By William H. Gross
- Investors should recognize that Euroland’s
problems are global and secular in nature; it will be years before
Euroland and developed nations in total can constructively escape from
their straitjacket of debt.
- Global growth will likely remain stunted,
interest rates artificially low and investors continually disenchanted
with returns that fail to match expectations.
- Investors should consider risk assets in emerging
economies, such as Brazil and Asia, and bonds in the strongest developed
economies, where the steep yield curve may offer opportunities for capital
gains and potentially higher total returns.
A 12-year-old coffee mug has a permanent place on the
right corner of my office desk. Given to me by an Allianz executive to
commemorate PIMCO’s marriage in 1999, it reads: “You can always tell a German
but you can’t tell him much.”
It was hilarious then, but less so today given the
events of the past several months, which have exposed a rather dysfunctional
Euroland family. Still, my mug might now legitimately be joined by others that
jointly bear the burden of dysfunctionality.
"Beware of Greeks bearing gifts” could be one;
“Luck of the Irish” another; and how about a giant Italian five-letter “Scusi”
to sum up the current predicament?
The fact is that Euroland’s fingers are pointing in
all directions, each member believing they have done more than their fair share
to resolve a crisis that appears intractable and never-ending. The world is
telling them to come together; they’re telling each other the same; but as of
now, it appears that you can’t tell any of them very much.
The investment message to be taken from this policy
foodfight is that sovereign credit is a legitimate risk spread from now until
the “twelfth of never.”
Standard & Poor’s shocked the world in August with
its downgrade of the U.S. – one of the world’s cleanest dirty shirts – to
double A plus. But what was once an emerging market phenomenon has long since
infected developed economies as post-Lehman deleveraging and disappointing
growth exposed balance sheet excesses of prior decades.
Portugal, Ireland, Iceland and Greece hit the
headlines first, but “new normal” growth that was structurally as opposed to
cyclically dominated exposed gaping holes in previously sacrosanct sovereign
credits.
What has become obvious in the last few years is that
debt-driven growth is a flawed business model when financial markets and
society no longer have an appetite for it. In addition to initial conditions of
debt to gross domestic product and related metrics, the ability of a sovereign
to snatch more than its fair share of growth from an anorexic global economy has
become the defining condition of creditworthiness – and very few nations are
equal to the challenge.
It was in this “growth snatching” that the
dysfunctional Euroland family was especially vulnerable. Work ethic and hourly
working weeks aside, the Euroland clan has long been confined to the same
monetary house. One rate, one policy fits all, whereas serial debt offenders
such as the U.S., U.K. and numerous G-20 others have had the ability to print
and “grow” their way out of it.
Beggar thy neighbor if necessary was the weapon of
choice in the Depression, and it has conveniently kept highly indebted
non-Euroland sovereigns with independent central banks afloat during the past
few years as well. Depressed growth with more inflation, perhaps, but better
than the alternative straitjacket in Euroland. As currently structured,
Euroland’s worst offenders now find themselves at the feet of a Germanic
European Central Bank that cannot be told to go all-in and to print as much and
as quickly as America and its lookalikes.
Proposals from the German/French axis in the last few days have heartened risk markets under the assumption that fiscal union anchored by a smaller number of less debt-laden core countries will finally allow the ECB to cap yields in Italy and Spain and encourage private investors to once again reengage Euroland bond markets. To do so, the ECB would have to affirm its intent via language or stepped up daily purchases of peripheral debt on the order of five billion Euros or more. The next few days or weeks will shed more light on the possibility, but bondholders have imposed a “no trust zone” on policymaker flyovers recently. Any plan that involves an “all-in” commitment from the ECB will require a strong hand indeed.
On the fiscal side the EU’s solution has been to
“clean up your act,” throw out the scoundrels and scofflaws (eight governments
have fallen) and balance your budgets. Such a process, however, almost
necessarily involves several years of recessionary growth and deflationary wage
pressures on labor markets in the offending countries. While the freshly
proposed 20-30% insurance scheme of the European Financial Stability Facility
(EFSF) offers hope for the refunding of maturing debt, it is the deflationary,
growth-stifling, labor/wage destroying aspect of the EU’s original currency
construction that threatens a positive outcome over the long term. Without an
ability to devalue their currency vs. global competitors or even – “Gott im
Himmel” – Germany itself, peripheral countries may have survival to look
forward to, but little else. Perhaps the Italians and Spaniards will put up
with it, but maybe they won’t. The ultimate vote of the working men and women
in these countries will always hang over the markets like a Damocles sword or
perhaps a French/German guillotine. If the axe falls, then bond defaults may
follow no matter what current policies may promise in the short term.
Investors and investment markets will likely be
supported or even heartened by recent days’ policy proposals. The problem of
Euroland is twofold however. First of all, they will remain a
dysfunctional family no matter what the outcome. You can’t tell a German much,
and while they can issue what appear to be constructive orders and solutions to
the southern peripherals, there is little doubt that none of them will “like it
very much.” Slow/negative growth and historically wide bond yield spreads will
therefore likely continue. Globalized markets themselves will remain relatively
dysfunctional, pointing towards high cash balances in presumably safe haven
countries such as the United Kingdom, Canada and the United States. The U.S.
dollar should stay relatively strong, ultimately affecting its own anemic
growth rate in a downward direction.
Secondly, and perhaps more importantly however,
investors should recognize that Euroland’s problems are global and secular in
nature, reflecting worldwide delevering and growth dynamics that began in 2008.
It will be years before Euroland, the United States, Japan and developed
nations in total can constructively escape from their straitjacket of high debt
and low growth. If so,
then global growth will remain stunted, interest rates artificially low and the
investor class continually disenchanted with returns that fail to match
expectations. If you can get long-term returns of 5% from either stocks or
bonds, you should consider yourself or your portfolio in the upper echelon of
competitors.
To approach those numbers, risk assets in developing
as opposed to developed economies should be emphasized. Consider Brazil with
its agricultural breadbasket and its oil. Consider Asia with its underdeveloped
consumer sector but be mindful of credit bubbles. In bond market space, the
favorite strategy will be to locate the cleanest dirty shirts – the United
States, Canada, United Kingdom and Australia at the moment – and focus on a
consistent, “extended period of time” policy rate that allows two- to ten-year
maturities to roll down a near perpetually steep yield curve to produce capital
gains and total returns which exceed stingy, financially repressive coupons. A
1% five-year Treasury yield, for instance, produces a 2% return when held for
12 months under such conditions. Bond investors should also consider high as
opposed to lower quality corporates as economic growth slows in 2012.
Because of Euroland’s family feud, because of too much
global debt, because of deflationary policy solutions that are in some cases
too little, in some cases ill conceived, and in many cases too late, financial
markets will remain low returning and frequently frightening for months/years
to come. I can imagine the coffee mugs for 2020 now: “Gesundheit!” from the
Germans, “C’est la vie,” from the French and “Stiff Upper Lip,” from the
British. In the United States I suppose it’ll still say, “Let’s go shopping,”
although our wallets will be skinnier. You can always tell an American, you
know, but you can’t tell ‘em to stop shopping. Likewise, investors should
always be able to tell a delevering, growth constrictive global economy – but
perhaps not. Dysfunction is not exclusive to politicians. Families, it seems,
feud everywhere.
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