Stress Testing Inflation Scenarios
- Although market-implied inflation expectations indicate modest levels of inflation, market participants fear the potential of deflation or inflation occurring.
- We propose four scenarios, from deflation to reflation to two stagflation outcomes, accounting explicitly for the movement in breakeven inflation and nominal and real rates.
- Implications for a diversified portfolio of equities and bonds could range from returns of -13% to +9% for the deflation and reflation scenarios, respectively.
- Reflation: In this first scenario, monetary and fiscal policy proves to be successful and the stimulus brings the economy closer to its pre-COVID long-term trend growth. Nominal rates remain relatively stable, breakeven inflation picks up to levels slightly above 2% and the U.S. dollar strengthens. This is good news for U.S. equity markets: With real rates and risk premia decreasing further, they could gain around 16%.
- Deflation: A grimmer scenario is one where disinflationary trends get the upper hand despite the Federal Reserve's keeping yields of all maturities close to zero. With economic growth impaired and increased uncertainty, this is bad news for U.S. stocks. The U.S. equity market could lose around 23% in this scenario, with growth stocks underperforming the market.5
- Inflation Overheating: In this scenario, inflation picks up slightly more than planned, which leads to disrupted economic growth and increases in nominal rates as the Fed reacts to rising inflation. U.S. equities benefit moderately from decreasing real rates with growth stocks benefiting more from declining real rates.
- Stagflation: This scenario is a more extreme version of the previous one, with inflation going up even more. However, this scenario assumes the U.S. is impacted more severely than other regions as a result of more aggressive fiscal and monetary stimulus, which could lead to significant pressure on the U.S. dollar. Although real rates decline, growth disruption and uncertainty take the upper hand, pushing U.S. equities into slightly negative territory, resulting in a positive bond-equity correlation.
Scenario | Reflation | Deflation | Inflation Overheating | Stagflation |
---|---|---|---|---|
Scenario 2-Year BEI (bps) | Reflation +100 | Deflation -125 | Inflation Overheating +200 | Stagflation +300 |
Scenario 10-Year BEI (bps) | Reflation +50 | Deflation -75 | Inflation Overheating +100 | Stagflation +150 |
Scenario 10-Year Treasury (bps) | Reflation +0 | Deflation -50 | Inflation Overheating +20 | Stagflation +60 |
Scenario EUR/USD | Reflation -3.5% | Deflation +1.5% | Inflation Overheating +1.5% | Stagflation +10% |
Scenario Credit Spreads | Reflation IG: -21% HY: -25% | Deflation IG: +77% HY: +54% | Inflation Overheating IG: 0% HY: -1% | Stagflation IG: +33% HY: +27% |
Scenario Narrative | Reflation Economic growth picks up, real yields drop, risk premia subside. Growth stocks continue to outperform moderately. | Deflation Significant disruption of economic growth, real yields bounce back, risk premia jump. Growth stocks mostly give back their recent outperformance against the overall market. | Inflation Overheating Slight economic-growth disruption, real rates plunge. Growth stocks continue to outperform the rest of the market. | Stagflation More significant implications for economic growth and risk premia. Very low real rates, but limited positive effects on growth stocks. |
Scenario US Equities (Nominal) | Reflation +16% | Deflation -23% | Inflation Overheating +6% | Stagflation -4% |
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