Some Corporate Bond Stuff

October 3rd, 2016 6:06 am

Via Bloomberg:

IG CREDIT: Volume Falls as Issuance Fades at Month/Quarter End
2016-10-03 09:50:48.453 GMT

By Robert Elson
(Bloomberg) — Secondary IG trading ended with a Trace
count of $15.3b Friday vs $15.8b Thursday, $13.3b the previous
Friday. 10-DMA $16.2b.

* 144a trading added $2.2b of IG volume vs $3.2b Thursday, the
highest 144a trading session since $3.5b June 8, vs $2.9b
last Friday

* Trace most active issues:
* ABIBB 3.65% 2026 was 1st with client and affiliate flows
accounting for 77% of volume
* SHPLN 2.40% 2021 was next with evenly weighted client
flows taking 84% of volume
* SHPLN 3.20% 2026 was 3rd with client and affiliate
trades at 71% of volume
* WPZ 7.85% 2026 was the most active 144a issue with client
flows at 100% of volume

* Bloomberg Barclays US IG Corporate Bond Index OAS remains
unchanged at 138 for 5th session in a row
* 2016 wide/tight: 215 (a new wide since Jan. 2012)/135
* 2015 wide/tight: 171/122
* 2014 wide/tight: 137/97
* All time wide/tight back to 1989: 555 (Dec. 2008)/54
(March 1997)

* Current market levels vs early Friday:
* 2Y 0.782% vs 0.726%
* 10Y 1.603% vs 1.544%
* Dow futures +23 vs -36
* Oil $48.71 vs $47.23
* ¥en 101.38 vs 101.10

* Weekly Issuance Recap: Volume Falls 35% W/w, Fails to Top
$30b
* September volume at $172.41b, 2nd highest of the year;
May topped $200b
* YTD $1.33t

* SSA, Big Bank Names Top List of October Maturities

Credit Pipeline

October 3rd, 2016 5:35 am

Via Bloomberg:

IG CREDIT PIPELINE: Long List Awaits Start of Final Quarter
2016-10-03 09:29:31.752 GMT

By Robert Elson
(Bloomberg) — LATEST UPDATES:

* Export-Import Bank of Korea (EIBKOR) Aa2/AA, hires
ANZ/BAML/CA/Miz/Samsung/SG/UBS for investor meetings from
Oct. 3; USD short to intermediate maturity deal may follow
* UPL Corp (UPL) Baa3/BBB-, mandates ANZ/C/CS/DB/JPM for
investor meetings Sept. 29-Oct. 4; 144a/Reg-S may follow
* Comision Federal De Electricidad (CFELEC) Baa1/BBB+,
mandates BBVA/BAML/C for investor meetings from Oct. 4
* Global Bank Corp (GLBACO) Ba1/BBB-/BBB-, has mandated
C/DB/JPM/UBS for investor meetings Oct. 3-6; 144a/Reg-S
$benchmark deal is expected to follow
* Government of Bermuda (BERMUD) A2/A+, mandates HSBC for
roadshows from Sept. 30; 144a/Reg-S issue expected to follow
* Partial tender also announced
* Bermuda last priced a USD deal in 2013
* Nafin (NAFIN) A3/BBB+; mandates BofAML, HSBC for investor
meetings Sept. 27-28; USD-denominated deal may follow
* Analog Devices (ADI) A3/BBB; ~$13.1b Linear Technology acq
* $5b loan received after $11.6b bridge (Sept. 26)
* Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank (SUMIBK) A1/A; mandates
C/Daiwa/GS/JPM to arrange investor calls beginning Sept. 26;
144a/Reg-S 3Y fixed and/or floating issue expected to price
in the near future
* Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (SAUDI), may raise over $10b
following roadshows in late Sept.
* KEB Hana (KEB) A1/A; mandates C/CA/JPM/SCB/UBS for investor
mtgs from Sept. 26; 144A/Reg S transaction may follow

MANDATES/MEETINGS

* HollyFrontier (HFC) Baa3/BBB-; investor calls Sept. 15-16
* Banco Inbursa (BINBUR) –/BBB+/BBB+; mtgs Sept. 7-12
* Woolworths (WOWAU) Baa2/BBB; investor call Sept. 7
* Sydney Airport (SYDAU) Baa2/BBB; investor calls Sept. 6-7
* Korea Housing Finance (KHFC) Aa1/–; investor mtgs
* MTN Group (MTNSJ) Baa3/BBB-; roadshows from Sept. 9
* Korea National Oil (KOROIL) Aa2/AA; meetings from Sept. 6
* Industrial Bank of Korea (INDKOR) Aa2/AA-; mtgs from Aug. 22
* Sumitomo Life (SUMILF) A3/BBB+; investor mtg July 19

