As 2019 Ends, Renewed Risk Appetite Stoking Markets

 | Dec 29, 2019 01:17AM ET

The year is winding down quietly, and the last week of 2019 is likely to be more of the same. The general mood of the market is quite different than a year ago. Then, investors had marked down equities dramatically amid fears of what was perceived as a synchronized downturn. Now with additional monetary easing in the pipeline and renewed expansion of the Federal Reserve and European Central Bank's balance sheets, risk appetites have been stoked.

Previously, the notion that the central banks can tame the business cycle was dismissed as hubris. Now, however, investors seem to be acting as if the business cycle has not just been tamed but has all but disappeared. The combination of easing monetary policy, some countries turning to fiscal policy (e.g., Japan, the UK, Canada, New Zealand), and what appears to be an extended tariff truce between the two largest economies, lifts the animal spirits of risk-taking.

However, just as we were skeptical of the profound bearishness a year ago, we are concerned now that the bullish is exaggerated. The Japanese economy is contracting, and India is slowing. Japan's preliminary manufacturing PMI was below the 50 boom/bust level for the eighth consecutive month. The final reading is not until January 5. India's manufacturing PMI rose in November for the first time since July. The December reading is due January 2. A year ago, it was above 53. Now it will be fortunate to remain above 51.

The market was surprised by the tick up in China's November PMI. Still, it did not presage an economic rebound as much as it signaled the economy may be stabilizing as the push for de-leveraging gives way renewed efforts to stimulate the economy. The November PMI gains are expected to be pared in December. China is not waiting for the legal trade document to be crafted. It continues to take measures that are consistent with the agreement and also in itself of interest. For example, China's soy imports from the U.S. more than doubled to 2. 6 mln tons in November from 1.1 mln tons in October. Officials have suggested that easier financial conditions will be forthcoming, and the overnight repo fell to its lowest rate in a decade last week. A reduction in the required reserve ratios has long been expected and could take place any day.

While the eurozone's service sector has shown some resiliency, manufacturing remains in poor health. The preliminary December reading was sobering given better German sentiment readings and ideas the worst is passed. It fell back to 45.9 from 46.9. It bottomed in September at 45.7. The final estimate will be issued on January 2, while the final services and composite reports are out the following week.

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Germany is the European engine. Its preliminary December manufacturing PMI dropped to 43.4 from 44.1. It was at 51.5 at the end of 2018. However, assuming no revision in the final estimate, the Q4 average of 43.2 would be the first quarterly increase since Q4 17. With new national strikes in France over pension reform, the economy may be vulnerable. The preliminary manufacturing PMI eased to 50.3 from 51.7. It bottomed at 49.7 in March and July. The silver lining is that with no revision, the French manufacturing PMI would average 50.9 in Q4, the strongest quarter since Q3 18. Spain and Italy's manufacturing was already in contraction in November, and it is expected to have deepened in December.

At her recent press conference, ECB President Lagarde pushed back against claims of the "Japanification of Europe" or that the negative interest rates have reached the "reversal point" where they are deterring activity by pointing to the growth in lending to households and non-financial businesses. These figures will be updated with the money supply report on January 3. M3 growth is expected to have ratcheted up to 5.7% from 5.6%, which puts it at its fastest pace since 2009.

The preliminary UK manufacturing PMI also fell in December. It returned to the trough set in August at 47.4 from 48.9 in November. The Bloomberg survey found that most economists suspect this is exaggerated and forecast that the final report on January 2 to be revised slightly higher. The following day, the UK is expected to report November lending data, and consumer credit and mortgage lending and approvals slowed. Investors seem to want to look past the near-term economic weakness anticipating a lifting of uncertainty over Brexit to fuel investment, helped by election promises of fiscal stimulus. International fund managers are thought to be underweight UK assets, and this may be a source of sterling demand, many expect.