Asset Allocation
Highlights We always strive to develop new analytical methods to complement our focus on judging currencies based on global liquidity conditions and the business cycle. This week, we introduce a ranking method based strictly on domestic factors: We call it the Aggregate Domestic Attractiveness Ranking. Using this method alone, the USD, the NZD, the AUD, and the NOK are the most attractive currencies over the coming three months, while the JPY, the GBP, the EUR and the CHF are the least attractive ones. If we further filter the results using a valuation gauge, the USD, the NOK and the CAD are the most attractive currencies over the coming three months, while the CHF, the JPY and the GBP are the least attractive ones. Ultimately, the message is clear: if the dollar corrects, domestic factors suggest it will be shallow. However, buying pro-cyclical commodity currencies at the expense of countercyclical ones makes sense no matter what. Feature This publication places significant emphasis on understanding where we stand in the global liquidity and business cycle in order to make forecasts for G-10 currencies. However, we also like to refer to other methods to add supplementary dimensions to our judgment calls. In this optic, we have focused on factor-based analyses such as understanding momentum, carry and valuation considerations. This week, we take another approach: We build a ranking methodology using domestic economic variables only, intentionally excluding global business cycle factors. Essentially, we want to create an additional filter to be used independently of our main method. This way, we can develop a true complement to our philosophy rooted in understanding the global business cycle. With this approach, we rank currencies in terms of domestic growth, slack, inflation, financial conditions, central bank monitors, and real rates. We look at the level of these variables as well as how they have evolved over the past 12 months. After ranking each currency for each criterion, we compute an aggregate attractiveness ranking incorporating all the information. We then compare the attractiveness of each currency to their premiums/discounts to our Intermediate-Term Timing Models. Based on this methodology, the USD, the NOK and the CAD are the most attractive currencies over the coming three months, while the CHF, the JPY, and the GBP are the least attractive ones. Building A Domestic Attractiveness Ranking Domestic Growth The first dimension tries to capture the strength and direction of domestic growth. We begin by looking at the annual growth rate of industrial production excluding construction, as well as how this growth rate has evolved over the past 12 months. Here, the currencies of countries at the top right of the chart are most attractive, while those at the bottom left are least attractive. As Chart I-1 illustrates, Sweden is performing particularly well on this dimension, while the euro area, Switzerland, the U.K, and Japan are not. The U.S. stands toward the middle of the pack. When aggregating this dimension on both the first and second derivative of industrial production, Sweden ranks first, followed by the U.S. and Norway (Chart I-2). The U.K. and the euro area rank at the bottom. When trying to gauge the impact of domestic growth on each currency’s attractiveness, we also look at the forward-looking OECD leading economic indicator (LEI). As with industrial production, the currencies of countries at the top right of the chart are most attractive, while those at the bottom left are least attractive. This changes the ranking. New Zealand exhibits the highest annual growth rate, followed by the U.S. Meanwhile, when looking at how the annual rate of change has evolved over the past 12 months, Australia shows the least deterioration, and the euro area the most (Chart I-3). Putting these two facets of the LEI together, Australia currently ranks first, followed by the U.S. and New Zealand. Switzerland and the U.K perform the most poorly (Chart I-4). Slack Then, we focus on slack, observing the dynamics in the unemployment gap, calculated using the OECD estimates of the non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment (NAIRU). Here, the currencies of countries at the top right of the chart are least attractive, while those at the bottom left are most attractive. Switzerland enjoys both a very negative and rapidly falling unemployment gap (Chart I-5). The U.K. also exhibits a clear absence of slack, but in response to the woes surrounding Brexit, this tightness is decreasing. Interestingly, the euro area looks good. Despite its high unemployment rate of 7.9%, the unemployment gap is negative, a reflection of its high NAIRU. Combining the amount of slack with the change in slack, Switzerland, New Zealand and the euro area display the best rankings, while the U.S. and Sweden exhibit the worst (Chart I-6). The poor rankings for both the U.S. and Sweden reflect that there is little room for improvement in these countries. Inflation When ranking currencies on the inflation dimension, we look at core inflation and wages. We assume that rising inflationary pressures are a plus, as they indicate the need for tighter policy. We begin with core inflation itself; the currencies of countries at the top right of the chart are most attractive, while those at the bottom left are least attractive. Canada and the U.S. both sport higher core inflation than the rest of the sample, as well positive inflationary momentum (Chart I-7). Switzerland displays both a very low level of inflation as well as declining momentum. U.K. inflation displays the least amount of momentum. On the core CPI ranking, the Canadian dollar ranks first, followed by the USD. Unsurprisingly, Japan and Switzerland rank at the bottom of the heap (Chart I-8). We also use wages to track inflationary conditions as G-10 central banks have put a lot of emphasis on labor costs. Similar to core inflation, we measure each country’s level of wage growth as well as its wage-growth momentum. The currencies of countries at the top right of the chart are most attractive, while those at the bottom left are least attractive. This time, the U.S. and the U.K. display both the highest annual growth rate of wages as well as the fastest increase in wage inflation (Chart I-9). Meanwhile, Norwegian wage growth is very poor, but improving. The U.S. and the U.K. rank first on this dimension, while Switzerland and Canada rank last, the latter is impacted by its very sharp deceleration in wage growth (Chart I-10). Financial Conditions The Financial Conditions Index (FCI) has ample explanatory power when it comes to forecasting a country’s future growth and inflation prospects. This property has made the FCI a key variable tracked by G-10 central banks. Here we plot the level of the FCI relative to the annual change in FCI. A low and easing FCI boosts a nation’s growth prospects, while a high and tightening FCI hurts the outlook. Consequently, the currencies of countries at the top right of the chart are least attractive, while those at the bottom left are most attractive. While Switzerland has the highest level of FCI – courtesy of an overvalued exchange rate – the U.S. has experienced the greatest tightening in financial conditions (Chart I-11). Combining the level and change in FCI, we find that New Zealand currently possess the most pro-growth conditions, followed by both Sweden and Norway. On the other end of the spectrum, Japan and the U.S. suffer from the most deleterious financial backdrop (Chart I-12). Central Bank Monitors We often use the Central Bank Monitors devised by our Global Fixed Income Strategy sister publication as a gauge to evaluate the most probable next moves by central banks. It therefore makes great sense to use this tool in the current exercise. The only problem is that we currently do not have a Central Bank Monitor for Switzerland, Sweden and Norway. Nonetheless, using this variable to create a dimension, we compare where each available Central Bank Monitor stands with its evolution over the past 12 months. The currencies of countries at the top right of the chart are most attractive, while those at the bottom left are least attractive. Currently, Canada and the U.S. show a clear need for tighter policy, without a pronounced fall in their respective Central Bank Monitors (Chart I-13). However, while the U.K. could stand higher rates right now, the British Central Bank Monitor is quickly falling, suggesting the window of opportunity for the Bank of England is dissipating fast. The euro area and Australia do not seem to justify higher rates right now. On this metric, Canada and the U.S. stand at one and two, while Australia and the euro area offer the least attractive conditions for their currencies (Chart I-14). Real Interest Rates The Uncovered Interest Rate Parity (UIP) hypothesis has been one the workhorses of modern finance in terms of forecasting exchange rates. To conduct this type of exercise, our previous work has often relied on a combination of short- and long-term real rates, a formulation with a good empirical track record.1 Accordingly, in the current exercise, we use this same combination of short- and long-term real rates to evaluate the attractiveness of G-10 currencies. This dimension is created by comparing the level of real rates to the change in real rates over the past 12 months. The currencies of countries at the top right of the chart are most attractive, while those at the bottom left are least attractive. The U.S. dollar is buoyed by elevated and rising real rates, while the pound is hampered by low and falling real rates (Chart I-15). This results in the dollar ranking first on this dimension, and the pound ranking last (Chart I-16). Interestingly, the yen ranks second because depressed inflation expectations result in higher-than-average and rising real rates. Aggregate Domestic Attractiveness Ranking and Investment Conclusions Once we have ranked each currency on each dimension, we can compute the Aggregate Domestic Attractiveness Ranking as a simple average of the ranking of the eight different dimensions. Based on this method, domestic fundamentals suggest that the USD, the NZD, the NOK and the AUD are the most attractive currencies over the next three months or so, while the JPY, the GBP, the EUR and the CHF are the least attractive ones (Chart I-17). Interestingly, this confirms our current tactical recommendation espoused over recent weeks to favor pro-cyclical currencies at the expense of defensive currencies. However, it goes against our view that the U.S. dollar is likely to correct further over the same time frame. This difference reflects the fact that unlike our regular analysis, the Aggregate Domestic Attractiveness Ranking does not take into account the global business cycle, momentum and sentiment. We can refine this approach further and incorporate valuation considerations. We often rely on our Intermediate-Term Timing Model to gauge if a currency is cheap or not. Chart I-18 compares the Aggregate Domestic Attractiveness Ranking of G-10 currencies to their deviation from their ITTM. Countries at the bottom left offer the most attractive currencies, while those at the upper right are the least attractive currencies. This chart further emphasizes the attractiveness of the dollar: not only do domestic factors support the greenback, so do its short-term valuations. The CAD, the NOK and the SEK also shine using this method, while the less pro-cyclical EUR, CHF and JPY suffer. The pound too seems to posses some short-term downside. Ultimately, this tells us that if the global environment is indeed unfavorable to the U.S. dollar right now, we cannot ignore the strength of U.S. domestic factors. Consequently, we refrain from aggressively selling the USD during the tactical anticipated correction. Instead, if the global environment favors the pro-cyclical commodity currencies on a three-month basis, it is optimal to buy them on their crosses, especially against the CHF and JPY. Meanwhile, the pound has very little going for it, and selling it against the SEK or the NOK could still deliver ample gains. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "In Search Of A Timing Model" dated July 22, 2016, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.S. has been mixed: January U.S. consumer confidence index surprised to the downside, coming in at 120.2. U.S. unemployment rate in January increased to 4.0%, from a previous 3.9% reading; however, this data point was likely distorted by the government shutdown Non-farm payrolls in January surprised to the upside, coming in at 304k. The DXY index rebounded by 0.9% this week. Tactically, we remain bearish on the dollar, as we believe that the current easing in financial conditions will help global growth temporarily surprise dismal investor expectations. Nevertheless, we remain cyclical dollar bulls, as the Fed will ultimately hike more than what is currently priced this year, and as China’s current reflation campaign is about mitigating the downside to growth, not generating a new upswing in indebtedness and capex. Report Links: Global Liquidity Trends Support The Dollar, But... - January 25, 2019 So Donald Trump Cares About Stocks, Eh? - January 9, 2019 Waiting For A Real Deal - December 7, 2018 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 The recent data in euro area has been negative: The Q4 euro area GDP on a year-over-year basis fell to 1.2%, in line with expectations. Euro area headline inflation in January on a year-over-year basis decreased to 1.4%, from the previous 1.6% in December 2018, core inflation rose to 1.1%. January Markit euro area composite PMI fell to 51.0. Euro area retail sales in December fell to 0.8% on a year-over-year basis, from the previous 1.8%. In response to this poor economic performance, EUR/USD has fallen by 0.8% this week. We remain cyclically bearish on the euro, as we believe that the Fed will hike more than anticipated this cycle and that Europe is more negatively impacted by China’s woes than the U.S. is. Hence, slowing global growth will force the ECB to stay dovish much longer than expected. Moreover, our Intermediate Term Timing Model, is showing that the euro is once again trading at a premium to short term fundamentals. Report Links: 2019 Key Views: The Xs And The Currency Market - December 7, 2018 Six Questions From The Road - November 16, 2018 Evaluating The ECB’s Options In December - November 6, 2018 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan has been mixed: Annual inflation increased to 0.4% from previous 0.3%, core inflation increased to 0.7% from 0.6%, and inflation ex fresh food increased to 1.1% from 0.9%. December retail trade weakened to 1.3% from the previous 1.4%. Japanese unemployment rate in December has fallen to 2.4%. January consumer confidence index fell to 41.9, underperforming the expectations. USD/JPY has risen by 0.3% this week. We remain bearish on the yen on a tactical basis. The recent FOMC meeting kept the U.S. key interest rate unchanged, so did many other central banks. The resulting ease in global financial conditions could be a headwind for safe havens, like the yen. Moreover, U.S. yields are likely to rise even after the easing in financial conditions is passed, as BCA anticipates the Fed to resume hiking in the second half of 2019. This will create additional downside for the yen. Report Links: Yen Fireworks - January 4, 2019 2019 Key Views: The Xs And The Currency Market - December 7, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 The recent data in Britain has been negative: Markit U.K. composite PMI has surprised to the downside, falling to 50.3 in January; service PMI dropped to 50.1 while construction PMI fell to 50.6. Halifax house prices yearly growth, surprised to the downside, coming in at 0.8%. Finally, Markit Services PMI also underperform, coming in at 50.1. The Bank of England rate decided to keep rates on hold at 0.75%. GBP/USD has lost 0.8% this week. On a long-term basis, we remain bullish on cable, as valuation for the pound are attractive. However, we believe that the current stalemate in Westminster, coupled with the hard-nose approach of Brussels has slightly increase the probability of a No-deal Brexit. This political uncertainty implies that short-term risk-adjusted returns remains low. Report Links: Deadlock In Westminster - January 18, 019 Six Questions From The Road - November 16, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Recent data in Australia has been negative: Building permits in December has surprised to the downside, coming in at -8.4% on a month-over-month basis. December retail sales has slowed down, coming in at -0.4%. Finally, in December, with exports contracted at a -2% pace, and imports, at -6% pace. The RBA decided to leave the cash rate unchanged at 1.5%. While it was at first stable, AUD/USD ultimately has fallen by 2% this week. Overall, we remain bearish on the AUD in the long run. The unhealthy Australian housing market coupled with very elevated debt loads, could drag residential construction and household consumption down. Moreover, the uncompetitive Australian economy could fall into a potential liquidity trap as the credit conditions tighten further. Report Links: CAD And AUD: Jumping Higher To Plunge Deeper - February 1, 2019 Waiting For A Real Deal - December 7, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 The recent data in New Zealand has been negative: The participation rate underperformed expectations, coming in at 70.9%. Moreover, employment growth also surprised to the downside, coming in at 0.1%. Finally, the unemployment rate surprised negatively, coming in at 4.3%. NZD/USD has fallen by 2.3% this week. Overall, we remain bullish on the NZD against the AUD, given that credit excesses are less acute in New Zealand than in Australia. Moreover, New Zealand is much less exposed to the Chinese industrial cycle than Australia. This means that is China moving away from its current investment-led growth model will likely negatively impact AUD/NZD. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Clashing Forces: The Fed And EM Financial Conditions - October 19, 2018 In Fall, Leaves Turn Red, The Dollar Turns Green - October 12, 2018 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 The recent data in Canada has been negative: GDP has fallen to 1.7% on a year-over-year basis from the previous 2.2%. The December industrial production growth came in at -0.7% month-on-month, a negative surprise. Canadian manufacturing PMI in January decreased to 53. On the back of these poor data and weaker oil prices, USD/CAD rose by 1.6% this week, more than undoing last week’s fall. We expect the CAD to outperform other commodity currencies like the AUD and the NZD, oil prices are likely to outperform base metals on a cyclical basis. Moreover, the Canadian economy is more levered to the U.S. than other commodity driven economies. Thus, our constructive view on the U.S. implies a positive view on the CAD on a relative basis. Report Links: CAD And AUD: Jumping Higher To Plunge Deeper - February 1, 2019 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Clashing Forces: The Fed And EM Financial Conditions - October 19, 2018 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland has been mixed: Real retail sales yearly growth improved this month, coming in at -0.3% versus -0.6% last month. However, the SVME Purchasing Manager’s Index underperformed expectations, coming in at 54.3. EUR/CHF has fell 0.2% this week. Despite this setback, we remain bullish on EUR/CHF. Last year’s EUR/CHF weakness tightened Swiss financial conditions significantly and lowered inflationary pressures. Given that the Swiss National Bank does not want a repeat of the deflationary spiral of 2015, we believe that it will continue with its ultra-dovish monetary policy and increase its interventionism in the FX market, in order to weaken the franc, and bring back inflation to Switzerland. Moreover, on a tactical basis, the ease in financial conditions should hurt safe havens like the franc. Report Links: Waiting For A Real Deal - December 7, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Recent data in Norway has been negative: The December retail sales missed the consensus estimates, coming in at -1.80%. December credit indicator decreased to 5.4%. Registered unemployment rate in January has increased to 2.6%, surprising to the downside. USD/NOK has risen by 1.8% this week. We are positive on USD/NOK on a cyclical timeframe. Although we are bullish on oil prices, USD/NOK is more responsive to real rate differentials. This means, that a hikes later this year by the Fed will widen differentials between these two countries and provide a tailwind for this cross. Nevertheless, the positive performance of oil prices should help the NOK outperform non-commodity currencies like the AUD. We also expect NOK/SEK to appreciate and EUR/NOK to depreciate. Report Links: Global Liquidity Trends Support The Dollar, But... - January 25, 2019 Waiting For A Real Deal - December 7, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Recent data in Sweden has been negative: Consumer confidence surprised to the downside, coming in at 92. Moreover, retail sales yearly growth also underperformed expectations, coming in at 5.6%. Finally, manufacturing PMI came in line with expectations at 51.5. USD/SEK has risen by 2.2% this week. Overall, we remain long term bullish on the krona against the euro, given that Swedish monetary policy is much too easy for the current inflationary environment, a situation that will have to be rectified. However, given our positive view on the U.S. dollar on a cyclical basis, we are cyclically bullish on