Gli scenari macroeconomici: crisi del debito, spinte recessive e
Transcription
Gli scenari macroeconomici: crisi del debito, spinte recessive e
The FACTSET EMEA Symposium 2015 The European Economy: Will the Tailwinds be Strong Enough? Gregorio De Felice Chief Economist – Intesa Sanpaolo Monaco, 26 June 2015 The four tailwinds: where do we stand? Energy prices • Brent Crude: -38% in US$ in 2015 vs. 2014, • -24% in EUR, due to exchange rate depreciation Exchange rate ECB measures • S/t Interest rates are record-low • Bond purchases in 2015-16 exceeding 1000Bn • Lower contagion risk • Effective exchange rate: -9.8% y/y in Q2 2015. 1 Fiscal policy • Flexible interpretation of the SGP • Less fiscal tightening in periods of weak growth or large output gap 1. The windfall from lower oil prices is for real … Oil-importing countries are experiencing a major improvement in their energy balance. Absolute change o.y.a. of imports from fuel-exporting countries (US$ millions) Note: actual change, y/y Source: IMF, DOTS 2 … and exports to oil producers decrease by far less The benefit is offset only to a small extent by the decrease in export to oil producers. Cutbacks by oil importers have been limited so far (with the exception of Russia) Note: actual change, y/y of imports from Euro Area. Source: IMF, DOTS. 3 The impact on real disposable income will be significant, but not overwhelming The decline in price indexes was more significant in early 2015. The boost to real disposable income in 2015 will average 0.3-0.5% in main Eurozone countries. Estimated energy-related savings in 2015 as a % of disposable income 0.6% 0.5% Savings (EUR Bn, r.h.s.) 0.5% % of 2014 DPI (l.h.s.) 10 9 8 7 0.4% 0.3% 0.3% 0.3% 6 5 4 0.2% 3 2 0.1% 1 0.0% 0 DEU FRA Source: Intesa Sanpaolo Research 4 ITA Lower oil prices are to a large deal persistent Structural oversupply will prevent a return of prices to 2013 levels. However, s/t volatility could result from geopolitical risk, US$ swings on currency markets, supply uncertainty. 3Q15 4Q15 1Q16 2Q16 3Q16 4Q16 2015 2016 2017 ICE BRENT 65.0 68.0 70.0 69.0 69.0 70.0 62.8 69.5 75.0 NYMEX WTI 60.0 62.0 66.0 65.0 65.0 66.0 57.2 65.5 71.0 5 2. A weaker exchange rate We might see some recovery of EER in 2016, but the levels of exchange rates should stay more competitive than in 2014. EUR/USD exchange rate and 2-year rate differential (r.h.s.) Nominal effective exchange rates 2014-16 4 2 0 -2 -4 -6 2014 2015f 2016f -8 -10 Eurozone Italy Source: ISP projections Source: Thomson Reuters data 6 Spain Portugal Greece Export response positive … European trade data already show a major impact of exchange-rate depreciation on flows to dollar-based countries. The effects is higher for Italy. Exports towards the US in EUR and USD terms From Germany From Italy Source: Thomson Reuters–Datastream Charting Source: Thomson Reuters–Datastream Charting 7 … but partly offset by weaker global demand Global trade growth is weak, due especially to emerging markets, and there is no sign that it will gather speed in the near future. The slowdown may be structural and not temporary. World trade and PMI – export orders CPB index of import trade, y/y % change Note: Y/y % changes computed from 3-month moving averages of constant US$ indexes, base 2000=100. Source: Intesa Sanpaolo Research computations on Markit & CPB data. 8 3. Monetary/credit easing The EAPP is in full development, with assets for 283Bn (165Bn government securities) purchased as of June 19. Rising excess reserves push money market rates closer and closer to the deposit rate. BCE - Expanded Asset Purchase Programme (Intesa Sanpaolo estimates, mld EUR) Total target M ar15-Sep16 Monthly purchase Mar15-Sep16 EAPP from M ar15 (1) of which: - ABS - Covered Bonds - Supras - Sovereigns & Agcy Previous CBP3 & ABSP (2) Total EAPP (1)+ (2) Sov & Agcy Supras CB & ABS Excess liquidity and the EONIA rate Purchased amount as of 19/ 06/ 2015 Residual purchase 60 Monthly Bn 19 N.Months 1140 EUR Bn 227. 