M&A-RELATED

* Bayer (BAYNGR) A3/A-; ~$66b Monsanto acq
* Hybrid bond sales planned; part of $57b bridge (Sept.
14)
* Danaher (DHR) A2/A; ~$4b Cepheid acq
* Sees financing deal via cash, debt issuance (Sept. 6)
* Couche-Tard (ATDBCN) Baa2/BBB; ~$4.4b CST Brands acq
* Expects to sell USD bonds (Aug. 22)
* Pfizer (PFE) A1/AA; ~$14b Medivation acq;
* Expects to finance deal with existing cash (Aug. 22)
* Danone (BNFP) Baa1/BBB+; ~$12.1b WhiteWave (WWAV) Ba2/BB
* Co. Says deal 100% debt-financed, expects to keep IG
profile (July 7)
* Zimmer Biomet (ZBH) Baa3/BBB; ~$1b LDR acq
* Plans $750m issuance post-completion (June 7)
* Great Plains Energy (GXP) Baa2/BBB+; ~$12.1b Westar acq
* $8b committed debt secured for deal (May 31)
* Abbott (ABT) A2/A+; ~$5.7b St. Jude buy, ~$3.1b Alere buy
* $17.2b bridge loan commitment (April 28)
* Sherwin-Williams (SHW) A2/A; ~$9.3b Valspar buy
* $8.3b debt financing expected (March 20)

SHELF FILINGS

* Starbucks (SBUX) A2/A-; debt shelf; has $400m maturing Dec.
5 (Sept. 15)
* Brunswick (BC) Baa3/BBB-; automatic mixed shelf; last issued
in 2013 (Sept. 6)
* Enbridge (ENBCN) Baa2/BBB+; $7b mixed shelf (Aug. 22)
* IBM (IBM) Aa3/AA-; automatic mixed shelf (July 26)
* Nike (NKE) A1/AA-; automatic debt shelf (July 21)
* Potash Corp (POT) A3/BBB+; debt shelf; last issued March
2015 (June 29)
* Tesla Motors (TSLA); automatic debt, common stk shelf (May
18)
* Reynolds American (RAI) Baa3/BBB; automatic debt shelf; sold
$9b last June (May 13)
* Statoil (STLNO) Aa3/A+; debt shelf; last issued USD Nov.
2014 (May 9)
* Corporate Office (OFC) Baa3/BBB-; debt shelf (April 12)

OTHER

* GE (GE) A1/AA-; Ratings cut by S&P on assumption of
increased debt for next couple of yrs on possible
acquisitions (Sept. 23)
* Israel Electric (ISRELE) Baa2/BBB-; said to hire C, JPM for
at least $500m bond sale in 4Q (Aug. 8)
* Visa (V) A1/A+; CFO says will issue $2b debt for buybacks by
yr end (July 21)
* Investment Corp of Dubai (INVCOR); weighs bond sale (July 4)
* Alcoa (AA) Ba1/BBB-; upstream entity to borrow $1b (June 29)
* Discovery Communications (DISCA) Baa3/BBB-; may revisit bond
market this yr, BI says (May 18)
* American Express (AXP) A3/BBB+; plans ~$3b-$7b term debt
issuance (April)

Fixing ObamaCare

October 3rd, 2016 5:15 am

Via the NYTimes:

Ailing Obama Health Care Act May Have to Change to Survive

By ROBERT PEAROCT. 2, 2016

 

WASHINGTON — The fierce struggle to enact and carry out the Affordable Care Act was supposed to put an end to 75 years of fighting for a health care system to insure all Americans. Instead, the law’s troubles could make it just a way station on the road to another, more stable health care system, the shape of which could be determined on Election Day.

Seeing a lack of competition in many of the health law’s online insurance marketplaces, Hillary Clinton, President Obama and much of the Democratic Party are calling for more government, not less.

The departing president, the woman who seeks to replace him and nearly one-third of the Senate have endorsed a new government-sponsored health plan, the so-called public option, to give consumers an additional choice. A significant number of Democrats, for whom Senator Bernie Sanders spoke in the primaries, favor a single-payer arrangement, which could take the form of Medicare for all.

Donald J. Trump and Republicans in Congress would go in the direction of less government, reducing federal regulation and requirements so insurance would cost less and no-frills options could proliferate. Mr. Trump would, for example, encourage greater use of health savings accounts, allow insurance policies to be purchased across state lines and let people take tax deductions for insurance premium payments.

