tv Bloomberg Real Yield Bloomberg April 26, 2019 1:00pm-1:30pm EDT
1:00 pm
jonathan: from new york city, i'm jonathan ferro. startsrg "real yield" right now. coming up, u.s. gdp delivering a big upside to price, helping all forecast. a headline flattered by an inventory boost fueling doubts the growth verse will be sustainable, providing another lift for treasuries. we begin with a big issue. united states looking like the best house on the block. >> strong growth. >> great gdp, great low inflation. >> better fundamentals.
1:01 pm
>> the underlying economy is doing well. >> the u.s. is doing relatively well. >> the u.s. is simply in a better place. yes, gdp was higher, but the devil is in the details. >> you have to strip out all of the noise of trade and inventories. inventories and trade, that is not indicative of the underlying economy. >> underlying demand was weak. business investment, pce cooled. >> definitely a deceleration from where we were last year. >> nowhere close to recession. jonathan: join me around the table is matt hornbeck, greg london, ian from steely. ian, let's begin with what must be the most hated 3% rate of gdp in america in recent memory. why?
1:02 pm
we have stocks up, treasuries up, but everyone seems to like it on the markets side. it is one of those, you beat expectations, but the mix of it was not great. it shows what people have been saying, we are in the slow trend like growth environment, which is good for all assets to why asset markets are up-to-date. on a gdp if i said 3% print, would you expect to see 2-year treasuries come in at five basis points? told you would have also me that the core pce would be missing, i was suggest that treasuries would be fine in that environment. >> the first print was actually higher in yields. when the market dog into it and saw the competition, they realized it was not as hot. jonathan: you see the positive contribution from tray that most people consider, the koch vision from inventories, which most think you give back as the year
1:03 pm
progresses, does that mean that the rest of the year will be bad? we are still around 2%. matthew: that is not a bad rate of growth if inflation is a 2%. if your policy rate is neutral, that is not bad. the problem is inflation is missing the feds target by 50 basis point. jonathan: is that your point as well, as we round out the week, it is not with gdp, but with a pce and a softer inflation rate in america? iain: yes, i agree with that. if you look at what has happened over the course of the year, you see the fed pivot and now it is all about inflation. that is what fomc members will be focusing on. we will see what jerome powell has to say about that. it has come down, lower than they would like. growth looks fine, not a problem there. inflation is what is on everyone's mind right now. jonathan: consumer price tolerance looks ok as well. several companies through the
1:04 pm
week, pepsico, coca-cola, dr. and gamble, all saying they can put up prices, and they got the green light from the consumer. there are a few signs that things are picking up. iain: i think so. if you think about the overall market, typically q1 is not great from a gdp standpoint. we also had to shut down to contend with, retail sales have picked up recently. there are some green shoots as look forward to q2. it is probably better than what most people have hoped for, when you look at where we were in november, december. greg: yesterday jobless claims notwithstanding, look at how strong the job market is. wages are going up. we think that will support prices. your view is the treasury yields are going lower. matthew: we are at 2.25 by the
1:05 pm
end of the year. puttingps out at me, the gdp report to the side, is what the university of michigan report was telling us, consumer expectations about long-term inflation. typically, the preliminary report gets advise higher, but this time it did not. this is a low expectation from consumers on inflation. heaven prevent the oil price goes down, breakeven inflation comes off. the fed will be even more worried than today. jonathan: i want to get to a dynamic that has been worrying people. treasury yields are coming this week and the dollar strengthened. the u.s. is still the high-yield are in the world. are a levered investor andy to borrow money to buy something, you are not coming to the u.s. because it cost money to borrow here. if you are a real money investor and are willing to take currency risk coming you are going to come to the united states. that has supported the dollar despite what most people have thought. jonathan: are we seeing signs of
1:06 pm
that, iain? you end up with a result of a stronger fixed income market, asset prices rich enough, and the dollar gets stronger as well? definitely seeing signs of that, and it is not just europe, it is happening in asia and japan as well. we are in a world of negative yields. big increase in the amount of negative yielding bonds across europe, japan. let's look to the u.s.. 2.5%, not asuries, high as we would like it, but a lot better than domestically. if you had that away, you don't get anything. are we start to see that, greg? the: one more piece of equation. stop volatility, yield volatility, and currency volatility has been low. those willing to take the risk feel more culpable because the
1:07 pm
surprise on either side is muted. almost 200 basis points of real yield in u.s. jonathan: with that comfort in low volatility, is that misplaced? it is correctly placed. i worry about too many bets on either side, and then you get that explosion of volatility, like we saw in march 2018. we seem to see those every 4, 5 months. forrry about the tinder that fire building again. matthew: we agree. at the end of the day, you need spark theis event to marketplace. to the real things that make volatility go up are not on most people's radar. we think it is coming but it is hard to see. jonathan: final word on the subject, iain? iain: we are in a good environment at the moment, benign central banks, trend like growth, low inflation.
