INSIDE DEBT
Transcription
INSIDE DEBT
INSIDE DEBT PRODUCED BY REUTERS IN PARTNERSHIP WITH ICAP Friday, November 21, 2014 CHART OF THE DAY U.S. MARKETS TODAY Canada inflation, central bank rate TODAY’S TOP STORY: ECB President Mario Draghi threw the door wide open for more drastic measures to prevent the euro zone from sliding into deflation, promising to use whatever means necessary as China also acted to boost its sagging economic growth. For more please click here Click on the chart for full-size image TREASURIES: Longer-dated Treasury yields fell in thin trading, in line with declines in the eurozone after European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said the central bank was prepared to do more to stimulate the sluggish eurozone economy. U.S. government debt took a cue from European markets, where Draghi's comments lifted euro zone debt and pushed yields on three of the region's countries - Ireland, Italy, and Austria - to record lows. Benchmark 10-year notes were up 6/32 to yield 2.31 pct. 5-year notes were up 2/32, yielding 1.61 pct. 30-year bonds jumped 22/32, with a yield of 3.02 pct. Year-on-year inflation rose to 2.4 pct. The core inflation rate rose to 2.3 pct. On a month-on-month basis, consumer prices edged up 0.1 pct. TODAY’S TOP NEWS Draghi throws ECB door open to money printing China cuts rates to spur growth, ease debt pressure Concerns about state of global economy have increased - UK's Osborne German tax revenues stay buoyant despite slowdown Japan PM seeks verdict on Abenomics in snap election Canada annual inflation jumps to 2.4 pct in Oct Greece battles with EU/IMF lenders over projected budget gap Italy October wage inflation plumbs record low, but still above consumer prices UK public finances improve, remain far off-track U.S. muni bond funds post $590 mln in inflowsLipper ECON WATCH FOR MONDAY NOVEMBER 24 ET 08:30 09:45 09:45 10:30 Indicators US US US US National Activity Index Markit Comp Flash PMI Markit Svcs PMI Flash Dallas Fed Mfg Bus Idx* Unit Reuters Prior ind ind ind ind 56.8 - 0.47 57.4 57.1 10.5 FOREX: The euro fell sharply after European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi said inflation expectations were declining to levels that were very low, keeping the door open for further monetary easing soon. The euro fell 1.18 pct to $1.2390 and dropped 1.58 pct against the Japanese yen to 145.84 yen. The dollar fell 0.41 pct to 117.71 yen. CORPORATES: Corporate bond spreads tightened after European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi announced asset purchases to stimulate the euro zone economy. The CDX-IG.23 index tightened by 2 bps to 64 bps. "It isn't the size of the moves but the shock value of the direction that is really lifting markets today," said Mark Luschini, chief investment strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott in Philadelphia, which manages about $67 billion in assets. "This is a one-two punch for global growth." STOCKS: Stocks closed higher, with major indexes rising for a fifth straight week after China's central bank cut its benchmark interest rate and its euro zone peer announced asset purchases in efforts to boost each region's economy. Autodesk jumped 6 pct, Ross Stores rose 7.3 pct. GameStop sank 13 pct. The Dow rose 88.81 points, or 0.5 pct, to 17,807.81, the S&P 500 gained 10.59 points, or 0.52 pct, to 2,063.34 and the Nasdaq added 11.10 points, or 0.24 pct, to 4,712.97. For the week, the Dow rose 1 pct, the S&P added 1.2 pct and the Nasdaq rose 0.5 pct. C & E: Gold climbed above $1,200 an ounce to its highest in three weeks, helped by short-covering and after a surprise interest rate cut by China fueled hopes that demand would rise in the world's biggest consumer of the metal. Gold rose 0.62 pct to $1200.84 an ounce. Oil rose 1.03 pct to $76.63 per barrel. Reuters-Jefferies index rose 0.36 pct to 269.76. For EYE ON ASIA click here For MARKET SNAPSHOT click here For MARKET SNAPSHOT on Asia click here For NEXT UP click here For EYE ON LATAM click here For DEEP DIVE click here INSIDE DEBT November 21, 2014 MARKET SNAPSHOT as of 3:20 pm EST REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS G/C MORTGAGE REPOS O/N 0.120 O/N 0.140 2-Week 0.150 2-Week 0.160 1-Month 0.150 1-Month 0.210 3-Month 0.160 3-Month 0.240 AGENCY REPOS i-REPOSM INDEX O/N 0.120 10:00 AM 0.125 2-Week 0.170 3:00 PM 0.098 1-Month 0.170 3-Month TREASURIES <5> <500> BID ASK 1-Mo Bill 0.040 0.035 3-Mo Bill 0.005 -0.005 6-Mo Bill 0.065 0.060 1-Year 0.120 0.115 2-Year 99.734 99.773 3-Year 99.773 99.813 5-Year 99.461 99.508 7-Year 99.813 99.859 10-Year 99.398 99.461 30-Year 99.516 99.578 YIELD CHANGE 0.041 0.000 0.005 -0.005 0.066 -0.004 0.122 -0.008 0.513 0.016 0.952 0.055 1.614 0.090 2.029 0.125 2.318 0.203 3.025 0.609 IR SWAPS <19901> SPREAD 2-Year 19.75 23.75 3-Year 17.50 21.50 5-Year 11.00 15.00 7-Year 6.00 10.00 10-Year 10.00 14.00 30-Year -5.25 -1.25 RATE 0.70 0.73 1.12 1.14 1.72 1.73 2.09 2.10 2.42 2.42 2.97 2.97 EQUITIES DJIA NASDAQ S&P 500 O/N 1-Month 