tv Bloomberg Real Yield Bloomberg January 3, 2020 7:30pm-8:00pm EST
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yield"n: bloomberg "real starts right now. ♪ coming up, looking for the fed to remain on the sidelines in 2020, even if u.s. manufacturing data is the weakest levels in a decade, and s&p takes the most bearish stance on credit since 2009. we begin with the big issue, bringing the fed back to the table. >> the fed is on hold. >> on hold. >> the fed goes to the sidelines. >> markets are ok with that. >> the threshold is extremely high. >> impossibly high.
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>> the fed make it pullback in. >> they make it pullback. >> conditions have to worsen. >> if something dramatic happens. >> or inflation has to majorly overshoot their level. >> they don't want to be the reason the markets fall off but they don't want to be the reason they go up. >> they do nothing in an election year. >> they will probably try to stay out of the spotlight. jonathan: joining me around the table, our guests. andy, your thoughts on the threshold to bring the fed back to the table in 2020. andy: i think if we put aside what happened overnight, because i think that is much more complex, otherwise, i don't think the fed is coming back to the table anytime soon. i think the same can be said of basically all central banks in the g7.
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no one is expecting anything from anyone. period,n a very benign absent to political issues. jonathan: diana, is that your take? diana: for the first half of the year we are likely to see the fed remain on hold. in the second half of the year, we could see them come back into play, especially because we don't see much follow-through on growth in the u.s. and the pressures remain contained. jonathan: craig? craig: i think consensus is right that the fed is on hold but a year is a long time, so a lot can change and we learned that overnight. i think the base case is right but i think it is important to retest the base case and not get too comfortable. jonathan: some seymour more slack in the labor market than before, but the way they respond to data has shifted too.
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how key is that? greg: you look at the dot plot that has been dramatic. that shows you how their mines have shifted, but i still think they are surprised by the lack of inflation. the labor market is still tight, not as tight as they thought, perhaps, but you are not seeing the inflation that i think everyone at the fed expected and i think as a result, they will continue to run the experiment hot. jonathan: you expect to see it anytime soon? greg: not really. it is firming and has come off the bottom, but to have a big uptick in inflation, i don't see it. jonathan: diana? diana: we think inflation will get to two this year, and will be close to that, but i think the fed will wanted to stay at that devil. -- at that level. i think that is what will be put into play. jonathan: andy?
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andy: i think that's spot on when it comes to inflation. think they will let it ride and i think people's expectations have become so benign in recent years that inflation is not really the problem, they are focusing on growth or any challenge to the growth outlook, their focus on the others, hiking rates to defend against inflation. the kind of know they can control it. jonathan: does that keep a lid on 10 year treasuries at 2% or lower? andy: not necessarily lower than 2%, but in the 2% area. we could get toward 2.25%. this time of year, you look at the alix for 2020 and lots of people are predicting rates much higher. i think they are looking for volatility where it doesn't exist. i think the rate environment will be denying -- the benign
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and credit is where the problems are. jonathan: looking at the bloomberg terminal, year in, 119 three. 120,ook for numbers around 125. where you come down? think it's range bound at some 2%. but the way i think about it and the way we think about it, the world can handle higher rates. 2018, what we learned in and sure the fed was in play and central banks were learning, but real rates moved up and that was the killer to risk. my number one focus for 2020 continues to be the level of real rates. if real rates move higher, i think it is a risk off environment. jonathan: any move higher is self-limiting because any move higher creates a risk off environment and the bid comes back in? greg: correct. jonathan: is that your thought,
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diana? diana: it is feared anytime you get close to -- it is. anytime you get close to the 2% rate, you need to have duration. it would not take much to get back to growth again. world, rates are in negative territory and that demands donation -- duration. jonathan: what does it mean for bunds? think it's a little different when you have ecb in transition, but absent that, yes. but the fly in the ointment is that the ecb is recalibrating, rethinking the strategy going forward, and that adds risk premium into the curve across europe. jonathan: let's talk about the secular curve in the u.s. the inverted last summer and started to steepen into the back end of 2019, how does that materialize? greg: i still believe the bias for the curve is the flatten and not the stephen.
