SGX Stocks and Warrants

Strategy: Fed Makes Emergency 50bp Cut

kimeng
Publish date: Wed, 04 Mar 2020, 12:47 PM
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  • Fed cuts Fed Fund rate from 1.50%-1.75% to 1.00%-1.25% in emergency meeting
  • Messaging suggests more cuts to come if virus outlook deteriorates as anticipated
  • Expect global central banks to follow Fed’s lead; we maintain neutral position in equities

 

The Fed is taking the lead in delivering stimulus with a bang, only a few hours after it had participated in a joint statement from G7 central banks which attempted to assure markets that “all appropriate policy tools” would be employed to support growth.

By announcing an intermeeting 50bp rate cut, the Fed has lowered the Fed Funds rate from the previous range of 1.50%-1.75% to 1.00%-1.25%.

Importantly, the Fed’s messaging suggests that this is not a “50bp and done”. In his press conference, Powell stated that the risks from the outbreak to the US growth outlook has “changed materially” and that the Fed was “prepared to act appropriately.” Judging from history, this language from the Fed against a backdrop of an external growth shock and low inflation suggest a bias for more cuts ahead as the Fed assess incoming data relating to the outbreak.

In the event that the outlook for the virus outbreak unexpectedly improves, the Fed would retain the optionality to go on hold. But if the trajectory of the outbreak and economy continues to deteriorate sharply in the weeks ahead, as per our base case scenario, we believe the Fed would make one to two more 25bp cuts in its scheduled meetings in March and April.

We see global central bankers taking the Fed’s cue. The Bank of Canada could cut its overnight rate by as much as 50bp to 1.25% today. The Bank of England can be expected to cut rates by 25bp to 0.50% when it meets on 26 March.

The BOJ and ECB has less policy space to ease than the Fed but will be under pressure to follow the Fed’s lead. Over the next few months, the BOJ could potentially cut rates by 10–20 bp deeper into negative territory and increase asset purchases but their hope would be that fiscal action from the government can take the lead. The ECB would focus its measures on easing credit tightness for corporates under stress from the virus outbreak and potentially more asset purchases and marginal rate cuts to the tune of 10-20 bp if foreign exchange pressures arise.

In the aftermath of the Fed cut, the US equity markets first rallied but quickly lost its gains, closing the session down about 3%. This reflects the view that monetary stimulus is a blunt tool against a medical outbreak which appears poised to cause a sharp economic shock in terms of widespread consumer demand shock and supply chain disruptions.

That said, monetary easing can help at the margin by supporting aggregate demand, for instance through savings gained via mortgage refinancing, and also offsetting the deterioration in financial conditions and sentiments.

In the aftermath of the Fed cut, we also saw the dollar easing against major peers. As the Fed has more scope for conventional rate cuts ahead versus major peers, we see the scope for moderating dollar strength - typically a positive factor for emerging markets. In particular, we now see a stronger setup for EUR appreciation against the USD and see the EURUSD at 1.16 in 12 months. Even accounting for policy responses from global central banks and governments ahead, we see significant scope for market volatility as the outlook for the virus and economy deteriorates as anticipated, and we expect near-recession growth in the second and third quarter of this year before a recovery in late 2020 and after.

Our neutral position in equities reflects prudence in this uncertain environment; while we believe it is too early to buy this correction, our base case is that the virus outbreak would not derail the longterm economic expansion. While the outbreak is escalating, investors should avoid areas of clear risk, for instance, industries such as travel, hospitality, restaurants, offline retail and entertainment.

As rates continue to fall, the search for yield will continue to be a structural driver of markets. We recommend switches from poorer quality assets into selective quality dividend-yielding stocks, such as Singapore REITs. Additionally, investors should monitor opportunities to switch into companies with solid long-term fundamentals that should emerge relatively unscathed from the virus outbreak.

It is also critical that investors build up portfolio resilience through active diversification and explore incorporating hedges into their portfolios, which

Source: OCBC Research - 4 Mar 2020

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