3-Month 6-Month 12-Month BID 0.100 0.150 0.200 0.310 0.170 0.240 0.360 0.430 0.103 0.106 0.113 0.116 0.201 0.211 MATURITY 9/27/2017 11/26/2019 9/6/2024 11/15/2030 PRICE CHANGE 76.7 80.4 1200.1 787.2 16.4 0.8 1.1 6.7 19.2 0.2 EURODOLLAR FUTURES Dec-14 Mar-15 Sep-15 Mar-16 Sep-16 Mar-17 U.S. Interest rate swap—yield curve CLOSE CHANGE 99.765 99.735 99.440 99.735 98.475 98.970 0.003 -0.005 0.000 -0.005 0.015 0.010 PRICE 120.57 125.23 131.81 CHANGE 0.09 0.16 0.50 FUTURES CBOT 5 yr CBOT 10 yr CBOT 30 yr CURRENCIES ASK BID EBS PRECIOUS METALS Bid Ask SPOT GOLD 1201.46 1202.23 PALLADIUM 1223.49 1231 SILVER 16.48 16.53 ACTIVE FANNIE MAE AGENCIES TERM COUPON 3-Year 1 5-Year 1.75 7-Year 10-Year 2.625 30-Year 6.625 96.81 10.60 11.09 NYMEX BRENT SPOT GOLD PALLADIUM SILVER EURODOLLAR DEPOSITS & OIS STRIPS (ASKED) ASK 0.110 CHANGE COMMODITIES 0.180 BID 0.090 INDEX 17815.81 4712.46 2063.84 Euro 1.2387 Sterling 1.5644 JP Yen 117.7200 Swiss Franc 0.97 Can Dollar 1.1240 Mexico 13.6025 FED FUNDS Open 0.1000 High 0.2300 Low 0.0800 ASK 1.239 1.5648 117.7600 0.97 1.1244 13.6036 ACTIVE FREDDIE MAC AGENCIES YIELD-SPREAD 8.5 5.5 23.75 20.75 34 7.5 31 4.5 YIELD 1.031 1.846 TERM 2.655 3.098 COUPON MATURITY 3-Year 12/29/2014 5-Year 8/25/2016 7-Year 01/0/1900 10-Year 30-Year 6.25 1/13/2022 7/15/2032 Wrightson ICAP Active MBS 15YR CPN FNMA 2.5 FHLMC 2.5 BID 101.2870 101.2500 ASK 101.2930 101.2500 YIELD 2.097 2.121 Active MBS 30YR CPN FNMA 2.5 FHLMC 2.5 GNMA 2.5 BID 96.2030 96.1200 98.0670 ASK 96.2070 96.1300 98.0730 YIELD 2.918 2.939 2.722 2 SM YIELD-SPREAD 13.5 10.5 Chart of the Day YIELD 3.158 INSIDE DEBT November 21, 2014 TODAY’S TOP NEWS Draghi throws ECB door open to money printing China cuts rates to spur growth, ease debt pressure European Central Bank President Mario Draghi threw the door wide open for more drastic measures to prevent the euro zone from sliding into deflation, promising to use whatever means necessary as China also acted to boost its sagging economic growth. Painting a bleak picture of the state of the 18 countries in the euro bloc, Draghi stressed that excessively low inflation had to be raised quickly. In a blunt message, he said there was now no sign of improvement in the months ahead and the ECB would pump more money into the euro bloc if its current measures fell short. We will do what we must to raise inflation and inflation expectations as fast as possible, he told an audience of bankers in Frankfurt. Annual euro zone inflation was 0.4 percent in October, far short of the ECB's medium-term target of just below two percent. Draghi's comments received a warm reception from Italian finance minister Pier Carlo Padoan, who said ECB action was welcome to revive economic growth in the euro zone. The ECB said it had started buying asset-backed securities. Along with purchases of covered bonds, a secure form of debt often backed by property, it is trying to encourage banks to lend and revive the economy. Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann, speaking shortly after Draghi at the same event, avoided talking about the issue entirely. China cut interest rates unexpectedly, stepping up efforts to support the world's second-biggest economy as it heads towards its slowest expansion in nearly a quarter of a century, saddled under a mountain of debt. But the central bank, keen to show it was not back-tracking on economic reforms, twinned the move with a slight liberalisation of the rates banks pay to borrowers in a bid to ensure millions of savers do not see their incomes hit. The People's Bank of China (PBOC) said it was cutting oneyear benchmark lending rates by 40 basis points to 5.6 percent. It lowered one-year benchmark deposit rates by 25 basis points to 2.75 percent. The changes take effect from Saturday. While the move acknowledged the risks to growth and marks a stepped-up effort to ensure the economy stays on track even as it is expected to slow to a 24-year low of 7.4 percent this year, the central bank took pains to signal that it was not simply moving towards a looser monetary stance. For one-year deposits, banks may now pay depositors 1.2 times the benchmark level, up from 1.1 times previously. It also scrapped limits on interest rates for long-term deposits of five years, and simplified its system of benchmark rates for loans. German tax revenues stay buoyant despite slowdown German tax revenues rose by 3.1 percent in October year-onyear to 40.3 billion euros, despite recent economic weakness, and were up 3.0 percent to 469.2 billion for the first 10 months, the Finance Ministry said in its monthly report. The German government expects the state and federal tax revenues to accelerate in the final two months of 2014, lifting the full year total by 3.5 percent to 590.3 billion euros. The Finance Ministry added that the federal tax take rose by 3.3 percent in October while state tax income rose by 3.2 percent. European Union tax income, however, was down 3.7 percent. Income tax revenue was up 6.5 percent in October compared to