The enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it’s the illusion of knowledge (Stephen Hawking)

It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so (Mark Twain)

Invest with smart knowledge and objective odds

THE DAILY EDGE: 18 August 2023: Peak Obesity?

Economists Lift US Growth Forecasts, See Fed Higher for Longer This supports expectations that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates higher for longer.

Gross domestic product is expected to advance an annualized 1.8% in the third quarter, nearly quadruple the 0.5% pace projected in July, according to the latest Bloomberg monthly survey of economists. They also see the economy expanding somewhat in the last three months of the year, rather than contracting. (…)

Economists in the survey now see the Fed holding interest rates higher for longer amid risks that a stronger economy will keep inflation above their goal. While economists don’t see further hikes on the horizon, they also don’t expect the central bank to cut rates until the second quarter of next year — which is three months later than July’s estimate.

However, economists did revise up their expectations for bond yields through the end of 2025. The two-year Treasury yield is now seen ending the current quarter at 4.82% compared to last month’s projection of 4.65%. (…)

Excluding food and energy, forecasters now see the personal consumption expenditures price index cooling more quickly through the end of this year compared to their July projections. Their estimates for the overall PCE measure — which is the Fed’s preferred inflation target — were little changed. (…)

At the same time, unemployment estimates were marked lower through the end of next year and hiring was seen higher, also supportive of a soft landing.

High five Be warned that Blomberg’s “Aug. 11-16 survey of economists included 68 responses, and many were submitted before a government report showed retail sales beat estimates in July after upward revisions to the prior two months.” (…)

The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow for Q3 jumped from +4.1% to 5.0% after the retail sales report and to 5.8% Wednesday after new data on housing and industrial production.

Some economists have argued that “weird” seasonal adjustments boosted the retail stats in July. But unadjusted data show total sales growth accelerating from +1.8% YoY in June to +2.5% in July. More significantly, excluding gasoline stations where sales fluctuate with gas prices, growth went from +4.8% in June to +5.3% in July.

My calculation of retail inflation (0.35 x CPI-Durables + 0.65 x CPI-Nondurables) gives “CPI-Retail” down 1.1% in June and down 0.6% in July.

Goods demand seems to be reaccelerating. If so, inventories will get normalized faster, helping manufacturing demand, particularly China’s, right on time for the holidays…Data on this Inventories to Sales Ratios chart is at the end of June.

fredgraph - 2023-08-18T073518.710

BofA’s Warning of a ‘5% World’ Sinks in With Yields Pushing Higher

All around the world, bond traders are finally coming to the realization that the rock-bottom yields of recent history might be gone for good.

The surprisingly resilient US economy, ballooning debt and deficits, and escalating concerns that the Federal Reserve will hold interest rates high are driving yields on the longest-dated Treasuries back to the highest levels in over a decade.

That’s prompted a rethink of what “normal” in the Treasury market will look like. At Bank of America Corp., strategists are warning investors to brace for the return of the “5% world” that prevailed before the global financial crisis ushered in a long era of near-zero US rates. And BlackRock Inc. and Pacific Investment Management Co. say inflation could remain stubbornly above the Fed’s target, leaving room for long-term yields to push even higher.

“There is a remarkable repricing higher in longer-term rates,” said Jean Boivin, a former Bank of Canada official who now heads the BlackRock Investment Institute.

“The market is coming more to the view that there is going to be long-term inflation pressures despite recent progress,” he said. “Macro uncertainty is going to remain the story for the next few years, and that requires greater compensation to own long-dated bonds.” (…)

While higher rates will soften the blow by boosting bondholders’ interest payments, they also threaten to weigh on everything from consumer spending and home sales to the prices of high-flying tech stocks. What’s more, they will increase the US government’s financing costs, worsening the deficits that are already forcing it to borrow some $1 trillion this quarter to cover the gap. (…)

Broader economic shifts are also driving speculation that the low rates — and inflation — of the post-crisis period were an anomaly. Among them: demographics that may push up wages as aging workers retire; a shift away from globalization; and drives to combat global warning by shifting away from fossil fuels. (…)

“People are going to need more term premium to own long-term bonds,” she said, referring to the higher payments investors normally demand for the risk of parting with their money for longer.

Even with the recent rise in yields, though, no such premium has returned. In fact, it remains negative as long-term rates hold below short-term ones — an inversion of the yield curve that’s usually seen as a harbinger of a recession. But that gap has started to narrow, cutting a New York Fed measure of the term premium to around minus 0.56% from nearly 1% in mid-July.

