Credit Pipeline

May 24th, 2016 6:06 am

Via Bloomberg:

IG CREDIT PIPELINE: 3 Expected to Price; Domestics Also Expected
2016-05-24 09:39:15.256 GMT

By Robert Elson
(Bloomberg) — Set to price today:

* The Russian Federation (RUSSIA) BB+/BBB-, to price $bench
144a/Reg-S 10Y, via mamanger VTB-solo; IPT 4.65-4.90%
* HSBC Holdings (HSBC) Baa3/na, to price $bench Perp/NC5
Subordinated CoCo, via hSBC-solo; IPT 7.25% area
* Three Gorges Finance (YANTZE) Aa3/A, to price 2-part
144a/Reg-S deal, via BoC/DB/GS/ICBC/JPM/UBS
* 5Y, IPT +110 area
* 10Y, IPT +150 area

LATEST UPDATES

* Walreens Boots Alliance (WBA) Baa2/BBB, has asked
BofAML/HSBC/UBS to arrange investor calls May 23-24.
* ~$17.2b Rite-Aid buy
* $7.8b bridge, $5b TL, debt shelf (Jan 7)
* Bayer (BAYNGR) A3/A-, expected to make all-cash offer for
Monsanto (MON) A3/BBB+, as soon as today; $62b offer would
be largest in German history
* Tesla Motors (TSLA); automatic debt, common stk shelf
* Debt may convert to common stk
* Discovery Communications (DISCA) Baa3/BBB-; may revisit bond
market this yr, BI says
* State of Qatar (QATAR Govt) Aa2/AA, mandates Al
Khaliji/Barc/BAML/DB/HSBC/JPM/Miz/MUFG/QNB/SMBC to arrange
investor meetings to begin May 19; USD 144a/Reg-S deal may
follow; last issued in 2011
* Apple (AAPL) Aa1/AA+, may return to market
* It priced $12b in 9 parts Feb. 16
* Re-opened 3 of the above issues for $3.5b March 17
* Merck & Co (MRK) A1/AA; has not priced a new issue since
Feb. 2015, has $1.5b maturing May 18
* General Electric Company (GE) A3/AA-, has yet to issue YTD;
parent GE Co has $11.1b maturing this year, including $2.3b
this week

MANDATES/MEETINGS

M&A-RELATED

* Abbott (ABT) A2/A+; ~$5.7b St. Jude buy, ~$3.1b Alere buy
* $17.2b bridge loan commitment (April 28)
* Air Liquide (AIFP) –/A+; ~$13.4b Airgas buy
* $10.7b financing incl bonds, EU3b-3.5b equity (April 26)
* Sherwin-Williams (SHW) A2/A; ~$9.3b Valspar buy
* $8.3b debt financing expected (March 20)
* Nasdaq (NDAQ) Baa3/BBB; Marketwired buy
* $1.1b bridge (March 10)
* Mylan (MYL) Baa3/BBB-; ~$9.9b Meda buy
* $10.05b bridge (Feb 17)
* Dominion (D) Baa2/A-; ~$4.4b Questar buy
* $1.5b issuance expected to fund deal (Feb 1)
* Shire (SHPLN) Baa3/BBB-; ~$32b Baxalta buy
* $18b loan to be refinanced via debt issuance (Jan 18)
* Molson Coors (TAP) Baa2/BBB-; ~$12b MillerCoors buy
* $9.3b bridge (Dec 17)
* Teva (TEVA) Baa1/BBB+; ~$40.5b Allergan generics buy
* $22b bridge; $5b TL commitment (Nov 18)
* Duke Energy (DUK) A3/A-; $4.9b Piedmont Natural buy
* $4.9b bridge (Nov 4)
* Aetna (AET) Baa1/A; ~$28.9b Humana buy
* $13b bridge (August 28)
* Anthem (ANTM) Baa2/A-; ~$50.4b Cigna buy
* $26.5b bridge (July 27)

SHELF FILINGS

* Reynolds American (RAI) Baa3/BBB filed automatic debt shelf;
sold $9b last June (May 13)
* Statoil (STLNO) Aa3/A+, files debt shelf; last issued USD
Nov. 2014 (May 9)
* Corporate Office (OFC) Baa3/BBB-; debt shelf (April 12)
* Rogers (RCICN) Baa1/BBB+; $4b debt shelf (March 4)

OTHER

* Ford Motor Credit (F) Baa2/BBB; may have ~$7b issuance this
yr (May 10)
* Wal-Mart (WMT) Aa2/AA; 2 maturities in April (April 1)
* GE (GE) A1/AA+; $25b debt possible for M&A, buybacks (Jan
29)

Traders in Need of Work

May 24th, 2016 5:43 am

This Bloomberg post highlights the stark changes in the trading business since the onset of the financial crisis. Bloomberg reports that at the end of Q1 2016 big banks employed 18,600 traders. That is a decline of 32 percent since 2011.

Via Bloomberg and a hat tip to Steve Feiss at Government Perspectives:
May 23, 2016 — 7:01 PM EDT

The world’s biggest banks have shed about one in three bond traders since 2011 as rules that make some businesses less profitable dovetail with volatile markets that are spooking investors, according to research from Coalition Development Ltd.

The total count of fixed-income, currency and commodity traders and salespeople at global banks was 18,300 in the first quarter of 2016, 32 percent less than the same period five years ago, Coalition data shows. Headcount fell 5 percent from a year earlier as lenders including Credit Suisse Group AG, Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank AG and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. fired workers in so-called FICC businesses to cut costs.

