World Economy
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Global Markets Predict Decades of Inflation Trouble

Global Markets Predict  Decades of Inflation Trouble
Global Markets Predict  Decades of Inflation Trouble

It might seem extraordinary that the developed world could fail to generate enough growth to lift inflation back to target for decades, yet there is mounting evidence this is a real possibility.

The steady slide in market gauges for long-term inflation in the US, Europe and Japan has accelerated since Britain’s vote to leave the EU last month, which dealt a fresh blow to a stuttering global economy, Reuters reported.

The last century has been punctuated by pockets of low or declining consumer prices, but even those warning of the depressing effects on inflation of shifts like slowing birth rates may be underestimating what awaits if markets are right.

This will have profound implications for wages, spending and levels of debt across the developed world.

Some investors warn these market bellwethers—closely watched by central bankers hoping their vast stimulus injections will prove effective—are way off the mark. However, few appear to be trying to profit from this supposed mispricing in inflation-protected bonds.

“What the inflation market is currently pricing is an incredibly benign inflation trajectory in the next 10 to 20 years,” said Martin Hegarty, head of inflation-linked bond portfolio at BlackRock in New York.

Breakeven Rates

“We are pricing a run rate that implies the Fed will miss its inflation target for a very, very long time and not only a miss but miss by a very wide margin.”

The so-called “breakeven rate”—the difference between the yield on an inflation-protected and a nominal bond of the same maturity—is viewed as a proxy for market inflation expectations.

Breakeven rates in the world’s largest economy, the US, are currently 1.49% for 10-year debt and 1.63% for 30-year bonds. This shows investors believe the Federal Reserve will miss its 2% inflation target over the next three decades.

Central banks in the eurozone and Japan face an even bigger challenge in getting consumer price growth back to their 2% targets, market pricing suggests.

German 10-year and 30-year breakeven rates, the eurozone benchmarks, stand at 0.78% and 1.1% respectively, while Japan’s 10-year rate is just 0.28%.

Even financial derivatives designed to strip out near-term volatility—five-year forward inflation rates which measure where 2026 inflation expectations will be in 2021—paint an ominous picture in the eurozone and Japan.

“Market measures of inflation are starting to reflect this idea of global secular stagnation—that the money central banks are spending will struggle to harness animal spirits and drive up inflation,” said Mizuho International’s head of euro rates strategy, Peter Chatwell.

One outlier is the United Kingdom, where markets expect inflation to overshoot as the country goes through painful devaluation of its currency post-Brexit.

It is hard to measure the historical accuracy of these longer-term market measures against survey-based forecasts, which tend not to venture as far into the future.

But analysis by Mizuho shows that when it comes to predicting eurozone inflation a year in advance, market inflation swap rates have shown a statistically relevant degree of accuracy since 2010, while the ECB’s survey of professional forecasters has not.

Yet within the central banking community, distrust of these market gauges is growing.

Modest Flows

If investors thought inflation-linked bonds were under-pricing the future path of consumer price growth, a rush of buyers should be expected to purchase inflation protection below its expected value.

According to ING fund data, that has not been the case, implying investors either have little conviction about future inflation or are worried about a further decline.

In the first week of July, inflows into inflation-linked bond funds were modest, equating to a 0.3% build in North American assets under management and a 0.1% rise in Western Europe funds.

Over the past month, inflows were 1.3% in North America, while Western Europe saw outflows of 1.4%.

Demand for inflation-linked bonds in Japan is so tepid that the ministry of finance was forced to reduce the amount it planned to issue earlier this year.

 

Financialtribune.com