2017 ten grey swan oh 2017 ten grey swan

Nomura has 10 'Grey Swan' risks that could roil markets in 2017






Here are Nomura's 10 events that could end up roiling your 2017.
1. Russia on the warpath
A staple of grey swan lists since Vladimir Putin's annexation of Crimea two years ago, Russian military aggression in eastern Europe remains one of the big risks for 2017. While an actual military invasion is unlikely, the foundations may be laid next year through anything from changes to US foreign policy to the election of populist leaders in Europe, according to Nomura. Position for risk by going long credit-default swaps of any of the Baltic nations, shorting credit and trading Poland as a negative proxy.
2. A surge in US productivity
As Fed officials make the case that the president-elect's fiscal stimulus should be targeted at increasing productivity, Nomura says a pick-up in research and development investment could already be laying the groundwork. Like the tech boom of the 1990s it would catch forecasters unaware, but could have implications ranging from a faster series of rate hikes to a sustained boost to equities if it materializes.
3. China floats the yuan
As recent outflows suggest, a balance-of-payments shock could follow hasty moves to liberalize the currency regime of the world's second-largest economy. The probability China gets to that goal in the next 12 months is "very low," Nomura analysts assert, but prepare for yuan weakness if it happens.
4. An exit from Brexit
UK Prime Minister Theresa May said she'll trigger the process of leaving by March of next year, and her favoured "Brexit means Brexit" catchphrase makes it sound like she means it. But there are two big upsets that could appease the 48%: the case being heard by the UK's Supreme Court might trigger a general election, were it to galvanize pro-EU sections of parliament, while — in an attempt to assuage further break-up — the EU could also grant the country face-saving concessions.
5. Capital controls in emerging markets
Emerging markets may face "pronounced outflows" in 2017 if Trump's planned stimulus spending sends US yields higher and further strengthens the dollar. That could prompt policy makers to take action, and they might even coordinate in a collective rebellion against the US. Countries most at risk are those with volatile currencies, low currency reserves and relatively low rates.
6. Japanese inflation jumps
What if the market is wrong to price in a moderate pick-up in Japanese inflation next year? A sharp rise — potentially triggered by the collision of higher oil prices and a weaker yen — could prompt the Bank of Japan to take action by lifting its 10-year yield target of zero percent. Such a shift could have a global impact because both inflation and global core bond yields are highly correlated.
7. A clearing house crisis
The systemic risks that stem from the clearing houses that were themselves introduced to contain systemic risks aren't new to regulators: financial stability watchdogs are already taking measures to deal with any potential fallouts. "The interplay between struggling banks, collateral squeezes, sharp market moves in an overpriced market with central counterparties at the center" could potentially lead to a crisis, in Nomura's worst-case scenario.
8. Trump takes fight to the Fed
The Fed chair has indicated that she'll stay her term. Yet Janet Yellen was on the receiving end of some harsh invective during the future president's campaign, and Nomura considers a change to the bank's mandate to be among 2017's outlying risks. More likely is that Trump could name sympathetic board members when present appointments expire. Higher policy rates could ensue.
9. Abenomics comes unstuck
The most likely outcome of a general election in Japan is that Prime Minister Abe's support will be solidified. That means that anything fracturing this stability will come as a big shock to the market. A weakening of Abe's hold on power could cause Abenomics trades to be unwound, with Japanese equities bearing the brunt of the pullback.
10. The end of cash
It seems inevitable that electronic payments will replace notes and coins at some point, but Nomura picks up on one reason why it might happen sooner rather than later: negative yields. Electronic money would prevent potential savers stashing money under their mattresses to avoid sub-zero interest rates. The risk to this scenario is of course that savers get hurt and consumers start inventing new hard currencies.