a year ago and 6.2 percent in the first 10 months of the year boosted by rising pay levels and an increase in the number of people employed. The economy added an average of 6,000 jobs per month in the July to October quarter, it said. The Finance Ministry said gross domestic product (GDP) growth is on target to meet the government's 1.2 percent goal, while it expects a slight acceleration in exports in the final two months of the year. Concerns about state of global economy have increased UK's Osborne Stagnation in the euro zone, recession in Japan and geopolitical crises have increased concerns about the state of the global economy, British finance minister George Osborne said. Osborne said economic performance in the euro zone was a cause of real worry and concern, particularly in Britain whose main export markets are in the bloc. There is definitely more concern around about the state of the global economy than there was a few months ago, you see that not just when you talk about Europe, he told an audience of business leaders in London. Speaking at the same event as Osborne, Italian Economy Minister Pier Carlo Padoan said he was confident that monetary policy was being used to do whatever it can in the euro area to support the recovery and move the inflation rate towards its target. Osborne said there had been a marked improvement in financial and credit conditions in Britain but more needed to be done, particularly for small and medium-sized businesses. Europe as a whole was still too dependent on bank credit as source of finance for businesses, he said. Canada annual inflation jumps to 2.4 pct in Oct Canada's annual inflation rate jumped last month as prices for shelter and food rose, putting pressure on the Bank of Canada's stance that interest rates will remain low for some time. Year-on-year inflation rose to 2.4 percent in October, Statistics Canada data showed on Friday. That was the highest level since June, surpassing economists' expectations for a slight rise to 2.1 percent from September's 2.0 percent. The core inflation rate rose to 2.3 percent, also topping forecasts. The figures sent the Canadian dollar to a three-week high against the greenback. Prices in all of the major components of the consumer price index rose, with the cost of shelter up 2.8 percent in the last year, pushed higher by a 20.1 percent jump in natural gas prices. Food prices rose 2.8 percent. On a month-on-month basis, consumer prices edged up 0.1 percent and core prices rose 0.3 percent. The annual rate was ahead of the central bank's forecast for 2.2 percent CPI increase in the fourth quarter. Japan PM seeks verdict on Abenomics in snap election Prime Minister Shinzo Abe dissolved parliament's lower house for a snap election on Dec. 14, seeking a fresh mandate for his struggling Abenomics revival strategy just two years after he returned to power promising that Japan is Back. An Asahi newspaper poll published on Friday showed Abe's support fell to 39 percent - the lowest since he took office in December 2012 - and just a bit more than the 40 percent who do not back him. Still, 37 percent said they would vote for Abe's Liberal Democratic Party in proportional representation districts, compared with 13 percent who planned to vote for the main opposition Democratic Party of Japan. Thirty percent were undecided. Separately, a key adviser to Abe said the economic policies are working well but the blow to the economy from an April sales tax hike has been bigger than expected. 3 INSIDE DEBT November 21, 2014 TODAY’S TOP NEWS (continued) Greece battles with EU/IMF lenders over projected budget gap UK public finances improve in Oct, remain far off-track Britain's public finances improved slightly in October but finance minister George Osborne is still unlikely to meet his budget goals before next year's general election. The Office for National Statistics said public sector net borrowing, excluding state-run banks, totaled 7.706 billion pounds ($12.1 billion) in October, down 2.4 percent from a year earlier. Economists had expected borrowing of 7.9 billion pounds. Friday's shortfall was a bit narrower than expected but economists said Osborne's target looks almost impossible to hit. Osborne said in March he aimed to slim the budget deficit by more than 10 percent over the following 12 months, helped by Britain's fast-recovering economy. From April through October, public sector net borrowing excluding banks was 64.1 billion pounds, 6.1 percent higher than in 2013. Receipts from income tax and national insurance contributions rose 1.5 percent in October and were only 0.6 percent higher in the first seven months of the financial year. The government has blamed the extra borrowing so far this year on irregular tax receipts in 2013 and expects the differences to even out. Osborne is due to present a half-yearly budget update on Dec. 3 which will probably include higher borrowing forecasts, leaving little scope to offer sweeteners to voters. Greece's government pushed