USD/SEK, since krona is the G-10 currency most sensitive to dollar moves. Report Links: Global Liquidity Trends Support The Dollar, But... - January 25, 2019 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights Hyman Minsky famously said that “stability begets instability.” The converse is also true: Instability begets stability. None of the preconditions for a U.S. recession are in place yet. The Fed’s decision to press the pause button on further rate hikes ensures that it will take at least another 18 months for monetary policy to turn restrictive. Global growth should accelerate by mid-2019, as Chinese stimulus kicks in and the headwinds facing Europe dissipate. Investors should overweight global equities and underweight bonds over the next 12 months. The leadership role in the equity space will gradually shift outside the United States. Feature The Long Shadow Of The Financial Crisis "Stability begets instability” declared Hyman Minsky in his widely cited, seldom-read book.1 By this, Minsky meant that periods of economic tranquility often encourage excessive risk-taking, sowing the seeds of their own demise. We would not quarrel with Minsky’s assessment, but we would point out that the converse is also true: Instability begets stability. Following periods of intense financial stress, lenders become more circumspect about whom they lend to, while borrowers become reluctant to take on debt. The result is economically bittersweet. On the plus side, the newfound caution of lenders and borrowers alike ensures that financial imbalances are slow to build up again. On the negative side, sluggish credit growth restrains spending. The net effect is a recovery that is often slow and uneven, but one which lasts longer than expected. Few Signs Of Major U.S. Economic Imbalances This is the world in which we find ourselves today. It took a decade following the subprime crisis for the U.S. to return to full employment. Much of Europe is not even there yet. Lenders continue to take risks. However, they have been quicker than usual to scale back exposure at the first sign of trouble. For example, as U.S. auto loan defaults began rising in 2015, banks tightened lending standards. As a result, the share of auto loans transitioning into delinquency peaked in Q4 of 2016 and has since drifted down modestly (Chart 1). Chart 1Lenders Are More Circumspect These Days: The Case Of Autos A similar thing happened when corporate credit spreads blew out in 2015 following the crash in oil prices (Chart 2). Banks tightened lending standards starting in late 2015. Once defaults peaked in early 2017, banks started easing standards. Chart 2Banks Were Quick To Tighten Lending Standards In 2015 Tellingly, the distress in corporate debt markets in 2015-16 did not cause the financial system to seize up, as evidenced by the fact that financial stress indices only increased marginally during that period. This suggests that financial imbalances never had a chance to rise to a level that threatened the overall economy. The Preconditions For The Next U.S. Recession Are Not Yet In Place Today, the U.S. private-sector financial balance – the difference between what the private sector earns and spends – stands at a healthy surplus of 2.1% of GDP. Both of the last two recessions began when the private-sector balance was in deficit (Chart 3). Chart 3The Private Sector Is Not Living Beyond Its Means The Way It Was Before The Last Two Recessions This raises an intriguing question: If the U.S. private sector is not suffering from any major imbalances, what is going to cause the next recession? That’s a very good question, with no obvious answer! The past two recessions were triggered by the bursting of asset bubbles – first the dotcom bubble and then the housing bubble. Today, U.S. equities are far from cheap, but with the S&P 500 trading at 16.1-times forward earnings, they are hardly in a bubble (Chart 4). The housing market is also on much firmer footing: The homeowner vacancy rate is near all-time lows, while the quality of mortgage lending has been very high (Chart 5). Chart 4While U.S. Stocks Are Not Cheap, They Aren't In A Bubble Chart 5Housing Fundamentals Are Solid Of course, recessions can occur for reasons other than the bursting of asset bubbles. The 1973-74 recession and the recessions of the early 1980s were triggered by a surge in oil prices, requiring the Fed to hike rates aggressively. Luckily, such an oil-induced recession is highly unlikely today. Inflation expectations are better anchored, while oil consumption represents a much smaller share of GDP than it did back then (Chart 6). In addition, the U.S. has become a major oil producer, which implies that the drag to consumers from higher oil prices would be partly offset by increased capital spending in the energy sector. At any rate, the ability of shale producers to respond to higher prices with additional output limits the extent to which prices can rise in the first place. Chart 6An Oil Price Shock Is Unlikely To Cause A Recession Past economic downturns have also been caused by major adjustments in the cyclical parts of the economy. As a share of GDP, cyclical spending is lower today than it has been at the outset of most recessions (Chart 7). The proliferation of just-in-time inventory systems has also reduced the influence that inventory swings have on the economy (Chart 8). Chart 7Cyclical Spending Is Not Extended A severe tightening of fiscal policy can also trigger a recession.2 Fortunately, the end of the government shutdown reduces the risk of such an outcome. Rightly or wrongly, voters blamed President Trump for the recent closure (Chart 9). As we speak, the Trump administration is negotiating with Democrats to avert another shutdown slated to begin on February 15. The key item of contention concerns funding for a border wall with Mexico. Even if a deal falls through, rather than shuttering the government again, Trump will probably pursue funding for the wall by declaring a national emergency. Our geopolitical strategists believe such an action will be challenged by the Democrats, but is likely to be upheld by the Supreme Court. Chart 9''I Am Proud To Shut Down The Government'' Global Growth Should Improve Admittedly, the external environment now has a greater influence on the U.S. economy than in the past. Nevertheless, given that exports are only 12% of GDP, it would take a sizeable external shock to knock the U.S. into recession. We think that such a shock is not in the cards. The trade war is likely to go on hiatus as Trump seeks to take credit for a deal with China. In addition, as we discussed two weeks ago, China will scale back its deleveraging campaign now that credit growth has fallen close to nominal GDP growth (Chart 10).3 Chart 10China: Time To Scale Back Deleveraging Euro area growth should reaccelerate over the coming months thanks to lower oil prices, a revival in EM demand, modestly more stimulative fiscal policy, and the palliative effects from the decline in government bond yields across the region. We have also argued that the risks of a “Hard Brexit” should abate.4 Waiting... And Waiting For Inflation To Rise When the next recession rolls around, it will probably be sparked by a surge in inflation, which forces the Fed to raise interest rates much more rapidly than it has so far. Here is the thing though: Inflation is a highly lagging indicator. It usually only peaks long after a downturn has started and troughs after the recovery is well underway (Chart 11). Consider the example of the 1960s. The unemployment rate fell below NAIRU in 1964, but it took another four years for inflation to break out in earnest (Chart 12). The U.S. unemployment rate has been below NAIRU only since 2017. The unemployment rate in Germany and Japan has been below NAIRU for much longer, yet inflation remains stubbornly low in both countries (Chart 13). Chart 12It Took An Overheated Economy For Inflation To Take Off In The Late-1960s Chart 13The U.S., Japanese, And German Economies Are At Full Employment Cheer Up This leaves us with a striking conclusion: Perhaps the next U.S. recession is not around the corner, as some grumpy economists seem to think. Perhaps this economic expansion can endure beyond 2020. The recent U.S. data has certainly been consistent with that thesis. The ISM manufacturing index rose 2.3 percentage points to 56.6 in January. New orders jumped by 6.9 percentage points to 58.2. Payroll growth has also accelerated. Real aggregate earnings are up 4.2% from a year earlier, the fastest pace since October 2015 (Chart 14). Chart 14U.S. Labor Income Growth Has Been Accelerating Housing data are showing tentative evidence of stabilization. New home sales are rebounding, while mortgage applications are back near cycle-highs (Chart 15). Chart 15Housing Activity Is Stabilizing After Last Year's Weakness Reflecting these positive developments, the Citigroup economic surprise index has jumped into positive territory (Chart 16). The New York Fed’s estimate for Q1 2019 GDP growth has also moved up to 2.4%. Chart 16U.S. Economic Data Are Beating Low Expectations Investment Conclusions Recessions and bear markets usually overlap (Chart 17). With the next recession still at least 18 months away, it is premature to turn bearish on equities. We upgraded stocks in December following the post-FOMC sell-off. Although our tactical MacroQuant model is pointing to an elevated risk of a setback over the next few weeks, we continue to see global equities finishing the year 5%-to-10% above current levels. As global growth bottoms out mid-year, the leadership role in equity markets should increasingly move away from the U.S. towards EM and Europe. Chart 17Recessions And Bear Markets Usually Overlap Bonds are a tougher call. We do not expect the Fed to raise rates again at least until June. This will limit the upside for bond yields, as well as the dollar, in the near term. Nevertheless, with the fed funds futures pricing in no rate hikes for the next few years, even a modest shift back to tightening in the second half of this year and beyond will push up bond yields, dampening total returns to fixed income. Looking beyond 2019, the case for maintaining a short duration stance in fixed-income portfolios is very strong. The longer the Fed allows the economy to overheat, the greater the eventual overshoot in inflation will be. Inflation expectations have fallen over the past few months (Chart 18). They should have risen. Ultimately, Gentle Jay Powell’s decision to press the pause button on further rate hikes means that rates will end up peaking at a higher level during this cycle than they would have otherwise. Chart 18Inflation Expectations Have Declined Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 As argued in Hyman P. Minsky, “Stabilizing an Unstable Economy,” Yale University Press, (1986). 2 Severe episodes of fiscal tightening have normally followed military demobilizations. These include the recessions following WW1, WW2, and the Korean War, and to a much lesser extent, the 1990-91 recession which was exacerbated by cuts to the defense budget at the end of the Cold War. 3 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “China’s Savings Problem,” dated January 25, 2019. 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Patient Jay,” dated January 18, 2019. Strategy & Market Trends MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights Chart 1Look For Rate Hikes In H2 2019 First things first: The Fed’s rate hike cycle is not over. Last week’s FOMC statement told us that the Fed will be “patient” and Chairman Powell cited slower global growth and tighter financial conditions as reasons to keep the funds rate steady. However, both of those reasons could soon evaporate. With the market now priced for 8 bps of rate cuts during the next 12 months and the dollar off its highs, there is scope for financial conditions to ease and global growth to improve in the first half of the year. According to our Fed Monitor, only tight financial conditions warrant a pause in rate hikes (Chart 1). The economic growth and inflation components of our Monitor (not shown) continue to recommend a tighter policy stance. The message is that if risk assets rally during the next six months causing financial conditions to ease, then all else equal, the Fed will have the green light to re-start rate hikes in the second half of the year. Investors should maintain below-benchmark duration in U.S. bond portfolios. Feature Investment Grade: Overweight Investment grade corporate bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 183 basis points in January. The index option-adjusted spread tightened 25 bps on the month and currently sits at 127 bps. We upgraded our recommended allocation to corporate bonds three weeks ago because spreads had become too wide given the current phase of the credit cycle.1 Presently, we observe that the 12-month breakeven spread for Baa-rated corporate bonds has been tighter 43% of the time since 1989 (Chart 2). In the phase of the credit cycle when the 3/10 Treasury slope is between 0 bps and 50 bps, corporate breakeven spreads are typically in the lower third of their distributions.2 Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview Baa-rated bonds currently offer better value than higher-rated credits. The 12-month breakeven spread for A-rated debt has been tighter 29% of the time since 1989 (panel 2). Aa and Aaa-rated credits clock in at 25% and 4%, respectively. With the Fed in a holding pattern, we are comfortable taking credit risk for the next six months and recommend that investors move down in quality to capture the extra return. The Fed’s Q4 Senior Loan Officer Survey, released yesterday, showed that a net 3% of banks reported tightening lending standards on C&I loans. Tighter lending standards correlate with higher defaults and wider spreads, so this tentative development bears close monitoring going forward. High-Yield: Overweight High-yield outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 408 basis points in January. The index option-adjusted spread tightened 103 bps, and currently sits at 416 bps. Our measure of the excess spread available in the High-Yield index after accounting for expected default losses is currently 224 bps, slightly below the historical average of 250 bps (Chart 3). In other words, if corporate defaults match the Moody’s baseline forecast for the next 12 months, high-yield bonds will return 224 bps in excess of duration-matched Treasuries, assuming no change in spreads. Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview Moody’s revised its baseline 12-month default rate forecast higher last month, from 2.6% to 3.4%, and as was discussed in last week’s report, the revised forecast looks reasonable given our economic outlook.3 Specifically, our measure of nonfinancial corporate sector gross leverage – calculated as total debt over pre-tax profits – is roughly consistent with a 4% default rate. This leverage measure improved rapidly during the past year, but should start to stabilize during the next few quarters as profit growth decelerates. All in all, baseline default rate expectations have moved higher in recent months, but junk spreads still offer adequate compensation for that risk. In fact, if we assume excess compensation equal to the historical average, then junk spreads embed an expected default rate of 3% (panel 4), not far from the Moody’s base case. While junk spreads offer adequate compensation given our 12-month default outlook, the near-term outlook for excess returns is somewhat brighter as the Fed’s dovish turn should lead to spread compression during the next few months. MBS: Neutral Mortgage-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 32 basis points in January. The conventional 30-year zero-volatility spread tightened 3 bps on the month, driven by a 3 bps decline in the option-adjusted spread (OAS). The compensation for prepayment risk (option cost) held flat. The drop in the 30-year mortgage rate to 4.46%, from 4.94% in November, led to a sharp spike in mortgage refinancings. However, refi activity remains very low relative to history (Chart 4). With the longer-run uptrend in mortgage rates still intact, the recent spike in refinancings is bound to reverse in the coming months. This will keep MBS spreads capped near historically low levels. Chart 4MBS Market Overview Outside of refi activity, MBS spreads are also influenced by changes in mortgage lending standards. The Federal Reserve’s Senior Loan Officer Survey showed no change in residential mortgage lending standards in Q4 2018 (bottom panel), while reported mortgage demand took a significant dip. Periods of tightening lending standards tend to coincide with MBS spread widening, but faced with weaker demand banks are much more likely to ease standards going forward. This is particularly true because very little progress has been made easing lending standards since the financial crisis. The median FICO score for new mortgages peaked at 781 in Q1 2011, but had only fallen to 758 as of Q3 2018. With relatively little risk of spread widening we are comfortable with a neutral allocation to Agency MBS, though tight spreads make the sector less appealing than corporate bonds from a return perspective. Later in the cycle, when the risk of corporate spread widening is more pronounced, MBS will likely warrant an upgrade. Government-Related: Underweight The Government-Related index outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 53 basis points in January. Sovereign debt led the way, outperforming the Treasury benchmark by 221 bps. Foreign Agencies outperformed by 65 bps, Local Authorities outperformed by 32 bps, and Supranationals outperformed by 3 bps. Domestic Agency bonds were the sole laggard, underperforming Treasuries by 3 bps on the month. The Fed’s pause and the accompanying weakness in the dollar spurred last month’s outperformance of USD-denominated Sovereign debt. But given the current attractiveness of U.S. corporate credit, we are not eager to chase the outperformance in Sovereigns. The option-adjusted spread advantage in Baa-rated U.S. corporate credit relative to the Sovereign index is as wide as it was in mid-2016 (Chart 5), a period when corporate bonds outperformed Sovereigns by a significant margin. Chart 5Government-Related Market Overview At the country level, our analysis of USD-denominated Emerging Market Sovereign spreads shows that only Argentina, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE and Poland offer excess spread compared to equivalently-rated U.S. corporates.4 We continue to view the Local Authority sector as very attractive. The sector offers similar value to Aa/A-rated corporate debt on a breakeven spread basis (bottom panel), and it is also dominated by taxable municipal securities that are insulated from weak foreign economic growth. Municipal Bonds: Overweight Municipal bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 7 basis points in January (before adjusting for the tax advantage). The average Aaa-rated Municipal / Treasury yield ratio fell 2% in January, and currently sits at 84% (Chart 6). This is about one standard deviation below its post-crisis mean but above the average of 81% that prevailed in the late stages of the previous cycle, between mid-2006 and mid-2007. Chart 6Municipal Market Overview In our research into the phases of the credit cycle, we often divide the cycle based on the slope of the yield curve. Since 1983, in the middle phase of the credit cycle when the 3/10 Treasury slope is between 0 bps and +50 bps (where it stands today), investment grade corporate bonds have delivered annualized excess returns of -14 bps. In contrast, municipal bonds have delivered annualized excess returns of +47 bps (before adjusting for the tax advantage).5 Given strong historical returns during the current phase of the cycle and the fact that our Municipal Health Monitor remains in “improving health” territory (bottom panel), we advocate an overweight allocation to municipal bonds. Long maturity municipal debt continues to offer a substantial yield advantage relative to the short-end of the curve. For example, a muni investor needs an effective tax rate of 35% to equalize the after-tax yields between a 5-year Aa-rated municipal bond and the equivalent-duration U.S. credit index. For a 20-year muni the same breakeven tax rate is between 10% and 17%. Treasury Curve: Favor 2/30 Barbell Over 7-Year Bullet Treasury yields declined in January, with the 5-year and 7-year maturities falling more than the short and long ends of the curve. The 2/10 slope flattened 3 bps on the month, from 21 bps to 18 bps. The 5/30 slope steepened 5 bps on the month, from 51 bps to 56 bps. In a recent report we looked at the correlations between different yield curve slopes and our 12-month Fed Funds Discounter.6 We found that the 5-year and 7-year maturities are most sensitive to changes in the discounter, while the short and long ends of the curve tend to be more stable. In other words, a decline in our 12-month discounter, like the one seen during the past two months (Chart 7), will tend to flatten the curve out to the 5-year/7-year maturity point and steepen the curve beyond that point. An increase in the discounter has the opposite effect. Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview We expect the market to price some Fed rate hikes back into the curve as financial conditions ease during the next few months. Based on that view, we recommend adopting a yield curve strategy that benefits from a rise in our 12-month discounter. A position short the 7-year bullet and long a duration-matched 2/30 barbell provides the appropriate exposure and is attractively valued by our yield curve models (panel 4).7 TIPS: Overweight TIPS outperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 84 basis points in January. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate rose 14 bps on the month, and currently sits at 1.88%. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate rose 9 bps, and currently sits at 2.04%. Both rates remain below the 2.3% - 2.5% range that has historically been consistent with inflation expectations that are well-anchored around the Fed’s target. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate also remains below the fair value reading from our Adaptive Expectations Model (Chart 8).8 This model is based on a combination of backward-looking and forward-looking inflation measures and is premised on the idea that investors’ expectations take time to adjust to changing macro environments. The current fair value reading from the model is 1.97%, but that fair value reading will trend steadily higher as long as core CPI inflation remains above 1.83%. The 1.83% threshold is the annualized trailing 10-year growth rate in core CPI, and it is the most important variable in our model. Chart 8Inflation Compensation On that note, core CPI has increased at an annual rate of 2.48% during the past 3 months, well above the necessary threshold. And while some forward-looking inflation measures have moderated, notably the ISM Prices Paid index (panel 4), this is largely a reaction to the recent drop in energy prices. A drop that should reverse as global growth improves in the coming months. ABS: Neutral Asset-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 16 basis points in January. The index option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated ABS tightened 8 bps on the month, and currently sits at 40 bps, 6 bps above its pre-crisis low. The Excess Return Bond Map in Appendix C shows that consumer ABS offer greater expected return than Domestic Agencies and Supranationals, though with a commensurate increase in risk. The Map also shows that Agency CMBS offer very similar return potential with much less risk. The Fed's Senior Loan Officer Survey for Q4 2018 showed that banks tightened lending standards slightly for both credit cards and auto loans. This is consistent with a continued gradual uptrend in consumer credit delinquencies (Chart 9). Chart 9ABS Market Overview Rising household interest expense further confirms that the consumer credit delinquency rate is biased higher, albeit from a low starting point (panel 4). All in all, ABS still offer a reasonable risk/reward trade-off but could warrant a downgrade in the coming quarters as credit quality worsens. Non-Agency CMBS: Underweight Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 67 basis points in January. The index option-adjusted spread for non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS tightened 11 bps on the month and currently sits at 105 bps. The Fed’s Senior Loan Officer Survey showed that banks tightened lending standards on commercial real estate (CRE) loans in Q4 and witnessed falling demand (Chart 10). This is a typical negative environment for CMBS spreads. Decelerating CRE prices are also a cause for concern (panel 3). Investors should maintain an underweight allocation to non-Agency CMBS. Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 28 basis points in January. The index option-adjusted spread tightened 4 bps on the month and currently sits at 57 bps. The Excess Return Bond Map in Appendix C shows that Agency CMBS offer high potential return compared to other low-risk spread products. An overweight allocation to this defensive sector continues to make sense. Chart 10CMBS Market Overview Appendix A - The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing We follow a two-step process to formulate recommendations for bond portfolio duration. First, we determine the change in the federal funds rate that is priced into the yield curve for the next 12 months. Second, we decide – based on our assessments of the economy and Fed policy – whether the change in the fed funds rate will exceed or fall short of what is priced into the curve. Most of the time, a correct answer to this question leads to the appropriate duration call. We call this framework the Golden Rule Of Bond Investing, and we demonstrated its effectiveness in the U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing”, dated July 24, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. Chart 11 illustrates the Golden Rule’s track record by showing that the Bloomberg Barclays Treasury Master Index tends to outperform cash when rate hikes fall short of 12-month expectations, and vice-versa. Chart 11The Golden Rule's Track Record At present, the market is priced for 8 basis points of rate cuts during the next 12 months. Given that we expect the Fed to deliver rate hikes in the second half of this year, we recommend that investors maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration. Appendix B- Butterfly Strategy Valuation The following tables present the current read-outs from our butterfly spread models. We use these models to identify opportunities to take duration-neutral positions across the Treasury yield curve. The models are explained in detail in the following two Special Reports: U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated July 25, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “More Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated May 15, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Table 4Butterfly Strategy Valuation: Raw Residuals In Basis Points (As of January 31, 2019) Table 5Butterfly Strategy Valuation: Standardized Residuals (As of January 31, 2019) Table 6Discounted Slope Change During Next 6 Months (BPs) Appendix C - Excess Return Bond Map The Excess Return Bond Map is used to assess the relative risk/reward trade-off between different sectors of the U.S. fixed income market. The Map employs volatility-adjusted breakeven spread analysis to show how likely it is that a given sector will earn/lose money during the subsequent 12 months. The Map does not incorporate any macroeconomic view. The horizontal axis of the Map shows the number of days of average spread widening required for each sector to lose 100 bps versus a position in duration-matched Treasuries. Sectors plotting further to the left require more days of average spread widening and are therefore less likely to see losses. The vertical axis shows the number of days of average spread tightening required for each sector to earn 100 bps in excess of duration-matched Treasuries. Sectors plotting further toward the top require fewer days of spread tightening and are therefore more likely to earn 100 bps of excess return. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Buy Corporate Credit”, dated January 15, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 For further details on how we divide the credit cycle based on the slope of the yield curve please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “2019 Key Views: Implications For U.S. Fixed Income”, dated December 11, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Running Room”, dated January 29, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Oil Supply Shock Is A Risk For Junk”, dated October 9, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “2019 Key Views: Implications For U.S. Fixed Income”, dated December 11, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearh 6 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Don’t Position For Curve Inversion”, dated January 22, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 The output from all of our yield curve models is shown in Appendix B of this report. 8 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Adaptive Expectations In The TIPS Market”, dated November 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification Corporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Chinese reflation, the ongoing global capex upcycle, and the Fed induced cap on the greenback with the knock-on effect of higher commodity prices, all signal that it still pays to overweight S&P cyclicals at the expense of S&P defensives. Sustained EM stock outperformance, a soft U.S. dollar, improving semi equipment operating metrics, along with compelling relative valuations and technicals, all suggest that there are high odds that the recent semi equipment run up has more upside. Recent Changes There are no changes in the portfolio this week. Feature The SPX consolidated the 350 point advance since the Christmas Eve trough last week, setting the stage for a durable advance in the coming months. The Fed stood pat last Wednesday, and signaled a much more dovish policy stance going forward. Chairman Powell was clearly humbled by last December’s convulsing equity market and abrupt tightening in financial conditions. On that front, in the latest FOMC statement the explicit mention of patience is significant: “the Committee will be patient as it determines what future adjustments to the target range for the federal funds rate may be appropriate”. A definitively more dovish Fed, which will help restrain the greenback, remains one of the three key catalysts for a durable equity market advance as we have highlighted in recent research.1 Encouragingly, our proprietary Equity Capitulation Indicator (ECI) has bottomed at two standard deviations below the historical mean (Chart 1). Over the past two decades, such a depressed level in our ECI has marked previous equity market troughs including the early-2016, 2011, 2002 and 1998 iterations. Only the GFC episode was lower, falling to three standard deviations below the mean. Clearly the late-December selling frenzy registers as another investor capitulation point and, if history at least rhymes, more gains are in store for the broad equity market. Chart 1Capitulation Chart 2 shows some other measures of breadth that corroborate our ECI’s message: investors hit the panic button and exited equities in droves in Q4. The upshot is that with selling exhausted, stocks can now stage a durable recovery as long as profits continue to expand. As a reminder, the continuation of the earnings juggernaut is the second key catalyst we identified two weeks ago.2 Midway through earnings season, SPX EPS have held up well with growth approaching 16%. For calendar 2019 we expect mid-single digit EPS growth in line with the signal from our macro driven S&P 500 EPS growth model (please refer to Chart 4 from the mid-January Weekly Publication).3 Chart 2Selling Is Exhausted A positive resolution to the U.S./China trade spat is the third catalyst we highlighted recently in order for equities to break out to fresh all-time highs.4 Related to this, China’s reflation efforts are equally important. On that front, news of quasi QE from the PBOC suggests that the Chinese authorities remain committed to injecting liquidity into their economy.5 Already, the PBOC balance sheet, with over $5.5tn in assets, is expanding anew. Empirical evidence suggests that SPX momentum and the ebb and flow of the PBOC balance sheet are joined at the hip, and the current message is positive (second panel, Chart 3). Chart 3Heed The PBoC Message Beyond the PBOC balance sheet expansion, the Chinese six-month credit impulse is also in a sling shot recovery. This Chinese credit backdrop is enticing and moves more or less in tandem with the SPX six-month impulse (top panel, Chart 4). Chart 4Reflating Away Two forces explain these relationships. First, China’s rise to become the second largest economy in the world along with its insatiable appetite for commodities and durable goods. Second, 40% of S&P 500 sales are international and an increasing share now originates in emerging markets in general and in China in particular. Keep in mind that the S&P cyclicals/defensives ratio is not only a high beta play on the SPX itself (top panel, Chart 3), but also an S&P global versus domestic gauge. Thus, both of these Chinese indicators also enjoy a positive correlation with the cyclicals vs. defensives tilt (bottom panels, Charts 3 & 4). With that in mind, this week we are drilling deeper into why we continue to prefer S&P cyclicals over S&P defensives and also highlight a highly cyclical index we went overweight in mid-December that has gone parabolic. Double Down On Cyclicals Vs. Defensives Early-October 2017 marks the initiation of our cyclical vs. defensive preference. Initially, this tilt jumped and peaked in mid-2018 returning 18% since inception. Since then, it has given up all of those gains and then some before troughing with the market on Christmas Eve, suffering a 6% drop since inception. Currently, the ratio has moved full circle and is back to where it was when we first recommended this portfolio bent (Chart 5). Chart 5Full Circle Should investors commit capital to this tilt at this stage of the cycle and given the current global macro backdrop? The short answer is yes. Charts 3 & 4 show that China’s reflation efforts and the fate of the S&P cyclicals/defensives ratio are closely correlated. In addition to the PBOC’s expanding balance sheet and rising Chinese credit impulse, Chinese monetary easing also benefits S&P cyclicals at the expense of S&P defensives. The Chinese reserve requirement ratio (RRR) has plummeted to the lowest point since the GFC and Chinese interest rates are also plumbing multi-year lows (RRR shown inverted, top panel, Chart 6). Chart 6China Flashing Green Tack on a resurgent currency with the CNY briefly breaking 6.70 with the U.S. dollar, and factors are falling into place for a playable rally in the cyclicals/defensive ratio. Likely, the Chinese are trying to appease President Trump by underpinning the yuan, but the Fed’s recent more dovish stance on interest rate hikes is also pushing the greenback lower. Taken together, this is a boon for the commodity exposed U.S. cyclicals that also garner a significant share of their sales from abroad (bottom panel, Chart 6). Commodity prices troughed last September, staying true to their leading properties and have been in recovery mode ever since (top panel, Chart 7). Now that the Fed has capped the U.S. dollar, more gains are in store for commodities and that is a boon for commodity producers’ top line growth prospects. Chart 7Capex Remains Healthy The demand backdrop is also enticing at the current stage of the business cycle, not only domestically, but also in China. Capital outlays remain upbeat and despite some recent turbulence, U.S. capex intentions are near multi-year highs (third panel, Chart 7). In China, recent piece meal fiscal easing announcements are far from negligible; already infrastructure spending has jumped after contracting late last year (second panel, Chart 7). Were these announcements to get supplemented by a bigger and more comprehensive package, then commodity-levered equities will excel further. A look at the relative balance sheet health of cyclicals versus defensives is revealing. Cyclicals are paying down debt and their cash flow continues to improve, still recovering from the late-2015/early 2016 global manufacturing recession. On the flipside, defensives are piling on debt. All four safe haven sectors have been degrading their balance sheets (relative net debt-to-EBITDA shown inverted, middle panel, Chart 8). Interest coverage sends a similar message: cyclicals are in excellent health both in absolute terms and compared with defensives (top panel, Chart 8). Chart 8B/S Improvement Continues Sell-side analysts have not yet taken notice of the macro tide that is turning in favor of cyclicals over defensives. Relative forward profit growth has collapsed to nil and net EPS revisions are at previous nadirs (fourth & fifth panels, Chart 9). Chart 9Oversold And Unloved In sum, if our thesis pans out that China will continue to reflate, global capex will remain vibrant, the greenback will drift lower (U.S. dollar shown inverted, top panel, Chart 9) courtesy of a dovish Fed that will push the broad commodity complex higher, then a significant valuation rerating looms for the cyclicals/defensives tilt (second panel, Chart 9). Bottom Line: Continue to the prefer S&P cyclicals to S&P defensives. We also reiterate our recent long S&P materials/short S&P utilities pair trade.6 Semi Equipment: Buy Into Strength In mid-December we boosted the S&P semi equipment index to overweight from underweight and since then this niche chip subindex has outperformed the broad market by 17%.7 Semi equipment stocks are high beta (bottom panel, Chart 10) and, while we are recommending to buy into strength, from a portfolio risk management perspective, today we are also setting a trailing stop at the 10% return mark in order to protect profits in this tactical (three-to-six month time horizon) position. Chart 10Buy Into Strength... These high-octane highly-cyclical tech stocks move in lockstep with other volatile asset classes. Rebounding emerging market (EM) stocks and FX confirm the S&P semi equipment breakout, and signal additional gains in the coming months (Chart 11). Not only do they share the high-beta status, but also semi equipment stocks garner 90% of their sales outside U.S. shores and 21% of total revenues come from China (please refer to Table 3 in our December 17, 2018 Weekly Report). Thus, the tight inverse correlation with the greenback and positive correlation with the outperforming EM stocks comes as no surprise (Chart 11). Chart 11...But Expect Heightened Vol Importantly, Taiwan and Korea are chip manufacturing hubs and semi equipment stocks are levered plays on the macro backdrops of these two economies. Recent data suggests that a turn is in the making in two key indicators in these countries, respectively. Taiwanese tech capex has likely troughed at a depressed level (middle panel. Chart 12), and Korean electronic components manufacturing capacity is now contracting for the first time since late-1997 (bottom panel, Chart 12). The latter is significant as this abrupt and sizable reining in of productive capacity will soon help arrest the fall in chip prices, which serves as an excellent pricing power proxy for the semi equipment industry. Chart 12Green Shoots Historically, relative forward profit growth and DRAM price momentum are joined at the hip. Therefore, were DRAM prices to exit deflation on the back of constrained Korean capacity, that would be a boon for relative profit prospects (second panel, Chart 13). Chart 13Analysts Have Thrown In The Towel Despite these marginal positive developments, sell-side analysts’ pessimism reigns supreme. Industry revenue and profit growth expectations trail the broad market by a wide margin and net EPS revisions remain as bad as they get. The upshot is that these lowered profit and sales growth bars will be easy to surpass in 2019 (Chart 13). With regard to technicals and valuations, oversold conditions bounced, as we posited in mid-December using history as a guide, but still remain depressed (middle panel, Chart 14). Valuations are compelling with the S&P semi equipment forward P/E trading at a roughly 40% discount to the overall market (fourth panel, Chart 13). Chart 14Technicals Remain Depressed Finally, earnings season has revealed that the bifurcated semiconductor market has staying power with semi equipment stocks (we are overweight) outperforming their ailing semi producer brethren (we remain underweight). Netting it out, sustained EM stock outperformance, a soft U.S. dollar, improving industry operating metrics, along with compelling relative valuations and technicals, all suggest that there are high odds that the recent semi equipment run up has more upside. Bottom Line: Maintain the overweight stance in the S&P semi equipment index for a while longer, but set a trailing stop at the 10% relative return mark in order to protect profits in this tactical (three-to-six month time horizon) position. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5SEEQ – AMAT, LRCX, KLAC. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Dissecting 2019 Earnings” dated January 22, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Ibid. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Report, “Catharsis” dated January 14, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Dissecting 2019 Earnings” dated January 22, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see Bloomberg Article, “PBOC Sets Up Swap Tool to Aid Bank Capital via Perpetual Bonds” dated January 24, 2019, available at www.bloomberg.com. 6 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Report, “Trader’s Paradise” dated January 28, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Report, “Signal Vs. Noise” dated December 17, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps
Highlights Our non-consensus inflation and Fed views just got even more non-consensus: Media and sell-side commentators were quick to speculate about an end to the tightening cycle following Wednesday’s FOMC meeting, but we don’t see any basis for changing our stance. December and January have been a wild couple of months, … : It’s not unusual for a swing in one direction to be following by a swing in the other, but the S&P 500 went from the 2nd percentile in December to the 96th percentile in January. … and we’re turning to our equity checklist to regain our bearings: Checklists help us maintain a healthy distance from day-to-day swings and focus on the key swing factors. For now, we don’t think anything much has changed, but the scope for a repricing of the entire Treasury curve has gotten bigger: The wider the disparity between our terminal fed funds rate expectation and the market’s, the greater the potential for yields to readjust. We continue to believe markets are being complacent about inflation pressures; their presence will force the Fed off the sidelines and ultimately spell the end of the expansion. Feature Brutal arctic cold swept the Midwest and the Northeast Corridor last week as the polar vortex clamped down on Canada and the upper U.S. The weather didn’t do anything to cool investors’ revived ardor for stocks, however. After finally taking a break from its nearly uninterrupted four-week sprint from 2,350 to 2,670 (that’s nearly 14% in just 17 sessions), the S&P 500 hung around the 2,640 level that supported it repeatedly during its October, November and early December travails (Chart 1). Then came Wednesday’s FOMC statement and press conference, and the S&P even poked its head above the 2,700 level that would seem to present a fairly stiff challenge (Chart 2). Chart 12,640 Lent Support Once Again … Chart 2... Will The Next Round Number Offer A Little Resistance? What Goes On One minute born, one minute doomed/ One minute up, and one minute down/ What goes on in your mind?/ I think that I am falling down If the conditions were polar out of doors, they were bipolar on traders’ screens. As much as the clients we spoke with in January were initially skeptical about our inflation view (it’s not dead) and our corresponding Fed call (at least three or four more hikes in response to budding price pressures), several of them seemed to come around before the meeting was over. They had a lot harder time with the two-part investment conclusion that risk assets would rally while the Fed was on hold, and the economy and corporate profits were able to gain a footing, before rolling over once the data become strong enough to bring the Fed back off the sidelines. Why would investors buy into the temporary part one? We offered the view that the selloff had gone too far, and seemed to have been founded upon a premise that the Fed had either already tightened into a recession, or had gotten uncomfortably close to doing so. We expect that a Fed pause will reveal that the market’s neutral-rate estimate had been way too low. Once the economy shows signs of life, and consensus earnings estimates stop declining and begin to rise again, stocks will rise, spreads will compress, and investors will get back to chasing performance. The renewed fundamental vigor could even allow the Fed to hike rates another couple of times without inspiring a new bout of market indigestion. After this week, we are the ones scratching our heads. The committee’s post-meeting statement did change more than it has since the gradual, 25-bps-per-quarter pace of hikes took hold at the end of 2016, but early January’s procession of Fed speakers who repeated “patience” like a mantra already telegraphed an extended pause. We did not read all that much into the substitution of “will be patient as it determines … [appropriate] adjustments” for “some further gradual increases,” even if the media and the markets did. We will have more to say about the Fed’s balance sheet in subsequent research, but suffice it to say for now that we do not think it will be terribly impactful. Bottom Line: While we were surprised by the intensity of the reaction to last week’s FOMC meeting, it remains our view that the pause in the Fed’s monetary tightening campaign will give equities and corporate bonds an opportunity to rally near their late September levels. Checking And Re-Checking Our Views Among our favorite trading-desk maxims is the advice to plan your trade, and trade your plan. Checklists help us plan and help establish a repeatable process. Having a process to fall back on when rapid-fire decisions have to be made allows an investor to react to conditions as they arise without suffering from analysis paralysis, just like a seasoned trader. Checklists aren’t magic, but they can help an investor keep his/her bearings in the midst of market tides that seem to sweep all before them. Confronting the combination of December’s despondency and January’s euphoria, we return to the equity downgrade checklist we rolled out in mid-October, and last formally reviewed in mid-November. The checklist attempts to look out for threats on four fronts: a looming recession, which would bring the curtain down on the bull market; earnings pressure independent of a full-fledged recession; inflation pressures that could compel the Fed to tighten policy with a renewed sense of urgency; and unsustainably positive sentiment, which could set equities up for a fall. At the moment, only the recession category could arguably be said to be flashing yellow. Recession Watch All three factors in our simple recession indicator are moving in the wrong direction, but the yield curve is the only one at a potentially problematic level (Chart 3, top panel). It would not be a disaster for equities or the economy if the curve inverted – it is habitually early, inverting a year before a recession, on average, and six months before the S&P 500 peaks – but we don’t think it will until markets begin pricing in new rate hikes. Assuming the three-month rate won’t move until they do, the curve could only invert if the 10-year Treasury yield were to fall into the 2.40s (Chart 3, bottom panel), which would be incompatible with our constructive economic view. By the time the Fed resumes hiking, the curve should have gained some breathing room, as an economy strong enough to require further tightening merits a 10-year Treasury yield at or above 3%. Chart 3The Curve Isn’t Ready To Invert Just Yet Year-over-year growth in the leading economic indicator decelerated sharply over the last three months of 2018 (Chart 4). It is a ways away from contracting, however, and only a series of hefty month-over-month drops could make it do so this quarter. Our estimate of the equilibrium fed funds rate remains 50 bps above the 2.5% target rate and our model projects that equilibrium will rise throughout the rest of the year. If its 3.25-3.5% year-end estimate is on the money, the Fed would have to hike three or four more times by year end to provide the restrictive backdrop required for a recession. Chart 4Decelerating, But Not Contracting Checking the final item in the recession section of the checklist, a 33-basis-point rise in the three-month moving average of the unemployment rate, would require a sharp hiring slowdown and/or a significant pickup in labor force participation. The January employment report makes a drop-off in hiring appear improbable, and we are skeptical that the participation rate can keep rising in spite of the drag from retiring baby boomers. If the unemployment rate were to rise because of a rising part rate, however, it might well be more likely to extend the expansion than end it. Bottom Line: The elements of our recession indicator are deteriorating, albeit slowly. A recession may not be more than a year away, but we can’t see it occurring until the Fed turns more hawkish. Earnings Pressure We have repeatedly offered our view that the labor market is as tight as a drum in print, calls and meetings. That is good for the economy because it increases households’ ability to consume, but it will eventually squeeze profit margins and induce the Fed to remove monetary accommodation. Compensation costs shouldn’t hurt margins if they grow at or below the sum of the rate of price-level and productivity gains. If inflation grows at the Fed’s 2% target, and productivity maintains its rough 1.25% growth pace, compensation growth of 3.25% shouldn’t pose a problem, but gains exceeding 3.5% might become problematic. The total compensation series of the employment cost index ticked up to 2.9% in the fourth quarter, but an assault on 3.25-3.5% does not appear to be at hand (Chart 5). Chart 5Wages Aren’t Pressuring Margins Yet Dollar strength is a margin headwind for any company competing with multinationals, at home or abroad. After peaking in mid-November and mid-December, the DXY index has rolled over and is back to its early October level (Chart 6). The fourth-quarter blowout in spreads had us poised to check the “rising corporate yields” box, but there’s no need following last month’s reversal (Chart 7). The savings rate has recovered enough to support spending, and there’s currently no sign that consumers are about to pull back (Chart 8). We are monitoring conditions in emerging markets for spillover into the U.S., but the dollar’s decline and the broad recovery in risk assets worldwide have taken pressure off of EM corporate and sovereign borrowers. Chart 6The Dollar's Backed Off … Chart 7... And Bond Yields Have, Too Chart 8Ready, Willing And Able Bottom Line: None of our proxy indicators suggests that corporate earnings face meaningful near-term pressure, either from tighter margins or lower revenues. Inflation Pressures Inflation poses a threat to equities if it makes the Fed uncomfortable enough to pull the plug on the expansion to keep the economy from overheating, or if it makes investors uncomfortable enough to apply a significant haircut to earnings multiples. Given the Fed’s “symmetric” target, we don’t think it will get anxious about core PCE inflation unless it threatens to exceed 2.5% (Chart 9). The 10-year and 5-year-on-5-year TIPS inflation breakevens have slid in lockstep with oil prices, and are nowhere near the 2.3-2.5% range that is consistent with the Fed’s 2% core PCE target (Chart 10); they offer no hint that longer-run inflation expectations might become unanchored. CPI is the go-to inflation series for investors and the media, and with both headline and core hanging around 2%, it is well short of levels that would promote anxiety among the public (Chart 11). Chart 9Realized Inflation Remains Contained … Chart 10... And Expectations Have Only Fallen Chart 11Nothing To See Here Bottom Line: We expect that unnecessary fiscal stimulus and an extremely tight labor market will eventually produce inflation, but they’re not testing investors’ complacency yet. Overexuberance Runaway sentiment could spark a nasty correction if it sets the bar for expectations so high that stocks inevitably disappoint. BCA’s composite sentiment indicator, which aggregates the results from surveys of individual investors, professional investors and advisors, is at the lower end of its range, though not yet at levels that have often marked equity bottoms (Chart 12, bottom panel). Before falling with the S&P 500 last January, the share of consumers expecting stock prices to rise over the next twelve months had reached a level consistent with past peaks (Chart 13, bottom panel). It has since fallen to the lower end of its range, and would seem to suggest that investors had nearly given up on stocks when the January survey was taken. Chart 12Investor Sentiment Is Muted … Chart 13... And So Is The General Public’s Bottom Line: The fourth-quarter decline pushed investor sentiment from around the higher reaches of its historical range to a position well below the mean. From a contrarian perspective, washed-out sentiment could help extend the rally. Investment Implications Our equity downgrade checklist gives U.S. equities a clean bill of health. Although potential gains are lower now with the S&P 500 trading above 2,700 than they were when it was trading below 2,500 at the beginning of the year, we do not see a fundamental reason to downgrade equities from overweight. The multiple expansion required to produce a new closing high might be a stretch, but we believe the S&P 500 can advance well into the 2,800s. We upgraded corporate credit last week, and expect that spreads will narrow as the Fed stays on the sidelines. One should not expect new tights in spreads, but there is potential for investors to augment their coupon spreads with some modest capital appreciation. We dislike Treasuries, especially at longer maturities, even more than we did before last week’s bull flattening of the yield curve. With rate hikes fully priced out, the only way the 10-year Treasury yield could fall even further would be if the Fed cut rates, and that scenario is flatly incompatible with our assessment of the economy’s strength. Doug Peta, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy dougp@bcaresearch.com
Feature The GAA DM Equity Country Allocation model is updated as of January 31st, 2019. The quant model slightly reduced the size of the underweight to the U.S. equities, but U.S. remains the largest underweight in the model and no directional changes among all the countries compared to last month, as shown in Table 1. Table 1Model Allocation Vs. Benchmark Weights As shown in Table 2 and Charts 1, 2 and 3, the overall model outperformed the MSCI world benchmark by 11 bp in January, with a 52 bps of outperformance from Level 2 model offset by a 17 bps of underperformance from Level 1. Since going live, the overall model has outperformed by 118 bps, with Level 2 outperforming by 192 bps and level 1 outperforming by 40 bps. Table 2Performance (Total Returns In USD %) Chart 1GAA DM Model Vs. MSCI World Chart 2GAA U.S. Vs. Non U.S. Model (Level 1) Chart 3GAA Non U.S. Model (Level 2) Please see also the website http://gaa.bcaresearch.com/trades/allocation_performance. For more details on the models, please see Special Report, “Global Equity Allocation: Introducing The Developed Markets Country Allocation Model,” dated January 29, 2016, available at https://gaa.bcaresearch.com. Please note that the overall country and sector recommendations published in our Monthly Portfolio Update and Quarterly Portfolio Outlook use the results of these quantitative models as one input, but do not stick slavishly to them. We believe that models are a useful check, but structural changes and unquantifiable factors need to be considered too in making overall recommendations. GAA Equity Sector Selection Model Dear Client, As advised in our October 2018 Special Alert, we have suspended the GAA Equity Sector Selection Model due to the significant changes in the GICS sector classifications, implemented at the end of September. We will rebuild the model using the newly constituted sectors once full back data is available from MSCI, which we understood would be in December but which we have not received yet. We thank you for your understanding. Xiaoli Tang, Associate Vice President xiaoliT@bcaresearch.com Amr Hanafy, Research Associate amrh@bcaresearch.com
Feature Half Way Back Since BCA went overweight global equities in late December, the MSCI ACWI index has rallied by 8% and the S&P 500 is back to only 8% off its September historical high. So far, this has been little more than a technical rally from the extreme oversold position in Q4. But with U.S. economic growth still resilient, earnings likely to grow healthily again this year (albeit more slowly than in 2018), and the valuation of risk assets (both equities and credit) no longer a headwind, we expect the rally to continue for some time, and so reiterate our overweight on equities. Recommendations True, there have been some disappointments in U.S. data in recent weeks. In particular, the December manufacturing ISM fell sharply to 54.3 from 59.3, raising fears that the U.S. is starting to decelerate in line with other regions (Chart 1). But the ISM may have been affected by the government shutdown and, overall, U.S. data still look solid, with the Citigroup Economic Surprise Index beginning to rebound, and stronger than in other regions (Chart 2). The residential housing market, which was exhibiting signs of stress last year, with existing home sales -6.4% YoY in December, is showing the first signs of stabilization, helped by mortgage interest rates that are now 50 BPs off their recent peak (Chart 3). Chart 1How Worrying Is The U.S. Slowdown? Chart 2U.S. Data Surprisingly Positive Chart 3Housing Market Should Stabilize In particular, the outlook for consumption looks healthy, with average hourly earnings growing at 3.3% YoY, consumer confidence close to an historic high, and the savings rate above 6%. Unsurprisingly, then, retail sales have boomed in recent months (Chart 4). Unless consumer confidence is dented by a repetition of the government shutdown or some other shock, consumption (68% of GDP, remember) should grow strongly this year. Add to this a residual positive impact of close to 0.5% of GDP coming from last year’s fiscal stimulus, and it is hard to imagine the U.S. going into recession over the next 12 months. Chart 4Consumption Booming The Fed will probably go on hold for now, however, given the market jitters in Q4. We are likely back to a situation like that in 2015-2016, where the Fed Policy Feedback Loop becomes the key factor for markets (Chart 5). When financial conditions tighten, with stock prices falling and the dollar appreciating, the Fed turns more dovish. However, this triggers a rally in risk assets and loosens financial conditions, allowing the Fed to start hiking again. With the tightening in financial conditions over the past six months, the Fed is likely to err on the side of caution for now (Chart 6). However, if our macro view is correct – and as inflation starts to pick up again after April, partly due to the base effect – the Fed will want to continue withdrawing accommodation over the course of this year. The Fed Funds Rate, at around 2.4% is still two hikes below what the FOMC sees as the neutral level of interest rates (the 2.8% terminal rate in the FOMC dots). We see the Fed, therefore, raising rates in June and perhaps hiking two or even three times this year. By contrast, the futures market assigns only a 25% probability of even one rate hike this year, and is even pricing in a small probability of a cut. Chart 6Tighter Conditions Mean More Cautious Fed Clearly, there are plenty of risks to the scenario of growth continuing. But those in the hands of President Trump, especially the trade war with China and the fight over funding of the wall on the border with Mexico, we don’t see as being serious impediments. Trump is fully aware that he is unlikely to be reelected in November 2020 if the U.S. is in recession by then. Every incumbent U.S. president since World War Two who fought for reelection during a recession failed to be reelected (Chart 7). The view of BCA’s geopolitical strategists, therefore, is that the White House and Congressional Democrats will agree to concessions to end the shutdown before the end of the current three-week stop-gap period. Less likely, Trump will declare a national emergency that will cause much controversy but have little impact on the economy. Our strategists also argue that there is a 45% probability of trade negotiations with China producing a result (at least a short-term one the president can boast about) before the March 1 deadline, and a further 25% probability of the deadline being extended without further sanctions being imposed.1 Chart 7Trump Won't Be Reelected In A Recession Equities: Analysts have become overly pessimistic about the earnings outlook for this year, cutting 2019 U.S. EPS growth to 7% (and only 2% YoY in Q1). Our top-down model (based on, admittedly optimistic, U.S. growth assumptions, but also headwinds from a stronger dollar) indicates 12% growth. If analysts are forced to revise up their numbers as better earnings come through, that should be a catalyst for further equity performance (Chart 8). We continue to prefer U.S. over European equities. The steady slowdown in European growth over the past 12 months has not yet bottomed, banks in Europe remain troubled, the earnings picture is less positive, and valuations relative to the U.S. are not especially attractive. We also remain underweight on EM equities: they may produce a positive return in a risk-on environment, but we see them underperforming DM as rising U.S. interest rates and a stronger USD put pressure on EM borrowers with excess foreign-currency debt. Chart 8Analysts Have Overdone Downward Revisions Fixed Income: The recent fall in U.S. Treasury yields was mainly caused by the inflation expectation component, itself very sensitive (if rather illogically so) to the oil price (Chart 9). As the oil price recovers (see below), inflation picks up moderately, and the Fed hikes by more than the market expects, we see the 10-year Treasury yield rising to 3.5% during the course of the year. BCA’s fixed-income strategists recently raised their recommendation on global credit to overweight, given more attractive spreads and the likelihood that the Fed will be on hold for the next six months.2 Their recommendation is for 3-6 months, and the Fed restarting the hiking cycle, say in June, might terminate the positive story. We are following their lead, by raising both high-yield and investment-grade bonds to overweight within the (underweight) fixed-income asset class. That means we are neutral credit in the overall portfolio. We would warn, though, that this is a somewhat short-term call: we still prefer equities as a way to play the continuing risk-on rally. Given the high level of U.S. corporate leverage, and the over-owned nature of the credit market, this is likely to be an asset class that performs very poorly in the next recession (Chart 10). Chart 9Inflation Expectations Should Recover Chart 10Corporate Leverage Is A Concern Currencies: Currencies will continue to be driven by relative monetary policy. With the growth desynchronization between the U.S. and other DMs set to continue (to a degree), we see modest further USD appreciation this year. The Fed (as argued above) will probably hike more than the market expects. But, given slow European growth, the ECB is unlikely to be able to hike in Q4 this year, as it currently is guiding for and the futures market implies (Chart 11). We see the ECB reopening the Targeted Long-Term Repo Facility (TLTRO), which expires soon. Italy and Spain have been big borrowers from this facility, and bank loan growth is likely to slow as it ends (Chart 12). A renewed TLRTO would be seen as a dovish move. Tighter dollar liquidity conditions also point to a stronger USD. U.S. credit growth continues to accelerate (to 12% YoY – Chart 13) in an environment where the monetary policy has tightened: credit growth is outpacing U.S. money supply growth by 7%. Historically this has been negative for global growth (mainly because the deteriorating liquidity is a problem for EM dollar borrowers) and positive for the dollar (Chart 14).3 Chart 11Can ECB Really Hike In 2019? Chart 13...U.S. Loan Growth Accelerating... Chart 14... Which Will Tighten Liquidity Further Commodities: The supply/demand situation for oil should improve over coming months. With Saudi Arabia and Russia committed to cut supply by 1.2 million barrels/day, U.S. shale production growth slowing given the low one-year forward price for WTI, Canada reducing production, and Venezuela on the verge of collapse (which alone could remove 700-800k b/d from the market), our energy strategists see the crude oil balance in deficit over the next four quarters (Chart 15). Given this, they forecast Brent crude rebounding to above $80 a barrel. Other commodity prices are mostly driven by Chinese demand. We see China continuing to slow, until the accumulated effects of its fiscal and mild monetary stimulus start to come through in H2 and stabilize growth. Our analysis suggests that China remains very disciplined about the size and nature of its stimulus: it is not turning on the liquidity taps as it did in early 2016. Bank loan growth has stabilized, but shadow banking activity continues to contract, as the authorities persist with their crackdown and their emphasis on deleveraging (Chart 16). Industrial commodities prices are therefore likely to weaken over the next six months. Chart 15Oil Balance In Deficit This Year Chart 16China Sticking To Credit Crackdown Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com GAA Asset Allocation Footnotes 1 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, “So Donald Trump Cares About Stocks, Eh?”, dated 9 January 2019, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, “Enough With The Gloom: Upgrade Global Corporates On A Tactical Basis,” dated 15 January 2019, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com 3 For a detailed explanation, please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, “Global Liquidity Trends Support The Dollar, But…,” dated 25 January 2019, available at fes.bcaresearch.com