Morgan Stanley

Regulators seeking to avoid another financial crisis have limited banks’ leverage when trading fixed-income products, making those businesses less profitable and prompting lenders to scale back operations. The new rules have coincided with a slump in commodity prices and a slowdown in the Chinese economy that helped bring about what Coalition described as the the slowest start to the year for the industry since the financial crisis.

“Revenues fell significantly, driven by a weak trading environment in the first two months of the quarter and a lack of one-off events seen in” the year-earlier period, Coalition wrote in a report on the data.

FICC revenue for the first quarter tumbled 28 percent from the same period last year to $17.8 billion, according to Coalition data. That’s down almost half from what the lenders produced from the same businesses five years ago, the data shows.

Within FICC, revenue from trading credit products fell 39 percent in the period to $2.9 billion because of “exceptional weakness” in distressed bonds and collateralized loan obligations, or CLOs, according to the report. Securitized products revenue tumbled 42 percent, while commodities dropped 40 percent, the data shows. Interest-rates trading, the business that includes buying and selling government bonds, had the smallest decline, falling 8 percent to $6.2 billion.

Bonds Searching for a Home

May 24th, 2016 5:38 am

Today the Treasury will auction a block of  $26 billion 2 year notes. With FOMC solons making noises about several rate hikes this year that might be a tough sale for the Treasury.

Via Bloomberg:

  • Two-year notes stagnate in 2016 as 30-year bonds surge 8.9%
  • Odds of Fed rate increase this year rise to 76%, futures show

Two-year Treasuries are barely eking out a gain in 2016, lagging behind every other U.S. bond and note, as investors prepared to bid at an auction of the securities Tuesday.

The Treasury Department is scheduled to sell $26 billion of the securities, just as Federal Reserve officials signal they may raise interest rates as soon as their next meeting in June. Fed Bank of Philadelphia President Patrick Harker, who doesn’t vote on monetary policy this year, said Monday he could see two to three moves in 2016. There’s a 76 percent chance the central bank will boost rates by December, the highest odds in two months, futures contracts indicate.

“They’re probably going to increase the rate in June or July if the data are good enough,” said Kim Youngsung, the head of overseas investment in Seoul at South Korea’s Government Employees Pension Service, which oversees $12.7 billion. “I’m not going to buy two-year bonds.”

The securities have returned 0.6 percent this year, based on Bank of America Corp.’s debt indexes. The broad Treasury market has gained 3.2 percent, let by an 8.9 percent surge in 30-year bonds.

Above Average

Treasuries were little changed Tuesday, with two-year note yields at 0.90 percent as of 6:42 am. in London, according to Bloomberg Bond Trader data. The price of the 0.75 percent security due in April 2018 was 99 23/32.

The yield is above the average of 0.76 percent for the past year. Because of their short maturity, two-year notes are among the most sensitive to what the Fed does with its benchmark, the target for overnight loans between banks. Ten-year yields were also little changed Tuesday, at 1.83 percent.

The difference between two- and 30-year yields shrank to 171 basis points Monday, the narrowest since 2008.

Tuesday’s economic data will include new home sales for April. The Treasury is scheduled to sell five-year notes Wednesday and seven-year securities Thursday. It also plans to sell two-year floating-rate debt Wednesday. Fed Chair Janet Yellen speaks Friday.

Enough Fed officials are speaking in favor of higher interest rates that Mohamed El-Erian, the chief economic adviser at Allianz SE and a Bloomberg View columnist, wrote on Twitter Sunday that officials are talking up a hike.

U.S. yields that are higher than those in other countries will still lure investors to Treasuries, said Tsutomu Komiya, a bond investor in Tokyo at Daiwa Asset Management, which had $119 billion in assets as of March 2015, the most recent figure on the company’s website. Two-year notes yield minus 0.51 percent in Germany and negative 0.23 percent in Japan.

“Global investors are trying to find an attractive investment option,” Komiya said. “Demand is strong” in the Treasury market, he said.

Early FX

May 24th, 2016 5:33 am

Via Kit Juckes at SocGen:

<http://www.sgmarkets.com/r/?id=h10948213,1717118d,1717118e&p1=136122&p2=df3d19b31ba59ec44865025862d10a34>

Good morning. From Munich, twinned with western Ireland judging by the weather..

The Brazilian real had the worst start of the week among major currencies, falling as political concerns resurfaced. The Turkish Lira, with its own political risk and a central bank meeting to boot, wasn’t that far behind, while the Asian currencies were OK Monday, less so this morning. In short, a slightly risk averse start to a week dominated by speculation about Fed policy, but without much in the way of major data to give us direction.

The Australian dollar, one of our favourite shorts, is down as RBA Governor reiterates the central bank’s view of the exchange rate as a shock-absorber. It wouldn’t work for all economist, but smoothing out terms of trade changes and not being concerned by large currency moves over time has served Australia well. With inflation soft and export prices under pressure, there’s room for the currency to fall.

The odds of a June Fed rate hike have risen to 30% according to Bloomberg, but the vast majority of people I speak to think the UK’s EU membership referendum will be enough to stay the Fed’s hand. For those tempted to look for an early move, July is the favourite, and the odds there, have increased to above 50%. I should add that SG’s US economics team doesn’t share that view, expecting a Q4 move, but the contrast with the UK where the chances of a July hike (pot-referendum, remember) remain firmly at zero. On the one hand, they can’t fall any further (!), but the contrast between the UK MPC outlook and the US FOMC outlook is stark enough to keep me bearish of sterling. Only data today, public sector finances for the start of the fiscal year, and a CBI Distributive Trades survey which ought to rebound in line with the official data, thereby telling us nothing at all.

