“Europe versus the UK”

How do the messages from the money sectors compare?

The key chart

Broad money growth is accelerating in both regions, but how do the messages behind these trends compare and what do they mean? (Source: ECB; Bank of England; CMMP analysis)

The key message

Broad money growth is accelerating in both the euro area (EA) and the UK but how do the messages behind these trends compare and what do they mean for investors?

M1 dynamics are the key growth drivers here as EA and UK households and corporates maintain high preferences for holding liquid assets despite negative real returns. Above trend corporate credit and resilient mortgage demand is offsetting weakness in consumer credit in both regions but with more volatile YoY credit dynamics in the UK. The growth gap between the supply of money and the demand for credit has reached new 10-year highs.

The overriding message here is one of uncertainty and deficient credit demand, a more nuanced message than some inflation hawks suggest.

Looking at ST dynamics, uncertainty peaked in May in both regions, HHs have stopped repaying consumer credit and the NFC “dash-for-cash” has also peaked.

From an investment perspective, 2020 is seen best as a year when an extreme event (Covid-19) engulfed weak, pre-existing cyclical trends. The negative impacts of this event have peaked, at least from a monetary perspective. However, adverse (over-arching) LT structural dynamics that have their roots in excess levels of private sector debt remain with negative implications for money, credit and business cycles and future investment returns.

The charts that matter

The key chart above illustrates how growth in broad money (M3) is accelerating in both the EA and UK. In the EA, M3 grew 10.2% in nominal and 9.8% terms YoY in July, the highest rates of growth since May 2008 and July 2007 respectively. In the UK, M3 grew 11.9% in nominal and 10.8% in real terms in July, the highest rates of growth since April 2008 and June 2008 respectively (n.b. I am using M3 here for comparison purposes rather than the Bank of England’s preferred M4ex measure referred to in other posts). These trends have helped to ignite the “inflation versus deflation” debate which, in turn, requires investigation of trends in the components and counterparts of broad money growth.

M1 is playing an increasing role in M3 in the EA and the UK despite negative real returns from overnight deposits (Source: ECB; Bank of England; CMMP analysis)

From a components perspective, narrow money (M1) is playing an increasing role in this growth despite negative real returns as EA and UK households (HHs) and corporates (NFCs) maintain high preferences for liquid assets. In the EA, M1 now accounts for 70% of M3 compared with only 42% twenty years ago. In the UK, M1 now accounts for 65% of M3 versus only 48% twenty years ago (see chart above). In both cases, the share of narrow money in broad money is at a historic high – potentially negative news for inflation hawks as HH and NFCs continue to save in the face of high uncertainty levels. The key unknown here is the extent to which these savings are forced or precautionary. Forced savings can be released relatively quickly to support economic activity. In contrast, precautionary savings are unlikely to move straight into investment or consumption.

Similar NFC, mortgage and consumer credit trends but with more volatile YoY growth dynamics in the UK (Source: ECB; Bank of England; CMMP analysis)

From a counterparts perspective, above trend NFC credit and resilient HH mortgage demand is offsetting weakness in consumer credit, with the UK demonstrating more volatile YoY growth dynamics than the EA. The graph above illustrates YoY growth trends in NFC credit (green), mortgages (blue) and consumer credit (red) for the EA (dotted lines) and the UK (full lines) over the past 5 years.

NFC credit is growing well above trend in both regions, but below May’s recent peak levels. In the EA, NFC credit grew 7.0% in July versus 7.3% in May. In the UK, NFC credit grew 9.6% in July versus 11.2% in May. Mortgage demand has remained resilient in both regions growing 4.2% in the EA and 2.9% in the UK. Weakness in consumer credit appears to be stabilising (see monthly trends below). In the EA consumer credit grew 0.2% in July unchanged from June, but still a new low YoY growth rate. In the UK, consumer credit declined -3.6% YoY compared with a decline of -3.7% in June.

Counterparts versus components – new peak gaps in the growth of private sector credit and money supply (Source: ECB; Bank of England; CMMP analysis)

Diverging trends between the components and counterparts of broad money tell an important story – the gap between the growth in money supply and the growth in credit demand is at new 10-year peak levels. In the EA, the gap between M3 growth (10.2%) and adjusted loans to the PSC growth (4.7%) was 5.5ppt (or minus 5.5ppt in the graph above). This is a 10-year peak and the largest gap since 2001 (not shown above). In the UK, the gap between M4ex growth (12.4%) and M4Lex (5.5%) was 6.9ppt, again a new 10-year peak. In “normal cycles”, money supply and the demand for credit would move together but current trends are indicative of a basic deficiency in credit demand and a second potentially negative piece of news for inflation hawks.