Highlights Global equity markets have managed to recoup some of last year’s plunge since we upgraded stocks to overweight in late December. The equity rally has been tentative, however, and so far feels more like a technical bounce from oversold levels than a resumption of the bull market. One driving factor behind last year’s market swoon was that policy uncertainty spiked at a time when the last pillar of global growth, the U.S., was showing signs of cracking. Investors thus welcomed the Fed’s signal that it would pause in March. Nonetheless, shrinkage in the Fed’s balance sheet is proving to be troublesome. Quantitative tightening does not necessarily imply permanently higher risk premia, but it will be a source of volatility. There are hopeful but tentative signs that a U.S. slowdown is not the precursor to a recession. The hit to GDP from the U.S. government shutdown will be reversed next quarter. The FOMC has also signaled that policymakers are attuned to the economic risks associated with tightening financial conditions, and that the calm inflation backdrop provides room to maneuver. The FOMC will stand pat in March, but should restart rate hikes in June as the economic soft patch ends. We still see only a modest risk of a U.S. recession this year. In contrast, our outlook for growth outside the U.S. remains downbeat for at least the first half of the year. Among the advanced economies, Japan and Europe are being the most affected by the Chinese economic slowdown and global trade tensions. This means that monetary policy divergence will continue to be a tailwind for the dollar. China continues to stimulate at the margin, but efforts so far have been insufficient to put a floor under growth. The contraction in Chinese exports has just begun. It is still too early to upgrade EM assets or base metals. Despite the cloud still surrounding Brexit, sterling is beginning to look attractive as a long-term punt. Our decision to upgrade corporate bonds to overweight this month, similar to our reasoning for upgrading equities in December, is based on improved value and a sense that investor pessimism had become excessive. Just as the selloff in risk assets was overdone, so too was the rally in government bonds. It is highly unlikely that the Fed is done tightening, as is currently discounted in the money market curve. A resumption of Fed rate hikes around mid-year means that the 10-year Treasury yield will move back above 3% by year end. Feature Global equity markets have managed to recoup some of last year’s plunge since we upgraded the asset class back to overweight in the latter half of December. A decline in the VIX and high-yield bond spreads are also positive signs that global risk appetite is recovering, following an overdone investor ‘panic attack’ last quarter. The equity rally has been tentative, however, and so far feels more like a simple technical bounce from oversold levels than a resumption of the bull market. One problem is that policy uncertainty has spiked at a time when the last pillar of global growth, the U.S., is showing signs of cracking (Chart I-1). Investors are skittish while they await a clear de-escalation of U.S./China trade tensions, an end to the U.S. economic soft patch, an end to the U.S. government shutdown, and signs that global growth is bottoming (especially in China). There has only been some modestly positive news on a couple of these issues. Chart I-1Policy Uncertainty Has Spiked Another factor that appeared to play a role in last quarter’s market swoon is the fear that the end of asset purchases by the European Central Bank and the normalization of the Fed’s balance sheet necessarily imply a structural de-rating for all risk assets. A related worry is that the de-rating might intensify the global economic slowdown, resulting in a self-reinforcing negative feedback loop. Does QT Imply Lower Multiples? The question of balance sheet normalization is a difficult one because there is widespread disagreement on how, or even whether, quantitative easing (QE) works. We have always maintained that QE was not about creating a wave of central bank liquidity that flowed into asset prices. Central banks did not “print money” – they created bank reserves. These reserves did not result in a major acceleration in broader measures of money growth, including M1 and M2, largely because there was little demand for loans and because banks tightened lending standards. In other words, the credit channel of monetary policy was broken. The implication is that investors should not worry that quantitative tightening (QT) implies a withdrawal of central bank liquidity that must mechanically come from the sale of risk assets. Rather, we believe that QE operates mostly through the portfolio balance effect. There are two ways to think about this channel. First, the central bank forced investors to move into riskier assets by purchasing large amounts of “safe” assets, such as government bonds. Investors had little choice but to redeploy the capital into other riskier areas, pushing up asset prices. The second perspective is that central bank purchases of government bonds depressed both the yield curve and bond volatility. Volatility fell because investors could forecast the policy rate with certainty – it would be glued to zero (or negative) for the foreseeable future in most of the advanced economies. This is akin to strong forward guidance that flattened the yield curve. Aggressive monetary stimulus, such as QE, also helped to reduce the perceived risk that the economy would succumb to secular stagnation or fall back into recession. Reduced bond volatility, lower bond yields, and less economic risk all increased the attractiveness of the riskier asset classes. These explanations represent two sides of the same coin. Either way, QE boosted a broad array of asset prices. If this is true, then unwinding QE must be bearish for risk assets, all else equal. In the case of the U.S., the fed funds rate is much more difficult to forecast than was the case when the Fed was buying bonds. Higher yields and bond volatility imply a lower equilibrium multiple in the equity market and wider equilibrium corporate bond spreads. Nonetheless, all else is not equal. If interest rates and bond volatility are rising in the context of healthy economic and profit growth, then it is likely that the perceived risk of secular stagnation is falling. It would be a sign that the economy has finally put the financial crisis firmly in the rear-view mirror. It could be the case that the upgrade in economic confidence overwhelms the negative impact of the reverse portfolio balance effect related to quantitative tightening, allowing risk assets to rise. No one can prove this thesis one way or the other and we are not making the case that unwinding the Fed’s balance sheet will necessarily go smoothly, especially since interest rates are rising at the same time. The problem is that both investors and the Fed are trying to figure out where the neutral fed funds rate lies. If the so-called level of R-star is still very low, then the Fed might have already made a policy mistake by raising rates too far. We discussed in last month’s Overview the market implications of four scenarios for the level of R-star and the Fed’s success in correctly guessing it. If the economy holds up and the economic soft patch ends in the coming months as we expect, then investors will revise their estimate of the neutral rate higher and risk assets will rally even as bond yields rise. The Doom Loop One risk to our base-case scenario is the so-called financial conditions “doom loop”. Irrespective of whether or not QT is playing a role, the doom loop scenario involves a shock to investor confidence that leads to a tightening in financial conditions and market liquidity as stock prices fall and credit spreads widen. More onerous financial conditions, in turn, undermine economic activity, which then feeds back into even tighter financial conditions. One could make the argument that risk assets are even more exposed to this type of negative feedback loop today than in past monetary tightening cycles because of program trading, the Fed’s balance sheet shrinkage and investors’ lingering shell shock from the Great Recession and financial crisis. Nonetheless, there are a few mitigating factors to consider. We believe that a doom loop is more likely to unfold when economic growth becomes very sensitive to changes in financial conditions. This normally happens when economic and financial imbalances are elevated. On a positive note, unlike in the lead-up to the last two recessions, the U.S. private sector is a net saver whose income outstrips spending by 2.1% of GDP (Chart I-2). The highly cyclical parts of the U.S. economy are not stretched to the upside as a share of GDP, reducing the risk that overspending in one part of the economy will required a deep contraction to correct the imbalance (Chart I-3). Chart I-2U.S. Private Sector: A New Saver Chart I-3U.S. Cyclical Spending Not Extended In terms of financial excesses, the good news is that the U.S. household sector is in its best shape in decades. Our main concern is debt accumulation in the corporate sector. We reviewed the related risks in a Special Report published in the November 2018 issue.1 We concluded that corporate leverage will not cause the next U.S. recession, because high levels of debt will only become a problem when profits begin to contract (i.e. when the economic downturn is already underway). Nonetheless, when a recession does occur, corporate spreads will widen by more than in the past for any given degree of economic contraction (see below). ‘Fed Put’ Still In Play Another factor that tempers the risk of a doom loop is that the so-called ‘Fed Put’ is still operating. The December FOMC Minutes and comments by various FOMC members communicated to investors that the Fed is attuned to the economic risks associated with tightening financial conditions, and that the calm inflation backdrop provides policymakers with room to maneuver. Chair Powell even said he was willing to adjust the Fed’s balance sheet run-off if necessary. One important reason for policymakers’ willingness to be flexible is that the fed funds rate is still not far from the zero-lower-bound, making it potentially more difficult for the FOMC to respond adequately in the event of a recession this year because the fed funds rate can only be cut by 250 basis points. Several U.S. data releases have been delayed due the government shutdown, but what has been released has been mixed. The downdraft in the January reading of the manufacturing ISM was eye-opening, highlighting that the global manufacturing slowdown has reached U.S. shores. The good news is that the non-manufacturing ISM and the small business survey, although off their peaks, remain consistent with solid underlying growth. The December U.S. payroll report revealed that wage growth continued to accelerate on the back of gangbusters job creation at the end of the year. There have also been some recent hints that the soft patch in capital spending and housing is ending (Chart I-4). Existing home sales fell sharply in December, but extremely low inventories suggest that it is more of a supply than a demand problem. The impressive bounce in home mortgage applications for purchases is a hopeful sign. U.S. commercial and industrial loan growth is also accelerating. Chart I-4Some Tentative Signs These tentative signs that the economic soft patch is close to an end will not be enough to get the FOMC to tighten in March, after so many members have gone out of their way to signal a pause in recent weeks. Nonetheless, we believe the economy will remain strong enough for the Fed to resume hiking in June. The U.S. government shutdown will complicate interpreting incoming economic data. Ultimately, while its impact on Q1 real GDP growth will be non-trivial, it will be reversed the following quarter and we do not expect any permanent damage to be done. U.S. inflation should edge higher by mid-year, supporting our view that the Fed will resume tightening in June. The decline in oil prices will continue to feed into a lower headline inflation rate in the coming months, but that does not mean that the core rate will fall. Indeed, core CPI has increased by roughly 0.2% in each of the past three months, translating into an annualized rate of approximately 2.4%. Base effects will depress annual core inflation in February but, thereafter, this effect will begin to reverse. The acceleration in wage growth according to measures such as average hourly earnings and the Employment Cost Index highlights that underlying inflationary pressures continue to percolate (Chart I-5). The implication is that the Treasury bond market is overly complacent in discounting that the fed funds rate has peaked for the cycle. Chart I-5U.S. Wage Pressure Is Percolating Looking further ahead, our base case remains that the next U.S. recession will not occur until 2020, and will be the result of tighter fiscal policy and further Fed tightening that takes short-term rates a step too far. No Bottom Yet For Global Growth Our outlook for growth outside the U.S. remains downbeat for at least the first half of the year. Our global economic indicators still show no sign of a turnaround, except for a bottoming in the diffusion index based on BCA’s Global Leading Economic Indicator (Chart I-6). The global ZEW economic sentiment index continued to fall in January, while business and consumer confidence readings in the advanced economies eroded heading into year end. Chart I-6Global Leading Indicators Still Deteriorating A better global growth dynamic awaits more serious policy stimulus in China. Real GDP growth decelerated further to 6.4% year-over-year in the last quarter of 2018. This is no disaster, but the point is that there are still no signs of stabilization. The Chinese authorities continue to tweak the policy dials at the margin, most recently providing some tax cuts and a liquidity injection into the banking system. Nonetheless, the central government has so far abstained from stimulating the property market due to existing speculative excesses. This is very different from the previous two policy easing episodes, including 2015/16 (Chart I-7). Chart I-7China: No Property Market Stimulus... The stimulus undertaken so far has been insufficient in terms of putting a floor under growth according to our 12-month Credit Impulse (Chart I-8). It is a hopeful sign that broad money growth is trying to bottom, but this does not guarantee that the credit impulse is about to turn. The latter is required to confirm that Chinese import demand will accelerate, providing a lift to EM exporters, EM asset prices and commodity prices. Without a positive credit impulse, China’s investment and construction activity will continue to moderate, leading to lower imports of machinery and raw materials. Chart I-8...And No Credit Impulse The economic situation in China is likely to get worse before it gets better. Dismal trade figures in December confirmed that the trade war is beginning to bite. The period of export ‘front-running’ related to higher U.S. tariffs is over as total exports fell by 4.4% year-over-year. Last year’s collapse in export orders indicates that the woes are just beginning. In turn, moderating production related to the Chinese export sector will bleed into domestic consumption and imports, suggesting that it is too early to expect a durable rally in EM assets or commodity prices. Lackluster Chinese demand and growing trade concerns have weighted on global business confidence, contributing to the pullback in capital goods orders, manufacturing PMIs and industrial production in the advanced economies (Chart I-9). Even the average service sector PMI and consumer confidence index in the advanced economies have fallen in recent months, although both remain at a high level. Chart I-9The Fallout From Trade Europe and Japan, in particular, are feeling the pinch. German GDP only grew 1.5% in 2018, implying that Q4 GDP growth was in the vicinity of just 0.2% QoQ. Meanwhile, European industrial production contracted by 3.3% year-over-year in December. The German Ifo and ZEW surveys do not point to any significant improvements in this trend. A few idiosyncratic factors explain some of this poor performance, including new emissions testing standards that have weighted on the German auto industry, a tightening in financial conditions in Italy, and the ‘gilets jaunes’ protests in France. Nonetheless, the euro area slowdown cannot be fully explained by one-off factors. The economy is highly sensitive to global trade fluctuations given that 18% of the euro area’s gross value added is generated in the manufacturing sector. Hence, China’s poor economic health has been painful for Europe, and the trend in Chinese credit does not bode well for the near term (Chart I-10). The European Central Bank (ECB) is likely to stay on the defensive as a result, especially as euro area core inflation, which has been stuck near 1% for three years, is unlikely to pick up if growth remains on the back foot. The ECB stuck with the view that the economic soft patch is temporary after the January policy meeting, but policymakers will consider providing more stimulus in March if the economy does not pick up (using forward guidance or a new TLTRO). This will weigh on the euro. Chart I-10China's Woes Are Infecting Europe Japan is suffering from similar ills. Exports are no longer growing, and foreign machinery and factory orders are contracting at a 4.1% and 4.3% pace, respectively. This weakness is not mimicked in domestic growth, but the disproportionate contribution of the external sector to Japan’s overall economic health means that this country is also falling victim to the malaise witnessed in China and emerging markets, the destination of 19% and 45% of Japanese shipments, respectively (Chart I-11). Collapsing oil prices and a firming trade-weighted yen have amplified this deflationary backdrop. It is therefore far too early to bet that the Bank of Japan will tighten the monetary dials. Chart I-11Japan Hit By The Chinese Cold As Well If we are correct that the U.S. economic soft patch will soon end, then the dollar will once again look to be the best of a bad lot. Interest rate expectations will move in favor of the dollar. We expect the dollar to rise by about 6% this year on a trade-weighted basis, appreciating most strongly against the AUD and SEK. As for sterling, it is beginning to look attractive as a long-term punt. Brexit Deadlock We are a month closer to the end-March deadline and a Brexit deal seems even farther out of reach. It could play out in one of three ways: (1) a “no deal” where the U.K. leaves the EU with no alternative in place; (2) a “soft Brexit” involving an agreement to form a permanent customs union or some sort of “Norway plus” arrangement; or (3) a decision to reverse the results of the original referendum and stay in the EU. There is no support for the “no deal” option in Parliament, which means that it won’t happen. We do not have a strong view on which of the latter two scenarios will occur. The odds of another referendum are rising and the polls are swinging away from any sort of Brexit, suggesting