Investment Outlook

How We Learned to Stop Worrying (so much) and Love “Da Bomb”

“It's a Dr. Strangelove world I suppose, or at least that's PIMCO's Secular Forum theme describing the likely global economic and investment environment over the next 3-5 years.”

It’s a Dr. Strangelove world I suppose, or at least that’s PIMCO’s Secular Forum theme describing the likely global economic and investment environment over the next 3-5 years. Not that we want to start you off with the impression that we are as deranged as Peter Sellers or as far gone as Slim Pickens riding that A bomb in our cartoon caricature. It’s just after listening to esteemed speakers such as Larry Summers and Martin Barnes, and analyzing months of internal PIMCO research during our recent three-day session in Newport Beach, that like the dear Doctor, we concluded we should stop worrying so much, or if not, at least try to love “da bomb.” “Da bomb?” We use the term loosely and with the spirit of youth who describe anything that is spectacular and enviable as “da bomb.” For the purpose of this Outlook, “da bomb” is globalization and all of its wondrous benefits – high growth, low inflation, accelerating profits, and benign interest rates. For that matter, you can compile a short list of critical factors that have aided and abetted globalization’s surge during the past decade or so: the information technology revolution, favorable government policies including inflation targeting and lower taxes, a shift to freer low cost markets in China and India , as well as moves towards deregulation and lower trade barriers worldwide. These have been PIMCO secular themes for years now, but somehow after correctly analyzing the evolution of “da bomb” we never stopped worrying about it and how it might end; like Slim Pickens headed for his mushroom cloud destination 20,000 feet below, we were giddy, but subconsciously pretty darn worried. We foresaw rising global growth, but said it would be “moderate” due to a lack of aggregate demand. We spoke to a “stable disequilibrium” which referred to good times now, but maybe bad times on the horizon, and emphasized not the stability but the potential downside arising from trade deficit imbalances, U.S. debt buildup, and resultant financial flows. Those worries were enough to tilt portfolio constructions towards a more U.S. centric housing led slowdown which we hit right on the money, but they steered us away from a more global orientation where the rest of the world continued to experience 5%+ growth rates and to dominate financial market trends.

Big deal or nuance? Well the fear of disequilibrium led to underweightings in risk assets and premature positions in front-end global yield curves over the past several years, and those positions cost us some basis points. So this Secular Forum stuff is quite important after all. Water under the bridge though and this is a new Forum. We put two glasses in front of those 80 or so in attendance in PIMCO’s big room (but clearly visible to the hundreds watching on screens in surrounding locations) and said: “This one’s half-empty, and this one’s half-full. It’s up to us to choose.” We didn’t really vow to stop worrying – just to worry less – and to look at “da bomb” from a different perspective and ask if there was a lotta love there. Let’s see what we found.

Secular Review
 Globalization. Technology. Freer markets/financial innovation. Favorable public policy. These are “da bomb’s” critical components and we could spend paragraphs expounding on the influence of each. Take it from us, we spent mucho hours of discussion with Larry Summers taking us through the intricacies of globalization and listening to the Bank Credit Analyst’s Martin Barnes – well he didn’t invent “da bomb” but he knows what goes into one. Let’s say for now though that all of these ingredients have combined to produce the dynamic trends displayed in our four mini-charts below: accelerating global growth; disinflation; increasing returns on equity capital; and low real interest rates.

