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efta-01458994DOJ Data Set 10OtherEFTA01458994
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DOJ Data Set 10
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efta-01458994
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8 December 2015
World Outlook 2016: Managing with less liquidity
The goods-services divide suggests the Fed and ECB are misdiagnosing
underlying inflation: low goods inflation is a global phenomenon that reflects
the dollar up and commodity down cycles. which are accelerated by monetary
policy divergence: services inflation is running much stronger and rising. Core
goods inflation (25% weight in the US; 38% weight in Europe) consistently
runs well below core services inflation. In the US, core goods inflation has
been running slightly negative for three years, while core services a much
stronger 2.5% for the last four years and recently moved to a new cycle high.
In the Euro area, core goods inflation is running higher than in the US
reflecting the depreciation of the euro, while core services has been moving up
and is running at 1.4%. Core goods inflation in the US is strongly correlated
with import price inflation. Zero or slightly negative core goods inflation in the
US can also be thought of as foreign inflation less the dollar's appreciation.
Core services inflation in the US has moved up over the last three months and
has a fair degree of catch up to do with the decline in unemployment relative
to the NAIRU and rental vacancies.
The dollar up cycle should have In'-; to care medium term but -steed bit:takers
are now in place to slow the pace. The US trade-weighted dollar rose 23%
during Jun 2014-Mar 2015, the fastest pace ever with about three years of
appreciation in a typical dollar up cycle packed into nine months. The rapid
appreciation erected two speed breakers which should slow the pace: lower
core goods inflation prompted the Fed to push out rate guidance in April
(marking a top in the dollar for next seven months); the drag on US growth and
earnings has seen a big reallocation (S-150bn) out of US equities into Europe.
Historically turns in productivity are led by the dollar. typical lag implies we are
at the cusp. Historically, over the post-World War II period, productivity has
grown at a trend rate of 2.1% per year, with long multi-year cycles in the level
of productivity around this trend. The current level is near the bottom of the
trend channel, a level last seen in 1995. Incentives matter: the dollar looks to
have been an important driver of productivity historically. There has been a
relatively strong correlation between the lagged level of the trade weighted
dollar and productivity. The average lag looks to have been about three years.
Cyclical asset allocation: large over.a€location to fixed income at the expense
of equities persists. Around recessions, flows overweight bonds over equities.
Asset allocation re-normalizes around Fed hiking cycles. This time various QEs,
calendar guidance and Twist prompted investors to put even more money into
bonds long after the recession. Despite equity inflows resuming in 2013
(especially after the taper) cumulative overweight in bonds is still $748bn and
underweight in equities $1.4 ten. Each episode of rising rates over the last five
years saw robust reallocations from bonds to equities.
The cross asset rates minder
Rate normalization cycles have long been associated with significant price
losses on the 10y. Previous rate hiking cycles each saw long-lived capital
losses on the 10y, averaging -11%. We estimate that a catch back up of
market expectations to the Fed's guidance is worth +150bps in the l0y
implying a significant potential re-pricing. The current divergence two years
ahead is comparable with historical experience near turning points in rate
cycles.
Page 68
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Deutsche Dank AG/London
CONFIDENTIAL - PURSUANT TO FED. R. CRIM. P. 6(e)
CONFIDENTIAL
SDNY_GM_00265359
DB-SDNY-0119175
EFTA01458994
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