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it points back to the real rate -- and not steepen. it points back to the real rate argument. i think it pulls it down. of a not representative decline in economic growth, it is more of a need. to the point where there are negative rates everywhere else, the higher it is above zero relative, the more attractive it is. jonathan: andy, your thoughts on how much steeper the curve can get in the u.s.? we had some steepeners come through into 2020, cannot continue? andy: i think it can continue based on domestic factors, but as greg says, as soon as you get any reasonable yield anywhere, people pounce, which limits the move higher. i think it makes some sense to have a steeper u.s. curve because ultimately i think they need to price in the risk of inflation picking up, you need to price in the risk perhaps a
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further issuance on the longer end if the treasury decides to shift. but to greg's point, i think spain's -- think things will be limited in the absence of anything else worth buying. jonathan: how important is the front end of the yield curve? greg: i think it's critically important. the big hiccup in the market and that i was concerned about year alleviated, fed have a well-functioning funding market is critically important to fixed income and the movement of capital. the fact the fed has stepped in, there are still more work to do, but injecting the front end program has been really important. i expect that to continue until there are other fixes. jonathan: have they addressed those issues where they can think about backing away again? greg: i think it's too premature for that. they need to lay out a roadmap and there are other things
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beyond their control and much more difficult just from a regulatory standpoint. banks are penalized on treasuries. jonathan: the kind of thing and trying to think about for 2020 is to what extent the fed will be backed into a corner with the balance sheet. i find it difficult to back away from the kind of -- they find it difficult to back away from the operations at the moment. there is a separate issue that we have some areas of the market, many viewers would disagree, but some areas believe this is qe. and because of that they are bidding up risk assets. if the fed starts to say, we have backed away from some of these operations, the balance sheet source ago the other way again and what do they do? greg: i think it's really difficult for them to get out. that's going back to the ecb experience where they feel trapped, same thing with the boj. the fed doesn't want to be trapped but i think they are. this isn't qe, it just looks and feels like qe, and the difference is there is no
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duration to it and it doesn't have the same impact. there's also talk in some circles on how they will help funding by going out the curve. jonathan: diana? diana: i think it certainly trades like qe. nott the point on duration being bought, maybe not anchoring the yield curve, but the amount of reserve in the system is increasing in the fed is increasing liquidity. we are seeing equities in risk assets across the board. i feel like this could be tricky for markets to maneuver this year. jonathan: our guests will be sticking with us. coming up, the high-grade bond market gearing up for a big month of sales following a slow december. that is coming up next. this is bloomberg "real yield or ." ♪
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♪ i'm jonathan ferro and this is bloomberg "real yield." to the auction block in europe, where the primary market is starting to shake back to life with a handful of deals to close out the week. three sterling offerings in the spotlight, including sales from nationwide building society. the high-grade building market gearing up. reinsurance group of america making up a thin pipeline expected to grow in the coming days and weeks. could be a busy week for u.s. high-yield issuance. chuck buns scheduled -- junk bonds scheduled to mature this month as companies look to refinance debt while borrowing costs remain cheap. s&p global ratings most bears on corporate debt than at any point in the decade. formost down grades
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complete relative to upgrades since 2009. with me, diana amoa and reg repeaters, and andrew chorlton in london. we know the story of the price action. they've given companies the benefit of the doubt the past five years. there's been a slowdown of cash flow growth, it's manifest in earnings. this is somewhat of a topping off. i don't view this as a really horrible trend per se. it is a little slow to react as quite frankly in years prior, there has been so much leverage put onto the balance sheets that they quite possibly did not deserve the ratings in the first place. jonathan: when you hear things like the most down grades relative to upgrades since 2009, people worry when they hear the number 2009. should they be concerned about the credit ratings for some of these come in his relative to
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where they are priced currently? andy: i think the pricing is the issue opposed to the fundamentals. the pricing is way ahead of the fundamentals because of the kiwi and the search for yield. -- the qe and the search for yield. you saw this and high-yield last year where the ccc's didn't do so well. i think you will see companies that are on top of deleveraging plans and following through, and they will be rewarded, and those that don't show discipline will be punished. there's no question that prices are expensive in credit. you don't get the kind of excess returns we have lester across pre-much every sector. -- pretty much every sector. you can't get that without materially changing something and people should be cautious in credit just because the entry point. jonathan: greg, do you agree? greg: not really.