[http://email.sgresearch.com/Content/PublicationPicture/226335/3]

Apart from frustration that sterling isn’t falling (I sense a growing reluctance to do anything ahead of June 23 now), the action really is mostly in emerging market currencies, and the yen. The Lira’s drift, the inability of the Mexican peso to find any friends, and the on-going (political) woes of BRL and ZAR both encourage a view that RUB is the long-term pick of the liquid EM bunch, and more importantly, add to scepticism about the ability of wider markets to withstand anymore jawboning from the FOMC. At the very least, we’ll get more volatility, though in all likelihood, the key to whether we see a real breakout of risk aversion will be determined by the reaction of the US equity market – which is sanguine, so far. And since all it gets fed on today are US existing home sales, after yesterday’s soggy Markit manufacturing PMI, a sharp equity move seems unlikely. The FX market cares, now more than sometimes, because after reaching new lows in equity vol relative to FX vol, that spread now seems to be correcting. A lot of equity investors and traders prefer, at these levels, to sell FX vol than equity vol, which will keep the former all bottled up until equity markets get more exciting (or less dull).

Aging Baby Boomer Alert: Bob Dylan, Forever Young Turns 75 Today

May 24th, 2016 12:28 am

What can you say about Bob Dylan? He encapsulates a generation and (I think) in the years from 1961 to 1974 wrote some of the greatest lyrics ever recorded. His voice is certainly an acquired taste but his music has been covered by so many great artists that if you search you will find something to suit your taste. I suggest covers by Judy Collins, Joan Baez and Richie Havens for starters.

Here is the Wikipedia entry on Dylan for those unfamiliar with the Bard of the 60s.

Negative Carry on Oil

May 23rd, 2016 11:34 pm

This is an excellent article by Tracy Alloway at Bloomberg which describes a tenuous situation in the oil market. Traders are borrowing money to finance oil at a loss. That can not continue indefinitely and suggests that oil prices are likely to fall.

Separately, you have got to love the verb ” heave” in the first sentence. That is not the usual homogenized stuff one sees in financial writing.

Via Bloomberg:

How Sustainable Is the Oil Rally?

The waters between Singapore and Malaysia used to heave with wooden ships carrying exotic spices. Now the Straits of Malacca are filled with vessels carrying a very different sort of commodity.

Oil traders awaiting a recovery in crude are turning to floating storage after benchmark Brent prices more than halved over a span of two years, according to Morgan Stanley analysts led by Adam Longson.

Unlike previous oil storage trades, however, this one is unusual in that current oil prices and storage costs ought to make it unprofitable. Morgan Stanley estimates that the one-month Brent storage arbitrage currently produces a loss of $0.48 per barrel, while its six-month equivalent loses $6.11 per barrel.

That suggests “no incentive to store oil on ships,” the analysts write. “Yet, banks are seeing a sharp uptick in interest to finance storage charters. This storage is not happening for profit. Rather, the market is looking for places to store oil. To profit, traders need to hope for oil prices to rise enough to pay for the new debt incurred for this storage.”

The prospect of debt-fueled oil storage trades may raise concern should crude prices fail to rise enough to offset costs. Moreover, the ‘Singapore supply glut’ means the recent price rally may prove fragile.

“The increase in floating oil comes despite disruptions in the Atlantic Basin and an out-of-the-money floating storage arb[itrage], suggesting markets are not as healthy as sentiment suggests,” the Morgan Stanley analysts write. “It also highlights the speculative nature of much of the oil bounce this year.”

Will Massive Debt Problem in China Require Bailout?

May 23rd, 2016 7:40 pm

Via Bloomberg:

  • Autonomous Research partner Charlene Chu talks in interview
  • She’s not yet convinced China is serious about tackling debt

Charlene Chu, a banking analyst who made her name warning of the risks from China’s credit binge, said a bailout in the trillions of dollars is needed to tackle the bad-debt burden dragging down the nation’s economy.

Speaking eight days after a Communist Party newspaper highlighted dangers from the build-up of debt, Chu, a partner at Autonomous Research, said she was yet to be convinced the government is serious about deleveraging and eliminating industry overcapacity.

She also argued that lenders’ off-balance-sheet portfolios of wealth-management products are the biggest immediate threat to the nation’s financial system, with similarities to Western bank exposures in 2008 that helped to trigger a global meltdown.

The former Fitch Ratings analyst uses a top-down approach to calculating China’s bad-debt levels as the credit to gross domestic product ratio worsens, requiring more credit to generate each unit of GDP. She’s on the bearish side of the debate about the outlook for China and has sounded warnings since the nation’s credit binge began in 2008.

Interviewed in Hong Kong last week, she estimated as much as 22 percent of all China’s outstanding credit may be nonperforming by the end of this year, compared with an official bad-loan number for banks in March of 1.75 percent.

Question

What do you see as the biggest risk in the financial system?

Answer

“China’s debt problems are large and severe, but in some respects a slow burn. Over the near term, we think the biggest risk is banks’ WMP portfolios. The stock of Chinese banks’ off-balance-sheet WMPs grew 73 percent last year. There is nothing in the Chinese economy that supports a 73 percent growth rate of anything at the moment. Regardless of all of the headlines and announcements about the authorities cracking down on WMPs, they have done very little, really, and issuance continues to accelerate.
“We call off-balance-sheet WMPs a hidden second balance sheet because that’s really what it is — it’s a hidden pool of liabilities and assets. In this way, it’s similar to the Special Investment Vehicles and conduits that the Western banks had in 2008, which nobody paid attention to until everything fell apart and they had to be incorporated on-balance-sheet.
“The mid-tier lenders is where these second balance sheets are very large. China Merchants Bank is a good example. Their second balance sheet is close to 40 percent of their on-balance-sheet liabilities. Enormous.”