94 912 23 235 106 776 55 1195 EUR Bn EUR Bn EUR Bn EUR Bn 4.81 40.90 17.60 164.62 55 283 19 194 88 611 41 Monthly Bn 6 Monthly Bn 14 Monthly Bn Source: ECB, Bloomberg and Intesa Sanpaolo 9 912 The transmission of monetary policy is improving Money and credit, y/y % change New loans to NFCs (EUR Bn) Source: ECB, Thomson Reuters-Datastream Charting Source: ECB, Thomson Reuters-Datastream Charting Credit easing under way, according to surveys Loans and overdrafts to NFCs: periphery-core spread Source: ECB (BLS) and ISP calculations Source: ECB and ISP estimates 10 Low interest rates to stay … ECB’s official stance on the EAPP is that it will continue until September 2016. Draghi (3rd June 2015): “if there were other factors which would, for example, create an unwanted tightening of monetary policy or […] there were downside risks to growth and price stability, then we will have to review and reconsider the size, the timing and the design of the programme. […] So far we frankly see no reason to do that.” On exit strategies: “exit strategies are really a high-class problem, and we’re really far from that, so we’re not discussing anything about that. […] We still have a long way to go.” Record-low money-market rates in the foreseeable future 2.00 1.50 Euribor 1m Euribor 3m Euribor 6m Euribor 12m 1.00 0.50 0.00 -0.50 2012 2013 2014 2015 Source: Intesa Sanpaolo projections, Thomson Reuters data. 11 2016 … with positive implications for the fiscal stance This low-rates environment allows most governments to cut their interest outlays, despite rising debt ratios. Interest rate spending by governments (% of GDP) 8 BEL 7 EUR FRA DEU ITA NLD ESP 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 Source: European Commission, AMECO 12 2009 2011 2013 2015 4. Less fiscal tightening due to a more flexible SGP The EU Commission introduced rules for fiscal adjustment more sensitive to the cyclical stance. Targets for 2015 and 2016 also take into account the reform effort. Cyclically-adjusted primary balance (% of GDP) Primary Balance (% of GDP) 3.0 2.4 2.2 2.0 2.0 4.5 2014 2015 2016 2.3 1.61.7 3.9 3.5 2.9 2.6 2.5 1.0 0.20.3 1.5 -0.2 -0.3 -1.0 -0.8 -1.3 -1.7 -1.8 -2.0 -3.0 BEL 2.1 0.1 0.0 DEU FRA ITA NLD -0.6 1.1 1.0 0.9 0.9 0.6 0.4 0.9 0.6 0.7 0.5 -1.4 -0.5 -2.5 ESP -1.5 -0.3 -0.4 -0.3 BEL Source: European Commission, AMECO DEU FRA Source: European Commission, AMECO 13 2014 2015 2016 3.6 3.3 ITA NLD ESP The four tailwinds will raise GDP growth to 1.5-2.0% Cheap energy, a more competitive exchange rate and more supportive economic policy should more than offset the weaker global environment, raising GDP growth in the Eurozone. GDP growth will be driven mostly by domestic demand in 2015-16 2.5 GDP growth, y/y 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 -0.5 -1.0 -1.5 Inventories -2.0 Net exports FCF HSHD spending -2.5 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters-Datastream, Eurostat and Intesa Sanpaolo forecasts 14 2017 The outlook is improving also for most of the Periphery GDP growth 2013-16 in some Southern European countries 2013 2014 2015f 2016f Italy -1.7 -0.4 0.6 1.2 Spain -1.2 1.4 1.5 1.7 Portugal -1.4 0.9 1.7 2.0 Greece -3.9 0.8 0.2(°) 1.9(°) Cyprus -5.4 -2.3 -0.5(*) 1.4(*) 3.0 2.7 2.0 0.9 1.0 0.0 0.1 0.2 1.5 1.7 1.6 1.8 0.6 0.4 -1.0 -2.0 Core -1.4 -3.0 2011 -2.3 2012 Peripherals 2013 2014 2015 Note: ‘Core’: Austria, Belgium, Finland, France, Germany; ‘Periphery’: Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, Spain. (*) European Commission, Spring Forecasts 2015; (°) Consensus Forecasts, May 2015. Source: Intesa Sanpaolo Research forecasts, Eurostat data and European Commission. 15 2016 The fiscal picture has improved since 2010 Structural fiscal flows have improved since 2010 to levels that can stem the increase in debt ratios. 