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Friday, March 29, 2024

Morgan Stanley: “The Past Two Months Will Go Down As Some Of The Most Fascinating On Record”

Courtesy of ZeroHedge. View original post here.

Authored by Matthew Hornbach, head of global interest rate strategy at Morgan Stanley

When the history books are written on central banks and markets, the past two months will go down as a couple of the most fascinating on record. From its December high on the first day of the month to its low on the 24th, the S&P 500 fell 16%. That dramatic drop, among the declines in other risky asset prices, prompted the Federal Reserve to assuage investor concerns in the first week of January by invoking the word “patient”. Analysts of Fedspeak knew that meant inaction at the next two FOMC meetings, effectively taking the March rate hike off the table. Since then, the S&P 500 is up about 8% as of Thursday’s close.

On that nervous January 4th, when Chair Powell first used the word “patient”, he also said that “if [the FOMC] ever came to the conclusion that any aspect of our normalization plans was somehow interfering with our achievement of our statutory goals, we wouldn’t hesitate to change it, and that would include the balance sheet certainly”. Throughout the rest of January, investors would send a clear message: If the Fed wanted financial conditions to help in achieving those statutory goals then, at a minimum, holding off on further hikes would be a good place to start.

To many market observers, including those on the FOMC, January’s price action may have suggested something else as well: What happened in 4Q18 was not about balance sheet normalization. However, we think that jumping to such a conclusion will not serve investors well in 2019, nor will trying to pin the blame for what happened in 4Q on any single factor. By our measures, financial conditions were on a tightening path through most of 2018 and one that began, importantly, after the balance sheet began to normalize. Coincidence? We think not.

As we discussed in our recent note, Insight into the Balance Sheet, we believe the shrinking of the Fed’s balance sheet, in conjunction with higher risk-free rates, causes private sector portfolios to rebalance away from risky assets and toward US Treasuries and agency MBS. This portfolio rebalancing – known as the portfolio balance channel effect – has been taking place all year in increasingly larger volumes. The 4Q rebalancing simply happened to coincide with a period of reduced liquidity and softening growth expectations, both at home and abroad. Of course, the environment in which portfolios rebalance matters. And the environment in December was not supportive of de-risking flows.

It’s worth emphasizing how portfolio rebalancing works in conjunction with interest rate levels to move markets. With quantitative easing (QE), the Fed removed assets of long duration (Treasuries and agency MBS) and replaced them with assets of zero duration (cash). This occurred just as the incentive to own longer-duration assets of all kinds – e.g., corporate debt and equities – was rising, thanks to near-zero yields on shorter-duration assets. As a result, portfolios rebalanced toward scarce, riskier assets of longer duration, which drove prices higher.

With balance sheet normalization, or quantitative tightening (QT), the Fed is removing assets of zero duration and, indirectly, replacing them with assets of longer duration. If the policy rate were still near zero, the relative demand for longer-duration assets might remain robust, even in the face of higher supply. However, the Fed is implementing QT with a much higher policy rate (see Exhibit), leading to higher demand for shorter-duration assets. As a result, portfolios are rebalancing away from riskier assets of longer duration, and this is now driving prices lower.

This framework suggests that the Fed’s decision to exercise more patience in raising rates further should prevent accelerated de-risking for now. At the same time, the previous incentives to de-risk still exist, and the Fed continues to force portfolio rebalancing. As a result, we expect that underlying financial conditions will tighten further as de-risking continues. We think that tightening will be driven by lower risky asset prices, while lower US Treasury yields act as a partial offset. Helped by a more patient Fed, 10-year Treasury yields should end the year at 2.45%.

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