that the original referendum result may be over-turned via another referendum (Chart I-12). Nonetheless, for investors, it does not matter much whether it is scenario 2 or 3; either outcome would be welcomed by markets. Overweight sterling positions are attractive as a long-term play, although it could be some time before the final solution emerges. Chart I-12Brexit Result May Be Overturned Upgrade Corporate Bonds To Overweight Given the recent global economic dynamics, it is perhaps surprising that U.S. corporate financial health actually improved in 2018 according to our Corporate Health Monitors (CHM). We highlighted in the aforementioned Special Report the risks facing U.S. corporate bonds when the economic expansion ends. High levels of corporate leverage mean that the interest coverage ratio for the median corporation in the Barclays-Bloomberg index will plunge to near or below all-time historic lows. The potential for a large wave of fallen angels implies that downgrade activity will be particularly painful for corporate bond investors. The surge in lower-quality issuance has led to a downward trend in the average credit rating and has significantly raised the size of the BBB-rated bonds relative to the IG index and relative to the broader universe of corporate bonds. Moreover, poor market liquidity and covenant erosion will intensify pressure for corporate spreads to widen when the bear market arrives. Rapid debt accumulation is reflected in our bottom-up Corporate Health Monitors (CHM) for the U.S. investment-grade and high-yield sectors (Chart I-13). The CHMs are constructed from six financial ratios that the rating agencies use when rating individual companies. The companies in our bottom-up sample were chosen so as to mimic the sector and quality distribution in the Bloomberg-Barclay’s corporate bond index. Chart I-13U.S. Corporate Health The debt-to-book-value of equity ratio for both the U.S. IG and HY sample of companies has risen to nose-bleed levels, although the ratio appears to have flattened off for the latter. Despite rising leverage, the HY CHM has shifted into “improved health” territory and the IG CHM is on the verge of doing the same. Last year’s upturn in the profitability measures, such as the return on capital, overwhelmed the deteriorating leverage trend. In Europe, where we distinguish between domestic and foreign issuers, rising leverage has been concentrated among the latter until recently (Chart I-14). In any event, the CHM for both types of issuers is close to the neutral zone. Chart I-14Euro Area Corporate Health Improving U.S. corporate health on its own would not justify increasing exposure to corporate bonds within balanced portfolios or moving down in quality. Profit growth is likely to moderate this year, especially in Europe, such that last year’s improvement in corporate health is likely to reverse. And, as previously discussed, the economic cycle is well advanced and this sector is particularly vulnerable to a recession. Nonetheless, value has improved enough to warrant a tactical upgrade to overweight within fixed-income portfolios, at a time when the FOMC has signaled a pause and the next recession is at least a year away. Implied volatility should continue to moderate and spreads should narrow, similar to dynamics in 2016, the last time that the Fed signaled patience following a period of market turmoil (Chart I-15). Chart I-15Fed Patience To Narrow Spreads Spreads have already narrowed from the peak in late December, but 12-month breakeven spreads for most credit tiers are all still close to or above their historical means, except for AA-rated issues (Chart I-16). For example, the 12-month breakeven spread2 for the Baa credit tier is 46%. This means that the spread has been tighter than its current level 46% of the time since 1988 and wider than its current level 54% of the time. Historically, spreads tend to hover within the tight-end of their historical range during this phase of the credit cycle, and only cheapen significantly when the yield curve inverts and the default rate moves higher. Chart I-16Value Restored In IG Corporates... For U.S. high yield, our estimate of the spread adjusted for expected defaults has risen to 237 bps (Chart I-17). This implies that investors are discounting a 2019 default rate of 3.2%, in line with Moody's forecast. Since we do not foresee recession this year, high-yield bonds are not expensive enough to be avoided within a portfolio. Chart I-17...And In HY Too Value has also improved in the European corporate bond market, but our global fixed-income team still recommends favoring the U.S. market for global credit investors. Leverage is higher in the U.S., especially relative to domestic issuers in Europe, but the U.S. economic and profit outlook for 2019 is better. Conclusions Our decision to upgrade corporate bonds this month, similar to our reasoning for upgrading equities to overweight in December, is based on improved value and a sense that investor pessimism had become excessive. For the equity market, the S&P 12-month forward P/E is an attractive 15.4 as we go to press, and bottom-up estimates for 2019 EPS have been slashed to a very reasonable 8%. Just as the selloff in risk assets late last year was overdone, so too was the rally in government bonds. It is highly unlikely that the Fed is done tightening. A resumption of Fed rate hikes, probably in June, means that the 10-year Treasury yield will move back above 3% by year end. Across the major countries, market expectations for yields 5-10 years from now are close to current levels, which is extremely complacent (Chart I-18). Investors should keep duration short of benchmark. Chart I-18Forward Rates Far Too Low Our shift to overweight in both equities and corporate bonds is tactical in nature. We fully expect to move back to neutral and then to underweight later this year or into 2020, as the peak in U.S. GDP draws nearer. Timing will be difficult as always, which means that investors should be prepared to trim risk exposure earlier than implied by our base-case economic timeline. The tactical upgrade does not imply that we have become more sanguine on the economic and geopolitical risks for 2019. We do not believe that quantitative tightening or U.S. corporate leverage will truncate the U.S. expansion prematurely. Nonetheless, there is a plethora of other risks to keep us up at night. These include a Fed policy mistake, a hard economic landing in China, a full-blown financial crisis in Italy and an escalation in U.S./China trade tensions. The last one has diminished marginally in probability. We have a sense that the recent equity market downdraft unnerved President Trump, such that he now has a diminished appetite for upsetting investors with talk of an escalating trade war ahead of next year’s election. Outside of these well-known risks, our geopolitical team has recently published its “Black Swans” report for 2019. These are deemed to be risks that are off of most investors’ radar screens, but that would have profound implications if they were to occur: It is premature to expect armed conflict over Taiwan, but an outbreak of serious tensions between China and Taiwan is possible as Sino-American strategic distrust continues to build. Russia and Ukraine may have a shared incentive to renew hostilities this year. Saudi Arabia has received a “blank cheque” from Donald Trump, and thus it may continue to be provocative. This could boost the geopolitical risk premium in oil prices. Tensions are building in the Balkans. A renewed conflict on Europe’s doorstep could be the next great geopolitical crisis. A “Lame Duck” Trump could stage a military intervention in Venezuela. We encourage interested readers to see our Special Report for details.3 As for emerging market assets and base metals, we continue to shy away until we receive confirmation that China is aggressively stimulating. We expect better news on this front by mid-year, but watch our China Credit Impulse indicator for timing. In contrast, investors should be overweight oil and related assets now because our commodity specialists still see the price of Brent rising above US$80/bbl sometime this year. Recent political turmoil in Venezuela buttresses our bullish oil view. Finally, this month’s fascinating Special Report, penned by BCA’s Chief Global Strategist, Peter Berezin, examines the long-term implications of the peaking in the average IQ in the advanced economies. Average intelligence is falling for both demographic and environment reasons. The impact will be far from benign, potentially leading to lower productivity growth, lower equity multiples, larger budget deficits and higher equilibrium bond yields. The report begins on page 20. Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst Mathieu Savary Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy January 31, 2019 Next Report: February 28, 2019 II. The Most Important Trend In The World Has Reversed And Nobody Knows Why After rising for thousands of years, human intelligence has begun to decline in developed economies. This can be seen in falling IQ scores and a decline in math and science test scores. Environmental factors appear to account for the bulk of this decline, but no one knows what these factors are. If left unchecked, falling intelligence will severely undermine productivity growth. This could lead to lower equity multiples, larger budget deficits, and ultimately, much higher government bond yields. Technological advances, particularly in the genetic realm, promise to radically raise IQs. In a complete abandonment of its one-child policy, China will combine these controversial technologies with pro-natal measures in order to boost sagging birth rates. The coming Eugenic Wars will be one of the most important economic and geopolitical developments of the 21st century. Part 1: What The Tame Fox Says In 1959, a Soviet scientist named Dmitry Belyaev embarked on an ambitious experiment: to domesticate the silver fox. A geneticist by training, Belyaev wanted to replicate the process by which animals such as cats and dogs came to live side-by-side with humans. It was a risky endeavor. The Soviets had essentially banned the study of Mendelian genetics in favor of the blank slate ideology that is popular in progressive circles today. Belyaev persevered. Working under the guise of studying vulpine physiology, he selected foxes based on only one trait – tamability. Less than 10% of foxes made it to the subsequent generation, with the other 90% being sent off to fur farms. By the fourth generation, the changes were undeniable. Rather than fleeing humans, the foxes sought out their attention with no prompting whatsoever. They even wagged their tails and whined and whimpered like dogs do. The tame foxes also displayed physical changes. Their ears flopped over. Their snouts became shorter and their tails stood upright. "By intense selective breeding, we have compressed into a few decades an ancient process that originally unfolded over thousands of years," wrote Lyudmila Trut, who began as Belyaev’s assistant and took over the project when her boss died in 1985. Genetically Capitalist? Evolution can broadly proceed in two ways. The first way is through random mutations. This form of evolution, which scientists sometimes refer to as genetic drift, can take thousands of years to yield any discernable changes. The second way is through natural selection, a process that exploits existing variations in genetic traits. As the Russian fox experiment illustrates, evolution driven by selective pressures (either natural or artificial) can occur fairly quickly. Did selective pressures manifest themselves in human evolution in the lead up to the Industrial Revolution? Did humans, in some sense, domesticate themselves? In his book, A Farewell To Alms, economic historian Gregory Clark argued in the affirmative. Clark documented that members of skilled professions in Medieval England had twice as many surviving children as unskilled workers (Chart II-1). Indeed, the fledgling middle class of the time had even more surviving children than the aristocracy, who were often out fighting wars. As a result, the wages of craftsmen declined by a third relative to laborers between 1200 and 1800, implying that the supply of skilled labor was growing more quickly than the demand for skilled workers over this period. In subsequent work, Clark and Neil Cummins argued that the spread of bourgeois values across pre-industrial England was more consistent with a model of genetic transmission than a cultural one (see Box II-1 for details). Similar developments occurred in other parts of the world. For example, in China, the gateway into the bureaucracy for a thousand years was the highly competitive imperial exam. Xi Song, Cameron Campbell, and James Lee showed that high-status men had more surviving children during the eighteenth- and nineteenth-centuries (Chart II-2).4 The 10,000 Year Explosion Stephen Jay Gould famously said that “There’s been no biological change in humans in 40,000 or 50,000 years. Everything we call culture and civilization we’ve built with the same body and brain.” Gould was wrong. Data from the International HapMap Project show that human evolution accelerated by 100-fold starting around 10,000 years ago (Chart II-3). In their book The 10,000 Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution, Gregory Cochran and the late Henry Harpending explained why evolution sped up so rapidly.5 The advent of agriculture led to a surge in population levels. This, in turn, increased the absolute number of potentially beneficial genetic mutations that could be subject to selection effects. Farming and the rise of city states also completely reshaped the environment in which people lived. Basic biology teaches us that environmental dislocations of this kind tend to generate selective pressures that cause evolution to accelerate. John Hawks, professor of anthropology and genetics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, put it best: “We are more different genetically from people living 5,000 years ago than they were different from Neanderthals.” Many of the changes to our genomes relate to diet and diseases. The various genetic resistances that people have built up to malaria are all less than 10,000 years old. Mutations to the LCT gene, which confers lactose tolerance into adulthood, occurred independently in three different geographical locations: one in East Asia, one in the Middle East, and one in Africa. The Middle Eastern variant was probably responsible for the rapid enlargement of the Indo-European language group, which now stretches from India to Ireland. The African variant likely facilitated the Bantu expansion, which started near the present-day border of Nigeria and Cameroon, and then spread out across almost all of sub-Saharan Africa. Evolution Of The Human Brain About half of the genes in the human genome regulate some aspect of brain function. Given the rapid acceleration in evolution, it would be rather surprising if our own brains had not been affected. And indeed, there is plenty of evidence that they were. The frontal lobe of the brain has increased in size over the past 10,000 years. This is the part of the brain that regulates such things as language, memory, and long-term planning. Testosterone levels have also declined. That may explain the steady reduction in violent crime rates (Chart II-4). We know that certain genes that are associated with higher intelligence have been under recent selective pressure. For example, the gene that leads to torsion dystonia – a debilitating movement disorder – appears to have increased in frequency. Why would a gene that causes a known disease become more widespread? The answer is that individuals who have this particular mutation tend to have IQs that are around 10-to 20-points above the population average. Why IQ Matters IQ has a long and contentious history. Yet, despite numerous efforts to jettison the concept, it has endured for one simple reason: It has more predictive power than virtually anything else in the psychological realm. A simple 30-minute IQ test can help predict future educational attainment, job performance, income, health, criminality, and fertility choices (Table II-1 and Chart II-5). IQ even predicts trader performance!6 Like most physiological traits, IQ is highly heritable.7 The genetic contribution to IQ increases from 20% in early childhood to as high as 80% by one’s late teens and remains at that level well into adulthood.8 This makes IQ almost as heritable as height (Chart II-6). Although there is a great deal of variation among individuals, on average, more intelligent people earn higher incomes (Chart II-7). If the same relationship existed in the pre-industrial era, as seems likely, then human intelligence probably increased in a way that facilitated the economic explosion that we associate with the Industrial Revolution. The stunning implication is that the emergence of the modern era was a question of “when, not if.” Part 2: The Flynn Effect By the late-19th century, it had become clear that the rich were no longer having as many children as the poor. This realization, together with the growing popularity of Darwin’s theories, helped galvanize the eugenics movement. Contrary to popular belief, this movement was not a product of the far-right. In fact, the most vocal proponents of eugenics were among the progressive left. John Maynard Keynes, for example, served as the Director of the British Eugenics Society between 1937 and 1944. Yet, a funny thing happened on the road to idiocracy: The concerns of eugenicists did not come to pass. Rather than becoming dimmer, people became smarter. This phenomenon is now known as the Flynn Effect, named after James Flynn, a psychologist who was among the first to document it. Chart II-8 shows the evolution of IQ scores in a sample of countries between 1940 and 1990. The average country recorded IQ gains of three points per decade over this period, a remarkably large increase over such a relatively short period of time. Explaining The Flynn Effect The Flynn Effect must have been entirely driven by environmental factors since genetic factors – namely the tendency of less-educated people to have more children, and to have them at an earlier age – would have reduced average IQs over the past two hundred years. But how could environmental factors have played the dominant role in light of the strong role of genes discussed above? The answer was proposed by geneticist Richard Lewontin in the 1970s. Lewontin suggested imagining a genetically-diverse sack of seed corn randomly distributed between two large identical fields. One field had fertilizer added to it while the other did not. Genetic variation would explain all of the differences in the height of corn stalks within each field, while environmental factors (the addition of fertilizer) would explain all of the difference in the average height of corn stalks between the two fields. This logic explains why genes can account for the bulk of the variation in IQs within any demographic group, while environmental effects may explain most of the variation across groups, as well as why average scores have changed over time. And what environmental effects are these? The truth is that no one really knows. Plenty of theories have been advanced, but so far there is still little consensus on the matter. Bigger, Healthier Brains It has long been known that learning increases the amount of grey matter in the brain. For example, a recent study showed that the hippocampi of London taxi drivers tend to be larger due to the need for drivers to memorize and navigate complex routes.9 The emergence of modern societies likely kicked off a virtuous circle where the need to solve increasingly complex tasks forced people to hone their learning skills, leading to higher IQs and further technological progress. The introduction of universal primary education amplified this virtuous circle. Better health undoubtedly helped as well. Early childhood diseases reduce IQ by diverting the body’s resources away from mental development towards fighting off infections. There is a strong correlation between measured IQ and disease burden across countries (Chart II-9). A number of studies have documented a strong relationship between the timing of malaria eradication in the U.S. and other parts of the world and subsequent observed gains in childhood IQs.10 Brain size and IQ are positively correlated. Forensic evidence from the U.S. suggests that the average volume of adult human skulls has increased by 7% since the late 1800s, or roughly the size of a tennis ball.11 Part 3: The End Of A 10,000 Year Trend The problem with environmental effects is that they eventually run into diminishing returns. This appears to have happened with the Flynn Effect. In fact, not only does the recent evidence suggest that the Flynn Effect has ended, but the data suggest that IQs are starting to decline. Chart II-10 shows that average math and science test scores fell in the OECD’s Program For International Scholastic Achievement (PISA) between 2009 and 2015, the latest year of the examination. The drop in math and science test scores has been mirrored in falling IQ scores. Flynn observed a decade ago that IQs of British teenagers were slipping.12 Similar results have been documented in France, the Netherlands, Germany, Denmark, and most recently, Norway. The Norwegian results, published last year, are particularly noteworthy.13 Bernt Bratsberg and Ole Rogeberg examined three-decades worth of data on IQ tests of Norwegian military conscripts. Military duty has been mandatory for almost all men in Norway since 1814, which means that the study’s authors were