That upward pressure has also been exacerbated by US federal spending, which is creating a flood of new debt sales to plug the deficit even as the economy remains at — or near — full employment. At the same time, the Bank of Japan’s decision to finally allow 10-year yields there to push higher will likely cut Japanese demand for US Treasuries.

BlackRock’s Boivin says there’s major shift underway at the world’s central banks. For years, he said, they kept interest rates well below the rate that’s considered neutral to spur their economies and ward off the risk of deflation.

“This has been flipped now,” he said. “So even if the long-term neutral rate is not changed, central banks will hold policy above that neutral rate to stave off inflationary pressure.”

KKR’s Henry McVey agrees:

While inflation has abated, we remain in a new regime characterized by above average inflation and rates, as well as slower, though positive real economic growth. Overall, we expect inflation to remain elevated, contrary to market optimism.The structural labor shortage, insufficient housing supply, ongoing geopolitical conflicts and the energy transition are drivers of elevated inflation.

(…) as we head into 2024, we remain above consensus in Europe and the US as a result of higher ‘sticky’ core inflation and in China as well because of easier year-over-year comparisons.Japan is also now transitioning from a long period of deflation to one of inflation, led by labor shortages and higher wages.

China’s State Developers Warn of Losses as Crisis Spreads

China’s state-owned property developers are warning of widespread losses, fueling concerns that the housing crisis is expanding from the private sector to companies with government backing.

Eighteen out of 38 state-owned enterprise builders listed in Hong Kong and the mainland reported preliminary losses in the six months ended June 30, up from 11 that warned of full-year losses in 2022, according to a Bloomberg tally based on corporate filings. Two years ago, only four firms with controlling or major state shareholdings posted losses.

The warnings signal state builders are no longer immune from the two-year housing slump that has weakened the economy and triggered dozens of defaults by private peers, with speculation that Country Garden Holdings Co. may be next. Authorities have in recent weeks stepped up pledges to support the property sector, though analysts are skeptical that the measures will be enough to revive the market anytime soon. (…)

Companies seeing losses include some of the biggest developers owned by the central government. Shenzhen Overseas Chinese Town Co. warned of a loss of as much as 1.7 billion yuan ($233 million), partly due to a marketing strategy to speed up home sales. That followed a loss in the second half of last year, which was its first since its 1997 listing. (…)

“SOEs could be kitchen-sinking their results for better years ahead,” Chan said. “The key is whether they can still receive liquidity support from banks. For smaller SOE developers, it will be a case-by-case situation.” (…)

But losses will reduce their scope to take on unfinished projects left by defaulted private-sector firms, further denting homebuyer sentiment. Chinese regulators see asset sales as a key step to easing the debt crisis, as President Xi Jinping’s government largely steers clear of direct bailouts.

“Sector consolidation anyhow takes time,” CreditSights’ Zeng said. (…)

(…) “Zhongzhi is a black box. They don’t have periodic disclosures, it’s a private company, and some investors don’t know what kinds of assets they’re investing in,” said Xiaoxi Zhang, an analyst at Gavekal Research.

The group’s difficulties, coming on the heels of the financial distress at Chinese property giant Country Garden Holdings, have fueled worries about China’s shadow-banking system and how intertwined it is with the property sector.

“The worry is that a ‘Lehman moment’ beckons, threatening the solvency of China’s financial system,” Zhang wrote in a note earlier this week. She added that China’s “regulatory vigilance” meant that would be unlikely. (…)

China’s property downturn has already caused dozens of developers to default on their debt, and many trusts have unwound their exposure to the sector, according to a report from Nomura.

Trust funds in China still had the equivalent of about $155 billion in exposure to the property sector at the end of the first quarter, according to data from the China Trustee Association. That “is now under great threat, in our view,” Nomura said, adding that trust funds have much larger exposures to financial markets, which increases the risk of contagion. (…)

Bloomberg adds this:

Underlining Zhongzhi’s importance, regulators have formed a task force as they seek to prevent contagion. Behind the scenes the firm has hired KPMG to carry out what is likely to be a protracted restructuring process. Potential asset sales threaten to weigh on broader markets. (…

Zhongrong has 270 products totaling 39.5 billion yuan due this year, according to data provider Use Trust. (…)

It’s unclear how many products Zhongzhi has defaulted on and whether the company has sufficient assets to cover the shortfall if liquidated. (…)