In such divergent proposals lies an emerging truth: Mr. Obama’s signature domestic achievement will almost certainly have to change to survive. The two parties agree that for too many people, health plans in the individual insurance market are still too expensive and inaccessible.

“Employer markets are fairly stable, but the individual insurance market does not feel stable at all,” said Janet S. Trautwein, the chief executive of the National Association of Health Underwriters, which represents more than 100,000 agents and brokers who specialize in health insurance. “In many states, the individual market is in a shambles.”

Mr. Obama himself, while boasting that 20 million people had gained coverage because of the law, acknowledged in July that “more work to reform the health care system is necessary.”

“Too many Americans still strain to pay for their physician visits and prescriptions, cover their deductibles or pay their monthly insurance bills; struggle to navigate a complex, sometimes bewildering system; and remain uninsured,” Mr. Obama wrote in The Journal of the American Medical Association.

The marketplace faces a major test in the fourth annual open enrollment season, which starts on Nov. 1, a week before Election Day. In many counties, consumers will see higher premiums and fewer insurers, as Aetna, Humana and UnitedHealth have curtailed their participation in the exchanges, and many of the nonprofit insurance cooperatives, created with federal money, have shut down.

Senator Jeff Merkley of Oregon, Democrat of Oregon, has introduced a resolution calling for a public option on the insurance exchanges that now has 32 co-sponsors. Credit Rachel La Corte/Associated Press

Mr. Trump has said that Congress must “completely repeal Obamacare,” and Republicans in Congress have repeatedly tried to do so. But parts of the law appear to be here to stay. One such provision, now widely accepted, says that insurers cannot deny coverage because of a person’s medical condition or history.

For their part, many Democrats are clamoring for a public insurance option, as they did nine years ago.

“Supporters of the public option warned that private insurance companies could not be trusted to provide reliable coverage or control costs,” said Richard J. Kirsch, who led a grass-roots organization that fought for passage of the Affordable Care Act in 2009 and 2010. “The shrinking number of health insurers is proof that these warnings were spot on.”

On Sept. 15, Senator Jeff Merkley, Democrat of Oregon, introduced a resolution calling for a public option. The measure now has 32 co-sponsors, including the top Senate Democrats: Harry Reid of Nevada, Chuck Schumer of New York and Richard J. Durbin of Illinois.

“You need competition to make the exchanges successful,” Mr. Merkley said in an interview. “A public option guarantees there’s competition in each and every exchange around the country.”

As they did before the Affordable Care Act was enacted, insurance lobbyists are mobilizing to kill the public option. The main trade group for the industry, America’s Health Insurance Plans, says it would do nothing to stabilize the exchanges, and in an urgent “action alert,” the group asked member companies to lobby against Mr. Merkley’s resolution.

Senator Lamar Alexander, Republican of Tennessee and chairman of the Senate health committee, said the Democrats’ public option plan would compound the problems it seeks to solve.

“Obamacare exchanges are collapsing because of federal mandates and a lack of flexibility,” Mr. Alexander said. “We need to give states more flexibility and individuals more choices so more people can buy low-cost insurance.”

Mr. Trump would replace the Affordable Care Act with an assortment of conservative policies, including some that are similar to ideas favored by House Republicans and by think tanks like the Heritage Foundation or the American Enterprise Institute. But Democrats and some Republicans say that Mr. Trump has not laid out a comprehensive, coherent alternative to the Affordable Care Act.

Mr. Trump would eliminate the requirement that most Americans carry health insurance. He would encourage the sale of insurance across state lines, in a bid to increase competition. And he would convert Medicaid, now an open-ended entitlement, into a block grant, giving each state a lump sum of federal money to provide health care to low-income people.

Congressional Republicans, like Senator Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, are pushing for less government involvement in health care. “Obamacare exchanges are collapsing because of federal mandates and a lack of flexibility,” Mr. Alexander said. “We need to give states more flexibility and individuals more choices so more people can buy low-cost insurance.” Credit Gabriella Demczuk for The New York Times

The basic structure of the Affordable Care Act looked promising to private insurers. The government, in effect, required consumers to buy their products and provided subsidies to help defray the cost, under an arrangement that had few precedents in other industries.

A public option could take market share from private insurers, so it is no surprise they would oppose it. But insurers say the public option would not hold down medical costs, which they describe as the main engine driving up premiums. Moreover, insurers say that the government would have an unfair advantage if it both regulates and competes with private plans.