able to collect comprehensive data on most Norwegian men and their fathers. Their paper clearly shows that IQ peaked with the generation born in the mid-1970s and declined by about five points, or one-third of a standard deviation, for the one born in 1990 (Chart II-11). For the first time in recorded history, Norwegian kids today are not scoring as well as their parents. A Mystery What caused the sudden reversal of the Flynn Effect in Norway and most other developed economies? Nobody knows. We can, however, offer three possible theories: New Technologies For much of human history, rising intelligence and technological innovation were complementary processes, meaning that the smartest people were the ones who could best exploit the new technologies that were coming their way. Moreover, as noted above, even those who were less gifted benefited from the mental stimulation that a technologically advanced society provided. It remains to be seen how future technological advances such as generalized AI will affect human intelligence, but recent technological advances seem to have had a dumbing down effect.14 For example, the GPS has obviated the need for people to navigate unfamiliar locations, thus blunting the development of their visuospatial skills. Modern word processors have made spelling skills less important. Having all the information in the world just a click away is a wonderful thing, but it has reduced the need for our brains to retain and codify what we learn. Meanwhile, the constant bombardment of information to which we are subject has made it difficult to concentrate on anything for long. How many youth today can read a report of this length without checking their Facebook feed multiple times? My guess is not many. Diminishing Returns To Education The ability to take young bright minds, who would have otherwise spent their lives doing menial labor, and provide them with an education was probably the greatest tailwind to growth that the 20th century enjoyed. There is undoubtedly still scope to continue this process, but the low-hanging fruits have been picked. Educational attainment has slowed dramatically in most of the world (Chart II-12). Economist James Heckman estimates that U.S. high-school graduation rates, properly measured, peaked over 40 years ago.15 Despite billions of dollars spent, efforts to improve school performance have generally fallen flat. A recent high-level report by the U.S. Department of Education concluded that “The panel did not find any empirical studies that reached the rigor necessary to determine that specific turnaround practices produce significantly better academic outcomes.”16 This gets to a point that most parents already know, which is that when people talk about “bad schools," they are really talking about “bad students.” Deteriorating Health Better health probably contributed to the Flynn Effect. But is it possible to have too much of a good thing? More calories are welcome when people are starving, but today’s calorie-rich, nutrient-poor diets have led to a surge in obesity rates. A clean environment reduces the spread of germs, but it also makes children hypersensitive to foreign substances. Following German reunification, researchers observed that allergies were much more common among West German children than their Eastern peers, presumably because of the West’s more salubrious environment.17 All sorts of weird and concerning physiological changes are occurring. Sperm counts have fallen by nearly 60% since the early 1970s.18 Testosterone levels in young men are dropping. Among girls, the age of first menarche has declined by two years over the past century.19 Are chemical agents in the environment responsible? If they are, what impact are they having on cognitive development? Nobody knows. Reported mental illness is also on the rise. The share of U.S. teenagers with a reported major depressive episode over the prior year surged by over 60% between 2010 and 2017 (Chart II-13). The fraction of young adults that made suicide plans nearly doubled.20 More than 20% of U.S. women over the age of 40 are on antidepressants.21 Five percent of U.S. children are receiving ADHD medication.22 Implications For Economic Growth And Asset Markets So far, the reversal of the Flynn Effect has been largely confined to the developed economies. Test scores are still rising in the developing world, albeit from fairly low levels. For example, two recent studies have documented significant IQ gains in Kenya and Brazil.23 In the poorest countries, opportunities for improving health abound. Even small steps such as fortifying salt with iodine (which costs about five cents per person per year) have been shown to boost IQ by nearly one standard deviation.24 Measures to reduce inbreeding are also likely to boost IQ scores.25 Yet, we should not underestimate the importance of falling cognitive skills in developed economies. Chart II-14 shows that there is a clear positive correlation between student score on math and science and per capita incomes. Most technological innovation still takes place in developed economies. There is an extremely tight relationship between visuospatial IQ and the likelihood of becoming an inventor (Chart II-15). Since IQ is distributed along a bell curve, a 0.1 standard deviation drop in IQs across the entire distribution will result in an 8% decline in the share of people with IQs over 100, a 14% decline in those with IQs over 115, and a 21% decline in those with an IQ over 130 (by convention, each standard deviation on an IQ test is worth 15 points). Falling IQs could result in slower productivity growth, which could further strain fiscal balances. Lower IQs are also associated with decreased future orientation.26 People who live for the moment tend to save less. A decline in savings would push up real rates, leading to less capital accumulation. History suggests that a deceleration in productivity growth and higher real rates will put downward pressure on equity multiples (Chart II-16). Part 4: Generation E For 200 years, the environmentally-driven Flynn Effect disguised the underlying genetically-driven decline in IQs that began not long after the dawn of the Industrial Revolution. Flynn has acknowledged this himself, noting at the 2017 International Society For Intelligence Research Conference that “I have no doubt that there has been some deterioration of genetic quality for intelligence since the late Victorian times.”27 Now that the Flynn Effect has reversed, both genes and the environment are working together to reduce cognitive abilities in developed economies. This means that the most important trend in the world – a trend that allowed the human population to increase during the Malthusian era and later allowed output-per-worker to soar following the Industrial Revolution – has broken down. Yet, there may be another twist in the story – one that began just a few months ago: the first members of Generation E were born. E Is For Edited ... Or Eugenics Lulu and Nana will be like most other children, but with one key difference: They will be the first humans ever to have their genomes edited through a procedure know as CRISPR-Cas9. Rogue Chinese scientist He Jiankui deactivated their CCR5 gene, which the HIV virus uses as a gateway into the body. His actions were rightfully condemned around the world for endangering the twins’ health by using a procedure that has not yet been fully vetted in animal studies, let alone in human trials (Lulu and Nana’s father is HIV+ but it is debatable whether the children were at an elevated risk of infection). He Jiankui remains under house arrest at the university where he worked. But whatever his fate, the dam has been broken. For better or for worse, the era of personal eugenics has arrived. The Return Of The Silver Fox It is easier to delete a gene than to add one. It is even more difficult to swap out a large number of genes in a way that achieves a predictable outcome. Thus, the successful manipulation of highly polygenic traits such as intelligence — traits that are linked to hundreds of different genes – may still be decades away.28 Predicting a trait is much simpler than modifying it, however. The cost of sequencing a human genome has fallen by more than 99% since 2001 (Chart II-17). Start-up company Genomic Prediction has already developed a test for fertilized embryos for IVF users that predicts height within a few centimetres and IQ with a correlation of 0.3-to-0.4, roughly as accurate as standardized tests such as the SAT or ACT.29 Other companies are following suit.30 Some will recoil in horror at the prospect of selecting prospective children in this manner. They will argue that such technologies, beyond being simply immoral, will widen social inequality between those who can afford them and those who cannot. Others will counter that screening embryos for certain traits is not that dissimilar to what people already do with prospective romantic partners. They will also point out that mass usage of these technologies will drive down prices to the point that even poor people will be able to access them, thus giving low IQ parents the chance to have high IQ kids. They might also note that such technologies may be the only way to reverse the ongoing accumulation of deleterious mutations within the human germline that has been the unintended by-product of the proliferation of life-saving medicines.31 We will not wade into this thorny debate, other than to note that there will be huge incentives for people to avail themselves of these technologies. The Coming Eugenic Wars And not just individuals either – governments too. While the initial impact of eugenic technologies will be small, the effects will compound over time. Carl Shulman and Nick Bostrom estimate that genetic screening could boost average IQs by up to 65 points in five generations (Table II-2). China has been investing heavily in genetic technologies. As Geoffrey Miller has argued, China’s infatuation with eugenics spans into the modern day.32 Like most other countries, fertility in China is negatively correlated with IQ. Mingrui Wang, John Fuerst, and Jianjun Ren estimate that China is currently losing nearly one-third of a point in generalized intelligence per decade, with the loss having accelerated rapidly between the 1960s and mid-1980s.33 The decline in the genetic component of Chinese IQs is coming at a time when the population itself is about to shrink. According to the UN’s baseline forecast, China will lose 450 million working-age people by the end of the century (Chart II-18). Meanwhile, the country is saddled with debt, the result of an economic model that has, for decades, recycled copious household savings into debt-financed fixed-investment spending in an effort to shore up domestic demand. The authorities may be tempted to tackle all three problems simultaneously by adopting generous pro-natal measures – call it the “at least one-child policy”– which increasingly harnesses emerging eugenic technologies. The resulting baby boom would strengthen domestic demand, thus making the economy less dependent on exports, while ensuring China’s long-term geopolitical viability. The Eugenic Wars are coming, and they will be unlike anything the world has seen before. BOX II-1 The Diffusion Of Bourgeois Values: Culture Or Genes? Higher-income people had more surviving children in the centuries leading up to the Industrial Revolution. Real per capita income was broadly stable during this period. This implies that there must have been downward social mobility, with sons, on average, being less wealthy than their fathers. This downward mobility, in turn, spread the characteristics of higher-income people across the broad swathe of society. What were these characteristics? Cultural values that emphasized thrift, diligence, and literacy were undoubtedly part of what was passed on to future generations. But surprisingly, it also appears that genetic transmission played an important, and perhaps pivotal, role. Models of genetic transmission make very concrete predictions about the correlations in economic status that one would expect to see among relatives. Biological brothers share 50% of their genes, as do fathers and sons. Likewise, first cousins share 25% of their genes, the same as grandfathers and sons. These facts yield two testable predictions: The first is that the correlation coefficient on status measures such as wealth, occupation, and education should be the same for relatives that share the same fraction of genes such as sibling pairs and father-son pairs. Box Chart II-1 shows that this is borne out by the data. The second prediction is that the correlation between status and genetic distance should follow a linear trend so that, for example, the correlation in wealth among brothers is twice that of first cousins and four times that of second cousins. Box Chart II-2 shows that this is also borne out by the data. Other evidence supports the importance of genes in the transmission of status across generations. The correlation in measures such as wealth, education, and occupation is much higher among identical twins than fraternal twins. Adopted children turn out to be more similar to their biological parents on these measures when they reach adulthood than their adopted parents, even when the children have never met their biological parents. The parent-child correlation also remains the same regardless of family size, suggesting that spreading the same resources over more children may not harm life outcomes to any discernible degree, at least on the measures listed above. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy III. Indicators And Reference Charts Our tactical equity upgrade to overweight last month has still not been confirmed by most of our proprietary indicators. Our Willingness-to-Pay (WTP) indicator for the U.S. is falling fast. It is also eroding for Europe, although it has ticked higher in Japan. The WTP indicators track flows, and thus provide information on what investors are actually doing, as opposed to sentiment indexes that track how investors are feeling. Investors have clearly moved funds away from the U.S. equity market and there is no sign yet that this is reversing. Our Revealed Preference Indicator (RPI) for stocks continued to issue a ‘sell’ signal in January. The RPI combines the idea of market momentum with valuation and policy measures. It provides a powerful bullish signal if positive market momentum lines up with constructive signals from the policy and valuation measures. Conversely, if constructive market momentum is not supported by valuation and policy, investors should lean against the market trend. While the RPI is still cautious, value has improved significantly according to BCA’s composite valuation indicator. It is a composite of 11 different valuation measures. This indicator almost reached the fair value line in December. Moreover, our Monetary Indicator has suddenly shifted out of negative territory for stocks, rising to the neutral line in December. Calming words from the Fed has improved the monetary backdrop by removing expected rate hikes from the money market curve. Given the improvement in both value and the monetary backdrop, the RPI could generate a ‘buy’ signal next month. Our Composite Technical indicator for stocks broke down last month, providing a clear ‘sell’ signal, and has not yet delivered a ‘buy’. However, sentiment is now washed out and earnings expectations have been revised heavily downward. These signals are bullish from a contrary perspective. The 10-year Treasury yield is in the neutral range according to our valuation model. Bonds are not overbought, despite the rally in December, because they were still working off oversold conditions. Contrary to the bond valuation model, the 10-year term premium moved further into negative territory in January, suggesting that yields are unsustainably low. Our bond-bearish bias is consistent with the view that the Fed rate hike cycle is not over. The U.S. dollar is somewhat overbought and very expensive on a PPP basis. Nonetheless, we believe it will become more expensive in the first half of 2019, before its structural downtrend resumes in broad trade-weighted terms. EQUITIES: Chart III-1U.S. Equity Indicators Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk Chart III-3U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators Chart III-4Revealed Preference Indicator Chart III-5U.S. Stock Market Valuation Chart III-6U.S. Earnings Chart III-7Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Chart III-8Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance FIXED INCOME: Chart III-9U.S. Treasurys And Valuations Chart III-10Yield Curve Slopes Chart III-11Selected U.S. Bond Yields Chart III-1210-Year Treasury Yield Components Chart III-13U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor Chart III-14Global Bonds: Developed Markets Chart III-15Global Bonds: Emerging Markets CURRENCIES: Chart III-16U.S. Dollar And PPP Chart III-17U.S. Dollar And Indicator Chart III-18U.S. Dollar Fundamentals Chart III-19Japanese Yen Technicals Chart III-20Euro Technicals Chart III-21Euro/Yen Technicals Chart III-22Euro/Pound Technicals COMMODITIES: Chart III-23Broad Commodity Indicators Chart III-24Commodity Prices Chart III-25Commodity Prices Chart III-26Commodity Sentiment Chart III-27Speculative Positioning ECONOMY: Chart III-28U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop Chart III-29U.S. Macro Snapshot Chart III-30U.S. Growth Outlook Chart III-31U.S. Cyclical Spending Chart III-32U.S. Labor Market Chart III-33U.S. Consumption Chart III-34U.S. Housing Chart III-35U.S. Debt And Deleveraging Chart III-36U.S. Financial Conditions Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Chart III-38Global Economic Snapshot: China Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst Footnotes 1 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Special Report "The Long Shadow Of The Financial Crisis," dated October 25, 2018, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 2 The amount of spread widening required for corporate returns to break-even with duration-matched U.S. Treasuries on a one-year horizon. 3 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report "Five Black Swans In 2019," dated January 16, 2019, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 4 Xi Song, Cameron Campbell, and James Lee, "Descent Line Growth and Extinction From A Multigenerational Perspective, Extended Abstract," American Sociological Review 80:3, (April 21, 2015): 574-602. 5 Gregory Cochran and Henry Harpending, "The 10,000 Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution," Basic Books, (2009). 6 Mark Grinblatt, Matti Keloharju, and Juhani T. Linnainmaa, “IQ, Trading Behavior, and Performance,” Journal of Financial Economics, 104:2, (May 2012): 339-362. 7 Thomas Bouchard, "Genetic Influence On Human Psychological Traits - A Survey," Current Directions in Psychological Science 13:4, (August 2004): 148-151. 8 The tendency for the genetic contribution to IQ to increase until early adulthood and then to remain at high levels until old age is known as the Wilson Effect. There is no consensus on what causes it, but it probably reflects a number of factors: 1) It may take some children longer than normal to reach full intellectual maturity. Testing their IQs at a young age will result in scores that are lower than those expected based on their parents’ IQs. The opposite is true for children whose IQs increase relatively quickly in young age, but possibly top out earlier; 2) Environmental effects are probably more important in young age when a child’s brain is still quite malleable; 3) Self-reinforcing gene-environment interactions tend to increase with age. Children do not have much control over their environment, but as they get older, they will seek out activities that are more in keeping with their genetic predispositions. For example, a studious child may pursue a career that reinforces their love of learning. 9 "Cache Cab: Taxi Drivers' Brains Grow to Navigate London's Streets," Scientific American, (December 2011). 10 Atheendar Venkataramani, "Early Life Exposure to Malaria and Cognition in Adulthood: Evidence from Mexico," Journal of Health Economics 31:5, (July 2012): 767-780; Hoyt Bleakley, "Health, Human Capital and Development," Annual Review of Economics 2, (March 2010): 283-310; Hoyt Bleakley, "Malaria Eradication in the Americas: A Retrospective Analysis of Childhood Exposure," American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 2, (April 2010): 1-45. 11 "Anthropologists Find American Heads Are Getting Larger," ScienceDaily, (May 2012). 12 "British Teenagers Have Lower IQs Than Their Counterparts Did 30 Years Ago," The Telegraph, (February 2009). 13 Bernt Bratsberg and Ole Rogeberg, "Flynn Effect And Its Reversal Are Both Environmentally Caused," Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 115:26, (June 2018): 6674-6678. 14 On the face of it, artificial intelligence would appear to be a substitute for human intelligence. Many applications of AI would undoubtedly have this feature, especially those that allow computers to perform complex mental tasks that humans now must do. However, there are several ways that AI may eventually come to complement human intelligence. First, and most obviously, AI could be used to augment human capabilities either directly by hardwiring it into our brains, or indirectly through the development of drugs or genetic techniques which improve cognition. Second, looking further out, the benefits of highly intelligent AI systems would be limited if humans did not possess the requisite intelligence to understand certain concepts that are currently beyond our mental reach. No matter how well intentioned, trying to explain string theory to a mouse is not going to succeed. There are probably a multitude of ideas that AI could reveal that we simply cannot comprehend at current levels of human intelligence. 