ahead with plans for a nearbalanced budget next year, ignoring objections from its EU/IMF lenders who say Athens is set to miss its deficit forecast. Athens and its foreign lenders have been at loggerheads over the projected deficit for next year, with the lenders arguing Greece will miss the 0.2 percent target because of a new payback plan for austerity-hit Greeks who owe money to the state. The Greek government, however, stuck to the forecast in its updated 2015 budget plan that was submitted to parliament without the approval of the lenders, marking its first nearbalanced budget in over three decades. It also predicted the budget deficit for this year would be larger than previously estimated, standing at 1.3 percent from 0.8 percent forecast in the October draft budget. Athens also lowered its target for a primary surplus this year to 1.8 percent from 2 percent previously and slightly raised the target for next year to 3 percent from 2.9 percent. Athens has struck an increasingly defiant tone as it haggles with the EUIMF inspectors on what is expected to be the final review under its 240 billion euro bailout. Italy October wage inflation plumbs record low, but still above consumer prices Italian annual wage inflation slowed in October to 1.0 percent, the lowest reading since the statistical series was introduced in 1982, data showed, but it was still well above consumer price inflation. Wage inflation edged down from readings of 1.1 percent in each of the previous three months, national statistics office ISTAT reported. On a month-on-month basis, wages in October were up 0.1 percent after being flat for the previous three months. Annual wage inflation remained well above the consumer price inflation rate in October, which stood at just 0.2 percent, based on Italy's EU-harmonized index. Italy's recession-bound economy is teetering dangerously close to deflation. In the January-October period, wages were up 1.2 percent compared with the first ten months of 2013, ISTAT said. U.S. muni bond funds post $590 mln in inflows-Lipper U.S. municipal bond funds reported $590 million of net inflows in the week ended Nov. 19, compared with $649 million in inflows in the previous week, according to data released by Lipper. The four-week moving average remained positive at $340.3 million, said Lipper, a unit of Thomson Reuters. High-yield muni bond funds reported inflows of $171.8 million, up from $127.5 million in the previous week. NEXT UP Japan inflation seen easing, boding ill for BOJ target EU investment plan to take shape next week Japan's annual core consumer inflation probably eased for a third straight month in October reflecting falling oil prices, a Reuters poll showed, likely keeping the Bank of Japan under pressure to act again in order to achieve its inflation target. Highlighting the pain from April's sales tax hike that helped tipped the economy into recession, factory output probably slipped in October and household spending continued to slide, the poll showed.A Reuters poll of about 20 economists showed the core consumer price index likely rose 2.9 percent year-onyear in October, slowing for a third consecutive month. Stripping out the effects of April's tax hike, consumer inflation was estimated at 0.9 percent, less than half of the central bank's 2 percent target, a level which investors see as virtually impossible to meet. Analysts remain skeptical about the BOJ's view that a tighter labor market and improving output gap will accelerate inflation to 2 percent around the fiscal year from April 2015. BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said on Nov. 19 inflation could slow below 1 percent due to falling oil and commodity prices, altering his earlier view that it would stay above 1 percent. Jean-Claude Juncker will unveil a much anticipated 300-billioneuro investment plan on Wednesday that is meant to trigger economic growth in the European Union. With Europe's economy barely growing and disenchanted voters turning increasingly to anti-EU radicals, the European Commission president pledged the money in July and promised to act when he took office three weeks ago. The European Parliament confirmed on Friday that Juncker would present the plan to it in Strasbourg but as EU officials prepared a for weekend of negotiation on both that and separate budget issues, it remained unclear how much hard cash the Union would invest. Sources have said the plan may involve just 20-30 billion euros going to a vehicle supervised by the European Investment Bank. Intended to soak up any losses, this could attract 10 to 15 times as much in private funding for infrastructure projects. As the European Central Bank signals a will to pump money into the economy, such a limited injection of new public cash some of which may already have been earmarked for investment - could disappoint investors hoping for more stimulus. 