Uncertainty proxies for EA HHs and NFCs (Source: ECB; CMMP analysis)

Looking at ST dynamics, “uncertainty” appears to have peaked at the same time (May 2020) in both the EA and the UK but remains very elevated against historic trends. In this context, trends in monthly flows into liquid assets offering negative real returns are used a proxy measure for uncertainty. In July, deposits placed by EA HHs totalled €53bn, below April 2020’s peak of €80bn but still above the 2019 average monthly flow of €33bn. NFC deposits increased by €59bn in July. Again this was below May 2020’s peak flows of €112bn but still well above the 2019 average monthly flow of €13bn (see chart above).

Uncertainty proxies for UK HHs and NFCs (Source: Bank of England; CMMP analysis)

In the UK, HH deposit flows totalled £7bn in July, down from the May 2020 peak of £27bn but above the 2019 monthly average flow of £5bn. NFCs deposits in July rose from £8bn in June to £ 12bn in July. These were also below the May 2020 peak of £26bn but well above the £0.8bn 2019 average (see chart above).

Monthly consumer credit flows in the EA (Source: ECB; CMMP analysis)

HHs have stopped repaying consumer credit and monthly flows have bounced back to just below (EA) or just above (UK) 2019 monthly average. In July, EA consumer credit totalled €3.2bn and €3bn in June and July respectively. This followed repayments of €-12bn, €-14bn and €-2bn in March, April and May respectively. The last two months’ positive monthly flows compare with the 2019 average of €3.4bn.

Monthly consumer credit flows in the UK (Source: Bank of England; CMMP analysis)

After four consecutive months of net repayments, UK consumer credit turned positive in July. The £1.2bn borrowed in July was above the average £1.2bn recorded in 2019. As noted above, the recent weakness in consumer credit means that the average growth rate (-3.6% YoY) is still the weakest since the series began in 1994.

Conclusion

In “August snippets – Part 1”, I highlighted the importance of disciplined investment frameworks and followed this in “August snippets – Part 2” by revisiting the foundations of my CMMP Analysis framework that incorporates three different time perspectives into a single investment thesis. How do July’s trends fit into this framework?

The overriding message here is one of uncertainty and deficient credit demand, a more nuanced message than some inflation hawks suggest. Looking at ST dynamics, uncertainty peaked in May in both regions, HHs have stopped repaying consumer credit and the NFC “dash-for-cash” has also peaked. From an investment perspective, 2020 is seen best as a year when an extreme event (Covid-19) engulfed weak, pre-existing cyclical trends. The negative impacts of this event have peaked, at least from a monetary perspective. However, the negative (over-arching) LT structural dynamics that have their roots in excess levels of private sector debt remain with negative implications for money, credit and business cycles and future investment returns.

If you go down to the woods today…

Please note that summary comments and graphs above are extracts from more detailed analysis that is available separately

“2Q20 message from the money sector”

Part 1 – the euro area narrative

The key chart

Headline figures mask a more nuanced message from the monthly flow data
Source: ECB; CMMP analysis

The key message

The “2Q20 message from the money sector” is simple: uncertainty in the euro area has peaked but remains elevated still.

  • Demand for overnight deposits remains the key driver of M3 growth
  • Above-trend NFC credit demand and resilient HH mortgage demand is offsetting weakness in consumer credit
  • Monthly flows into overnight deposits (and uncertainty) peaked in March at 5x 2019 average flows but remain 1.3x 2019 average flows
  • HHs have stopped paying down consumer credit and mortgage demand has remained resilient throughout the pandemic
  • The NFC “dash for cash” has also peaked and the monthly flow of corporate borrowing fell below the 2019 average in June
  • Despite negative real rates, almost €10trillion continues to sit in cash and overnight deposits
  • The key question – how much of this is “forced” versus “precautionary” savings – remains unanswered for now.

Six charts that matter

The headlines from the ECB’s money supply data for June 2020 suggest little change to the “message from the money sector” narrative (see key chart above). Growth in broad money (M3) rose to 9.2% YoY from 8.9% in May, the fastest rate of growth since July 2008. Narrow money (M1) grew 12.6% YoY from 12.5% in May and overnight deposits grew 13.1% YoY from 13.0% in May. M1 and overnight deposits contributed 8.5ppt and 7.6ppt to the overall M3 growth of 9.2% respectively. In short, households (HHs) and corporates (NFCs) continue to demonstrate a high preference for liquid assets despite negative real returns, which reflects high levels of uncertainty. No surprises here.