About 106 trust products worth 44 billion yuan defaulted this year through July 31, according to Use Trust. Real estate investments accounted for 74% of the defaults by value. Last year also saw billions of dollars in defaults. (…)

While it’s unlikely Zhongzhi’s woes will impact the big commercial banks, it could spread to other asset managers if wealthy investors start pulling their money, said Dinny McMahon, an analyst for Trivium China and author of China’s Great Wall of Debt. (…)

(…) Court approval of the debt restructuring would make the deal legally binding in the U.S. and would close the door to any disputes against the plan that could be brought in America. Many of China Evergrande’s $19 billion in foreign bonds are governed by U.S. law. (…)

Overseas creditors eventually agreed to a consensual deal in the spring of this year. Holders of the developer’s $19 billion in foreign debt can choose to swap their holdings into new long-term debt or take some principal losses and get a mix of shorter-term bonds and equity-linked notes backed by shares of Evergrande or two of its listed subsidiaries, including China Evergrande New Energy Vehicle Group.

All of the company’s offshore creditors have until next week to vote on the plan, which requires three-quarters’ support to pass.  (…)

Higher Interest Rates and Sluggish Economy Fuel European Bankruptcies EU bankruptcies surge to the highest level since 2015, nudged by the end of pandemic-era aid

(…) The number of European Union businesses filing for bankruptcy in the three months to the end of June rose 8.4% from the previous quarter, reaching the highest level since 2015, according to Eurostat, the European Union’s statistics office. Registrations of new businesses fell 0.6%.

Bankruptcy filings rose in all sectors of the European economy, according to Eurostat, with hotels, restaurants and transportation companies hit especially hard in the second quarter. (…)

In July, the number of companies going into administration in Germany rose 24% compared with a year earlier, according to the Federal Statistics Office, as a combination of high costs for energy and raw materials, rising interest rates, and the late impact of phased out pandemic-era subsidies forced companies to seek protection from creditors.

“We’re now seeing the market shakeout,” said Christoph Niering, head of the Professional Association of Insolvency Administrators in Germany.

Niering says many companies that are seeking protection now were already struggling before the pandemic. But government support during the pandemic and in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine kept them on life support. Now, the crash is unfolding in slow motion. (…)

The Ozempic Craze Could Put These Companies on a Crash Diet Anti-obesity medications could affect industries that benefit from America’s food problem.

(…) Until recently, though, investors in industries that help treat the consequences of obesity weren’t really sweating. But after a study was released this month showing Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy (the weight-loss version of Ozempic) helped reduce heart attacks and strokes, companies that make medical devices like glucose-monitoring systems and sleep-apnea machines plunged in value. Developers of drugs for fatty liver disease, which is linked to obesity, have also fallen sharply. (…)

Some analysts are even starting to project that reduced cravings could moderately curb demand for fast-food restaurants and packaged snacks.

To understand the potential impact on some sectors, it is important to bear in mind that drugs like Ozempic and Mounjaro don’t just let you binge on french fries guilt-free. These drugs, originally developed to treat Type 2 diabetes, mimic a gut hormone called glucagon-like peptide-1, or GLP-1, which helps suppress appetite (Mounjaro mimics an additional hormone as well).

People on drugs like Wegovy are less likely to crave Krispy Kremes. And if they stay on the drug for years (unlikely at this stage due to restrictions on most insurance plans), their weight loss could help prevent all sorts of complications, like Type 2 diabetes. That could in turn mean fewer sales of things like insulin pumps and sleep apnea machines. And people who slim down could hit the cancel button on their dieting apps. (…)

All this is very hypothetical for now: Paying for the treatment of 100 million obese Americans would literally make Medicare insolvent at the drugs’ current prices. Eventually, though, as data shows longer-term benefits that extend beyond weight loss, insurance coverage will expand.