4 INSIDE DEBT November 21, 2014 EYE ON ASIA POLL & PREVIEW EVENTS Singapore industrial output seen expanding in October For Nov 24 INDIA Trade balance RBI for Q3: Prior -34.60 bln C/A balance for Q3: Expected –10.50 bln, Prior –7.80 bln Singapore's manufacturing output is expected to have bounced slightly in October, according to a Reuters poll, after a survey of manufacturers showed that factory activity expanded at the fastest pace in 3-1/2 years. The median forecast in a Reuters poll showed that industrial production expanded 2.3 percent in October from the previous month on a seasonally adjusted basis. The poll of 12 economists also predicted that manufacturing output rose 1.0 percent in October from a year ago. In a welcome sign for manufacturing output, the Singapore Institute of Purchasing & Materials Management's Purchasing Managers' index rose to 51.9 in October SINGAPORE Consumer price index (yy) for October: Expected 0.60 pct Prior 0.60 pct POLL & PREVIEW (continued) Indonesia to review tax treaties in drive to double revenue Indonesia will review its tax treaties with dozens of countries and may suspend those it concludes are being abused for tax avoidance, as the government looks to significantly boost revenue, the finance minister said. More than half of Indonesia's estimated 60 million tax payers are considered tax evaders, while only 12 percent of companies pay taxes, Finance Minister Bambang Brodjonegoro said. India monitors foreign flows into debt funds, may tighten rules Worried by potentially destabilising hot money flows, India's central bank could take action if foreign investors pour excessive amounts into mutual funds to bypass limits on ownership of government debt, according to a senior policymaker. Foreign institutional investors have almost reached their $25 billion limit on direct holdings of government debt, but have begun raising their exposure by investing through debt-focused domestic mutual funds. "This is a way of working around the rule," the policymaker told Reuters. "If the flows become quite high into g-secs (government bonds), then we may have to take some action with SEBI," he added. Long "to do" list for India's Modi as clock ticks on reform Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has a long list of progrowth measures to implement over the next four months, but time may have already run out to breathe enough life into the economy to meet the tough 2014/15 fiscal deficit target without cuts. Modi's election victory in May unleashed a rush of money from foreign portfolios betting the reformist prime minister would drive a quick recovery. That has yet to materialise, with both factory utilisation and capital spending low. Parliament convenes on Monday for a month-long session in which the government is confident of passing legislation to allow more foreign investment in the insurance industry, despite hostile opposition parties. Malaysia's Oct inflation at 2.8 pct y/y, below expectations Malaysia's inflation, measured by the consumer price index, rose 2.8 percent in October from a year earlier, data from the Statistics Department showed. MARKET SNAPSHOT as of 3:20 pm EST GOVERNMENT BOND BENCHMARKS 5-Year Bid Yield Australia 99.857 2.781 Japan 100.397 0.117 China 102.251 3.477 Hong Kong 100.950 1.293 Singapore 100.600 1.496 10-Year Bid Yield 95.748 3.279 100.375 0.460 103.750 3.671 100.500 1.913 105.900 2.321 INTEREST RATE SWAPS 5-Year Bid Ask 3.115 3.175 AUD JPY 0.23 0.29 CNY HKD 1.59 1.67 <SWAPS> 10-Year Bid Ask 3.6425 3.7025 0.59 0.65 3.79 3.99 2.21 2.29 1.565 1.62 TWD INR KRW SGD 2.2125 1.675 2.2525 1.69 6.84 2.48 2.38 FORWARDS 3 months <FORWARDS> ASIA FUTURES 7.14 2.52 2.4 Close Change Bid Ask SGX Nikkei 225 17410.00 40.00 JPY -13.88 -13.68 SGX MSCI Taiwan 341.80 7800.00 377.90 2.50 205.00 1.60 AUD NZD HKD -58.1 -70.5 -2.5 -57.6 -70 0.5 8524.50 473.90 36.50 2.08 SGD THB 2.5 12.9 3 13.3 SGX FTSE China SGX MSCI Singapore SGX CNX Nifty SGX AC ASIA P xJP DEPOSITS 3 months <DEPOS> Bid -0.05 4.7 2.85 3.7 0.25 0.3125 JPY CNY AUD NZD HKD SGD 5 NDF’s 3 months Bid <NDFS> Ask CNY 0.0218 0.0238 TWD KRW INR -0.05 1117.4 62.901 -0.031 1118.4 62.971 MYR 3.3049 3.3079 PHP IDR 45.16 12320 45.2 12350 INSIDE DEBT November 21, 2014 EYE ON LATAM LATAM TOP STORIES LATAM MARKETS TODAY Mexico cuts 2014 growth forecast after surprisingly weak 3rd qtr TREASURIES Mexican 30-Year Mexico's finance ministry cut its 2014 growth forecast after the economy grew unexpectedly slowly in the third quarter in a modest recovery that is now also threatened by rising social unrest. Mexican gross domestic product expanded 0.5 percent in the third quarter from the second, the national statistics agency said, slowing from a downwardly revised 0.9 percent growth in the April-to-June period. The finance ministry said it now saw the economy growing between 2.1 and 2.6 percent in 2014, down from its previous 2.7 percent forecast. The revision is in line with analysts' projections for 2.3 percent growth this year. Pena Nieto has passed a series of economic reforms in the past two years, including opening up the state-run energy sector, but the laws could take years