Friday, March 8, 2019

US Annual Economic Outlook 2019


Despite the turmoil, the global economy will continue to grow with low inflation in 2019
2018 has been a year of turmoil for financial markets with weakness in the bond markets and two significant sell-offs in equity markets. However, 2019 promises to be much calmer. After a very strong start in equity markets between November 2017 and the end of January 2018, there was a big sell-off from January to April, and another beginning in October and continuing through to December. In between there was a series of disturbances in emerging markets (EM) featuring crises in Venezuela, Argentina and Turkey. In addition to the long-running saga of the Brexit negotiations, the year featured a strong rise in the price of oil followed by a sudden collapse from early October, and disruptions created by President Trump’s repeated trade measures – targeted first at steel and aluminium, then at Europe and NAFTA (North America Free Trade Agreement), and ultimately focusing primarily on China. With numerous other geopolitical events adding to investors’ anxieties – such as wars and unrest in the Middle East, continuing immigration pressures in Europe and the US, the victory of populists over the establishment in Italy and the consequent budget disputes with the EU Commission in Brussels – there was plenty of reason for investors to pull back from risk-markets such as equities. However, the fundamental backdrop to all this was the US Federal Reserve’s (Fed) policy of normalising US interest rates, raising them from 1.25% in early December 2017 to 2.25% a year later, and shrinking it balance sheet. Rising US rates always create a challenging environment for investors. After nearly a decade of virtually zero interest rates, the upturn in rates has put steadily increasing pressure on equity and other risk asset classes. Although some of these geopolitical events may prove to be temporarily damaging, it is my view that they will prove to be no more than waves on the surface of the tide which is the record-breaking expansion of the US business cycle. (Greenwood, 2019)

US monetary policy is becoming less accommodative, but the Fed is not “tightening”, only “normalising” policy. The current “normalisation” phase is analogous to the mid-course corrections in interest rates that occurred in 1994-95 and 2004-05. The important point about those episodes was that the business cycle continued to expand for several years after the completion of normalisation, and the equity and real estate markets also peaked considerably after these rate hikes were completed. At its meeting on 7-8 November the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) of the Fed kept the federal funds rate at 2.0-2.25%, having removed in September the wording in their previous statements that had asserted the “stance of monetary policy remains accommodative”. The median projection of FOMC members for the federal funds rate remained at 3.1% for 2019 (suggesting four rate hikes of 0.25% during 2019) and 3.4% for 2020, but with the recent sell-off on Wall Street and the plunge in the price of WTI oil to $51 the FOMC may defer raising rates at their meeting on 18-19 December.

Bibliography


Greenwood, J. (2019). Annual Economic Outlook 2019. Invesco.




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