2022: The Great Normalisation

| Multi Asset | Macro Views
Guilhem Savry
Head of Global Macro & Dynamic Asset Allocation, Cross Asset Solutions-Investment

After two turbulent years of deep recession and extreme recovery, we expect 2022 to be the year of normalisation with regards to policy mix, economic activity and inflation. The New Year should see slowing growth and inflation, as inventories turn from headwinds to tailwinds. There is also a genuine chance of hitting a fiscal cliff, while major central banks simultaneously engage in a new cycle of hikes. All of these factors will likely provoke volatility in the markets and trigger large dispersions across and within assets. Against this backdrop, flexibility in views and positioning are key to navigating a world where any incremental change could dramatically affect market sentiment. The good news, in our view, is that current expectations for monetary policy and earnings growth incorporate too much inflation and too little growth. What can we expect in terms of asset returns going forward?


 

Dance Me to the End of Love

Jennifer Leonard Cohen, 2009





What’s Next?

Fed changes stance, but expected terminal rate remains low

The terminal rate for US Fed funds (the level at which policy rates will stop going up) is currently priced between 1.8% and 2.0%. Putting this into perspective, a complete, sub-2% rate hike cycle would be a mere drop in the ocean when seen over a 50-year period. This would be the lowest rate hike cycle in history, even smaller than the one that started in 2016, when Yellen engineered a gentle, well-telegraphed upward cycle, where employment mattered much more than inflation. Granted, the direction for rates is upwards, but the distance is relatively small, and as such, terminal rates matter more than the path of tightening.

When it comes to the duration of a complete rate-hiking cycle, the Fed usually ends or even reverses that cycle after less than 24 months (Figure 1). In contrast, current pricing implies that the Fed will maintain the upcoming cycle for three years, which in our view – and historically – seems a little far-fetched.

Figure 1: Previous and current expected Fed rate-hike cycles
Previous-and-current-expected-Fed-rate-hike-cycles
Source: Unigestion, Bloomberg as at 31.12.2021

Even if the rate-hike cycle were to materialise as broadly anticipated until 2024 and suggested by the Fed dot plots and various forecasts made in December 2021, real short-term rates would stay slightly negative, something that has never happened since 1970 (Figure 2).

Figure 2: Real Fed funds rates based on Fed dot plots and forecasts (December meeting)

 Real Fed funds rates based on Fed dot plots and forecasts

Source: Unigestion, Fed, Bloomberg as at 31.12.2021

In the end, we are far less sanguine about the magnitude and duration of the upcoming Fed rate-cycle than what the market is currently pricing, given the potential pitfalls awaiting in 2022 and our belief that the Fed will much rather err on the side of caution than aggressively hike rates. If history is any guide, the path to normalisation will be shorter and shallower than most – including the Fed – currently expect. This in turn should be beneficial for growth-oriented assets in general and equities in particular.

The end of “easy money” is not the end for equities…

An analysis of the last five hiking cycles by the Fed reveals that the S&P 500 rose every single time in the 12 months that followed the initial rate hike. On average, the index rose by 7.6% a year after the Fed first pulled the trigger (Figure 3).

Figure 3: S&P 500 before and after the first Fed hike (months)

SP-500-before-and-after-the-first-Fed-hike

Source: Unigestion, Bloomberg as at 15.12.2021

…but weighs on activity and worsens inflation

In what may come as a surprise considering the Fed’s dual mandate of stable prices and maximum employment, the past tightening cycles had more adverse effects on economic activity and inflation than on financial assets. Our proprietary US Growth Nowcaster, which tracks and synthesises US growth in real time through a large spectrum of economic data, tends to decline on average by 0.35 in the 12 months following the first hike, as shown below in Figure 4.

Figure 4: US Growth Nowcaster before and after first Fed hike (months)

US-Growth-Nowcaster-before-and-after-first-Fed-hike

Source: Unigestion, Bloomberg as at 15.12.2021

Even more surprisingly, despite the tightening of financial conditions, inflation pressures continue to grow significantly in the year that follows the first Fed hike. Our analysis clearly shows the general upwards trend of our US Inflation Nowcaster once the cycle commences.

Asset allocation for 2022

While 2021 was the year of reflation morphing into full-fledged inflation, we doubt that 2022 will cascade into stagflation, as many market observers and participants may fear. Rather, we see a gradual deceleration of growth and inflation, induced by easing supply constraints, which in turn should lessen the pressure on central banks to hike as aggressively as currently anticipated. History also shows that US equities and the US dollar generally benefit in the first 12 months of a new rate hiking cycle by the Fed, and we believe that this time around will be no exception, especially in light of the very short and shallow upwards path that Fed funds are likely to take.

While the risk of the dreaded “policy mistake” is not to be discounted, where central banks would hike too fast and too far – triggering higher bond yields and a general meltdown as investors deleverage – we are much more likely to witness a gentle, Yellen like rate hike cycle, than the “massacre” engineered by Volcker in the 1970s. Likewise, Covid may continue to linger and spawn even more dangerous variants than the ones we have so far experienced, which would put us back to square one, with lockdowns and restrictions regenerating massive fiscal and monetary stimulus to combat deflation and massive defaults.

However, after the tumultuous rollercoaster ride of the past two years we believe the time has come for a “great normalisation”, where life somewhat reverts to the “mean” we knew before 2020 and where individuals, companies and policymakers can return to a semblance of “business as usual”.

Against that backdrop, we would prefer:

  • Quality segments in equities that offer solid earnings growth and higher visibility in terms of profitability
  • US equities versus the rest of the world thanks to higher flexibility in the US policy mix and its corporate leadership in key sectors
  • A US dollar that should benefit from stronger US GDP and higher liquidity in its capital markets, both of which should drive flows into US assets
  • We would also be less exposed to real assets than we were in 2021, as current pricing in both inflation breakevens and energy prices reflect a durable expansion period in the global cycle, which in our view, given the potential headwinds identified for next year, is now too optimistic.

Unigestion Nowcasting

World Growth Nowcaster

World-Growth-Nowcaster

World Inflation Nowcaster

World-Inflation-Nowcaster

Market Stress Nowcaster

Market-Stress-Nowcaster

Weekly Change

  • Last week, our World Growth Nowcaster Growth stabilised at above-potential levels as emerging market bounced back to neutral
  • Our World Inflation Nowcaster remained stable at elevated levels as a pullback in the UK was compensated by a rise in Australia
  • Our Market Stress Nowcaster decreased as volatilities and spreads moved lower

Sources: Unigestion, Bloomberg, as of 10 January 2022.


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