(…) Intuitive Surgical, the maker of da Vinci robots used in bariatric surgery, warned investors last month that the drugs are starting to hurt demand. (…)

Intuitive’s warning prompted a broader decline in a sector that racks up about $40 billion in annual sales for things like knee replacements, kidney disease and heart-failure machines. The impact could be biggest for businesses that treat conditions that are highly correlated with obesity such as sleep apnea, Type 2 diabetes, and total knee replacements, according to a Morgan Stanley report. (…)

(…) Novo Nordisk’s U.S. sales of Ozempic and Wegovy have been so strong that it has had to convert dollars into kroner in unusually large quantities, raising the krone’s value relative to the euro, said Danske Bank director Jens Naervig Pedersen. (…)

Denmark’s central bankers have responded by keeping interest rates below the European Central Bank’s, weakening the krone, said Pedersen. (…)

FYI: So far, US insurers haven’t been convinced the medications are worth the cost. Just a quarter of private insurance plans cover the drugs, and they’re not available through Medicare. (Bloomberg)

THE DAILY EDGE: 17 August 2023

Americans Have Almost Depleted Excess Savings, SF Fed Study Says

Excess savings US households built up during the pandemic will probably be exhausted in the current quarter, according to research from the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, removing a key support for consumer spending that has boosted the US economy this year.

“Our updated estimates suggest that households held less than $190 billion of aggregate excess savings by June,” San Francisco Fed researchers Hamza Abdelrahman and Luiz Oliveira said in a blog post published Wednesday on the bank’s website.

“There is considerable uncertainty in the outlook, but we estimate that these excess savings are likely to be depleted during the third quarter of 2023.”

Earlier this year, Abdelrahman and Oliveira published research estimating $500 billion of excess savings remained on household balance sheets as of March 2023, after peaking at $2.1 trillion in August 2021. (…)

  • Walmart beats expectations for sales and profit and raises its full-year forecast. (CNBC)
Some Fed Officials Are Turning Cautious about Raising Rates Too High Central bank officials face a puzzle as inflation slows, but economic activity is firmer than anticipated

Minutes of the July policy meeting, released Wednesday, said some officials thought the risks of raising rates too much versus too little “had become more two-sided, and it was important that the committee’s decisions balance the risk of an inadvertent overtightening of policy against the cost of an insufficient tightening.”

At the same time, officials still saw “significant risks” that inflation might not fall as much as they expect, which could require them to raise rates again this year, the minutes said. (…)

While all 11 voters on the committee voted in favor of a rate increase at their meeting last month, two of 18 officials who participated in the deliberations said they would have supported leaving rates unchanged, the minutes said. (…)

The Atlanta Fed GDP Now: Latest estimate: 5.8 percent — August 16, 2023

Ed Yardeni:

The economy isn’t landing; it’s flying high. Following better-than-expected July reports for housing starts and industrial production this morning, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow tracking model raised Q3’s real GDP growth rate to 5.8% (saar) from 5.0%, after raising it from 4.1% yesterday on a better-than-expected July retail sales report. Consumer spending and residential investment are now tracking at 4.8% and 11.4%.

Positive economic surprises are bearish for bonds.

  • Single-family housing starts jumped 6.7% to 983,000 units (saar) last month. They rose 9.5% y/y, led by the West, where single-family starts soared 28.5%. A shortage of existing homes for sales is boosting new home sales despite mortgage rates rising above 7.00%.
  • In July, total industrial production increased 1.0% m/m following declines in the previous two months (chart). Manufacturing output rose 0.5% in July; the production of motor vehicles and parts jumped 5.2%, while factory output elsewhere edged up 0.1%. The index for mining moved up 0.5%, and the index for utilities climbed 5.4% as very high temperatures in July raised demand for cooling.

Goldman Sachs:

In the US, we expect real GDP growth to slow to an above-consensus 2.0% this year on a Q4/Q4 basis, reflecting a negative impulse from tighter financial conditions and additional drags from tighter bank lending. We see a below-consensus 20% probability of entering a recession over the next year as we think taming inflation will not require a recession.

We expect core PCE inflation to decline to 3.4% by Dec 2023, reflecting continued supply chain recovery, a decline in shelter inflation, and slower non-housing services inflation as the labor market continues to rebalance. We expect the unemployment rate to end the year at 3.5% and remain there for the next few years.

We believe the Fed’s hiking cycle is now complete and that the Fed will remain on hold at the current Fed funds rate range of 5.25-5.5% into 2024. We expect the first rate cut to come only in 2Q24 and to proceed at a 25bp/quarter pace, with the Fed funds rate range likely ultimately stabilizing at 3-3.25%, though we see some uncertainty around that pace.

In China, we expect real GDP growth to accelerate to 5.4% yoy in 2023 off the back of China’s post-reopening recovery. While recent economic data remains sluggish, we expect sequential growth to improve somewhat in H2 owing to a diminishing drag from destocking, step up in policy easing measures, and stabilization of Chinese exports. That said, significant uncertainties remain around the property sector downturn and its impact on the rest of the economy.