Figure 1 is a bar chart that shows global growth in gross domestic product from 1980 to 2006. In recent years, GDP growth is at its highest point for the time period shown, with a peak of about 5.25% in 2006, compared with 4.8% in 2005, and 5.2% in 2004, which are also higher than all other years. Over the time period, growth typical ranges between a low of about 1%, in 1981, and 3.75%. It surpasses 4% in 1984, 1988, 2000, and the last three years shown. Figure 2 is a line graph showing the world average of consumer price inflation, from 1980 to 2006. Inflation peaks in the early 1990s around 36%, then sharply declines for the rest of the 1990s, finally reaching lows of around 5% by 2002, after which it remains flat. In 2006 it’s around that level. In the 1980s, inflation ranged between roughly 12% and 25%. Figure 3 is a line graph showing profits’ share of gross domestic product for the G7 Ex-Germany Index, from 1981 to late 2006. In late 2006, the index is around 1.34, up from its base of 1.0 in 1981. Its last trough during this time period is around 2001, at around 1.0, after which it rises sharply to its level of 1.34 six years later. The metric’s lowest level is around 1992, at 0.90, and shows peaks of about 1.18 in 1989, 1.13 in 1997, and 1.12 in late 2000. Figure 4 is a line graph showing the real 10-year government yield of the G7 basket deflated by G7 CPI, from 1981 to 2007. In 2007, the metric is around 2.4%, near its low for the period, which is about 1.8% in 2005. The yield starts in 1981 at around 3%, then trends upward to a peak of about 8.5% in 1984, after which it begins a steady long-term trend to its recent lows during this time frame.

And let’s be clear about one important thing. As investment managers as opposed to private citizens we don’t give much of a hoot about “da bomb” except as it affects those four little graphs and their trend lines that you see in front of you. Get them right and you’ll have what should be described I suppose as a “quadfecta” and a pot-load of alpha. Get them wrong and well…enjoy that ride Slim Pickens, the end is nigh! Interestingly, each of these trends has a common thread, as do the components of “da bomb”: The ascendance and dominance of capital vs. labor. Add a billion or so potential workers to the global labor force, blend in a technology S curve acceleration, combine these with deregulation, lower taxes, and free trade, and you have a recipe for accelerating returns to capital and diminishing returns to labor. Higher stock prices, lower inflation, declining interest rates and importantly a rather low volatility environment for both economic growth and asset prices have resulted. It’s known as the “great moderation” in economic circles, assisted not insignificantly by what has been called Bretton Woods II, a recirculation of surplus reserves into consuming nations that has promoted growth and lower interest rates – no mean feat in historical context.

What’s New?
Does this virtuous circle favoring capital at the expense of labor continue? We see nothing to stop it absent a global financial bubble popping of sorts, an accelerated decline of U.S. housing in the short run, or a U.S.-led trade policy reversal that could precipitate counter-attacks from Asian exporters. These three are not “black swans” as they say. Asset bubbles are a near inevitable result of attractively financed leverage in search of a limited array of financial assets – and the exuberance that inevitably accompanies them. In turn, if U.S. housing declines soon morph into the consumer sector, the belief in a U.S.-centric global economy will reemerge, and a cyclical argument for slower global growth will accompany it. Anti-trade legislation may or may not become a reality. Still, odds favor a continuation of recent years’ global growth rates and the favorable dynamics for most financial markets which accompany that secular 3-5 year forecast.

A bigger threat to asset markets however, comes not from slower economic growth in the short-term, but inflationary pressures towards the end of our secular timeframe. Note first of all the increasing influence of non-core food and energy prices in G-7 nations over the past few years as illustrated in Chart 5 for the United States . Since 1967, average differences in headline vs. core inflation have essentially been zero, despite distinct periods of cyclical variation. Now, however, with globalization so dominant and Chinese/Asian appetites for oil, soybeans, and iron ore amongst other commodities so voracious, it’s hard to envision an extended period of lower headline U.S. increases. This may bias more central banks to begin considering headline numbers in their policy decisions like Japan and the ECB do already.

Figure 5 is a line graph showing the annualized difference in average monthly rates for U.S. headline versus core inflation, from 1967 to 2007. In early 2007, the five-year rolling average of monthly headline inflation minus monthly core inflation is nearing a peak for the time span, at around 0.75%, a level last seen around 1981. The metrics lowest level is about negative 1.2% in 1986, after which it starts a steady climb to its peak in 2007. The metric is at its highest in the late 1970s, at around 1%.