For some people, the subsidies have proved inadequate. People with annual incomes less than two and half times the poverty level (less than $29,700 for an individual) receive the most generous subsidies and have signed up in large numbers.

But enrollment figures suggest that higher-income people who receive smaller subsidies or none at all have not seen insurance as such a bargain.

“The insurance exchanges have enrolled more than 80 percent of the potential exchange population with incomes below 150 percent of the federal poverty level,” said Caroline F. Pearson, a senior vice president of Avalere, a health policy consulting company. But, she added, they have enrolled only 17 percent of potential customers with incomes from three to four times the poverty level ($35,640 to $47,520 for an individual).

Andrew M. Slavitt, the acting administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said the administration was taking steps to ensure “a stable, sustainable marketplace” — by increasing payments to insurers for “high-cost enrollees” and by curbing any abuse of “special enrollment periods” by people who sign up for coverage after they become sick. In addition, federal officials are redoubling efforts to sign up young adults.

Dr. John W. Rowe, who was the chief executive of Aetna from 2000 to 2006 and the president of Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York before that, predicted that “the insurance market will stabilize in two or three years.”

“We are not in a death spiral,” Dr. Rowe said. “If this were a patient, I would say that he’s not in intensive care, but he’s still in the hospital and requires careful monitoring.”

But that does not mean the act will heal on its own, said Sara Rosenbaum, a professor of health law and policy at George Washington University.

“Even the most ardent proponents of the law would say that it has structural and technical problems that need to be addressed,” she said. “The subsidies were not generous enough. The penalties for not getting insurance were not stiff enough. And we don’t have enough young healthy people in the exchanges.”

Metals in Bull Market

October 3rd, 2016 5:05 am

Via Bloomberg:

Ranjeetha Pakiam
David Stringer
david_stringer
October 2, 2016 — 10:43 PM EDT
Updated on October 3, 2016 — 2:50 AM EDT

China data ‘undeniably beneficial’ for metals: CME’s Norland
LME Index has advanced to its highest in more than a year

 

Copper advanced as industrial metals held gains that have pushed them into a bull market amid signs of stabilization in China’s economy.

The metal used in pipes and wires rose as much as 0.3 percent on the London Metal Exchange to $4,880 a metric ton, and was at $4,871 a ton at 2:45 p.m. in Singapore. Tin advanced as much as 0.6 percent to extend its best quarterly performance since 2013. Lead also gained while zinc declined and aluminum was flat.

The LME Index, tracking six contracts, is at its highest in more than a year and moved into a bull market last week as sentiment improves following OPEC’s agreement to cut oil output, which drove up oil prices and increased production costs for metals. China’s manufacturing purchasing managers index, an official factory gauge, stayed at the highest level in almost two years for a second month and services increased, according to data released Saturday by the National Bureau of Statistics. Markets in China are closed this week.

“The PMI numbers were undeniably beneficial for metals,” and the entire industrial sector is showing renewed growth, Erik Norland, executive director and senior economist at CME Group Inc., said Monday in an interview in Singapore. “There’s been a lot of talk about how it’s one of the strongest numbers that we’ve seen out of China in the past two years.”

Copper demand will exceed supply by 52,000 tons in 2017 after a surplus of 110,000 tons this year, Japan’s biggest producer Pan Pacific Copper Co. said Monday in a presentation in Tokyo. Prices will climb 46 percent through 2020 as the global market swings to a shortage, it said.

Nickel retreated as much as 0.6 percent after it advanced Friday by the most in more than a week. Output of the metal in the Philippines, which accounts for about a fifth of global production, will tumble 18 percent this year amid the nation’s audit of mining operations, BMI Research said Monday in a note.

The audit raises the chances of prices rallying by about a quarter through 2017, according to UBS Group AG’s Daniel Morgan in an interview Friday.

 

OPEC Output Cut is Too Little and Too Late

October 3rd, 2016 4:54 am

Via WSJ:

An OPEC Output Cut Not Likely to Alter Oil Imbalance
Many analysts say the proposed reduction isn’t big enough, nor will it happen quickly enough

By Nicole Friedman
Oct. 2, 2016 2:08 p.m. ET

OPEC’s move to cut output might be too late.

After pumping full tilt for the past two years, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is weighing a plan to reduce production by up to 700,000 barrels a day later this year. But many analysts say the proposed reduction isn’t big enough, nor will it happen quickly enough, to address a global supply glut that has kept oil prices low.