1:08 pm
you just need something to spark us to get that volatility up. it is hard to see where it will come from. at the moment, people are happy to run this low vol environment. jonathan: the economic data abroad through the week, some doubts are about whether the global economy stabilizes, particularly in china. americahink the buy story is being reinforced with the fact that data is still ok, and there are some doubts happening more specifically in the asia-pacific region? matthew: absolutely. clearly, you can see things happening in china, but when you look at the neighbors, you don't see it yet. you do not see it in japan, korea, certainly not in europe. that is a problem for a lot of investors. jonathan: definitely not in south korea. gdp in negative territory. it is hard for me to be convinced that china is recovering without a little sign of positive spillover to
1:09 pm
neighboring countries. greg: seems like so much of the growth coming from china is export driven. so that growth is not going into neighboring economies. jonathan: are we paying attention enough to this? that the recovery in china is different? greg: i don't think the market is paying attention to it, and they should. matthew: i agree with greg. everyone is hopeful that what is happening in china will begin to spill out. even our economists are looking for some spillover to help europe along. but if they are wrong on that, it's a major issue for the marketplace, the major issue for the fed. jonathan: how disappointed will we be with the second have hopes? iain: when you look historically, you normally have months in china, and then reverberating around the world. i agree it's been more domestically focused, the stimulus over the past few
1:10 pm
months, but when we were talking about it before, we expected more weakness followed by the pickup in q2 and the second half. this data is coming through in china, has not fed through to the rest of the world. let's keep an eye on that. toeel like it is unlikely sustain itself internally and not filter out. jonathan: a key story for the rest of the year. coming up on the program, the auction block. inflix dominating the show the u.s. jump bond market. -- junk-bond market. this is bloomberg "real yield." ♪
1:13 pm
we begin in the u.s.. the treasury very busy through the week. offering to, 5, 7-your notes. they $32 billion seven-your auction was awarded with 2.46% with primary dealers receiving the highest shares since october. netflix attracting demand, luring another $6 million in pricing. the 10.5-year dollar securities while the euro5% notes were sold at 3.875%. automotive seat manufacturer avian price 7% senior secured bonds together with a $800 million term loan. it will refinance is is this thing that credit facility, another sign capital markets remain supportive for high-yield issuers. matthew hornbeck, greg sta ples, and iain stealey are still with me.