There are other global threats to the disinflationary character of “da bomb.” Chart 6 outlines an increasing trend of import prices from mainland China through Hong Kong and then outward. Admittedly, the appreciation of the Yuan has played a part, but that, I suppose, is the point. As the Yuan inexorably revalues, China ’s ability to export deflationary impulses to the rest of the world becomes questionable, especially as it itself experiences internal inflation. China may still be exporting deflation to Asia and Euroland, but it clearly is beginning to export mild inflation to Japan and the U.S. And, although China and other BRICs/developing nations will undoubtedly remain mercantilistic exporters for years to come, an internal orientation is developing which at the margin absorbs excess savings, increases aggregate demand, and tilts global inflation upward. Importantly, special consultant to PIMCO Alan Greenspan has pointed out that the process of transitioning hundreds of millions of workers from planned economies to a market environment may peak in the next 2-3 years in terms of its rate of growth, reducing the disinflationary impact. Additionally, common sense would acknowledge that the labor/capital tug of war which has produced noticeable inequalities between wealthy and lower class workers would begin to be rectified globally via wage and benefit gains that in turn will pressure either profit margins, consumer prices, or both. Euroland’s tightening labor market may be this theory’s first petri dish.

Figure 6 is a line graph showing the percentage year-over-year change in prices of overall China exports to Hong Kong and Chinese consumer goods exports to Hong Kong, from 1995 to 2007. For both metrics, prices have been rising since around 2002 through the end of the period shown, with a 2.25% year-over-year increase in the prices for overall China exports to Hong Kong in 2007, while those of consumer goods exports are at around 2%. These are highs not seen since mid- to late-1990s. For the late 1990s and early 2000s, the two metrics fell in price. At the start of the graph, in 1995, overall exports to Hong Kong were around 5%, and those of consumer goods were around 2%.

All of this will make interesting discussion points at Central Bank policy meetings for years to come. Over 20 CBs (Central Banks) are officially on the “inflation-targeting” bandwagon with the U.S. a de facto member since the appointment of Ben Bernanke. Yet even if the magic 2% inflation target is agreed on by nearly all G-7 policymakers, and a 3-4% target by many developing nations, once-reliable short-term rate targeting levers may not work as effectively. The abundant liquidity of today’s financial marketplace may be another way of describing the ability of private agents – be they hedge funds, private equity, or simply old-fashioned banks – to create credit on their own given satisfactory reserve levels which are now more than ample. Unwillingness to employ increased margin requirements by the Fed during the NASDAQ bubble, and near 0% margin downpayments accepted by mortgage bankers during the housing bubble, give evidence to the diminishing influence of CBs and the growing influence of private agents in the credit creation process. Obviously the ultimate cost of money as determined by CBs is critical in reining in unlimited credit creation, but if the price to Wall Street is far less onerous than the cost to Main Street, there may be limits as to how far CBs can raise rates and therefore control inflation. In sum, “da bomb’s” low inflationary influence will predominate but some G-7 economies may come closer to experiencing 3% inflation as opposed to 2% as we move towards the end of our secular horizon.

Financial Markets
These portents of higher inflation and still strong global growth may seem negative for global bond markets and indeed they are, but cyclical countertrends as evidenced currently in the U.S., Japan , and elsewhere suggest caution in overreaching just yet into bearish secular territory . Additionally, astute investment managers recognize that these days, price/yield insensitive investment flows have been instrumental in “artificially” lowering global G-7 yields by as much as 50 basis points in recent years, although the dampening influence of these same flows on volatility may be a causal agent. What has been called Bretton Woods II is an economist’s label to describe the win/win game of buying surplus nations’ exports and watching those monies come straight back into the buyers’ financial markets in a form of vendor finance – at low yields no less. Following the flows (if you can) has been key in determining G-7 yield trends both short and long-term. Government intermediate and longer curves have been pushed down, and to counter the stimulative effect, short policy rates have been set higher than might otherwise be the case. To illustrate, “10-year real rates” throughout most G-7 curves have been lower in the past few years than they have been over the prior two decades as shown in Chart 7, part of a study done by PIMCO’s Ramin Toloui.