to boost the economy, and now weak growth and the political crisis have drawn attention away from his reform agenda. The economy grew 2.2 percent in the third quarter from the same period of 2013. A separate report showed the economy contracted for the second month in a row in September. Mexico's monthly economic activity index fell 0.1 percent compared with August. Banker to be named Brazil finance minister, papers say Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff will name respected banker Joaquim Levy as her new finance minister, three leading newspapers reported, signaling a shift toward more market-friendly policies that could breathe life into a stagnant economy. Levy's appointment was reported by Valor Economico, Folha de S.Paulo and Estado de S.Paulo, who cited unnamed sources. Reuters was not immediately able to confirm the decision, and a statement from Rousseff's office said the names of new ministers would not be announced on Friday. Levy, head of the asset management arm of Brazil's second largest private bank Bradesco SA and a former government treasury secretary, emerged as a candidate for the job Thursday after Bradesco's chief executive reportedly turned it down. The University of Chicago-trained economist is a proven fiscal hawk who helped Brazil obtain its investment grade rating while he was treasury chief between 2003 and 2006 by checking spending and overhauling its debt structure. Many investors hope Levy will be able to pull off a similar coup this time, if his appointment is confirmed. They say hefty budget cuts are necessary to restore confidence in an economy stuck in its fourth year of stagnant growth. Yield 6.75 Price 27 /32 Mexican10-Year 5.85 24 /32 Brazilian10-Year 12.41 542 /32 Brazilian 5-Year 12.38 201 /32 Chilean 30-Year 1.01 22 /32 Chilean 10-Year 0.38 -1 /32 Colombian 10-Year 6.55 -18 /32 Colombian 5-Year 5.40 4 /32 Venezuela PDVSA 20 year 15.01 120 /35 Venezuela PDVSA 10 year 21.96 93 /34 EQUITY MSCI Latin American Index Close 3137.04 Pct Change 4.48 Brazil's Bovespa Index 56084.04 5.02 Mexico's IPC Index 44633.28 0.96 Chile's IPSA Index 3988.04 0.3 Vale 20.22 6.93 Banco do Brasil 29.83 8.32 Bradesco 41.00 7.61 Petrobras 14.30 11.89 CURRENCIES Last Pct Change Brazilian Real 2.5152 -2.2 Mexican Peso 13.6187 -0.22 Chile Peso 594.4 -0.87 Columbian Peso 2145 -0.53 2.9115 -0.39 Peru Sol LATAM TOP STORIES (continued) what he called an "out-of-consensus base case scenario." However, downside risks for macroeconomic indicators and earnings remain relevant, he added. "From an equity strategy perspective, we are counterconsensus constructive on the second-term policy environment of the Rousseff government, and we continue to believe Brazil is a relatively 'easy' fiscal and monetary policy stabilization case," the note said. Argentina says Sept economic activity down 0.2 pct yr/yr Argentina's economic activity index fell 0.2 percent in September versus the same month last year, and rose 0.2 percent compared with previous month, the government said. HSBC sees improved Brazil risk, reward as Rousseff adjusts policies Peru's economy grows 1.76 pct in 3rd qtr, underscoring slowdown Strategists at HSBC Securities are recommending investors take on additional risk in Brazil, where equity markets sank about 30 percent from this year's peaks, on signs that President Dilma Rousseff will undertake gradual, more market-friendly policy adjustments ahead of her second term. In a client note distributed late on Thursday, a team of HSBC strategists led by Ben Laidler said the balance between risk and reward in Brazil's stock market improved after a recent sell-off and signals that Rousseff might fine-tune some of the economic policies she enacted in her first term. Laidler estimates that the MSCI Brazil equity index could rise as much as 16 percent, up from a prior 6 percent gain forecast, in Peru's economy grew 1.76 percent in the third quarter compared with the same period last year, the government said, underscoring the sharp slowdown in the Andean nation's economy caused by tumbling mineral exports. The July-September growth figure mirrored the 1.72 percent expansion recorded in the previous quarter and was far below the 5.2 percent registered in the third quarter of 2013. 6 INSIDE DEBT November 21, 2014 DEEP DIVE Commentary and Analysis Fed inflation goal and the 'coming years' mirage was concerned to convey in the language of the post-meeting statement that any decision regarding the timing of the first increase in the federal funds target range would be datadependent,” Stephen Lewis, Chief Economist at ADM Investor Services in London, wrote in a note to clients. Any ideas as to how they get to a place where they might hike? “One member,” unnamed but possibly Minneapolis Fed President and dove Narayana Kocherlakota, made noises about stronger forward guidance to undergird the inflation target, according to the minutes. Why exactly that would work when all the rest hasn’t is left up to us, imagination-dependent, as it