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WLD

Volatility assumptions look too low.

Resilience in the US has bolstered hopes for a soft landing that leaves financial markets and the real economy relatively undamaged. Global interest rate trajectories have converged, and long-term yields have dropped in line with signs of slowing inflation. The People’s Bank of China has kept a tight leash on the renminbi, while the Bank of Japan’s intervention threat has capped losses in the yen. A slowdown in the euro area has restrained the common currency’s gains against the dollar. Except for Treasury futures—which have been roiled by shifting views on inflation, underlying growth, fiscal funding gaps, and changing Fed...

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Economies are proving remarkably resilient.

The last year and a half should have been disastrous for the global economy. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine upended supply chains and sent energy prices soaring. Chinese authorities forced hundreds of millions into lockdown. High and persistent inflation forced central banks to raise interest rates at a pace unequalled since the 1980s. Housing markets tumbled. Bank failures triggered unease at the very core of the financial system. Political brinkmanship brought the US to the edge of default. Yet, over and over, worst-case fears in markets and boardrooms have gone unrealized. European economies retooled at lightning speed and a warm winter...

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Disinflationary forces are growing more powerful.

The “transitory” supply-side forces that lifted inflation through much of the post-pandemic period are retreating. With supply chains almost fully healed, global shipping costs have plunged, agricultural price indices are down more than 20 percent from their highs, and in most industrialized countries, grocery costs are softening in month-over-month terms. Energy prices remain elevated relative to historical averages, but are down dramatically from last year. And consumer expectations are coming down in most regions. On the demand side, a powerful feedback loop remains in play, with aggregate nominal household incomes rising as persistent labour market imbalances put upward pressure on...

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Policy expectations are stabilizing.

The pace of monetary tightening from major central banks is clearly decelerating, and rate hikes look likely to peter out almost completely by the early autumn, helping reduce overall policy uncertainty. Following a pause in June, the Federal Reserve looks likely move to the sidelines after delivering a final quarter-point increase at its July meeting, bringing rates to a 5.50-percent terminal level. The European Central Bank looks likely to follow a similar (but lagged) trajectory, with two half-point moves in July and September, followed by a shift onto a data-contingent footing. Investors currently have the Bank of England priced to...

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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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