Figure 7 is a scatter plot of real G7 ten-year yields, shown on the Y-axis, and estimated G7 potential growth rates, shown on the X-axis. The graph includes plots for the years 1981 to 2006. The average of the plots forms a line with an upward slope of 3.12 and a correlation of 0.63. Two areas are highlighted: the years of 2001 to 2006 are clustered near the bottom left-hand end of the line, between 2% to 3% real growth, and roughly between 2.2% and 2.3% estimated growth. The other highlighted cluster is above the line, up and to the right, including years 1992, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1999, and 2000. Real growth for this group ranges roughly between 3.5% and 4.4%, and estimated potential growth is around 2.3% to 2.5%. Most of the other plots are up and to the right, above real yields of 4% and estimated growth rates of 2.8%.

Now, however, a growing number of investors are trying to “be like Yale or Harvard” by moving toward more diversified asset allocations, and that includes the holders of over 50% of outstanding U.S. Treasuries, Chinese and Petrodollar central authorities among them. A day after our Forum’s conclusion, for example, China eased investment restrictions in order to allow its commercial banks to buy stocks abroad. Even without a buyers’ strike or a dramatic reversal of the U.S. current account deficit though, Treasury yields (and other widely held G-7 government issues) will lose some of their caché over the next few years and real yields may rise somewhat. Still there are limits. As our own Paul McCulley suggests, the clearing real rate of interest is not driven so much by the flows of credit, but rather the yield that is necessary to stimulate aggregate demand – that good old glass half-empty influence of recent Secular Forums. We continue to accept the global economy’s structural demand “anemia,” while acknowledging that aggregate consumption and therefore real rates are likely to be boosted as BRIC and other populations adjust to an increased level of affluence by spending more and saving somewhat less at the margin.

As an additional statement of fact, although without firm conclusion, it is striking that real global growth as shown in Chart 8 is advancing at a 5% potential rate while G-7 countries are mired at levels just above 2%. Low policy and term real rates reflective of this 2% growth are in effect financing global growth at 5% – an unprecedented spread for at least the last several decades. Investment managers and economists are fond of speaking of the Yen carry trade – borrow near 0%, invest much higher – as being the dominant liquidity lever in today’s marketplace. Chart 8 speaks to a broader more significant carry trade which admittedly cannot be efficiently employed due to capital controls and relatively immature capital markets ( China, India , etc.). Still McCulley’s demand thesis can only stand in awe at the G-7 real yield/global growth rate gap, where G-7 yields in effect stabilize their own economies but serve to encourage attractive arbitrage opportunities into investments in the BRICs and other developing economies. One wonders if there may be some move towards closure in future years, a move that in turn would increase real yields, lower global growth or both.

Figure 8 is a line graph showing the estimated global potential growth and estimated G7 potential growth. Estimated global potential growth is shown from 1951 to mid-2007, and from 1992 onward shows steady increases, to about 5% in 2007, up from less than 3% in 1992. Estimated G7 potential growth is shown to move in the same direction as estimated global potential from its year of inception on the graph in 1972, when it’s around 4%, all the way to 2007, when its around 2.5%. When estimated global potential starts increasing in the early 1990s, estimated G7 potential growth continues declining to the early 2000s, then levels off. The divergence begins around 1993.

With the possibility of creeping inflationary tendencies, especially in weak currency countries including the U.S., combined with the potential reduction of financial flow subsidies which to this point have favored fixed income vs. equity and real commodity investments, we come to the following range forecasts for the secular timeframe from 2007 to 2011.

The figure is a table showing the 10-year note secular and average secular inflation forecasts for the United States, Europe and Japan as of 2007. Data are detailed within.

Readers and clients again are alerted to the probability of yields closer to the lower end of our ranges during the weak cyclical environment of 2007 and 2008. The U.S. housing downturn has yet to reach bottom in our opinion and its influence on U.S. consumption and global growth yet to weigh in. Markedly different duration and curve strategies throughout the period therefore may be called for.