were. None of this is to say that the U.S. is Japan, trapped by a declining population in a recessionary and deflationary future. One can only imagine what our economy would look like if we had a similar attitude to immigration as does Japan. But it is reasonable to ask if there are forces at work, probably global and quite possibly featuring the debt load, which make the current suite of policy tools ill-suited to the tasks on which they are being used. Monetary policy, in other words, is easy to enact, unlike fiscal policy. By James Saft The Federal Reserve’s 2 percent inflation objective feels more and more like an aspiration or, maybe, like steadily rising middle -class wages, a nostalgic anachronism. Policy-makers noted in the minutes from their October meeting that inflation not only continues to run below the Fed's longerrun goal but that some markets show investors demanding less inflation insurance as time passes. Yet the Fed chooses to reassure us with the following statements: “Many participants observed the committee should remain attentive to evidence of a possible downward shift in longer-term inflation expectations. Some of them noted that if such an outcome occurred, it would be even more worrisome if growth faltered.” Well, yes, growth faltering, as it seems to be doing elsewhere in the world, and may do in the U.S., would make that whole inflation issue a bit more sticky. But it gets better, because the Fed has not just a goal in mind, but a time frame. Check this out: “Participants anticipated that inflation would be held down over the near term by the decline in energy prices and other factors, but would move towards the Committee’s 2 percent goal in coming years.” In “coming years”. Lots of things may come to pass in “coming years”. Jet packs and the Cubs winning the World Series, to name just two. So I’ll give the Fed credit and agree that yes, we will some day return to normal inflation. What seems a lot less clear is when, and through what mechanism, exactly. After all, a minority of FOMC participants, what the Fed calls “a few,” were warning that inflation might stay below the objective for “quite some time,” another delightfully vague and contractually meaningless time frame. And note that the Fed was meeting before the release of the latest Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan survey which showed consumers have the lowest long-term (five-to-10-year) inflation expectations since the tail end of the recession in March 2009, at 2.6 percent this month, down 0.2 percentage point in a month. Now let’s put this in a bit of context. This is not simply the result of falling energy prices, and thus likely to come out in the wash in coming years. Inflation as the Fed best measures it has been below target for two and a half years and is only 1.4 percent. (James Saft is a Reuters columnist. The opinions expressed are his own. At the time of publication he did not own any direct investments in securities mentioned in this article. He may be an owner indirectly as an investor in a fund.) INVESTMENT FOCUS-Russian assets remain dangerous but not untouchable By Sujata Rao and Sam Wilkin Sanctions-hit Russian assets, weighed further by this year's collapse in energy prices and subsequent rouble slide, remain dangerous territory for many global investors but they are not seen as untouchable and some are scouting opportunities. Effectively an investor pariah since the March annexation of Ukraine's Crimea led to Western sanctions on several companies and individuals, Russian bonds, stocks and currency have performed worse this year than most other markets, these graphics show: PERSISTENCE IS A VIRTUE UNTIL IT ISN’T And remember too that we’ve had six years of extraordinary monetary policy, the vast majority of which is still in place subsequent to the taper of bond buying. While many are called out, rightly, for warning that QE would cause inflation which never came, the fact that so little did persist raises uncomfortable questions. All of this non-inflation is happening with job growth actually in quite peppy territory. Unemployment is only 5.8 percent for the first time in six years and the economy keeps creating 200,000plus jobs per month. So how exactly the Fed will manage to raise rates “in coming years,” presuming we won’t see a hike in December, remains unclear. Not only did the minutes show sensitivity to low inflation, but also to the rather minor turmoil seen recently in financial markets. If that scares them, just wait until risk investors actually think we might see a hike within a current bonus cycle. So, as it has been for a while, the Fed will play for time. “In light of uncertainties over the inflation outlook, the FOMC Click on the charts for full-size image That, to many, seems justified, given the risk of more sanctions that could lead to fresh market falls, economic recession and even corporate debt defaults. But some fund managers attending Reuters' Global Investment Outlook Summit this week also