 43-your notes. this comes out week after record bids for italy's 30-your bonds. elsewhere in the u.s., investors jumped into the cash. indirect bidders to the largest portion of the $50 billion sale since july 2011. soldly incorporates, at&t $5 billion of triple b bonds to help to refinance its debt. fourthtes due 2028, the most active in the investment grade market. that is where i want to begin. at&t, the largest nonfinancial issuer of corporate debt making
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debt reduction a top priority for this year. with us to discuss is michael vimplecom doug peebles, and krishna memani. let's start with michael. as at&t caught what you consider the new religion for the c-suite? michael: absolutely, telecom is the poster child right now for balance sheet religion. they are focused on deleveraging. at&t being one of the largest issuers, it's been given the mandate. ratings agencies are hovering over everyone as we speak. jonathan: i have heard this is the year of the debt diet. someone on my show said that. washna: i think part of it volatility in 2018. interest-rate volatility and stock market lability. market is right, some people got religion, but they have only gotten the first commandment. we are waiting on the other nine to come through. that volatility
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put a pause on the expansion of balance sheet that they were done the path of. tax reforms was a bit of a driver as well. at the end of the day, if the liquidity is available, if the market pricing of risk is relatively low, money is cheap, corporations will continue to deliver. not at the pace they were doing before, but leverage is going up. doug: i think everybody gets religion. around the plane during turbulence and everyone is doing their own form of praying. you talk about a debt diet. if you look around the world, since the first quarter of 2009, and we came into this with $110 trillion of global debt outstanding, we increased it by $60 trillion. it is crazy. by the way, within that 60 trillion, about half of it is from china. so yes, we all need a debt diet. jonathan: let's talk about a
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part of the market where people have been concerned over the last year, the expanding side of triple b, the line between investment grade and high-yield. are those concerns overdone? walk me through the triple b universe and how concerned we should be. krishna: the fact that the triple b sector is the largest component of the investment grade market is something to worry about. at the end of the day, the driver of catastrophic outcome with that sector really will depend on the economic cycle and the credit cycle far more than anything else. i think the right way to think of --it is, when the day when a bad outcomes arrive, triple b's are going to underperform far more than they have previously. jonathan: in the short-term, medium-term, what we have on the table between investment-grade and high-yield, the tightest
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spread in almost 10 years. you are telling me this is the year of the debt diet. we have double be spreads coming into narrow that gap. i think the big concern for a lot of people, the trade that people are starting to think about, is now the time to go along triple b's? the spread't think was the triple b's backing up to the double b's, which is a sign of a healthy market. if krishna is right and we don't have a recession or five years, you are definitely supposed to be long. i think it isink it wamichael: overdone. the reality is, as soon as the market started to worry about the triple be part of the investment grade market was the time to go in and own it. our conservation was there were certain areas in the triple b
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market we are concerned about, certain segments, certain large issuers, but i don't think it is this mass wave of companies going down into high-yield. that should not be what is worrying people. doug: when i talk to fixed income people, they are not crazy worried about this. when you talk about other --mentators, other investors i'm just stating my observation, jonathan. i think that there are others that are really worried. krishna: we are just smart. all kidding aside. the point dog is making is an important one. it is not just the size of the cohort, it is -- there are far larger companies in triple b's, the coverage ratios are good. looking at a specific number and freaking out is probably not the right thing to do. krishna memani, doug
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peebles, michael temple sticking with me. drifting higher on the front end by about five basis points. no drama on the longer end. around 3% on a 30 year yield. coming up, the final spread. the week ahead featuring the fed minutes from the january meeting. that is next. this is bloomberg "real yield." this is bloomberg. ♪
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still with me is michael vimplecom doug peebles, and krishna memani. krishna, i want to begin with you and he skipped call option on the -- in santander in spain. how concerned are you? the first, so if you are a typical european investor and got into the market comecertain expectations you are disappointed, flustered. how could they do this? investore a long-term in credit markets, have been doing this for a long time, this sort of thing happens all the time. we have had this with tier one's, lbo's, a company would promise all sorts of things. as an analyst, you have to expect what is the most economic thing for the issuer to do? this was, indeed, the most economic thing for the issuer to do. they are fiduciaries. jonathan: this is a market that
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is now maturing? one great analyst in london said just that. if you look, from an economic standpoint, were they supposed to do this? yes, they were. did they know it was going to surprise the market? they probably did. i think it is a sign of a market that is maturing. not only the action but the reaction. jonathan: we had a little bit of a move after the event but we have come back since then. michael, do we have to assume become morels common? michael: the market is maturing, ,nvestors are now on the look so there will be some differentiation, further spread widening between the ones that will and won't. one of the questions is, is there something underlying that we should be worried about. concern -- we talked
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about it with slowing europe. we have never seen a revival of the credit channel in europe. banks have struggled to make money. they have struggled to deal ever. -- de-lever. banks in the u.s. did a good job shrugging their leverage. the europeans have not done that in a meaningful way. jonathan: we have to leave it there. rapidfire final round. we begin with the chinese rate cut before the end of the quarter. yes or no. michael: yes. doug: yes. krishna: yes. jonathan: the spread between triple b's and double b's than there was in 10 years. long triple b's or double be? michael: triple b. doug: triple b. krishna: long triple b. most crowded trades
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for the bank of america fund manager survey. you continue to stick with it or do you fade it? michael: our expectation is em is very attractive right now. doug: it doesn't trade like it is long. it had for a while. the survey.eve just to be clear to doug's point, it was more about em. along em. jonathan: great to catch up with you all. this was bloomberg "real yield." this is bloomberg tv. ♪
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comes one day after he agreed to sign legislation providing about $1.4 billion for the controversial wall. the president told reporters today the action he is taking is in keeping with his campaign slogan, make america great again. >> if you are going to have drugs pouring across the border, you are going to have human traffickers form across the border in areas where we have no protection, in areas where we --'t have a barrier, then very hard to make america great again. mark: the president said he expects to be sued but also expects the supreme court to eventually rule on the matter. he added "happily will win, i think." in a joint statement, nancy pelosi and chuck schumer called the president house move "an unlawful declaration over a crisis that does not exist." they added the declarat
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