As a continuing theme from last year’s forecast, the interest leverage throughout the global financial system will at some point pose a danger to risk-oriented markets (stocks, high yield debt, CDO structures, and housing prices). Yet our strong global growth forecast this year serves as a counterweight to perpetually glass half-empty portfolio structures. The immediate problem with a glass half-full orientation is that almost all risk spreads are already priced for the half-full or even a 7/8-full glass. What PIMCO is now attempting to identify are still appropriately priced “equity like” investments within the asset class choices available to a classic fixed income manager. If the world is going to exhibit near historic growth rates, we want to be able to participate – not only to outperform our indices but to offer attractive absolute returns as well. It will do you as clients, little good, if we outperform the unexciting asset class that G-3 bond markets represent, and yet provide returns of only 3% in doing so. What we want to be able to do is to take advantage of the high growth of emerging market economies – the BRICs and their smaller clones. That obviously can be done via emerging bond markets, yet spreads on their dollar-denominated bonds are narrow ( Brazil at 75 basis points over LIBOR). The best opportunities lie with still unexploited local currency fixed income markets (Brazil in this case at 500 basis points over LIBOR) and relatively liquid emerging market currencies which in effect allow bondholders to benefit from growth in these countries via a classically recognized yet not extensively used asset “class” – its currency. We will be in touch with you further regarding our purchase of these assets for your account.

The emphasis on emerging market currencies rather obviously suggests relative weakness of the U.S. dollar. We continue to believe that U.S. growth will descend towards the lower quartile of countries within a broad global composite. Such U.S. growth, despite relatively favorable demographic labor force trends spiked by immigration, will suffer due to reduced U.S. consumption and the need for higher savings. Even in the face of resistance by Chinese authorities vis-à-vis the Yuan and the Japanese via artificially low interest rates, this lower growth speaks to a weaker dollar and lower relative asset price appreciation in comparison to the rest of the world. PIMCO portfolios will therefore likely feature increasing international diversification in foreign currency terms.

We recommend as well that clients and other readers continue to diversify their asset mix with a growing percentage of commodities. In addition, Chart 8’s gap between G-7 financing rates and global economic growth indicates an asset bias towards owners not lenders. PIMCO, while continuing to be recognized as the authority on bonds will hopefully be able to assimilate equity-type returns into new products as well as many standard conventional portfolios.

Conclusions
We started out by suggesting the potential for a Dr. Strangelove world, and our conclusions suggest we may get it. “Da bomb” in the form of sustainable global growth with perhaps an early cyclical slowdown appears to be the likeliest outcome. Those who “own” this growth as opposed to those who lend to it will benefit. We will attempt to position ourselves to exploit this secular change in emerging economies, mindful of our roots as well as the inherent risks in the world of levered finance that is flocking to be like Harvard or Yale during a period of rising valuations. That suggests increasing scrutiny of not only economic growth, but the prices of assets that discount such growth. Hopefully at the end of our secular timeframe in 2012 we will be shouting “Wahoo!” like our boy Slim Pickens. It promises to be quite a ride. And as always, we thank you, our clients, for your trust and the opportunity to express all of the views expressed in this Outlook. If we worry about one thing it’s your satisfaction with our performance. Let it always be thus.

William H. Gross
Managing Director

Disclosures

London
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Limited
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Madrid
PIMCO Europe GmbH - Spain
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28046 Madrid, Spain
Tel: +34 810 809 912

Paris
PIMCO Europe GmbH - France
50–52 Boulevard Haussmann,
75009 Paris

Past performance is no guarantee of future results. This article contains the current opinions of the author but not necessarily those of PIMCO. Such opinions are subject to change without notice. This article has been distributed for educational purposes only and should not be considered as investment advice or a recommendation of any particular security, strategy or investment product. Information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but not guaranteed.