- In the post-pandemic haze, developed market central banks made a judgement call: inflationary pressures would be transitory. It was the wrong one.
- At risk of weakening the credibility upon which fiat currency systems are built, they have had to compensate with hawkish policy of a magnitude few imagined possible.
- Market inflation expectations have been successfully re-anchored. But the repricing of the term structure of interest rates has had profound knock-on effects to all asset classes.
- The fallout will continue. A global recession is not yet in the price of assets. And for spot inflation to return to target, the pain will need to extend beyond financial markets into the economy.
- As economic and earnings growth falter, and disinflationary dynamics set in, the negative correlation between equity and bond returns is likely to be restored.
- The dollar has likely not peaked, though the denouement of the cycle is likely to be associated with the outperformance of the Yen and Swiss Franc.
Keeping policy loose for too long put central bank credibility at risk. Central banks are now fighting back, leading the global economy down a recessionary road. This is not in the price of assets. As growth, earnings and inflation all falter, the negative correlation between equity and bond returns is likely to be restored.