2010 2014 200 180 160 200 High-debt & Fiscal surplus High-debt & Fiscal imbalance 180 160 GRC ITA 120 USA 100 BEL IRL PRT 80 FRA UK 60 ESP 40 DEU USA 100 UK 80 ITA IRL BEL FRA ESP DEU NLD 40 Low-debt & Fiscal surplus 0 -5 120 60 NLD Low-debt & Fiscal imbalance -10 Gross Debt Gross Debt PRT 140 140 20 High-debt & GRC Fiscal surplus High-debt & Fiscal imbalance 0 20 0 5 Low-debt & Fiscal imbalance -10 Low-debt & Fiscal surplus -5 0 Cyclically-adj. primary balance Cyclically-adj. primary balance Source: IMF Fiscal Monitor database 16 5 Even Italy seems to be recovering Italy appears to have shifted from recession to a slow recovery from Q4 2014, but the trend is still fragile. Exports and fixed investment provided support. Out of the woods? GDP supported by exports and fixed investment Source: Thomson Reuters-Datastream Charting, ISTAT and Intesa Sanpaolo calculations 17 However, q/q growth does not pick up in the Eurozone Eurozone GDP grew 0.4% q/q in Q1 2015 (Q4 2014: 0.3%). Business surveys are not consistent with stronger growth in Q2. PMIs and the EC confidence index not yet consistent with faster GDP growth. Source: Markit, European Commission and Intesa Sanpaolo calculations 18 Baseline view to be challenged from all sides Slowdown Turnaround of FX rates of global economy Weak capital spending Potential for political instability in Spain, High debt ratios Collapse of Greece (Italy?) 19 The Greek nightmare No breakthrough in the negotiations since February, no funding available to cover the June repayment to IMF and the July 20 bond redemption. Government has supported its liquidity position by suspending most payments to suppliers and contractors. The economy is falling back into recession. Fast deposit outflow, but no evidence of bank-run up to mid June. Rapid deterioration from June 13. Reliance on ECB liquidity stands at ca. 120Bn euros, but is rising fast. A fast-shrinking deposit base, high reliance on central bank support Uncertainty and payment delays take their toll Source: Thomson Reuters-Datastream Charting, Bank of Greece Source: Thomson Reuters-Datastream Charting 20 Many paths lead to Grexit Stock of ELA eligible assets is depleted 30/6: Greece misses IMF payment Bank run ECB suspends ELA (to raise pressure) 20/7: Greece misses GGB repayment Syriza loses support, party divided ECB suspends BoG from TARGET2 ECB suspends ELA 21 Capital controls are introduced Sharp economic contraction Nationalisation of banks Issuance of a local currency Monetary financing of deficit Debt-service suspended Greek government backs down New programme The costs of Grexit/1 Exports to Greece Collapse of trade flows Direct financial links Financial ‘contagion’ Confidence In the very worst case, the negative impact could be of 0.1-0.2% for the most exposed countries. The exposure of European banks is now negligible and there is little negotiable debt around. The long gestation of the crisis means that investors should be well prepared to the risk. Source: Thomson Reuters-Datastream, Eurostat and Intesa Sanpaolo calculations Tensions on sovereign spreads are likely, in the short term. Fundamentals are far more robust than in 2011 However, the ECB may front-load the PSPP to restore confidence Future crises may see more volatile spread (but not as much as in 2011: the institutional framework has been improved) Hard to assess whether it will be transitory or persistent. Relevance will also depend on context and policy response. 