Question

Who buys a WMP?

Answer

“The products used to be predominantly sold to the public, but now they’re increasingly being sold to banks and other WMPs. We’re starting to see layers of liabilities built upon the same underlying assets, much like we did with subprime asset-backed securities, collateralized debt obligations, and CDOs-squared in the U.S. The range of assets is much more diverse than mortgages, but we have significantly less visibility on the assets than we did with subprime.”

Question

After the People’s Daily commentary, is it clear that the government is serious about deleveraging?

Answer

“The word deleveraging should not be used when discussing China. Deleveraging means negative credit growth, or a contraction in the ratio of credit to GDP. China is nowhere close to deleveraging. Over the years, I have learned from watching the authorities respond to issues like WMPs that there is often a large divergence between official rhetoric and actual action. It’s encouraging to see policy makers acknowledge the severe overcapacity problem, but I am sceptical that much headway will be made any time soon, given how painful implementation will be and the pushback they will inevitably receive at local levels.”

Question

Is a financial crisis or a very dramatic economic slowdown now inevitable?

Answer

“Not yet, but we’re getting there because the problem is getting so big. We’re still adding 10 to 20 percentage points to the ratio of credit to GDP every year — that has not changed despite the fact that credit growth has decelerated. If the government was to come out with a very aggressive — and it would have to be incredibly aggressive — bailout package for corporates, as well as financial institutions, it would do a lot in terms of dealing with some of this debt overhang and getting rid of the black cloud that’s hanging over the country. However, the idea that China needs a massive bailout in the trillions of U.S. dollars isn’t something I think the authorities are on board with or accept yet. They still believe they can grow out of it.”

Question

Could your assessment of China’s debt situation be based on faulty assumptions?

Answer

“If we’re wrong, and there’s always a chance of that, it’s going to be because we’re under-appreciating the economic growth potential in China — that there is some more strength to the consumption story and services story than we sense now, and that these are about to take off and propel the country out of these debt problems.”

Question

How does China’s debt build-up compare to Japan’s previously?

Answer

“If you look at Japan, the credit expansion wasn’t anywhere close to the size of China’s, and China’s continues to grow at a rapid rate. There is also a somewhat Wild West, chaotic nature to a lot of the shadow banking going on in China that is different from the shadow credit we saw in Japan. What’s positive for China is that they’ve got a leadership team that is not as afraid as the Japanese leadership is of radical change. So, if China’s authorities ever do decide debt is the center of their problems and they need to do something about it, we won’t have decades of complacency with nothing really done. On the negative side, China has a much weaker social safety net and a much poorer population, which makes social and political instability a real concern.”

Question

What’s your assessment of China’s capital flows?

Answer

“The party line is that outflows are all about offshore debt repayment, but that accounts for a minority of the flows we are seeing. We think most of the money is leaving through trade mis-invoicing, which is very hard to shut down. Although capital outflows have quieted down, the underlying motivations for people to move their money out of the country are still there. This problem has not gone away.”

Tim Duy on The June FOMC Meeting

May 23rd, 2016 10:41 am

Via Tim Duy at Tim Duy’s Fed Watch:

This Is Not A Drill. This Is The Real Thing.

The June FOMC meeting is live. That message came through loud and clear in the minutes, and was subsequently confirmed by New York Federal Reserve President William Dudley. Last week, via Reuters:

“We are on track to satisfy a lot of the conditions” for a rate increase, Dudley said. He added, though, that a key factor arguing for the Fed biding its time a little was the potential for market turmoil around Britain’s vote in late June about whether to leave the European Union…

…”If I am convinced that my own forecast is sort of on track, then I think a tightening in the summer, the June-July time frame is a reasonable expectation,” said Dudley, a permanent voting member of the Fed’s rate-setting committee.

Boston Federal Reserve President Eric Rosengren, the canary in the coal mine that was long ago alerting markets that they were underestimating June, subsequently gave a strong nod to June in his interview with Sam Fleming of the Financial Times:

We are still a month away from the actual meeting. We are going to get another employment rate in early June. We are going to get a second retail sales report. So I want to be sensitive to how the data comes in, but I would say that most of the conditions that were laid out in the minutes as of right now seem to be . . . on the verge of broadly being met…

Clearly, the Fed will be debating a rate hike at the next FOMC meeting. Will they or won’t they? To answer that question, I need to begin with my main takeaways from the minutes:

1.) The Fed broadly agrees that the economic recovery remains intact. Overall there is broad agreement at the Fed that outside of manufacturing (for both domestic and external reasons), economic activity has moderated but remains near or somewhat below their estimates of potential growth and hence is sufficient to drive further improvement in labor markets. The weak first quarter numbers were largely statistical noise attributable to faulty seasonal adjustment mechanisms. Data since the April meeting generally supports this story. The economy is not falling over a cliff, recession is not likely, nothing to see here, folks.

2.) A contingent, however, disagreed with the benign scenario:

 However, some participants were concerned that transitory factors may not fully explain the softness in consumer spending or the broad-based declines in business investment in recent months. They saw a risk that a more persistent slowdown in economic growth might be under way, which could hinder further improvement in labor market conditions.

This group will want fairly strong evidence that the first quarter was an anomaly before the sign off on the next rate hike.

3.) There was broad agreement of the obvious – global and financial market threats waned since the previous meeting. The Fed recognized that their hesitation to hike rates helped firm markets. It’s important that they recognize that if the economy weathers a bout of financial market turbulence, it is often with the aid of easier Fed policy. Some Fed speakers appeared not to recognize this relationship earlier this year.

