>DEFLATION VERSUS INFLATION (MERRILL LYNCH)
Deflation vs. Inflation: The Battle Rages On
US TIPS: We remain positive on longer maturity TIPS BE’s for longer horizon investors. The recent narrowing in BE's provides an opportunity to re-add to long BE positions that we had recommended scaling back on last week.
European IL: We remain short Euro breakevens but see short term risk from oil prices and therefore prefer to sell inflation forward. We analyse cross-country breakeven spreads and recommend selling BTPei35 breakevens against OATei32. The real German government curve looks too flat in the 5-8 year sector compared to France.
JGBi: The rally in JGB inflation linkers has stalled since April. We believe further weakness should provide a selective buying opportunity.
EM IL: the only long duration left
Exposure to inflation-linked instruments remains important in our overall exposure in EM local debt markets. What we have seen in recent weeks is that exposure to real rates is now the best way to express a long duration view. This is because most central banks have now come close to the end of the easing cycle, which means there is little upside at this stage for a plain long duration position. On this basis, we continue to hold recommendations of a long Turkey Feb. 2012 CPIlinker bond and a long Brazil NTN-B 2015 IPCA-linked bond in our portfolio.
Commodities: A very fast increase in oil prices in the coming months could put the embryonic economic recovery at risk. How high could oil go near-term? In OECD economies, our economists believe that $70-80/bbl oil could start to pose a risk to the recovery, while the risks to EM growth would come in at $90-100/bbl.
US economics: Headline CPI came in significantly below expectations with a 0.1% M/M increase in May. Most forecasters missed the tepid rise in energy which benefited from an aggressive seasonal factor to the downside. Core prices were in-line with a 0.1% M/M gain taking the annual rate to 1.8% versus 1.9% in April. Euro area economics: Inflation hit a record low of 0.0% in May. While downside risks dominate in the summer, positive headlines rates are seen before year-end.
UK economics: CPI inflation fell a little further in May, and is expected to continue falling to a trough in September.
To see full report: INFLATION
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