Weekly market commentary - BlackRock

European government bond yields have swung as markets question how far the ECB will ease policy beyond a first cut expected this week. Falling inflation and 18 months of weak economic activity make the case for the ECB to start cutting rates. But we don't think it will cut far and fast. Likewise in the U.S., we see just one or two Fed cuts this year. This is not your typical rate cutting cycle. Central banks are set to keep rates above pre-pandemic levels (see the dots in the chart) due to persistent inflationary pressures – and last week's euro area inflation data again showed stalling inflation progress. Unusually, the ECB is readying to cut when growth is improving, inflation is above its 2% target and the unemployment rate is at a record low. That's a far cry from the economic crisis and low inflation in the past decade that spurred the ECB to introduce negative interest rates and buy bonds at scale.

In another unconventional step, the ECB is on the verge of easing policy before the Fed – and before it's certain what's next for monetary policy in the U.S., in our view. U.S. inflation is proving volatile and services inflation especially elevated, so another rate hike is not entirely off the table. This means that in the short term, the gap between Fed and ECB policy rates could widen and weigh on the euro against the U.S. dollar until the Fed starts cutting rates. Investors may see opportunities in further policy divergence, but we think it will be temporary as both central banks ultimately keep rates high for longer.

Supply constraints in play

Even with anticipated rate cuts, we see policy rates in the U.S. and Europe settling at a far higher level than they were pre-pandemic. The reason: inflation. We don't see euro area inflation falling below 2% as it did when central banks cut rates before 2020. That's because we are in a world shaped by supply constraints – a reality ECB officials have acknowledged recently. Among those constraints are mega forces – structural shifts driving returns now and in the future – like geopolitical fragmentation, demographic divergence and the low-carbon transition. Those forces are also playing out in the U.S. As a result, we expect ongoing inflationary pressures and structurally lower growth than in the past across major economies.

The ECB trimming rates and recovering euro area growth should favor European stocks. Yet we are underweight, preferring U.S. stocks on a tactical, six- to 12-month horizon as they are set to get a bigger boost from mega forces like AI. Within fixed income, our preference flips. We scoop up the higher total yields on offer in euro area credit. Improving growth in the euro area could also limit any spread widening relative to the U.S. We are neutral euro area government bonds and UK gilts as market pricing of near-term rate cuts aligns with our view. We see support for European bonds due to smaller fiscal deficits than in the U.S. Rules on limiting deficits now apply again after being suspended during the pandemic. We await the results of the European parliamentary election in June and UK general election in July – but expect a muted impact on bonds.

Our bottom line

An ECB cut is unlikely to be the start of a meaningful global easing cycle. We favor U.S. stocks over Europe's on stronger corporate earnings and the AI theme. We're neutral European government bonds but get income in European credit.

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