4.) Still, the risks are either balanced or to the downside. Apparently, none of the participants saw risks weighed to the upside.  While some participants believe the threats had lessened sufficiently to justify a balanced outlook:

Several FOMC participants judged that the risks to the economic outlook were now roughly balanced.

the view was not widely shared:

However, many others indicated that they continued to see downside risks to the outlook either because of concerns that the recent slowdown in domestic spending might persist or because of remaining concerns about the global economic and financial outlook. Some participants noted that global financial markets could be sensitive to the upcoming British referendum on membership in the European Union or to unanticipated developments associated with China’s management of its exchange rate.

It seems reasonable that this large group will need to see further diminishment of downside risks to justify a hike in June. Brexit doesn’t derail a June hike unless it looks to be negatively impacting financial markets.

5.) The question of full employment deeply divides the Fed. Who wins this debate is critical to defining the policy path going forward. One group thinks the economy is not at full employment:

Many participants judged that labor market conditions had reached or were quite close to those consistent with their interpretation of the Committee’s objective of maximum employment. Several of them reported that businesses in their Districts had seen a pickup in wages, shortages of workers in selected occupations, or pressures to retain or train workers for hard-to-fill jobs.

But others saw room for further improvement:

Many other participants continued to see scope for reducing labor market slack as labor demand continued to expand.

The Fed’s plan had been to let the economy run hot enough for long enough to eliminate underemployment. One sizable camp within the Fed thinks this largely been accomplished. This is the group that is itching for more hikes earlier. This is a place where Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen should have an opinion and be willing to guide on that opinion. In the past, she has sided with the “still underemployment” camp.

6.) The Fed is also split on the inflation outlook but most believe inflation is set to trend toward target. A nontrivial contingent saw downside risks to the inflation outlook due to soft inflation expectations:

Several commented that the stronger labor market still appeared to be exerting little upward pressure on wage or price inflation. Moreover, several continued to see important downside risks to inflation in light of the still-low readings on market-based measures of inflation compensation and the slippage in the past couple of years in some survey measures of expected longer-run inflation.

But the majority were either neutral or dismissive of the signal from expectations:

However, for many other participants, the recent developments provided greater confidence that inflation would rise to 2 percent over the medium term.

7.) June is on the table. I have long warned that market participants were underestimating the odds of a rate hike in June. This came across loud and clear in the minutes:

Participants agreed that their ongoing assessments of the data and other incoming information, as well as the implications for the outlook, would determine the timing and pace of future adjustments to the stance of monetary policy. Most participants judged that if incoming data were consistent with economic growth picking up in the second quarter, labor market conditions continuing to strengthen, and inflation making progress toward the Committee’s 2 percent objective, then it likely would be appropriate for the Committee to increase the target range for the federal funds rate in June.

Consider that the Fed’s modus operandi is to delay an expected policy change for two meetings in the face of market turmoil. Hence given calmer financial markets, June could not be so easily dismissed. But it was  not just the financial markets that stayed the Fed’s hand. It was also softer Q1 data. As of April, participants had not concluded that they would see what they were looking for to justify a rate hike.

 Participants expressed a range of views about the likelihood that incoming information would make it appropriate to adjust the stance of policy at the time of the next meeting. Several participants were concerned that the incoming information might not provide sufficiently clear signals to determine by mid-June whether an increase in the target range for the federal funds rate would be warranted. Some participants expressed more confidence that incoming data would prove broadly consistent with economic conditions that would make an increase in the target range in June appropriate.

Moreover, these are participants, not committee members. The actual voters members appeared less committed to June, saying only:

Regarding the possibility of adjustments in the stance of policy at the next meeting, members generally judged it appropriate to leave their policy options open and maintain the flexibility to make this decision based on how the incoming data and developments shaped their outlook for the labor market and inflation as well as their evolving assessments of the balance of risks around that outlook.

Here are my thoughts, assuming of course the data and the financial markets hold up over the next few weeks:

A.) There is a rate hike likely in the near-ish future. There seems to be broad agreement that, at a minimum, the pace of activity remains sufficient to bring the Fed’s goals – both maximum employment and price stability – closer into view. Close enough that most voters will soon think another rate hike is appropriate. The doves can’t push it off forever.

B.) The Fed will consider June, and there is likely some support among the voting members for a June hike. But ultimately, I think most will want a more complete picture of the second quarter before hiking rates. Also, the contingent that remains less convinced by the inflation outlook will press for more time. Moreover, they will also need broad agreement that the risks to the outlook are at least balanced. It would indeed be silly to plow forward with rate hikes if most members thought the risks were still weighted to the downside, even if the data were broadly consistent with the Fed’s forecast. That agreement of balanced risks just might not be there by June.

C.) Fed doves might, however, need to strike a compromise to hold the line on June and avoid more than one or two dissents. That compromise could be a strong signal about the July meeting via the statement, the press conference, or, most likely, both. A July hike would also serve to end the idea that the Fed can’t hike rates without a press conference.

D.) The reason compromise might be necessary is the possibility of a fairly stark divide between voting members. Assume Esther George, Eric Rosengren, and James Bullard will push for a rate hike in June. Furthermore, assume that Lael Brainard opposes a rate hike, and has sufficient leverage to pull Dan Tarullo and William Dudley to her side. Janet Yellen might prefer to negotiate a compromise rather than face the prospect of multiple dissents from either camp.