1:14 pm
do you still get the feeling that this is wide open for issuance? iain: i think so. we saw that in europe. very little supply over the course of the year. came about after the easter break. investors have been snapping them up. there has been a thirst for supply, cash on the sidelines. people came into the are slightly defensive. i think supply can come. the good news from the european was fornt, a lot of it refinancing, so we are not seeing a pickup in leverage. a demand forely high-yield coming from retail, institutional investors. we are 150 basis points tighter than the start of the year. jonathan: the team at bloomberg spent some time breaking down the spread return of leverage. on historical measure in terms of the average, not great. within the high-yield
1:15 pm
market, you could maybe argue for the investment grade space. high-yield leverage does not look too bad, coming down since 2016. ultimately, from a valuation standpoint, that is the big question. mentioned, down 150 basis points on the year, back at levels from last september. the question is where we go from here. but we are in this environment where we have trend like growth, accommodative for banks, the cycle feels like it's been extended. the hunt for yield is back. jonathan: we also have to work at what is driving that less spread of returns, whether it is leverage picking up. what do you see as the dominant factor? iain: on the investment grade side, we see leverage coming down. peaked a couple quarters ago. we will see what happened this earnings cycle. across the european and u.s. high-yield markets, we don't to
1:16 pm
leverage that concerns us. the current environment is perfect in our mind for credit on this decent nominal growth standpoint. jonathan: greg, let's talk about high-yield versus investment grade. do you think about the regional composition of those indexes? is that a factor in the thinking for you? greg: i don't think so. we are getting comfortable with diversification on the investment grade space. theu.s. tends to be where market has more diversification. overseas, you're much more limited into natural resource companies and not much beyond that. jonathan: what about floating rate versus fixed rate, high yield versus leveraged loans? the prospect for rate hikes, it is not there for many people. then they take away from that, why would i want to be in floating rate? is there a prospect for a rate hike at any point in the next year? matthew: not within the next year. allen's that there, our chief
1:17 pm
u.s. economist, is looking for rate hikes in the back half of 2020. those forecasts have been changing. a lot can happen between now and the next 12 months. it is hard to see at this point a rate hike being delivered, but if the s&p keeps going up, credit spreads keep tightening, if financial conditions continue to ease, the fed will have their third mandate in question, financial stability. ian, i have heard increasingly as the week has progressed, maybe we are right for a bit of a rotation from the great performance in high yield the underperformance of loans. what do you think of that? iain: i'm not sure. we have seen a lot of money come out of loans. people piled into loans last year as rates were going up. stabilized, now the worry is the market is pricing in cuts, they are not as attractive.
1:18 pm
it feels like high-yield bonds make more sense. you have that yield and also the possibility of capital gain in those yields come down. greg: we have seen the leverage thanindex yielding higher the investment grade index. people are not anticipating any tightening anytime soon. we disagree. we think the next move will be a tightening at the end of the year or next year. jonathan: if you disagree on the right story, the rotation out of high-yield into loans, that is something you are doing? greg: we are starting to do that. the other dynamic is how much selling is going into the clo business. they have a good appetite for loans. jonathan: great to have you with us. let's get a market check. yields coming in 10 basis points on a weekear, 2.28 where we had a pretty decent gdp print. the important part of all of
1:19 pm
1:21 pm
jonathan: i'm jonathan ferro. this is bloomberg "real yield." coming up over the next week, a busy one. more tech earnings wrapping up with google on monday. apple results on tuesday. trade representative bob lighthizer and steven mnuchin traveling to beijing to resume talks on wednesday. a fed decision and news conference with chairman powell coming up. rates likely to remain on hold for the bank of england on thursday.
