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Markets are capitulating.

After a long series of shockingly-positive data releases out of the United States, investors are suddenly more convinced that policymakers will succeed in pulling off an “immaculate disinflation” – in which price growth comes back to target without triggering a big rise in unemployment. Equity valuations, long-term yields, financial conditions, and consensus economic forecasts are all pointing to stronger conviction in a “soft landing” scenario, and a growing number of previously-bearish market pundits have pivoted, pushing recession forecasts into late 2024 and beyond. Currency markets have realigned, with the greenback following archetypal “smile” dynamics in falling against its counterparts in...

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The laws of economic gravity have not been repealed.

Growth through much of the post-pandemic period has defied traditional business-cycle analysis, and the noise-to-signal ratio in economic data remains extraordinarily high. Yet the sheer breadth and diversity of recession indicators that are currently flashing red in developed economies – inverted yield curves, tighter bank lending standards, weak manufacturing activity and depressed consumer confidence – would suggest that a deepening slowdown is underway. We think global growth rates will slow sequentially in the third and fourth quarters as the lagging impact of higher rates hits home and household demand continues to normalise relative to pre-pandemic levels. Corporate labour hoarding and...

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Volatility is picking up.

Australian dollar turbulence is increasing, with the currency trading in a widening 450-pip band centered around the 0.67-cent mark in recent weeks. The exchange rate has been swung around by shifts in expectations around tightening cycles at the Federal Reserve and Reserve Bank of Australia, China’s faltering post-COVID lockdown recovery, and subsequent stimulus expectations, the downshift in global growth, Australia’s domestic economic resilience in the face of rising interest rates, and evolving risk sentiment. We think these gyrations could be taste of things to come in the third quarter. The Australian and global economies have entered a more challenging phase,...

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Volatility could make a comeback.

The factors pushing volatility lower through the first half of the year are beginning to lose traction, and the list of outcomes that could topple prevailing market assumptions is multiplying: Long-term interest rates could yet revert higher if inflation rates remain elevated. A policy mistake could trigger a financial crisis or drive economies into recession more quickly than currently expected. A ceasefire in Ukraine could drive a reappraisal in global energy markets and lift the euro out of its malaise. An aggressive stimulus push from Chinese authorities might send commodity prices soaring. The artificial intelligence mania could reach new heights...

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Expectations are low.

The renminbi has remained in a downtrend for much of the year, falling to its lowest levels against the dollar since November 2022. The upward adjustment in US interest rate assumptions has coincided with a faltering post-Covid economic rebound to weaken rate differentials and limit the appeal of Chinese assets. With domestic demand remaining stubbornly anemic, markets are convinced policymakers are preparing to roll out a range of measures – including more rate cuts – to support growth in coming months. Much like our thoughts regarding the Japanese yen, we believe a lot of negativity may now be built into...

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