E.) Of all the divisive points above, I think the most important is the debate over the level of full employment. The ability of the doves to slow the pace of subsequent rate hikes will hinge on their willingness to push for below NAIRU unemployment to alleviate underemployment. If the doves maintain the upper hand, the path of subsequent rate hikes will be very, very shallow. I cannot emphasize enough that this is a debate in which Janet Yellen has the opportunity to take leadership that fundamentally defines her preferred rate path going forward. Does she stick with the bottom dots?

Bottom Line: This is not a drill. This meeting is the real thing – an undoubtedly lively debate that could end with a rate hike. I think we narrowly avoid a rate hike, but at the cost of moving forward the next hike to the  July meeting.

FX

May 23rd, 2016 6:28 am

Via Marc Chandler at Brown Brothers Harriman:

Drivers for the Week Ahead

  • The Federal Reserve has succeeded in convincing the market that a summer rate hike was more likely than it previously believed
  • It is unrealistic to expect the ECB to extend its easing program until the effects of its new measures can be assessed or until it is clear that price pressures are not increasing
  • Reports from the G7 meeting indicate Finance Minister Aso informed the US that Japan will go ahead with the planned hike in the retail sales tax next April
  • The only major central bank that meets in the week ahead is the Bank of Canada
  • Several EM central banks meet this week, including Israel, Turkey, Hungary, and Colombia

The dollar is mixed against the majors as the new week gets under way.  The yen and the Kiwi are outperforming, while the Loonie and the Norwegian krone are underperforming.  EM currencies are mixed.  KRW and TWD are outperforming while PLN, HUF, and TRY are underperforming.  MSCI Asia Pacific was up 0.4%, with the Nikkei down 0.5%.  MSCI EM is up 0.6%, with Chinese markets up around 0.5-1.5%.  Euro Stoxx 600 is flat near midday, while S&P futures are pointing to a slightly lower open.  The 10-year UST yield is down 2 bp at 1.82%.  Commodity prices are mixed, with oil down 1% and copper up modestly.  

The US dollar’s weakness in recent months, despite negative interest rates in Europe and Japan, likely had many contributing factors.  These factors include shifting views of Fed policy, weaker US growth, the recovery in commodity prices, including oil, gold and iron ore, and market positioning.

A new phase began in late April/early May.  The dramatic rally in iron ore prices reversed, and the Australian dollar, bottomed against the US dollar in mid-January, seemingly to anticipate the broader trend weakness.  It peaked a week before the other major currencies, including the euro, yen, sterling and the Canadian dollar.

The US dollar bottomed against a swath of currencies on May 3.  The greenback’s technical tone began strengthening seemingly before the fundamentals.  However, by time the dollar turned, the US economy was already recovering from the soft patch seen in Q4 15 and Q1 16.

Last week, the combination of constructive data, the FOMC minutes, and NY Fed President Dudley’s comments pushed up US interest rates and widened the premium relative to other major countries.  The widening rate differentials provided fundamental support for the dollar.

The Federal Reserve succeeded in convincing the market that a summer rate hike was more likely than it previously believed.  Moreover, Dudley, who we argue is part of the Fed’s leadership from which policy emanates, recognized risks posed by the UK referendum, and put the market on notice that although there is no scheduled press conference afterward, a move at the July meeting is also a distinct possibility.

Although the Federal Reserve has indicated that two rate hikes are likely this year (rather than four that it envisaged late December), investors have been skeptical (and more skeptical than economists).  Some critics cited this as evidence of the Fed’s loss of credibility.  One need not accept the Fed is a slave to the markets, as other critics claim, to appreciate that the gap between the market and the FOMC posed an operational challenge.  Under such conditions, the rate hike could be more disruptive than necessary.

Last week, the Fed regained the upper hand.  In the first part of the year, there was often a 100 bp spread between the FOMC’s dot plot and the Fed funds futures strip.  The March dot plots in effect cut the gap in half.  And now the combination of the recognition that rather than a recession, the US economy is reaccelerating, and the Federal Reserve is committed to opportunistically and gradually normalizing US monetary policy, is prodding investors to move closer to the Fed’s position.

In addition to the reassertion of the Federal Reserve’s credibility, another implication of the increased likelihood of a rate hike is that it casts doubt on the talk of a secret agreement at the Shanghai G20 meeting in late-February.  The delay between the first Fed hike and the second one was not a function of some agreement among the G20 to weaken the dollar.

The delay was the result of the Fed’s assessment of domestic and global economic considerations.  As those considerations changed (US economy strengthening, global markets stabilized), the Fed is preparing the markets for a resumption of hiking cycle.  The heightened realization that the Fed is not “one and done” like some many have claimed may have knock-on effects on equities, emerging markets and commodities.  

To the extent that risk-off dominates, it reflects renewed appreciation of the divergence meme, which is central to our bullish dollar outlook.  This is an important observation because a risk-off move is typically associated with a stronger yen.  Yet the yen weakened as if the increase in US rates offset the so-called safe-haven appeal of the yen.

A fortnight after the supposed secret agreement, the ECB eased policy aggressively.  What was discussed (or agreed upon) in Shanghai does not explain what the ECB did in March or what it is doing now.  Some of the measures it announced have not been implemented yet.   Even after the full program is operational, the ECB will have to monitor and evaluate the impact.

Similarly, after the BOJ surprised the world by adopting negative interest rates at the end of January, it was not G20 that prevented the BOJ from easing further.  It was prudence (if such a concept is still meaningful in the context of QQE and negative rates).  By the time the G20 met, the dollar had already fallen more than 7% against the yen from the late January peak.  