HH and NFC loans as a counterpart to M3 (% YoY)
Source: ECB; CMMP analysis

Looking at the counterparts to broad money, credit to the private sector contributed 5.1ppt to M3 growth down from 5.3ppt in May. HH lending stood at 3.0% YoY, flat on the month, while growth in NFC lending fell to 7.1% YoY from 7.3% in May. As before, above-trend NFC credit and resilient HH mortgage demand (4.1% YoY) offset the lack of growth in consumer credit (flat, YoY)

Monthly flows of overnight deposits
Source: ECB; CMMP analysis

Behind the headlines, the monthly flow data presents a more nuanced picture. Monthly flows into overnight deposits peaked at €250bn in March (5x the 2019 average flow) and have fallen back to €63bn in June (1.3x the 2019 average flow).

HH “uncertainty” peaked one month before NFC “uncertainty” – but both remain elevated
Source: ECB; CMMP analysis

HH deposit flow peaked at €80bn in April and has fallen to €50bn in June. NFC deposit flow peaked a month later in May at €112bn and has fallen back even faster to €42bn. In both cases, however, the latest monthly flow is still 1.2x the respective 2019 averages.

HH no longer paying down consumer credit
Source: ECB; CMMP analysis

After three months of negative flows, EA HHs have stopped paying down credit for consumption. They borrowed €1bn in June after negative flows of €-12bn, €-14bn and €-2bn in March, April and May respectively.

Mortgage demand remains resilient
Source: ECB; CMMP analysis

HHs also borrowed €10bn in June to purchase houses, down from €20bn in May. The smoothed 3m MVA of monthly mortgage flows has been trending between €10bn and €20bn for a sustained period reflecting resilient demand since mid-2017.

Passed the peak “dash for cash”
Source: ECB; CMMP analysis

The “dash for cash” from NFCs appears to have peaked at €121bn flow in March 2020. Since then, the monthly flow has declined to €72bn (April) and €50bn (May) to €8bn (June), below the 2019 average monthly flow of €11bn.  

Please note that the summary comments and graphs above are extracts from more detailed analysis that is available separately.

“Follow the Euro-money”

2019’s end-of-year message

The key chart

Leading (real M1), coincident (real HH) and lagging (real NFC) indicators moved further away from the levels associated with recession risks in the euro area during 2019 (% YoY, real terms)
Source: ECB; Haver; CMMP analysis

The message from 2019

Monetary indicators moved away from the levels associated with recession risks in the euro area (EA) during 2019.

A very brief summary

Nominal growth rates in narrow money (M1), broad money (M3) and private sector credit (PSC) ended the year at, or close to, 12-month highs and well above the levels recorded in 2018. In real terms, M1 grew 6.6% in 2019 versus 5.0% in 2018 (with a 2019 high of 7.6% in October). Given the leading indicator qualities of trends in real M1, this data supports the narrative that recession fears in the EA have been overdone. Household credit (a coincident indicator) grew at 3.7% in nominal terms, the fastest rate in the current cycle and 2.4% in real terms. The main inconsistency in this data was the slowdown in NFC lending over 2019 particularly in the final months (trends in real NFC credit are typically considered lagging indicators).

These positive trends were offset by three counterbalancing trends: (1) while PSC growth ended 2019 close to its high, current growth remains subdued in relation to LT trends; (2) the demand for credit continues to lag the supply of money which indicates that the EA has still to recover fully from the debt overhang; and (3) ECB policies are fuelling growth in less-productive FIRE-based lending (see “The ECB’s missing chart“) with potentially negative implications for leverage, growth, financial stability, and income inequality.

The charts that matter

Growth rates in narrow money (M1), broad money (M3) and private sector credit (PSC) ended the year at, or close to, 12-months highs (% YoY, nominal terms)
Source: ECB; Haver; CMMP analysis
Leading indicator – real M1 grew 6.6% YoY in 2019 versus 5.0% YoY in 2018 (% YoY in real terms)
Source: ECB; Haver; CMMP analysis
Co-incident indicator – real HH credit growth of 2.4% , driven by sustained mortgage demand (% YoY in real terms)
Source: ECB; Haver, CMMP analysis
Lagging indicator – the slowdown in real NFC credit in 4Q19 was inconsistent with other trends (% YoY in real terms)
Source: ECB; Haver; CMMP analysis
PSC credit growth ended the year on a high, but remains subdued in relation to LT trends (% YoY 3m MVA in nominal terms)
Source: ECB; Haver; CMMP analysis
Deficient demand – private sector credit demand lags the supply of money. The EA has still to recover fully from the debt overhang (% YoY 3m MVA in nominal terms)
Source: ECB; Haver; CMMP analysis
Fueling the FIRE – ECB policies are supporting growth in less-productive FIRE-based lending with potentially negative implications for leverage, growth, financial stability, and income inequality (% total EA loans)
Source: ECB; Haver; CMMP analysis

Please note that the summary comments above are extracts from more detailed analysis that is available separately