Going into this year, many forecasters projected that supply and demand for crude would return to balance by the end of 2016. But even after OPEC’s agreement, most now don’t see a rebalancing until the middle of next year, or even later. Global inventories are near record levels, and OPEC has been outflanked by shale producers that have weathered oil’s collapse and can boost output when prices rise.

“The fast and nimble U.S. drillers have taken away some of OPEC’s power,” said Daniel Yergin, vice chairman of IHS Markit and a longtime oil-market watcher. ”Now there’s a lot more oil that is not OPEC oil.”

OPEC reached a consensus on Wednesday to scale back production to between 32.5 million and 33 million barrels a day, down from 33.2 million barrels a day in August. The cartel said it would complete details at its November meeting.

News of the proposal caught the market by surprise, sending U.S. crude prices up 8% over the last three days of the week to $48.24. Prices are up 30% this year, after falling below $30 to a 13-year low early in the year.

It remains unclear which countries would cut and whose production numbers would be used as a reference point. OPEC members have a history of failing to comply with output quotas.

Even if OPEC ratifies and enforces the agreement, many energy experts say the production cuts could have a limited impact on correcting the global supply imbalance. The glut reflects in part the changing roles of U.S. producers and OPEC, as shale drillers have gained market share and more power to influence global prices.

“OPEC does not control marginal production and therefore has no lasting control over prices,” Commerzbank AG said in a research note on Thursday.

Countries outside of OPEC now account for 58% of the world’s total output, which in the second quarter ran at 95.9 million barrels a day, above estimated demand of 95.6 million barrels a day, according to the International Energy Agency.

OPEC’s proposed cuts would reduce the excess supply only if they weren’t offset by gains in non-OPEC output. Even if the cuts were to bring global production back into line with consumption, inventory levels around the globe would remain high.

In July, the most recent period for which data are available, stockpiles of crude oil and refined products held by countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development topped 3.1 billion barrels, up 15% from two years earlier, according to IEA data. Non-OECD stockpiles also stand near records, according to Bernstein Research estimates.

“At the end of the day, it just comes down to very, very basic fundamentals: how much oil do you have in the system?” said Joe Tanious, senior investment strategist at Bessemer Trust. “You want to see a drawdown of those inventories.”

Overall, non-OPEC production is expected to fall by more than 800,000 barrels a day this year, according to the IEA, but rise by nearly 400,000 barrels a day next year due to increased output from Canada, Russia and Brazil.

Some investors say the consensus is too bearish and think the glut will ease. They note that companies have cut hundreds of billions of dollars in spending on oil and natural-gas production since 2014, and that 2017 might mark the first-ever third straight year of declining energy spending, according to the IEA.

“Shale can turn on and off quickly, but the other 96% of the oil market cannot,” said Robin Wehbé, portfolio director at Boston Company Asset Management, a unit of Bank of New York Mellon Corp. He said that an “unprecedented starvation of capital for oil companies” would slow output and lift prices in the coming years.

But lower investment hasn’t translated into lower production as quickly as many expected. Projects that were started years ago are still coming on line. Bernstein Research released a list last week of 136 offshore projects still under construction, some of which aren’t expected to be complete until 2021.

Output that has been disrupted for political reasons or other factors is also coming back as well. Iran’s output in August was nearly 800,000 barrels a day above its average in 2015, when it was restricted by international sanctions, according to the IEA. That almost offsets a decline in U.S. output in the same period. Canadian production has rebounded following wildfires in May, and Nigeria and Libya could also increase production if unrest in those regions subsides.

On the demand side, consumption has recently disappointed. Oil demand is expected to grow by a robust 1.3 million barrels a day this year, according to the IEA, but demand growth plunged in the third quarter due to “a dramatic deceleration in China and India,” the agency said.

OPEC itself has contributed to the global glut by producing record levels of oil this summer.

“The market has changed since June, and our expectations about the rebalancing process have shifted,” OPEC President Mohammed bin Saleh al-Sada, who is Qatar’s oil minister, said Wednesday. “It is evident that there is now a greater degree of urgency about ensuring the market returns to balance as quickly as possible.”

—Georgi Kantchev and Benoit Faucon contributed to this article.