Surely, the Japanese did not accept the need for a weaker dollar at the Shanghai G20 meeting.  Indeed, in the weeks leading up to the G7 meeting, Japanese officials wanted to secure a consensus, as they did after the 2011 earthquake and tsunami, for an official response to what it perceives as a disorderly, one-way, speculative dollar-yen market.  

The media played up the difference of opinion between the US and Japan, but it seemed clear that Europe did not support Japan’s position either.  To be sure, Japan can still intervene, if it wishes.  Even the recent revisions to the US Treasury’s semi-annual report on the foreign exchange market do not preclude Japanese intervention.  The quantitative threshold is intervention of more than 2% of GDP.  Roughly speaking, this allows for nearly $100 bln of intervention.  

Recall that on October 31 2011, Japanese officials reportedly intervened and bought $100 bln against the yen in a single 24-hour period.  Despite coordinated G7 intervention earlier in the year, the US dollar continued to weaken against the yen, and had fallen to new record lows near JPY75 the day of the massive intervention.  Although the dollar did not return to the lows, it took more than three months, the election of Abe, and the official jawboning before the dollar took out the highs it recorded on the day of the intervention.  

While Japan could intervene, the bar seems high, especially ahead of the heads of state summit next weekend.  Moreover, the objections raised by the US (and Europe) make the intervention a high risk venture.  Unilateral intervention by Japan does not have a strong successful track record.  

Failed intervention, over the objections, would be embarrassing and show weakness, when strategic ambiguity may be a better course.  It could embolden the very speculators that Japanese officials argue are driving the yen higher.  At the same time, it may serve to antagonize the nationalistic sentiment that Abe is nurturing to make it seem that the US is blocking Japanese intervention, even though the US has no veto.  

Japan reported its largest trade surplus in several years and nearly 30% higher than economists expected.  Below the surface, the details were not particularly inspiring.  Exports fell for a seventh consecutive month and the year-over-year pace of -10.1% was a little more than expected.  Imports shocked with a 23.3% plunge.  The market has expected a little more than a 19% decline.  In March, they fell by almost 15%.

Also illustrating the difficult straits the economy is in, the preliminary manufacturing PMI fell to 47.6 from 48.2, its third month below the 50 boom-bust and the lowest since the end of 2012.   Separately, the Cabinet left is economic assessment unchanged from April–weakness within moderate recovery.  It updated its estimate of the recent earthquake damage to JPY2.4-JPY4.6 trillion (~$22-$42 bln).

The record from the recent ECB meeting (released last week) revealed that the officials remain concerned about the secondary impacts from the lowflation/deflation.  This could take the form of weak wage growth, for example, and/or slow productivity gains.

The flash eurozone composite PMI slipped marginally to 52.9 from 53.0.  The market had expected a small increase.  The service component was unchanged at 53.1 while the manufacturing PMI eased to 52.4 from 52.6.  The composite appears consistent with 0.4-0.5% Q2 GDP, which by most estimates is near trend growth for EMU.  

A worrisome feature is that the forward-looking new orders fell to their lowest level since the start of the year.  German new orders were at ten -month lows.  This warns that the increase in output was to fill the backlog rather than new business.  On the other hand, at next week’s ECB meeting, officials may note the first of input prices in five months.  

The problem for the ECB is not current growth; it is the failure of many countries to enact structural reforms that would raise growth potential.  That said, the ECB’s new measures did not prevent the IMF from revising its GDP forecast lower.  ECB officials expect price pressures to increase as the year progresses partly as a result of the base effect and partly as a result of strengthening demand.

It is unrealistic to expect the ECB to extend its easing program until the effects of its new measures can be assessed or until it is clear that price pressures are not increasing.  We suspect that the earliest ECB can reach such a conclusion is near the end of the year.  Again, ECB action is perfectly understandable without having to claim a Shanghai Agreement.

Japan is in a different position.  We do not think the stronger than expected Q1 GDP changes the outlook for the trajectory of policy.  Preliminary estimates of Japanese GDP (like US GDP) are often subject to statistically significant revisions.  It is not a solid foundation on which to build policy.

The Abe government is reportedly preparing a fiscal package, in addition to the earthquake relief measures that were approved by the Diet last week.  The lack of fiscal consolidation will not deter the additional BOJ easing.  Indeed, coordination of fiscal and monetary is the traditional LDP policy prescription.

Reports from the G7 meeting indicate that Finance Minister Aso informed US Treasury Secretary Lew that Japan will go ahead with the planned hike in the retail sales tax next April (from 8% to 10%).  Previously there have been reports and speculation that the sales tax increase would be postponed.  The impact of the sales tax increase will likely be blunted by additional fiscal measures.

We have already seen that the UK referendum is a factor that the Fed will take into consideration at next month’s FOMC meeting.  It seems reasonable that the BOJ also takes it into account when its policy meeting concludes the day after the FOMC.  A July move seems more likely, though some may argue that the upper house election (July) may push the move into August.

In addition to the renewed appreciation of divergence, a couple of polls showing a swing toward the Remain camp have seen sterling extend its recent gains.  Implied volatility (for one and two-month) and the premium for puts over calls pulled back in the second half of last week.  Nevertheless, we caution medium-term investors from letting their guard down.

Even if the probability of Brexit is modest or low, the initial market reaction could be severe.  The reason one may choose to hedge is not necessarily because one anticipates Brexit, but because one does not take the risk of ruin.  

The only major central bank that meets in the week ahead is the Bank of Canada.  Policy is securely on hold.  The rise in oil prices and the pullback of the Canadian dollar are welcomed developments.  One area of concern is that the economic momentum seems fragile at the start of Q2, though the central bank will want to look through the disruption caused by the fires in Alberta.

