Strong U.S. earnings and capex, central bank divisions, and shifting inflation assessments

SUMMARY

Technology investments drove a Q1 surge in U.S. capital spending across sectors. Against a backdrop of interest rate uncertainty, we continue favoring U.S. equity exposure while underweighting duration.


KEY TAKEAWAYS:

 

Tech investments fuelled Q1 U.S. capex surge with broad sector gains


Central banks show internal divisions; rate hikes more likely for Eurozone/Japan


Fed Chair nominee Kevin Warsh advocates trimmed mean inflation over core measures


Strong core capital goods orders signal continued expenditure momentum ahead


Current data supports higher U.S. equity exposure & underweight duration stance


 

 

 

Strong U.S. earnings growth underpins business capex

In addition to stronger-than-expected U.S. earnings growth, a feature of the current earnings cycle is robust capital expenditures (capex), particularly hyperscalers investing in AI infrastructure.

This is also apparent in U.S. government economic data reports.

For example, inflation-adjusted spending on data centers was 24% higher than year-ago levels in the first quarter, while real business spending on information processing equipment soared at a quarterly annualized rate of 43% in Q1.

Meanwhile, the first quarter's capex increase was broad-based, as spending on medical instruments, industrial equipment, construction machinery, office furniture and equipment, and mining and oilfield machinery all rose.

Encouragingly, core capital goods order growth points to continued expenditure growth potential ahead.

Bottom line: Strong business investment signals business optimism in the economic outlook.

This optimism is being driven in part by solid earnings growth, which in turn helps enable the expenditures on equipment.

Investments in equipment that enhance productivity can also help boost the longer-run trend growth rate of the economy.

We believe this argues for maintaining U.S. equity exposure in portfolios.

Central banks' divergent outlooks

Last week brought unchanged policy rates for the Federal Reserve (Fed), European Central Bank (ECB), Bank of England (BoE), Bank of Japan (BoJ), and Bank of Canada (BoC).

Brazil's Banco Central do Brazil (BCB) cut rates but highlighted firmer underlying inflation and stronger growth, which implies a risk to expectations for potential future easing.

Both the ECB and BoE stated an intention to be attentive to second-round effects on prices from oil, or the pass-through of high energy prices in underlying inflation.

The BoE noted the risks to the economic outlook and the tightening in financial conditions. 

The ECB cited upside risks to inflation but also intensifying downside risks to growth.

Nonetheless, markets imply high odds of rate hikes in June by the ECB.

The BoJ delivered a hawkish hold, suggesting policymakers are leaning toward a June rate hike.

The BoJ lowered its growth forecast but raised projections for both overall and core inflation with pass-through expected given "a labor shortage continuing to be strong." 

The BoJ also described its inflation forecast as being "significantly higher."

The vote to leave rates unchanged was six-to-three, with all three dissenters voting for a hike.

BoJ Governor Kazuo Ueda told reporters after the vote: "as chair, I take that seriously."

This was the highest number of dissents at a BoJ policy meeting in ten years. 

Similarly at the Fed, there were four dissenting votes, the highest since 1992.

One dissenter argued for a rate cut, while three voters did not support inclusion of an easing bias at this time.

At the previous Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting in March, Fed Chair Jerome Powell suggested, "some participants judged that there was a strong case for a two-sided description of the Committee's future interest rate decisions in the post-meeting statement."

He added there were even more participants wanting two-sided guidance this week. 

Powell and other colleagues may have been concerned that two-sided guidance would start the process of markets pricing in Fed rate hikes, which does not appear to be the guidance most policymakers are ready to deliver at this point.

On his future, Powell said last week's press conference was his last as chair, but he will continue to serve as a governor, "for a period of time, to be determined."

Bottom line: The Middle East conflict prompted a sharp repricing of global policy rate outlooks.

Interest rate futures markets initially placed high odds on April rate hikes by the ECB and BoE, which we felt were highly unlikely. 

Meanwhile, markets priced out Fed rate cuts, an appropriate adjustment to pricing given inflation risks from higher energy prices.

Rate decisions going forward will likely be determined by policymakers' judgement of the risks to inflation and growth. 

Bottom line: For suitable and qualified clients, alternatives may strengthen portfolio resilience as traditional diversification weakens, but outcomes depend on disciplined implementation, manager selection, and clear portfolio roles.

We focus on assets and strategies that deliver differentiated return drivers, support income, and inflation resilience, and may help stabilize portfolios through market stress.

It is important to note diversification does not guarantee a profit or protect against loss.

