Inflation fears are rumbling through financial markets again. Unprecedented fiscal and monetary stimulus to contain the fallout from the Covid pandemic has investors worried that the multi-decade fall in inflationary pressures might finally be about to turn. The key question facing them is how to prepare.
In part, history suggests the outlook for markets depends on what the inflationary backdrop is likely to be.
A combination of rising prices and modest economic growth, for example, favours commodities and gold. Inflation with an economy ‘running hot’, meanwhile, acts as a boost not only for those defensive investments, but also for real assets more generally – including housing, equities and high yield bonds.
The risk of a strong rise in US inflation is probably at its highest for at least 15 years. Lockdowns designed to rein in the pandemic have caused supply bottlenecks, leading to a rise in commodity prices and those of other production inputs; delivery times have also lengthened, further reducing availability of goods.
Base effects will also be significant. Oil prices collapsed a year ago – the prices of some oil contracts went negative briefly in 2020 – and their subsequent recovery will push annual headline inflation measures above 3 per cent in the second quarter.
These factors have fed through to inflation worries. Long-run inflation expectations, implied by the 10-year breakeven inflation rate, have risen to 2.3 per cent, their highest since July 2014. Household inflation expectations for the coming year have also jumped, up 1.2 percentage points to 3.3 per cent and their 5-year expectations have climbed to 2.7 per cent.
Supply-driven inflationary pressures should ease with the opening of the economy as the pandemic is brought under control. But at the same time, demand is set to jump as consumers start to spend their stimulus cheques, not least on long-shut services.
If inflation is on its way up, how investors ought to react will depend on the wider state of the economy and business conditions.
We took a look at one year total returns of nine asset class indices – commodities, gold, S&P 500, US Treasury bonds, US high yield credit, investment grade credit, Treasury inflation protected securities (TIPS), money markets and housing – relative to what was happening to US inflation and economic growth since 1950.
In general, we found a negative correlation between inflation and US Treasuries, stocks and investment-grade credit, and a positive correlation with the six other asset classes.
Although money markets are positively correlated with inflation, their real returns during periods of high and rising prices are slightly negative. By contrast, TIPS, housing, commodities and gold all post positive returns during inflationary periods, in double digits for the latter two. What’s more, commodities, real estate and gold continue to show a positive correlation to inflation even with a lag, which is to say their future returns rise and fall with current inflation.
Investment returns move in the same direction as economic growth for all asset classes except Treasury bonds, TIPS and gold, with Treasuries showing the largest negative correlation. Stocks and high yield bonds show the strongest correlation with economic growth, though housing and money markets also move in the same direction.
As the 1970s made very clear, though, rising inflation doesn’t always coincide with economic growth. In which case, investors need to know what happens to assets under different inflationary and growth regimes.
We classified periods based on whether US quarterly GDP growth was above or below its 7-year moving average, and inflation by whether inflation was above a 2 percent annual rate and rising or, alternatively, below 2 per cent or declining.
We found that in benign environments of low inflation but strong growth, the best performers were riskier assets: stocks, high yield and investment grade credit, with average annual returns of 19 per cent for the first and 11 per cent for the latter two. Gold and commodities, which are typically good hedges against inflation, were the worst performers under that scenario.
In periods of rising inflation and growth – which seems the most likely outcome for the coming quarters – commodities generated 14 per cent annual returns, the S&P 500 was up 13 per cent, high yield and gold up around 11 per cent and housing up 7 per cent. Indeed, this is the second-best economic environment for both stocks and high yield credit, which suggests growth is a more important factor here than inflation. By contrast, TIPS, Treasuries and money markets all fared badly in that environment.
In those periods when inflation was high and growth low, gold and commodities generated 19 per cent annual returns, TIPS 8 per cent and Treasuries 7 per cent. In those periods, high yield credit, money markets and stocks were the worst performers.
Finally, when inflation and growth were both subdued, Treasury bonds and investment grade credit posted returns of 8 per cent, while stocks were up 6 per cent. Gold and commodities were the worst performers under these conditions.
Interestingly, adjusting those returns for risk doesn’t alter these outcomes materially – though here we are restricted to using data available since 1998 rather than the full history back to 1950. The only difference of note is that TIPS look more attractive during periods of inflationary expansion on a risk-adjusted basis.
Our analysis of US asset class returns suggests investors have plenty to think about as they parse economic developments. Will inflation take off and become embedded, or are we just looking at a temporary spike after which price pressures will fade back to trends of the past decades? Will the economy snap back and maintain momentum? Will the US Federal Reserve calibrate its monetary policy to suit the real economy? Will the last bout of stimulus trigger overheating?
But whatever the actual outcome, at least history offers some guide to what investors might be able to expect from asset classes.
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