What To Expect In 2017: 5 Key Themes

 | Dec 11, 2016 03:54AM ET

Economic Commentary

The year 2016 was dominated by an environment of multi-year lows in oil prices and global bond yields as well as political surprises. Much of this is set to change in 2017, where we see five key themes emerging. First, we expect a shift in policy focus from monetary to fiscal in AEs. Second, we expect expansionary fiscal policy in the US to push the Fed to tighten monetary policy at a faster pace, raising US yields.Third, higher US interest rates are expected to increase the risk of capital flight from EMs. Fourth, we expect a recovery in global oil prices as the market rebalances with OPEC production cuts and strong demand growth. And fifth, we expect heightened political risk with the rise of populism and important elections in Europe.These themes predominantly offer positive growth dynamics for advanced economies (AEs), but could act as a drag on growth for emerging markets (EMs).

First, the anticipated fiscal stimulus in AEs in 2017. In the US, Trump has promised tax cuts and infrastructure and defence spending. Elsewhere, monetary policy has reached its limits with interest rates as low as they can go and quantitative easing losing efficacy. For instance, the ECB’s deposit rate is at -0.4% and it is running out of assets to buy due to restrictions on its quantitative easing programme. Years of fiscal austerity and falling interest rates have helped create fiscal space and a number of major economies are now planning a stimulus for 2017. In Europe, draft budgets submitted to the EU point to stimulus and spending tends to rise in election years. Both Japan and the UK have announced increased infrastructure spending. The fiscal stimulus in advanced economies should help raise growth to 1.7% in 2017 from 1.6% in 2016.

In the US, fiscal stimulus is expected to raise growth and inflation, implying faster rate hikes by the Fed. This leads to our second theme of rising US yields. The US Treasury 10-Year yield has risen around 50bps since Trump’s election on the expectation of a large fiscal stimulus. If Trump’s tax cuts and infrastructure spending are implemented, US interest rates are likely to continue to rise.

Net portfolio flows of EM equity and debt (USD bn)