Write to Nicole Friedman at [email protected]

Early FX

October 3rd, 2016 4:48 am

Via Kit Juckes at SocGen:

<http://www.sgmarkets.com/r/?id=h1170311f,187ac0b5,187ac0b6&p1=136122&p2=f94495df1b24d80c637ae8da04b27a1e>
The first working day of October means the darkest start in months and despite being a beatiful autumnal morning, cold. Markets are quiet with a bunch of places off, and the early focus is on PMIs, though we did get some sterling softness afteer Mrs May’s promise to trigger Article 50 by the end of Q1.                                                                                      Pick of the early PMIs was a solid 51.1 in Russia, prompting talk of an economic thaw, just in time for winter. Short ZAR/RUB is a long-term trade we’ve still got on, and still like, and even though it meanders around 4.60 trendlessly I have hopes that this is a trade which will benefit if oil prices start trending up or South African politics has another significant wobble.                                                                                    Otherwise, no change in the Tankan large-manuf outlook, which remains in ‘meh’ territory. Equities are higher though, and we’ll stick with long USD/JPY. Other PMIs ahead include final Euozone ones, exp n/c at 52.6 in Europe, 51.8 vs 53.3 in the UK and 49.3 vs 49.4 for the US ISM.                                                                                                                      I’m slightly surprised the pound hasn’t bounced from its fall yesterday evening, but not surprised enough to prevent me being bearish long-term. To be fair, absolutely no-one is going to change their view of the UK economy, sterling or the wider implications of ‘Brexit’ until there are mountinas of evidence about the economic impact. But if Phillip Hammond spends half his speech at 10:30 talking about responsible fiscal policy and the other half giving little help to the economy, I’ll take that bearishly for the currency. It won’t help my bearish bias on gilts however.                                                                                                                Beyond that, we’re staying short Kiwi vs AUD and USD, we’re watching 10year Note yields (1.6% today, close to their highest level of the last week, but hardly exciting), and watching politics in Spain, and in the US (of course).

European Manufacturing Shows Some Strength

October 3rd, 2016 4:44 am

Via Bloomberg:

Carolynn Look
carolynnlook
October 3, 2016 — 4:00 AM EDT
Updated on October 3, 2016 — 4:20 AM EDT

PMI increased to 52.6 in September from 51.7 in August
Stronger demand seen from domestic, international customers

 

Manufacturing in the euro area accelerated in September as incoming new business grew at the fastest pace in three months.

A Purchasing Managers Index for manufacturing rose to 52.6 from 51.7 in August, in line with earlier estimate, IHS Markit said on Monday. The expansion was driven by stronger demand from both domestic and international customers, the London-based company said in a statement.

While the report indicates a rebound in confidence after a third quarter marked by political uncertainty and signs of a slowdown, the improvement remains patchy. Headwinds include slumping demand and the fallout from the U.K.’s decision to leave the European Union, as well as concern that European Central Bank stimulus is reaching the limit of its effectiveness.

“Production gains are being driven by welcome signs of improving demand from both within the region and from wider export markets,” said Chris Williamson, chief business economist at IHS Markit. “The concern is that the upturn is worryingly uneven, reliant on a ‘core’ centered on Germany and its neighbors.”

Germany’s manufacturing PMI rose to a 3-month high, and the second-best reading in two-and-a-half years, Markit said. Strong performances were also seen in the Netherlands and Austria. Spain, Italy, and Ireland registered weaker growth, while manufacturing in France continued to decline and Greece slipped into contraction.

ECB President Mario Draghi last week renewed his plea to governments to use the current ultra-loose monetary policy as an opportunity to deliver structural reforms and help create a sustainable recovery.

Unintended Consequences

October 2nd, 2016 11:45 am

Via WSJ:

Deutsche Bank and the Unintended Consequence
How Dodd-Frank and other steps to redress the 2008 crisis are helping to foment the next panic.

By Holman W. Jenkins, Jr.
Sept. 30, 2016 6:39 p.m. ET

Hillary Clinton in Monday’s debate attributed the 2008 financial crisis to “trickle down” economics and Republican tax cuts. That’s one explanation you won’t find in a widely hailed new book about the financial meltdown by Harvard Law School’s Hal S. Scott, “Connectedness and Contagion.”

Too bad Mr. Scott’s scholarly approach cannot be dismissed so readily. One reason right now is Deutsche Bank.

A long acknowledged expert, Mr. Scott dispenses with the idea that the crisis flowed as the necessary result of a housing correction or bad mortgages, or because Lehman Brothers (which held such mortgages) was too connected to other banks such that they would fail if Lehman could not honor its debts.

The problem wasn’t connectedness, but contagion, more colloquially known as panic. Example: The Reserve Fund, a money-market fund, “broke the buck” because it held a small amount of Lehman IOUs. Yet the run quickly spread to other money-market funds that held no Lehman IOUs, only stopping when the money-fund industry was enfolded in a general government bailout of the financial system.