New Fed leader may revamp inflation weighing methods

In his confirmation hearing, Fed Chair nominee Kevin Warsh advocated for the use of "trimmed mean" inflation measures, presumably in place of the "core" inflation measures currently emphasized by many policymakers.

Core inflation in the U.S. excludes food and energy prices.

With trimmed mean inflation, changes for individual components of the price index are ranked, and parts of the most extreme observations at both ends of the range are excluded to better capture the central trend.

Trimmed mean Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) inflation is reported by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. 

Trimmed mean measures of inflation may be preferable to "core" measures, as they exclude outliers dynamically, rather than excluding food and energy every month (or energy and unprocessed food in the Eurozone; energy, food, alcoholic beverages and tobacco in the U.K.; and fresh foods in Japan).

While other regions also report trimmed mean inflation rates, these metrics are generally not a central focus for policymakers outside Canada, but even there the Consumer Price Index (CPI)-trim measure has been somewhat de-emphasized recently by the BoC.

Nonetheless, closer attention from the Fed might stimulate greater emphasis by other central banks.

Trimmed mean inflation measures have their detractors, who point to these indicators being slow to signal rising inflation pressures resulting from COVID and the government's response to the pandemic, in part because it trims the high-price components more than the low-price components. 

We utilize a 20% symmetrical trimmed mean inflation scale, which seeks to improve on the Dallas Fed measure using three methods.

First, it excludes 20% of the outliers on both ends of the spectrum.

Second, it focuses on the momentum of price gains by tracking three-month and six-month inflation rates, in addition to year-over-year gains.

Third, it assesses the breadth of rapid price gains based on the share of PCE components reporting one-month annualized gains faster than 5%. 

Bottom line: Symmetric trimmed mean inflation, and measures of the momentum and breadth of price increases may gain traction at the Fed and other central banks as tools to assess underlying inflation trends.

Our assessment of underlying inflation is less favorable than that indicated by the Dallas Fed trimmed mean measure, supporting our preference to remain underweight duration.

Investments

Our expertise in and access to global markets provide you with insights and the broadest range of investment opportunities, which we accompany with the highest level of service.

Contact us

To help put you in touch with the right Private Bank team, please answer the following questions.

Are you an existing Private Bank client?

Please fill out the form, so we can contact you.

I consent to the use of my personal information (name, telephone number and email address) by Citi Private Bank for the purpose of contacting me to send me marketing information about Citi Private Bank's wealth management products and services. I understand that my information will be used in accordance with the relevant  privacy statement for my location. I also understand I can withdraw this consent to be contacted by phone by emailing donotcall@citi.com, or email by visiting the email preference center at any time.

Please consent to the terms and conditions to continue

I am looking for services to support...

My net worth is (USD)...

The AUM (USD) of my single family office is...

Thank you for your interest in Citi Private Bank.

Our family office services are only available to single family offices with over $100 million in AUM. 

Thank you for your interest in Citi Private Bank.

Our services have a minimum investment level of $5 million.

Based on the information provided, we believe that a Citigold relationship may be most appropriate for your needs.

To find out more: Visit Citigold

Thank you for your interest in Citi Private Bank.

Our services are only available to individuals & family offices.

Based on the information provided, we believe that a Citi Commercial Bank may be most appropriate for your needs.

To find out more: Visit Citi Commercial Bank

Job title & Company

Job title & Company

Location

Please select one of the above options

Please enter your contact details

How can we help you?

I consent to the use of my personal information (name, telephone number and email address) by Citi Private Bank for the purpose of contacting me to send me marketing information about Citi Private Bank's wealth management products and services. I understand that my information will be used in accordance with the relevant privacy statement for my location. I also understand I can withdraw this consent to be contacted by phone by emailing donotcall@citi.com, or email by visiting the email preference center at any time.

Please consent to the terms and conditions to continue

How can we help you?

I consent to the use of my personal information (name, telephone number and email address) by Citi Private Bank for the purpose of contacting me to send me marketing information about Citi Private Bank's wealth management products and services. I understand that my information will be used in accordance with the relevant privacy statement for my location. I also understand I can withdraw this consent to be contacted by phone by emailing donotcall@citi.com, or email by visiting the email preference center at any time.

Please consent to the terms and conditions to continue

Thank you for your interest in Citi Private Bank. A member of our team will be in touch with you shortly.

Thank you for contacting Citi Private Bank. Your enquiry has been forwarded to your relationship team who will be in touch as soon as possible.