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Leading Indicators
Carlos Capistran
Merrill Lynch (Mexico)
carlos.capistran@baml.com
Brace for faster global growth
¢ Our leading indicator of leading indicators (LILI}, shows that global growth will likely
continue to improve in early 2017.
¢ Faster global growth as anticipated by LILI supports higher rates and reflation.
A leading indicator of leading indicators
Investors use leading indicators to try to anticipate turning points in economic activity
because those turning points drive FX, rates and stocks. One transmission channel is
that turning points usually anticipate monetary policy changes. The most reliable leading
indicators available summarize a battery of activity, financial and qualitative variables.
One example is the set of Composite Leading Indicators (CLIs) calculated by the OECD,
which is heavily used by policy makers and market participants.
The problem that we have with leading indicators is they are not really useful to market
participants because they move after the market does. That is, leading indicators
anticipate growth but not the market because they use financial variables to anticipate
growth. Leading indicators rely heavily on interest rates, stock market indexes and
exchange rates because they incorporate vast information quickly.
LILI solves the problem in two dimensions. It is not based on financial variables. Rather,
LILI is based on qualitative data, consumer and business confidence, which we believe
are optimal to capture “animal spirits.” And, it is constructed explicitly to anticipate the
CLI, as we use a dynamic forecasting regression with lags of consumer and business
confidence to calculate LILI.
The signal for early 2017
LILI indicates that in early 2017 global growth will continue with an improving economic
outlook (Chart 23). Consumers and firms seem to be bullish around the world, because
LILI anticipates an even stronger outlook than the CLI. Here global growth means
growth in the OECD plus the six largest non-OECD members. LILI anticipates the CLI by
four months, and the CLI in turn anticipates growth by three months.
LILI supports our house view of higher rates and reflation, as the peak of the business
cycle is not in the forecasting horizon. Since LILI is not based on market measures, we
are confident that LILI anticipates market movements as well.
Chart 23: LILI is our leading indicator of leading indicators that leads growth by 7 months and OECD’s CLI by 4 months
103
101
99 ‘
ee QECD + 6 LILI
97 em QECD + 6 CLI
e====OECD +6 growth
Jan-06 Jan-08 Jan-10 Jan-12 Jan-14 Jan-16
Source: BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research, OECD. Note: OECD + 6 includes the 33 OECD member countries plus the largest 6 non-OECD members: Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Russia and South Africa
Bankof America
: Global Rates, FX & EM 2017 Year Ahead | 16 November 2016 11
Merrill Lynch
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_014741
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