NEW YORK: Investors bracing for another jumbo US Federal Reserve interest-rate hike are focusing on a few key trades - betting on a deeper inversion in the US yield curve, further losses in stocks and a stronger US dollar.
Short-term treasury rates have exceeded yields on longer maturities for months, in a time-tested harbinger of an economic downturn ahead.
The MLIV Pulse survey, which drew 737 responses, showed that the bulk of contributors expect further inversion.
Some see it reaching levels last seen in the early 1980s, when Paul Volcker ratcheted up borrowing costs to break the back of hyperinflation.
That outlook underscores the bearish sentiment building amid concerns the central bank risks stifling growth in its fight against inflation.
Most economists expect a third straight increase of 75 basis points on Wednesday, with further tightening to come. The majority of the MLIV survey’s contributors say it’s best to bet on dollar gains, and 44% prefer to sell stocks.
“The strong message from the Fed is that they want to cause demand destruction by pushing rates higher, so it’s not a question of whether we go into recession but when,” said Subadra Rajappa, head of US rates strategy at Societe Generale SA.
“And there’s a good chance we have a hard-landing type of situation.’’
Hotter-than-forecast consumer inflation data last week boosted expectations for just how hawkish the Fed needs to be to curb price pressures.
It pushed traders to see the Fed raising its benchmark to a peak of around 4.5% in March, from a current target of 2.25% to 2.5% for the fed funds rate.
It’s an outlook that sets the stage for the yield curve to become more deeply inverted. Investors can make that wager by selling short-term Treasuries and simultaneously buying longer maturities.
While survey respondents expect yields to rise broadly, they see shorter-tenor rates -those most closely tied to Fed policy - climbing more.
That’s a typical pattern when the Fed is withdrawing accommodation, and it already sent the widely watched gap between two and 10-year yields to minus 58 basis points last month, the most inverted since 1982.
Among 446 investors expecting a deeper inversion, 62% see that gap plunging even deeper into negative territory, while 38% predict it will not go past last month’s low.
These measures bear watching because of their track record - the spread between rates on three-month bills and 10-year yields has inverted before in each of the past seven US recessions.
“The bond market expects that the Fed will push rates up enough to trigger a recession,” said Kathy Jones, chief fixed-income strategist at Charles Schwab.
The prospect of an earnings-crushing recession combined with steeper borrowing costs delivered a decisive survey result when it comes to stocks.
Equities are coming off another painful week, reflecting growing concern that the Fed’s aggressive rate-hike campaign will crimp economic growth.
For the week, the S&P 500 index fell 4.8%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 fell 5.8%.
The greatest share of survey respondents, 44%, said they would sell equities before the Fed meets.
To be sure, the latest slump in stocks has left some investors concluding it’s time to buy - 28% prefer value stocks ahead of the Fed, 16% prefer all stocks, and 13% prefer growth stocks.
“It’s going to be another hawkish message from the Fed,” said Michael Contopoulos, director of fixed income at Richard Bernstein Advisors.
“And the one quadrant you don’t want to be in if you are an equity investor is one where there’s decelerating earnings growth and tightening monetary conditions, which is where we are going.”
One of the strongest signals out of the survey is that respondents see further pain ahead for the roughly US$24 trillion Treasury market, which is already on track for its steepest annual loss since at least the early 1970s.
The majority of respondents, 70%, said they expect 10-year Treasury yields to be higher in a month than they are now, compared to 30% that expect them to fall.
This benchmark for global borrowing has already more than doubled this year, to above 3.4% now, raising borrowing costs for everyone from companies to home-buyers. One of the biggest winners from higher yields could be the dollar, which has soared this year as the Fed’s tightening campaign boosted interest-rate differentials in the greenback’s favour.
“That does keep the US dollar supported,” Charu Chanana of Saxo Capital Markets said in a Bloomberg TV interview.
Among MLIV Pulse respondents, 61% said there’s more scope for greenback gains, signalling it’s best to maintain or increase long positions.
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index, which tracks the currency against a basket of 10 leading counterparts, set a record high this month.
The greenback’s strength is rippling through global financial markets, putting pressure on US trading partners including Canada and Japan.
Fed chair Jerome Powell said this month that officials “need to act now, forthrightly, strongly” to curb inflation. In the eyes of survey respondents, that likely means little deviation from this year’s big investment trends.
“The Fed is fighting an expectation battle,” Joe Davis, global chief economist at Vanguard Group Inc, wrote in a research note.
“It is a tradeoff between the impacts of higher policy rates, but they would rather tamp down inflation in the current environment, even at the expense of growth and the labour market.”
- Bloomberg
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