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JP Morgan Strategist said Peaking Inflation Volatility Bullish for Stocks

Published 06/09/2022, 04:22 AM
Updated 06/09/2022, 08:29 AM
© Reuters.  JP Morgan Strategist Said Peaking Inflation Volatility Bullish for Stocks

There are preliminary signs inflation volatility could be peaking which would be bullish for stocks, JP Morgan strategist Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou wrote in a note to clients Wednesday.

The strategist said the markets appear to largely be looking through this rise in volatility, highlighting among other things "term premia", which is the compensation investors require for holding a long-term bond compared to rolling over a series of short-term bonds. While measuring term premia is not straightforward, Panigirtzoglou notes estimates have largely recovered from their pandemic lows of around -1%. Panigirtzoglou said the Kim-Wright measure and Blue Chip measure based on the recently released semi-annual longer-term survey for June 2022 both at around +25bp, not far from their levels in 2015 and 2018. The ACM term premium measure is also close to its 2018 levels.

On US CPI inflation volatility, Panigirtzoglou notes much of it has arisen from energy and reopening components. "With a significant re-pricing in energy already having taken place, in principle, this influence should begin to wane over time in the absence of further energy-related shocks," he commented.

In the firm's longer-term fair value framework, peaking inflation volatility would imply only a modestly higher fair value for real yields from current levels over the coming year.

The strategist said looking through the spike in inflation volatility implies a current fair value of 4400 for the S&P 500, or about 7% higher versus Wednesday's close.

Panigirtzoglou also said the reduced demand for hedging is a bullish signal for equities as it likely reflects low equity positioning by investors.

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"In our opinion, this reduced demand for hedging is a bullish signal as it likely reflects low equity positioning by institutional investors. Indeed, the put to call open interest ratio tends to be high when investors are overweight equities like the beginning of 2015, 2018, and 2020 or the end of 2021," Panigirtzoglou said. " And vice versa the put to call open interest ratio tends to be low when investors are underweight equities, such as at the end of 2016, end of 2018, March 2020 and currently."

Latest comments

it's not secret that inflation peaked already. the problem that creates the most uncertainty is how much the fed will have to tighten to bring inflation down 6%, which no one can say for certain. if inflation comes down with moderate rate hikes than tightening expectations will be lower which will he bullish but if it turns out that inflation stays higher than the fed will need to hike more which will be bearish. I also doubt their calculations of fair value is even remotely correct since an accurate reading implies that investors are willing to pay higher multiples for stocks in an inflationary environment. history shows the multiples investors are willing to pay changes over time due to changes in policy.
do they ever communicate with each other at jp morgon Dimon said only last week that there's a "hurricane out there" now one week later and they and everything I'd bullish fot stocks?
peak inflation we're barely out of the top of the first inning I have no idea what these people are talking about good luck Kabuki theater rearranging the chairs on a Titanic so on and so forth
Yes peak inflation only downhill from here demand destruction has occurred target alone is dropping prices as they have record inventories. Everyone ordered 3x bc of supply issues so that will slow everything along with fed not buying and rates up. Peak Inflation is here doesn't mean it will go back to PreBiden 1.6% overnight but down hill it is headed
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