see opportunities, regardless of political risk. They note Russian share prices measured against future earnings are among the world's cheapest, and one-year government bond yields of 10 percent. Such valuations are "compelling", Anne Richards, CIO of Aber- 7 INSIDE DEBT November 21, 2014 DEEP DIVE Commentary and Analysis (continued) deen Asset Management told the summit in London. "We are more likely buyers than sellers," Richards said. Richards acknowledged risks to the Russian trade but said investors needed to look closely at companies' business models to gauge whether they would survive the political crisis "People still wash their clothes and need washing powder, people still wash their hair and need shampoo, people still drink beer. There are lots of things people will still do regardless of whether Russia invades Ukraine," she added. Bulls will note that returns on Russian stocks and bonds since 2000 far exceed those in most other markets, as the following graphics show: move in the underlying emerging bond index. "We still like Russia believe it or not," Greg Peters, who helps manage over $534 billion at Prudential Fixed Income told the summit in New York. "They have very little external debt, and you really have to see the current account crater in a way that's hard to foresee." "It's going to be volatile for sure, but I still think it's money good, and we still like it." Rouble debt is a more risky proposition but 10 percent yields may prove tempting, especially if the currency stabilises after its free-float earlier this month. Asset manager Lombard Odier for instance is overweight Russia in a fundamental-focus benchmark, based on criteria such as debt levels, balance sheet strength and political stability. "It's time to do math on Russian fundamentals and think less on geo-politics," Lombard Odier global fixed income strategist Salman Ahmed said. "Almost everything is in the price." To be sure there are many who will balk at buying into such a volatile market, which remains driven by geo-politics rather than valuations or fundamentals. Hedge fund star Michael Hintze of CQS, for instance, branded Russia an investment "black hole". But index-tracking funds must remain invested in Russia, which comprises around 5 percent of MSCI's emerging equity index and nearly 10 percent of debt benchmarks run by JPMorgan. Given sanctions affect only some new securities, existing Russian bonds and stocks continue in passive portfolios. Northern Trust for instance holds Russian assets in passive funds, Wayne Bowers, the asset manager's Europe and Asia CIO said, though he said the state of the economy would make him cautious about actively adding exposure. The biggest deterrent, especially for more conservative managers, is the prospect of a deeper crisis that leads to more sanctions, potentially trapping them in a free-falling market. George King, portfolio strategist at RBC Wealth Management said the mid-year bounce had led clients to question if another rebound could be in the offing should political noise abate. "We have had people ask us about it....is it time to play for a positive bounce in Russia?" he said. "Our answer is: it's a very dangerous game to play." Click on the charts for full-size image And even sceptics reckon Moscow will not want to escalate the Ukraine crisis further. So risk/reward on rouble assets is "more balanced than three months ago", according to Andrew Wilson, Europe CIO for Goldman Sachs Asset Management. There is also the danger of missing out on any recovery - Russia's dollar-denominated equity index jumped 40 percent between March and July when some calm returned to Ukraine. Wilson said he was cautious about adding to Russian positions but he is currently neutral, meaning his fund's holdings equal Russia's weight in debt and equity indexes. Bond investors will point to Russia's public debt levels of 10 percent of annual economic output - among the world's lowest and hundreds of billions of dollars in reserves as a reason why current bombed-out valuations make no sense. Russia pays a far higher yield premium over U.S. Treasuries on its dollar bonds than Brazil or Turkey whose credit ratings are lower and debt levels much higher. Its debt spreads have blown out 1.7 percentage points this year, more than five times the INSIDE DEBT is produced by Reuters in partnership with ICAP. Edited and compiled by Bijoy Koyitty and Shibesh Mehrotra in Bangalore. For questions or comments about this report, email us at: [email protected] ICAP: For additional information and to find out more about how ICAP's range of market information, commentary and research solutions can help your business, contact [email protected]. Americas: +1 212 341 9789 For Market Snapshot, ICAP provides OTC capital markets data, Thomson Reuters provides exchange data. © 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved. This content is the intellectual property of Thomson Reuters and its affiliates. 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