Unfortunately the Dodd-Frank law treated connectedness, not panic, as the problem, especially with its focus on higher capital standards. While these have their uses, Mr. Scott says, capital “is all gone in a heartbeat if there is a panic.”

Worse, savoring the sound bite “no more bailouts,” Congress deliberately erected political obstacles to regulators acting swiftly in the inevitable next crisis.

Which brings us to Deutsche Bank, whose troubles have filled the news. Its stock price is down, the cost of insuring against its default is up. Big depositors are withdrawing cash. Murmurs of a “Lehman moment” are worrying markets globally.

Angela Merkel, Germany’s chancellor, didn’t help matters by allegedly ruling out government support. Of course, she didn’t mean it, but even so, bailing out the bank, if necessary, might be to trade one crisis for another. That’s because doing so might unravel the anti-bailout disciplines Germany has been trying to impose to hold together the Eurozone.

OK, Deutsche Bank won’t be allowed to fail. The thing to notice, though, is how thoroughly this crisis stems from our efforts after the last crisis.

Not only has the bank’s ability to meet tougher capital standards been hindered by low or negative interest rates imposed by the world’s central banks. Capital has been drained out of the bank by a uniquely American crisis “solution”—lawsuits. The Justice Department is currently seeking a bank-breaking $14 billion for supposedly defective mortgages sold to investors, including Fannie and Freddie. In another U.S. court, the bank’s own shareholders are suing because the bank bought the same crummy securities for its own account.

Wait, Deutsche Bank knowingly invested in defective mortgage securities? Of course not. The essence of a run is that the market no longer distinguishes solvent from insolvent, and these mortgages were the first victim. These securities were never so crummy as the ubiquitous media description “toxic” implied. They were the same securities the U.S. government acquired in the bailout and later sold for a profit. (Deutsche Bank was actually a buyer.)

Here, in spades, is the circularity of the bailout dilemma. Washington largely spawned the panic that its own heroics were later required to end. Now let it be said that some believe Prof. Scott paints an overly dire picture of the Dodd-Frank reforms. Politicians and regulators will act to stop a future panic no matter what the law says rather than suffer the consequences of failing to do so.

Maybe that’s right, but there’s no doubt the world financial system has become more fragile, not less so, especially in Europe. Here’s why: Italy would like to bail out its banks using taxpayer money fearing runs if depositors must bear losses. But Italy’s government itself arguably is insolvent, propped up only by the European Central Bank, and EU rules stand in the way of Italy’s plan for its banks.

So far the Italian public is not panicking, but Italy is the EU’s third biggest economy and a key member of its currency bloc. We are one political accident away from a crisis that would unravel the euro. Undoubtedly the Obama administration already is scurrying to call off its mortgage witch hunt rather than supply a match to this powder keg. But such an accident is coming sooner or later in a world characterized by slow growth and ever-mounting debt.

Bond Bull Case

October 2nd, 2016 8:40 am

Via WSJ:

Credit Markets

Why the Bond Bulls Will Keep Running
The fourth quarter will likely bring continued strength for bond prices, many portfolio managers say

By Min Zeng
Oct. 2, 2016 7:00 a.m. ET
0 COMMENTS

The fourth quarter will likely bring continued strength for bond prices, many portfolio managers say.

While the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury rose in the third quarter, its first quarterly increase this year, many investors expect any further rise in 2016 to be limited by uncertainty overhanging markets and the global economy.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note was 1.605% Friday, up from 1.492% at the end of June. Yields rise as bond prices fall.

“Key factors supporting low and range-bound yields continue to be the subdued global growth backdrop, low levels of interest rates abroad, muted inflation outlook, and generally robust demand for fixed income given demographic factors,” said Erik Schiller, senior portfolio manager for global government bonds at Prudential Financial Inc. ’s fixed-income unit, which manages $652 billion.

Mr. Schiller is sticking to his view that a selloff in Treasury bonds would present a buying opportunity. He isn’t convinced that yields will rise in a lasting way until global economic growth and inflation turn markedly higher.

The market is likely to be volatile heading into the U.S. presidential election and the Federal Reserve’s decision in December whether to raise interest rates, traders said.

But with major economies in Europe and Japan still using negative interest rates in a bid to restart flagging growth, many U.S. investors believe Treasury yields will remain at exceptionally low levels by historical standards.

The yield has risen from its historic closing low of 1.366% in July but remains below the 2.273% logged at the end of 2015.

Worries about less support from major central banks rattled the bond market in September. But the risk of a replay of 2013’s “taper tantrum”—when yields spiked in response to the Fed signaling it might dial back its easy-money policy—has been receding after the Bank of Japan reiterated its commitment to monetary stimulus and the Fed indicated an even shallower path of rate increases in coming years.