In China, following a shorter-than-expected reopening impulse, medium-term challenges such as demographics, the multi-year property downturn, local government implicit debt problems, and geopolitical tensions may start to become more important for the growth outlook. As such, we expect lower and below-consensus growth in 2024 [4.5%] and 2025.

Bond Yield Hits Highest Since 2008 The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note closed at a 15-year high, threatening steeper costs for borrowers and raising concern about the potential fallout in the stock, bond and housing markets.

A key benchmark for interest rates across the economy, the 10-year yield settled at 4.258%, according to Tradeweb. That was up from 4.220% Tuesday and marked its highest close since June 2008, months before the collapse of Lehman Brothers and expansive Federal Reserve policy ushered in more than a decade of historically low bond yields. 

The rise in yields is making investors nervous, because past surges have at times proved destabilizing for markets. With the 10-year yield still well below the level of short-term interest rates set by the Fed, some analysts see ample room for it to keep climbing—a development that could lead to unexpected disruptions, as investors are forced to unwind wagers based on projections for lower yields. (…)

The 10-year yield has been climbing for weeks based largely on a run of solid economic data, which has prompted many investors to abandon bets that the U.S. is headed toward a recession over the next six to 12 months. (…)

Longer-term yields got an extra boost this month when the Treasury Department announced that it would need to borrow more than anticipated in the coming months to finance the federal budget deficit. That is forcing investors to buy more bonds than they might have wanted. (…)

Instead of betting that the Fed will have to raise interest rates ever higher to defeat inflation and then start cutting them once a recession arrives, investors are wagering that the Fed may be done raising rates but also further away from any cuts.

That has helped drive up longer-term bond yields relative to shorter-term ones, in a reversal of the dominant trend over the past year-and-a-half. Minutes of the Fed’s most recent policy meeting released Wednesday afternoon added to recent signs that officials are growing more cautious about raising rates. (…)

The average rate on the standard 30-year fixed mortgage has climbed to 6.96%, up from about 5% a year ago. (…)

Let’s also not forget the impact of higher LT rates on banks’ bond portfolios…Risks of more bank crisis and less bank loans…

(…) Contributing to the selloff in the asset class, Japan — which has the developed world’s lowest interest rates thanks to its ultra-easy monetary policy — saw weak investor interest when selling 20-year notes Thursday.

The yield on a Bloomberg index for total returns on global sovereign debt rose to 3.3% Wednesday, the highest since August 2008. Sovereign bonds worldwide have handed investors a loss of 1.2% this year, making the asset class the worst performer across Bloomberg’s major debt indexes. (…)

The higher yields in the US continue to draw in buyers. Investors pumped $127 billion this year into funds that invest in Treasuries, on pace for a record year, Bank of America Corp. said last week, citing data from EPFR Global. (…)

JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s client survey showed long positions in the week to Aug. 14 matched the peak set in 2019, which was the highest since the financial crisis. (…)

China’s Housing Slump Is Much Worse Than Official Data Show

Bloomberg gathered several of its China reporters to sum up what’s really happening:

  • Official prices showing new home prices off 2.6% and existing home prices off 6.0% reflect deficient surveys by government agencies. The reality, according to conversations with real estate agents and private data providers, show existing-home prices falling at least 15% in prime neighborhoods of major metropolitan areas like Shanghai and Shenzhen, as well as in more than half of China’s tier-2 and tier-3 cities. Existing homes near Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.’s headquarters in Hangzhou have dropped about 25% from late 2021 highs, according to local agents.
  • Data from Goldman Sachs suggest that the huge overbuilding of recent years will take 5 years to clear.
  • This excess supply is meeting with tepid demand: Chinese lack the cash and the confidence to commit to buy a house.
  • Demographics have also turned negative with real demand (other than speculative) around 9 million units annually, down from 17 million 5 years ago.

If so, China, and the world for that matter given its importance, is not out of this growing mess anytime soon.

Signs of late-summer COVID wave

If you’ve noticed a sudden rise in the number of people wearing masks while you’re out and about lately, here’s why: COVID is on the upswing again, Axios’ Alex Fitzpatrick and Kavya Beheraj report.

  • The average COVID hospitalization rate nationwide rose about 17% between June and July, per the latest available CDC data.
  • With so little testing happening these days compared to the height of the pandemic, hospitalization rates are now one of the best proxies for estimating broader viral spread.