EM had another rocky week, but managed to end on a slightly firmer note Friday.  Market repricing of Fed tightening risk was the big driver last week, and that could carry over into this week.  There are several Fed speakers in the days ahead, capped off with Fed chief Yellen on Friday.  

Several EM central banks meet this week, including Israel, Turkey, Hungary, and Colombia.  There is some risk of a dovish surprise from Turkey, while Hungary is expected to continue easing.  Colombia is an outlier, with high inflation seen leading to another 25 bp hike.

 

Credit Pipeline

May 23rd, 2016 5:58 am

Via Bloomberg:

IG CREDIT PIPELINE: 4 Expected to Price; Domestics to Be Added
2016-05-23 09:45:47.954 GMT

By Robert Elson
(Bloomberg) — Set to price today:

* The Russian Federation (RUSSIA) BB+/BBB-, to price $bench
144a/Reg-S 10Y, via mamanger VTB-solo; IPT 4.65-4.90%
* Axis Bank (AXSBIN) Baa3/BBB-, to price 144a/Reg-S 5Y Green
Bond, via managers Axis/BAML/C/CA/HSBC/JPM/SCB; IPT +175
area
* Australia & New Zealand Banking Group (ANZ) Aa2/AA-, to
price $bench 144a/Reg-S 2-part deal, via ANZ/BAML/MS
* 5Y FRN, IPT equiv
* 5Y, IPT +105 area
* Industrial & Commercial Bank of China NY (ICBCAS) A1/A, to
price $bench 5Y, via BNP/BAML/C/WFS; IPT +145 area

LATEST UPDATES

* Bayer (BAYNGR) A3/A-, expected to make all-cash offer for
Monsanto (MON) A3/BBB+, as soon as today; $63b possible
* Tesla Motors (TSLA); automatic debt, common stk shelf
* Debt may convert to common stk
* Discovery Communications (DISCA) Baa3/BBB-; may revisit bond
market this yr, BI says
* State of Qatar (QATAR Govt) Aa2/AA, mandates Al
Khaliji/Barc/BAML/DB/HSBC/JPM/Miz/MUFG/QNB/SMBC to arrange
investor meetings to begin May 19; USD 144a/Reg-S deal may
follow; last issued in 2011
* Three Gorges Finance I (YANTZE) Aa3//na/A+, to hold investor
meetings May 18-23, via BoC/DB/GS/ICBC/JPM/UBS; 144a/Reg-S
USD deal is expected to follow
* Apple (AAPL) Aa1/AA+, may return to market
* It priced $12b in 9 parts Feb. 16
* Re-opened 3 of the above issues for $3.5b March 17
* Merck & Co (MRK) A1/AA; has not priced a new issue since
Feb. 2015, has $1.5b maturing May 18
* General Electric Company (GE) A3/AA-, has yet to issue YTD;
parent GE Co has $11.1b maturing this year, including $2.3b
this week

MANDATES/MEETINGS

M&A-RELATED

* Abbott (ABT) A2/A+; ~$5.7b St. Jude buy, ~$3.1b Alere buy
* $17.2b bridge loan commitment (April 28)
* Air Liquide (AIFP) –/A+; ~$13.4b Airgas buy
* $10.7b financing incl bonds, EU3b-3.5b equity (April 26)
* Sherwin-Williams (SHW) A2/A; ~$9.3b Valspar buy
* $8.3b debt financing expected (March 20)
* Nasdaq (NDAQ) Baa3/BBB; Marketwired buy
* $1.1b bridge (March 10)
* Mylan (MYL) Baa3/BBB-; ~$9.9b Meda buy
* $10.05b bridge (Feb 17)
* Dominion (D) Baa2/A-; ~$4.4b Questar buy
* $1.5b issuance expected to fund deal (Feb 1)
* Shire (SHPLN) Baa3/BBB-; ~$32b Baxalta buy
* $18b loan to be refinanced via debt issuance (Jan 18)
* Walgreens Boots (WBA) Baa2/BBB; ~$17.2b Rite-Aid buy
* $7.8b bridge, $5b TL, debt shelf (Jan 7)
* Molson Coors (TAP) Baa2/BBB-; ~$12b MillerCoors buy
* $9.3b bridge (Dec 17)
* Teva (TEVA) Baa1/BBB+; ~$40.5b Allergan generics buy
* $22b bridge; $5b TL commitment (Nov 18)
* Duke Energy (DUK) A3/A-; $4.9b Piedmont Natural buy
* $4.9b bridge (Nov 4)
* Aetna (AET) Baa1/A; ~$28.9b Humana buy
* $13b bridge (August 28)
* Anthem (ANTM) Baa2/A-; ~$50.4b Cigna buy
* $26.5b bridge (July 27)

SHELF FILINGS

* Reynolds American (RAI) Baa3/BBB filed automatic debt shelf;
sold $9b last June (May 13)
* Quest Diagnostics (DGX) Baa2/BBB+, files debt shelf; last
issued in March 2015, $300m matured last month (May 13)
* Statoil (STLNO) Aa3/A+, files debt shelf; last issued USD
Nov. 2014 (May 9)
* Corporate Office (OFC) Baa3/BBB-; debt shelf (April 12)
* Rogers (RCICN) Baa1/BBB+; $4b debt shelf (March 4)

OTHER

* Ford Motor Credit (F) Baa2/BBB; may have ~$7b issuance this
yr (May 10)
* Wal-Mart (WMT) Aa2/AA; 2 maturities in April (April 1)
* GE (GE) A1/AA+; $25b debt possible for M&A, buybacks (Jan
29)