22 The costs of Grexit/2 Write-off of official loans TARGET2 balances Savings EUR 52.9Bn of Greek Loan Facility. EUR 141.9Bn of EFSF loans EUR 25.2Bn of IMF loans As of Apr 30, the TARGET2 liabilities of Bank of Greece stood at EUR 98.8 billion. If Greece detaches from the Eurozone and from TARGET2, no repayment plan can be envisaged. No need to extend further financial assistance (possibly EUR 50Bn in 5 years) Suspension of EU transfers, normally 2-3Bn per year (15.2Bn allocated over 2014-20). In case of agreement, substantial debt relief will be required, which reduces the present value of theoretical cash flow. 23 How a reasonable deal on Greece should look like… Trial period (2015 H2) ECB, IMF repaid with EU funds (cash for reforms) Moderate Fiscal correction ~1% Some structural reforms, measures to improve tax-compliance 3rd programme ESM, IMF cover the financing gap, Primary surplus raised to 2.5% Growth-enhancing reforms + measures to support the unemployed and the poors Post-2020 settlement Debt relief (maturity extension) Primary surplus 2.5% Growth-friendly policies No repayment of debt to IMF and ECB without support 4000 3000 2000 1000 0 -1000 -2000 -3000 -4000 -5000 payments to IMF ECB-owned bonds cash deficit/surplus Total (excl. GRBL) Projected debt service 2015-45 (without debt relief) -7% capital, % of GDP interest, % of GDP -6% -5% -4% 643 -726 -3% -492 -2% -1873 -3682 5 6 -3275 7 -3068 -1% -4517 8 9 10 11 0% 12 2015 24 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045 … and what we may get Reforms for cash Deal on the release of 7.2Bn of funds left from the 2nd programme, to be extended by 3-6 months Greece will commit to a fiscal adjustment yielding a 1% primary surplus in 2015, mostly based on tax increases and to a reform of early retirement. The June 30 payment to the IMF is too close: increase in the ceiling to GRBL issuance? Implementation risk Strains within Syriza (parliamentary approval probably guaranteed by opposition parties) Funding need for 2015H5 not fully covered by programme extension (also considering that squeeze on suppliers is not sustainable): gap of ca. 8Bn according to our estimates. Need to start negotiation on 3rd programme as soon as possible! Default risk not averted despite the deal! 25 Spain: deep transformation of the political landscape In Spain, declining support for Partido Popular (PP) and the rise of new political movements may put an end to the PP – PSOE turnover. A PP-PSOE coalition may turn out to be the only feasible outcome. Regional elections in Spain opens up an highly uncertain scenario for the year-end national elections Spain – New Congress projections based on regional elections outcome ERC Ciudadanos 2011 IU 2015 CiU Podemos PSOE PP 0 50 100 150 200 Note: projections on the number of seats in the next Parliament based on the result of the recent regional vote. The general election will be held in November. Source: El País and Intesa Sanpaolo research. 26 Anti-EU parties on the rise, but with little to share The EU and the euro have turned into one of the preferred targets of populist movements of all colours in Europe. Support for some anti-EU movements 35 29 - 31% 30 Previous 25 Latest poll 20 15 17.5 16 26 10 19 15.5 5.5 5 4.7 0 Fra: Front National (Ifop polls) Jan 29 Ita: 5 Stelle (Piepoli polls) 9 feb Ita: Lega Nord (Piepoli Germ: AfD (15 Feb 2015 polls) 9 feb Hamburg Municipal elections)* Note: Ifop, Piepoli, Wall Street Journal (for Germany) and Intesa Sanpaolo research 27 Summing up … The Eurozone economic scenario is currently more favorable than last year: the outlook is improving for core countries, but also for most of the Periphery. Four tailwinds are sustaining the recovery: low energy prices, the depreciation of the euro, a more flexible interpretation of the SGP and the over-expansionary stance of the ECB. Also the Italian economy appears to have shifted from recession to a slow recovery: that is good news, but the trend is still fragile. Our baseline, however, is challenged by all sides: political instability, the risk of a slowdown in global growth or of a turnaround in exchange rates, weak capital spending, high debt ratios. The Greek situation is the issue that most urgently needs a solution. Negotiations on a 3rd programme have to be started as soon as possible: default risk has not been fully averted. 28