A rout in shares of Deutsche Bank AG during late September have also boosted demand for Treasury bonds. Traders say Treasury yields have room to fall should jitters over the health of Germany’s biggest bank heighten in coming months.

Larry Milstein, managing director of government and agency trading at R.W. Pressprich & Co., said the Deutsche Bank situation will continue to “overhang the markets” until it is resolved, possibly with the assistance of the German government.

U.S. bond and exchange-traded funds targeting Treasury securities attracted a net cash inflow of $1.02 billion for the week that ended on Sept. 21, the biggest weekly inflow since February, according to data from fund tracker Lipper.

A rate increase by the Fed before the end of the year likely would lead to some selling in the bond market, but mostly on short-term debt whose yields are highly sensitive to the Fed’s rate policy, say analysts and investors.

“The Fed has limited scope to raise rates as we are stuck in this low-growth environment,” said Mark MacQueen, co-founder and portfolio manager in Austin, Texas, at Sage Advisory Services Ltd., which oversees $12 billion in assets.

Mr. MacQueen said he sticks to the strategy of selling short-term debt and buying long-term bonds, a popular trade to prepare for the Fed’s potential rate increase. He expects the 10-year Treasury yield to trade between 1.5% and 1.75% during the remainder of the year.

A potential threat to the bond market, analysts say, is a ramp-up of fiscal spending after the election as major central banks are stretching to the limits of monetary stimulus.

More spending would lead to a rise in the U.S. budget deficit and require the nation to issue more debt, which could put upward pressure on Treasury yields, according to analysts.

In addition, fiscal action such as infrastructure investments could brighten up market sentiment toward the growth outlook and raise expectations on inflation, a big threat to the value of long-term government bonds.

Francesco Garzarelli, co-head of global macro and markets research at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., said he expects the 10-year Treasury yield will rise to 2% by year-end.

But some analysts say the impact on the bond market from potential fiscal spending may be less than feared. James DeMasi, chief fixed-income strategist at Stifel Nicolaus & Co., said he is skeptical that “a large-scale fiscal program will make it through a bitterly divided Congress” in the coming year.

Write to Min Zeng at [email protected]

Consumer Spending Analysis

September 30th, 2016 12:34 pm

Via TDSecurities:

TD Securities Dataflash

TD: Spending momentum likely to ease in Q3, but core inflation perking up

·         Personal income suggests a smaller consumer contribution to Q3 GDP growth than during Q2, with real personal spending slipping 0.1% m/m.

·         Inflation did show signs of perking up, with core PCE accelerating to 1.7% y/y from 1.6% y/y.

·         While the August personal income and spending report hints that consumption will provide a more modest contribution to Q3 growth momentum, markets will look closely to next week’s payroll and ISM reports to help refine the odds of a December rate hike (which are currently priced at 45%).

The August personal income and spending report came in at the lower end of expectations, with incomes rising 0.2% m/m after last month’s 0.4% m/m gain. Spending nevertheless came in below consensus estimates for a 0.1% m/m rise, remaining flat during the month even as the 0.3% m/m gain in July was revised up to 0.4% m/m. There was also pronounced softness in real personal spending activity, which slipped 0.1% m/m following the prior month’s 0.3% m/m gain. The 3m annualized pace of real consumer spending edged lower to 3.8% from 4.1% last month, suggesting that consumption (a key factor supporting Q2 GDP growth) is likely to provide less support to Q3 GDP growth. The data mirrors softer August retail sales activity, which has shown US consumers paring back purchases during the month, with the savings rate ticking modestly higher to 5.7% from 5.6%.

The inflation front offers a modestly more encouraging picture. Headline PCE edged 0.1% m/m higher (0.144% before rounding) after the prior month’s flat print and the pace of headline inflation accelerated to 1.0% y/y from 0.8% y/y. Core inflation also saw gains, advancing 0.2% m/m (0.178% before rounding) as the annual pace of core inflation edged higher to 1.7% y/y from 1.6% y/y. The 3m annualized pace core inflation momentum also showed some stabilization. Interestingly, medical inflation did not show acceleration in the PCE report despite a jump in the CPI report earlier this month.

Overall, the data suggests some likely softening in consumers’ contribution to spending growth during Q3 following very strong Q2 spending. Given the Fed’s increased emphasis on economic data for gauging the likelihood of a rate hike later this year, we expect the focus to turn toward next week’s payroll and ISM reports, which should show some improvement from August levels.