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you should always be cautious in credit, there is nothing but downside and upside is very limited, and that's very much the case. but it's still a decent environment for credit, pricing has come along long way in a short time. a lot of that was a reversal of the prior year. i think, unless you see a real and companies-- continuing to trash the balance sheet. there's been more of a downgrade but you haven't seen companies actually look to impair their balance. i think that is important. i think it's too early to sell the credit rally and there's too much negativity around bbb and around high-yield bonds in particular jonathan: -- in particular. jonathan: bbb had a fantastic year in 2019 and ccc did not until december of 2019 viewed you on the bandwagon for 2020? greg: we were on the show in
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november and usb the question and -- and asked me the question and it was too early, but there has been such a big price dislocation. for us, there's much more value and ccc. b i see value in the capital structure at least for now. if pricing changes, we will accept your jonathan: diana? diana: i think you need to be select, but with the fed balance sheet still increasing and you have a relatively easy monetary conditions, there is money to be made further down the credit spectrum. i think for the first part of the year, it will not be a rally in every thing should be supported barring a geopolitical shock. everything should be supported by the external backdrop. thought the s&p report was interesting because the things
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they are talking about are things that markets have talked about a long time. the auto sector, the problem child, is flagging and could be one that needs to adjust more. we have seen some improvement in other sectors. ccc, it is energy stocks that have underperformed. you look at where the valuations compensate. jonathan: bloomberg has crunched some of the numbers with the credit ratings, 11 to one was the downgrade to upgrade ratio in 2019, which is terrible. to greg's point, if you're going to start looking at the areas of the market that were lacking in 2019, is that an area you would be willing to look at? is a cyclical tailwind enough to offset what are very big structural issues in that particular area and that particular sector?
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diana: again, it's on a name by name basis. i think the structural issues, in the u.s. they are talking about market saturation and that's not going to go away. the sector may have gotten a boost from what the fed did last year, so the consumer credit becoming more accessible, but again, it's very much a name by name basis. auto arehe bbb expected to be downgraded this year. the markets are pricing that into an extent. in europe, i think the balance some is slightly stronger, of the names have been hit hard. they have been forced to get up to speed sooner. again, very much on the name by name basis rather than a sector. i think long-term challenges for the sector will remain with us. jonathan: andy, a quick word on the auto sector? andy: there are some fundamental problems that need to be addressed in terms of the change
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in the sector. same thing with the energy sector, it's going through a fundamental change in how people buy cars and the type of course they are buying. i think the challenge with europe, looking more generically at european credit, last year over 5% and the index yields about 50 basis points. i don't really understand how people can come into 2020 with a particular bullish view on credit given the returns we have enjoyed in 2019. i think autos, again, it will be name by name, but in that area, there may be the opportunity to pick some names that deliver and recognize the challenges. but it is another sector in transition. jonathan: final word around the desk? greg: i think it's time to be invested in credit. i think it's too early, it is named by name, it is dispersion. i think it is a place for alpha. that coming up, the
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♪ i'm jonathan ferro and this is bloomberg "real yield." in the next week, fmoc president taking center stage. plus, pick economic reports out of the u.s., including factory orders -- numbers. next friday, the u.s. payrolls report. up on whereto pick we ended the week with a really weak manufacturing in the u.s. much should we be worried about what is happening? been onethink that's
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of our big concerns, that the markets were getting a bit ahead of themselves and that's why we think being induration in the u.s. make sense. the economy is not picking up to the extent the markets seem to be anticipating, at least the equity markets. today -- whenism you look at the underlying data, there is just general weakness. employment also came in lower than expectation. that should makes next week's payroll data interesting. given that the markets expect something fairly robust. i think if we see downside, they might have to rethink. jonathan: the hope more than everything is to see destabilization in china, and if we see it in europe, the u.s. will lag manufacturing recovery but not lead it, and it will be the last out. is that the right approach? greg: i think gets more concurrent. clearly, europe has been copied between the u.s. and china, and
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they should definitely react, but they are separate. just because the u.s. entered it will not bean the first to exit, either. i think people are too negative on the u.s. in terms of that. but it bears watching. what today's numbers full due is that the consumer about a holdup because that is the key driver to the economy. jonathan: so far, so good into 2020. it's get to the rapid, three quick questions and three quick answers if you can. first question, can high-yield credit spreads in the u.s. breakthrough 300 basis points in 2020? yes or no? greg: yes. .ndy: no diana: yes. jonathan: will 20/20 be the year of ccc in the u.s.? diana: no. andy: no. greg: yes.
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yousef: the major stories driving headlines this week. the u.s. airstrike in iraq and syria on the basis that it was being used by iranian backed most -- militia. now, israel's third election in less than a year. dubai over the world export 2020. can the event turnaround portions of the struggling emirates? ♪ yousef: the
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