1:22 pm
jobs numbers on friday. still with us is matthew hornbeck, greg staples, and iain stealey. what are you looking for next week from chairman powell? iain: what will be interesting is his taken reading on inflation. that is the ship we have seen over the past few months. that is the fed's mandate now. they know the growth side is ok. to me, what is the lower bound, what will be low enough to knock them into cutting rates at this stage? matthew: the idea of an insurance rate cut is definitely something people are going to be interested in hearing about. depending on what he says in his prepared remarks, hopefully some enterprising reporters will ask him about the concept of an insurance rate cut. jonathan: maybe some here at bloomberg that may ask the question. walkway through that concept. a win to michael mckee. walk me through this concept of an insurance rate cut. matthew: when you go back and
1:23 pm
look at the first rate cuts in each of the previous several insurance camed up when you read the fomc transcript. this is not a new concept. what we have to remember about an insurance rate cut, you buy insurance before the highest burns down. that is the idea here. the core inflation gets to an unsustainably low level, they need to put some additional accommodation in place. interesting to talk about but very unlikely. look at this morning gdp print. i don't think the fed needs to step in and do anything right now. inflation will be fine. need todon't think they do anything. obviously, the market is pricing nextin as we look out into year. the likelihood is we will see inflation weakening over the next couple months. maybe it picks up later in the year. that is where everyone's attention will be. what we haven't talking about recently is this concept of average inflation over the cycle. at the time we are dipping down below 2% over the past five
1:24 pm
years. that is what people will drill into. jonathan: i would love to get an idea of how you think risk assets would respond to a federal reserve rate cut. if they started to talk about an insurance rate cut, wouldn't that worry people that build more confidence? iain: i think the markets would fly. you have seen that today with people looking at inflation print, stocks doing well. , the u.s. economy economy, 3% gdp growth, looks good. employment looks good, the consumer looks good. i don't think they need to do a cut and you would just put fuel on the fire. matthew: i completely agree. if it is an insurance rate cut, that means it is being put in place without any real fear. currently in the marketplace. that should send assets higher. the one thing i want to bring up, we are expecting a rate cut next week. more of a technical issue with
1:25 pm
respect to the interest the fed pays banks on excess reserves. jonathan: you are looking for five basis points. matthew: we are seeing the effect of federal funds rate move higher. %, below the 2.44 target range. we think this sets up the fed nicely to make another technical adjustment. this and be the first technical adjustment that they would make in the absence of a rate hike. there will be sun communities in the fed has to do, but that is something chairman powell can address and his prepared remarks. jonathan: i look forward to seeing him try to navigate that news conference. the final round, you know it is time for the rapid final round. this gdp print, as good as it gets for 2019 yes or no? matthew: yes. greg: no. iain: yes. jonathan: it has been tough for the year for high-yield relative to leverage loans.
1:26 pm
time to start rotating toward floating rate, yes or no? matthew: no. greg: yes. iain: no. jonathan: the intraday low for the 10-year, getting closer again, so i will ask again. 2.34 on an intraday basis. is that the low for the year in 2019? i know what you are going to say, matthew. matthew: absolutely not. greg: yes. iain: i think you can go lower. jonathan: interesting stuff, great to catch up with all of you. that does it for us from new york. see you next friday at 1:00 new york time. this was bloomberg "real yield." -- bloomberg tv tv. ♪ so with xfinity mobile
1:28 pm
i can customize each line for each family member? yup. and since it comes with your internet, you can switch wireless carriers, and save hundreds of dollars a year. are you pullin' my leg? nope. you sure you're not pullin' my leg? i think it's your dog. oh it's him. good call. get the data options you need and still save hundreds of dollars... do you guys sell other dogs?
1:29 pm
now that's simple, easy, awesome. customize each line by paying for data by the gig or get unlimited. and now get $100 back when you buy a new lg. click, call, or visit a store today. mark: i'm mark crumpton with bloomberg first word news. in indianapolis today, president trump promised to fight for gun rights as he addressed the national rifle association.
1:30 pm
speaking to the group for a third straight year, the president declared himself "a champion for the second members toand urged rally behind his reelection bid. the nation's largest gun rights organization was pivotal to mr. trump's victory in 2016. the president appears to be staging his tune about vaccines. as he left the white house for indianapolis today, the president urged parents to get their kids vaccinated amid a measles outbreak. in the past, mr. trump has said he doubted the effectiveness of vaccinations and suggested multiple times that there could be a link between back scenes and autism in children. measles in the united states has climbed to its highest levels in 25 years. catholic churches in sherlock i canceled all sunday masses until further notice over fears of more attacks from islamic state linked extremists, and the military said its soldiers in the eastern part of the country exchanged gunfire friday night with suspects believed
44 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
Bloomberg TV Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on