Reflation Trade Is The New Bullish Narrative

by Lance Roberts, RIA

Economic ā€œreflationā€ is becoming the next bullish narrative as equity valuation increases continue to outpace earnings gains, at least according to Gold Sachs and Tony Pasquariello.

ā€œIf GS is correct on the big calls, the macro backdrop is set to remain friendly: the US economy should continue to grow nicely above trend ā€” picking up speed as the year moves along ā€” with three adjustment rates cuts along the way. Ā to not obscure the moral of that story: the Fed is set to ease policy ā€¦ into an upswing. Ā while Fedspeak this week had a somewhat hawkish bent, the house view for 2024 remains intact.ā€

Interest rates, gold, and commodity prices have increased in the past few months. Unsurprisingly, the bullish narrative to support that rise has gained traction. Interestingly, this ā€œreflationā€ narrative tends to resurface by Wall Street whenever there is a need to explain the surge in commodity prices. Notably, the last time Wall Street focused on the reflation trade was in 2009, as noted by the WSJ:

ā€œThe most talked-about investing strategy these days isnā€™t stuffing money in a mattress, itā€™s the reflation trade ā€” the bet that the world economy will rebound, driving up interest rates and commodities prices.ā€

CRB index vs Oil Prices

While that ā€œreflation tradeā€ lasted for about two years, it quickly failed as economic growth returned to 2%-ish growth along with inflation and interest rates. As shown, oil and commodity prices have a very high correlation. The critical reason is that higher oil prices reduce economic demand. As consumption falls, so does the demand for commodities in general. Therefore, if commodity prices are to ā€œreflate,ā€ as shown, such will depend on more robust economic activity.

CRB index vs GDP

As such. The reflation trade hinges on a global resurgence of economic activity, usually associated with economies recovering from a recessionary period. However, the U.S. never experienced a recession. As discussed in ā€œDeficit Spending,ā€ despite numerous recessionary signals, like the inverted yield curve, manufacturing data, and leading economic indicators, the economy avoided recession due to massive governmental spending. To wit:

ā€œOne explanation for this has been the surge in Federal expenditures since the end of 2022 stemming from the Inflation Reduction and CHIPs Acts. The second reason is that GDP was so grossly elevated from the $5 Trillion in previous fiscal policies that the lag effect is taking longer than historical norms to resolve.ā€

Federal Receipts & Expenditures

While economists focus on the ā€œreflation trade,ā€ we must answer whether the support for more substantial economic growth exists. This is the sole determining factor in whether the ā€œreflation tradeā€ can continue.

Is Reflation Already Behind Us?

Interest rates and inflation have ticked up recently, driving investors into gold and commodities. However, the surge in precious metals and commodities is more of a function of speculative exuberance rather than an economic resurgence. As discussed in ā€œSpeculative Warnings,ā€

ā€œIn other words, the stock market frenzy toĀ ā€œbuy anything that is going upā€Ā has spread from just a handful of stocks related to artificial intelligence to gold and digital currencies.ā€œ

SP500 vs Gold

Notably, the gold, commodities, and interest rate surge corresponded with more robust economic growth beginning in the third quarter of last year. That uptick in economic growth defied economistsā€™ expectations of a recession. Such was because of the massive flood of monetary support from Government spending programs. However, that monetary impulse is now reversing.

M2 vs GDP

As far as the ā€œreflation tradeā€ is concerned, as that monetary impulse recedes, so will economic growth, as shown. Even if the economy continues to grow at 2-2.5% annualized each quarter, the annual rate of change in growth will continue to slow.

GDP Actual and Estimates

Importantly, this assumes that the Government will keep ā€œspending like drunken sailorsā€ over that same period. However, if they donā€™t, the economic growth rate will slow even more quickly without increasing monetary spending.

Debt issuance to support spending

It is important to remember that increasing debts and deficits do not elicit stronger long-term economic growth. As debt levels rise, economic growth rates will slow as money diverts from productive investment into debt service.

Debt to GDP Ratio

That reality should be unsurprising, as this is not the first time the Government has gone ā€œall inā€ on a reflation trade. As noted above, following the Financial Crisis, the Government intervened with HAMP, HARP, TARP, and a host of other spending programs to ā€œreflateā€ the economy.

Letā€™s review what happened with interest rates, inflation, and gold and commodity trade.

Past May Be Prologue

As noted in 2009, following the ā€œFinancial Crisisā€ and recession, the Government and the Federal Reserve engaged in various monetary and fiscal supports to repair the economy. While the economy initially recovered from the recessionary lows, inflation, economic growth, and interest rates remained subdued despite ongoing interventions.

Interest rates vs GDP

That is because debt and artificially low interest rates lead to malinvestment, which acts as a wealth transfer mechanism from the middle class to the wealthy. However, that activity erodes economic activity, leading to suppressed inflation and a surging wealth gap.

Inflation adjusted household equity ownership

During that same period, commodities and precious metals rose initially as the ā€œreflation expectationā€ was widespread. However, debt-driven realities quickly undermined that assessment and those investments languished relative to equities, as the flood of liquidity and low rates made equities far more attractive to investment.

SP500 market vs gold vs commodities

While the relative performance of precious metals and commodities has picked up in recent months, this is more likely a function of ā€œirrational exuberanceā€ in the financial markets. As discussed previously, the surge in speculative investment activity is not uncommon to markets, and currently, many asset classes are becoming highly correlated.

However, while there is a compelling narrative around gold and precious metals from an investment perspective, those chasing that trade have had many years of terrible underperformance. While this time could be different, the ā€œreflation narrativeā€ will most likely fall prey to the realities of excessive debt, which will pressure Governments to cut rates once again.

If the past is potentially prologue, likely, the bullish narrative of ā€œreflationā€ may once again find future disappointment. Such is particularly the case as the economics of debt and poor policy choices continue to erode the middle class further.

 

Copyright Ā© RIA

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