15 James Heckman and Paul La Fontaine, "The American High School Graduation Rate: Trends and Levels," The Review of Economics and Statistics 92:2, (May 2010): 244–262. 16 "Turning Around Chronically Low-Performing Schools," The Institute of Education Sciences (IES), (May 2008). 17 E. von Mutius, F.D. Martinez, C. Fritzsch, T. Nicolai, G. Roell, and H. H. Thiemann, "Prevalence Of Asthma And Atopy In Two Areas Of West Germany And East Germany," American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine 149:2, (February 1994): 358-64. 18 "Sperm Counts In The West Plunge By 60% In 40 Years As ‘Modern Life’ Damages Men’s Health," Independent, (July 2017). 19 Kaspar Sørensen, Annette Mouritsen, Lise Aksglaede, Casper P. Hagen, Signe Sloth Mogensen, and Anders Juul, "Recent Secular Trends in Pubertal Timing: Implications for Evaluation and Diagnosis of Precocious Puberty," Hormone Research in Paediatrics 77:3, (May 2012): 137-145. 20 “Results from the 2017 National Survey On Drug Use And Health: Detailed Tables,” Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Center for Behavioral Health Statistics and Quality, Rockville (Maryland), (September, 2018). 21 Laura A. Pratt, Debra J. Brody, and Qiuping Gu, "Antidepressant Use Among Persons Aged 12 and Over: United States, 2011–2014," NCHS Data Brief No. 283, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, (August 2017). 22 Some, but not all, of the increase in reported rates of mental illness may be due to more aggressive diagnosis by health practitioners. For example, a recent study revealed that children born in August were 30% more likely to receive an ADHD diagnosis than those born in September, simply because they were less mature compared to other kids in the first few years of elementary school. See: Timothy J. Layton, Michael L. Barnett, Tanner R. Hicks, and Anupam B. Jena, "Attention Deficit-Hyperactivity Disorder and Month of School Enrollment," New England Journal of Medicine 379:22, (November 2018): 2122-2130. 23 Tamara C. Daley, Shannon E. Whaley, Marian D. Sigman, Michael P. Espinosa, and Charlotte Neumann, "IQ On The Rise: The Flynn Effect In Rural Kenyan Children," Psychological Science 14:3, (June 2003): 215-9; Jakob Pietschnig and Martin Voracek, "One Century of Global IQ Gains: A Formal Meta-Analysis of the Flynn Effect (1909-2013)," Perspectives on Psychological Science 10:3, (May 2015): 282-306. 24 N. Bleichrodt and M. P. Born, “Meta-Analysis of Research on Iodine and Its Relationship to Cognitive Development,” In: ed. J. B. Stanbury, "The Damaged Brain of Iodine Deficiency," Cognizant Communication Corporation, New York, (1994): 195-200; "Iodine status worldwide: WHO Global Database on Iodine Deficiency," World Health Organization, Geneva, (2004). 25 Mohd Fareed and Mohammad Afzal, "Estimating the Inbreeding Depression on Cognitive Behavior: A Population Based Study of Child Cohort," PLOS ONE 9:12, (October 2015): e109585. 26 H. de Wit, J. D. Flory, A. Acheson, M. McCloskey, and S. B. Manuck, "IQ And Nonplanning Impulsivity Are Independently Associated With Delay Discounting In Middle-Aged Adults," Personality and Individual Differences 42:1, (January 2007): 111-121; W. Mischel and R. Metzner, "Preference For Delayed Reward As A Function Of Age, Intelligence, And Length Of Delay Interval," Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology 64:6, (July 1962): 425-31. 27 James Flynn, “IQ decline and Piaget: Does the rot start at the top?” Lifetime Achievement Award Address, 18th Annual meeting of ISIR, (July 2017). 28 For a good discussion of these issues, please see Richard J. Haier, “The Neuroscience of Intelligence,” Cambridge Fundamentals of Neuroscience in Psychology, (December 2016). 29 "The Future of In-Vitro Fertilization and Gene Editing," Psychology Today, (December 2018). 30 "DNA Tests For IQ Are Coming, But It Might Not Be Smart To Take One," MIT Technology Review, (April 2018). 31 Michael Lynch, "Rate, Molecular Spectrum, And Consequences Of Human Mutation," Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107:3, (January 2010): 961-968. 32 Geoffrey Miller, "What *Should* We Be Worried About?" Edge, (2013). 33 Mingrui Wang, John Fuerst, and Jianjun Ren, "Evidence Of Dysgenic Fertility In China," Intelligence 57, (April 2016): 15-24. EQUITIES:FIXED INCOME:CURRENCIES:COMMODITIES:ECONOMY:
Highlights We advocate implementing asset allocation not across EM assets, but rather relative to their DM counterparts. EM stocks should be part of a global equity portfolio. EM sovereign and corporate credit should be part of a global credit portfolio. EM local currency government bonds are a unique asset class with idiosyncratic features and a low correlation with other assets. Hence, their addition to any multi-asset class portfolio is beneficial. We continue recommending below benchmark allocation to EM equities, credit and local bonds. The rebound in various EM financial markets is reaching a critical technical level where it will either stop or, if broken, will carry on for some time. In Peru, further decline in industrial metals prices and ongoing involuntary monetary tightening bode ill for share prices; continue underweighting. Feature We frequently receive questions from our clients on how they should be positioning their portfolios within EM asset classes such as equities, EM U.S. dollar bonds (credit markets) and local currency government bonds – whether they should be overweight EM stocks versus EM credit markets and domestic bonds, or vice versa. While BCA’s Emerging Markets Strategy service covers EM stocks, credit and domestic bonds and exchange rates, we do not make asset allocation calls between EM equities, EM credit and local currency bonds. The reason is very simple: in a risk-on market, EM equities always outperform EM credit and local bonds, and in a risk-off environment, stocks always underperform fixed income (Chart I-1). Chart I-1EM Stocks Versus EM Credit And Local Bonds With respect to the relative performance of EM credit markets versus domestic bonds, the performance of EM currencies is key. A large portion of total returns on EM local currency bonds comes from exchange rates (Chart I-2). Hence, when EM currencies appreciate, domestic bonds outperform EM credit markets (U.S. dollar bonds), and vice versa (Chart I-3). Chart I-2EM Currencies Are Key To EM Local Bonds Returns Chart I-3EM Local Bonds Versus EM Credit: It Is A Currency Call For investors willing to allocate across EM asset classes, a directional view on financial markets should drive allocation between equities and fixed-income. In rallies, equities should be favored, while during risk-off periods, fixed income should be preferred. It follows that investors should overweight EM credit markets versus domestic bonds when EM currencies depreciate, and tilt allocation toward local currency bonds versus EM credit markets when EM exchange rates appreciate. Recommended Approach To Asset Allocation We advocate implementing asset allocation not across EM assets, but relative to their DM counterparts: EM stocks should be part of a global equity portfolio. A pertinent asset allocation decision should be whether to be overweight, neutral or underweight EM within a global equity portfolio. In short, EM stocks should not be compared with EM credit or local bonds, but rather versus their DM counterparts. Having mentioned that, we are maintaining our underweight recommendation on EM within a global equity portfolio for now. EM sovereign and corporate credit should be part of a global credit portfolio – i.e., asset allocators should compare them with other credit instruments such as U.S. and European corporate bonds. Total returns on EM U.S. dollar-denominated sovereign and corporate bonds can be deconstructed into the total return on U.S. Treasurys and the excess return of these EM bonds over U.S. Treasurys. Investors can obtain exposure to U.S. Treasurys by owning them outright. Hence, the unique feature of EM sovereign and corporate bonds is their spreads over U.S. government bonds. EM sovereign and corporate bond spreads over U.S. Treasurys reflect issuers' ability and willingness to pay. Thereby, investors should treat EM dollar-denominated bonds as a pure credit product and this asset class should be part of a global credit portfolio. At the moment, we recommend asset allocators underweight EM sovereign and corporate credit versus U.S./DM corporate credit, in line with our short EM equities/long U.S./DM equities strategy (Chart I-4). Within credit markets, EM investment-grade and high-yield credit should be compared with their peers in U.S./DM, respectively. The reason we are negative on EM credit markets relative to the U.S. and DM universe is that the majority of EM sovereign and corporate bond issuers in Latin America and the EMEA are commodity producers. Hence, their revenues fluctuate with commodity prices, and their spreads should be under upward pressure as commodity prices drop further and EM currencies correspondingly depreciate (Chart I-5). Chart I-4EM Credit Versus U.S. Credit Chart I-5EM Credit Spreads Are Sensitive To Commodities And EM Currencies In the meantime, Chinese property companies, financials and industrials/materials remain the largest issuers of corporate debt in emerging Asia. Specifically, U.S. dollar bonds issued by Chinese companies account for 32% of the Barclay’s overall EM USD Credit index and 56% of the EM Asia USD Credit index. Crucially, Chinese corporate credit is essential to trends in emerging Asian credit markets. We are bearish on the fundamentals of Chinese corporate bond issuers due to our negative view on Chinese capital spending, particularly in the real estate sector. With respect to EM local-currency government bonds, this is an entirely different asset class with returns often uncorrelated with any other asset. Table 1 shows that EM local currency bond returns in U.S. dollars have a low correlation with most other asset classes. Therefore, adding EM local-currency bonds to a global multi-asset class portfolio will help achieve risk diversification provided an expectation of a positive return on this asset class in the long run. EM domestic bond returns are comprised of local yield carry and capital gains/losses, as well as currency appreciation/depreciation. Business cycles and monetary policies could from time to time be desynchronized across EM countries, and EM currencies could also at times diverge. In short, all of this will add idiosyncratic risk to any global multi-asset class portfolio and push out the portfolio’s efficient frontier – i.e., the portfolio could achieve higher returns for the same amount of risk (volatility). The exposure to EM local currency bonds should be altered according to the view on this asset’s absolute performance. Presently, we recommend below benchmark allocation to this asset class because we expect the majority of EM currencies to depreciate versus the U.S. dollar, the euro and the Japanese yen. The key driver of EM currencies is not U.S. interest rates but the global business cycle (Chart I-6). Odds are high that global trade will continue disappointing as China’s growth weakens further. This will lead to tumbling EM currencies and outflows from high-yielding EM domestic bonds. Chart I-6What Drive EM Currencies Within an EM local currency bond portfolio, our recommended overweights are Mexico, Brazil, Chile, Russia, central Europe, Thailand and Korea. The list of our overweights and underweight across EM stocks, credit markets, local bonds and currencies is always published at the end of our reports. Bottom Line: Global asset allocation should treat EM stocks as part of a global equity portfolio. EM sovereign and corporate credit should be part of a global credit portfolio. In turn, EM local currency government bonds are a unique asset class with idiosyncratic features and a low correlation with other assets. Hence, their addition to any multi-asset class portfolio is recommended given an expectation of a positive return in the long run. A Make It Or Break It Juncture The rebound in various EM financial market segments is reaching a critical technical level. At that point, it will either reverse, or will break through and carry on the upward momentum for some time: EM share prices have troughed at their three-year moving averages but are now facing resistance at their 200-day moving averages (Chart I-7). Failure to break above their 200-day moving averages would signal higher risks of a major breakdown. Conversely, a decisive break above their 200-day moving averages would suggest that the recent rebound has much farther to go. Our Risk-on versus Safe-Haven currency ratio has found support at its 6-year moving average but is now facing resistance at its 200-day moving average (Chart I-8, top panel). This ratio is highly correlated with EM share prices, and its breakout or breakdown will be an important signal for the direction of EM, commodities and global cyclical assets in general (Chart I-8, bottom panel). Chart I-7EM Share Prices Are Between Support And Resistance Chart I-8This Currency Ratio Is Key To EM And Commodities Trend A relapse from this level would be a major bearish signal, as it would confirm the formation of a head-and-shoulders pattern in this currency ratio. The latter would entail a major breakdown. A number of EM currencies such as ZAR, MXN, KRW, TWD, MYR and CNY are at a critical juncture (Chart I-9). A breakout or failure to do so will entail a major move. Chart I-9AEM Exchange Rates Are At Make It Or Break It Juncture Chart I-9BEM Exchange Rates Are At Make It Or Break It Juncture Meanwhile, the BRL may be forming an inverted head-and-shoulders pattern (Chart I-10). Hence, continuous BRL strength would signal rising odds of an extension to the rally in Brazilian markets. Chart I-10The Brazilian Real: An Inverted Head-And-Shoulder? Finally, industrial metals prices have failed to rebound and appear to be forming a head-and-shoulders formation. This pattern foreshadows considerable downside from current levels (Chart I-11, top panel). In the meantime, oil prices have bounced off their long-term moving average and might have a bit more room to advance before hitting a major resistance between $65-$70 for Brent (Chart I-11, bottom panel). Bottom Line: Our fundamental view on EM risk assets remains negative due to our expectations of further weakness in China’s growth. However, we are monitoring various signals and indicators to gauge whether the latest rebound can last much longer, which would cause us to change our stance tactically. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com Peru: Involuntary Monetary Tightening Peru’s central bank is tightly managing the country’s exchange rate. As a result, it has little control over local interest rates. The Impossible Trinity thesis stipulates that in a country that has an open capital account, the central bank can control either interest rates or the exchange rate, not both simultaneously. Provided Peru has an open capital account, its central bank can have tight control over either the exchange rate or interest rates. So long as the central bank focuses on exchange rate stability, local interest rates will fluctuate with its balance of payments (BoP). Therefore, Peru’s credit cycle and hence domestic demand swings and bank share prices are driven by BoP (Chart II-1). Negative BoP dynamics – shrinking inflow of U.S. dollars – causes local interest rates to move higher while a positive BoP leads to lower borrowing costs (Chart II-2). Chart II-1Commodities Prices & Bank Stocks Are Correlated Chart II-2Trade Balance Drives Interbank Rates We expect negative BoP dynamics for Peru going forward – metals prices will drop as China’s growth continues to decelerate, and EM countries will likely experience a bout of portfolio capital outflows. If Peru’s central bank continues to favor limited currency depreciation, its interbank rates will march higher. Chart II-3 illustrates that the pace of net foreign exchange reserves accumulation often negatively correlates with interbank rates and leads loan growth by around 12 months (Chart II-4). Chart II-3Peruvian Local Rates Have Risen Chart II-4Peru: Bank Loan Growth Will Relapse When the monetary authorities purchase foreign exchange reserves, they inject local currency excess reserves (liquidity) into the banking system. More plentiful banking system liquidity drives down interbank rates and allows banks to expand credit, boosting domestic demand. The reverse also holds true. The Peruvian central bank was able to mitigate upside in local rates amid the negative terms-of-trade shock in 2014-‘15 by conducting foreign currency swaps with banks. This swap led to an injection of local currency reserves into the system. Currently these swaps are being unwound and banks’ excess reserves are dwindling, putting upward pressure on local rates. Hence, the rise in interbank rates in the past 12 months has not only been due to negative terms of trade but also due to the expiration of foreign currency swaps. As metals prices drop and exports contraction deepens, the currency will come under selling pressure (Chart II-5). To prevent the currency from depreciating considerably, the central bank has to tighten liquidity, producing higher interbank rates. The latter bodes ill for domestic demand. Chart II-5Money Growth Is Contingent On Trade Bottom Line: We continue to underweight the Peruvian bourse because of its exposure to mining companies and banks. The former is at risk from falling industrial metals prices, while the latter will suffer from rising interbank rates. Within the mining sector, gold and silver stocks should outperform copper producers because we foresee more downside in industrial metals than precious metals prices. Andrija Vesic, Research Analyst andrijav@bcaresearch.com Footnotes Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights The main headwinds to euro area growth in 2018 are easing in 2019, at least in part and for the time being. The two main tail-risks are a messy Brexit and financial market volatility, but these are not our central case. Stay overweight the Eurostoxx50 versus the S&P500. Go underweight German bunds. Go overweight the German DAX versus German long-dated bunds. Add the German DAX as a new long position to the existing long basket holdings in France, Ireland and Switzerland. Maintain the short basket holdings in Norway and Denmark. Feature Chart of the WeekThe Underperformance Of German Equities Vs. German Bonds Is At A Euro Debt Crisis Extreme! Economies do not grow in straight lines. Rather, the process of economic expansion is a never-ending ebb and flow, creating clockwork-like oscillations in economic activity. As a perfect illustration, the growth in the euro area wage bill has trended higher through the past five years and is now running at very healthy 4 percent clip. Yet this strong uptrend has been interspersed with wobbles that have occurred with a remarkable regularity (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Economies Have Regular Wobbles... The recent setback in euro area activity has spooked some economy watchers. Even the ECB has just moved its risk assessment surrounding the growth outlook to the downside. But the downgrade was largely a result of its ‘data-dependency’ which, by definition, is always backward looking. This meant that the downgrade had a negligible effect on the financial markets which are always forward looking. For the markets, there is a much more important issue: is the recent setback the start of something serious, or can we expect a bounce back? The Setback The explanation for the regular wobbles in euro area growth comes from the oscillations in global economic activity (Chart I-3). But here we need to be wary of a potentially circular argument. As Europe is a dominant component of the global economy, euro area domestic demand setbacks could themselves be the root cause of the over-arching global growth oscillations. Chart I-3...Because Of Clockwork-Like Oscillations In Global Economic Activity Recently, Italy and Germany have suffered idiosyncratic ‘country and sector specific’ setbacks. The spat between Rome and Brussels over Italy’s 2019 budget caused Italian bond yields to soar and Italian bank lending to contract viciously (Chart I-4). Meanwhile, the auto sector – a major engine of the German economy – spluttered as it absorbed the new WLTP emissions testing standard. Through the middle of 2018 German vehicle exports suffered a €20 billion hit which shaved 0.6 percent from the €3.4 trillion German economy (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Italian Bank Lending Contracted Viciously, But Will Now Recover Chart I-5German Auto Exports Plunged, But Will Now Recover Despite all of this, the epicentre of the 2018 growth setback was not inside Europe, but outside Europe. The ECB correctly blames the recent down-oscillation not on domestic causes, but on softer external demand, specifically “vulnerabilities in emerging markets”. The central bank argues that once there is clarity on the exports and the trade sector, much of the euro area’s weakness will wash out. Another very important driver of European growth oscillations is the oil price. In recent years, the growth in GDP in excess of wages has perfectly and inversely tracked oscillations in the oil price (Chart I-6). The simple reason is that Europeans are net importers of energy, and the amount of energy they consume tends to be price inelastic. Hence, when energy prices soar as they did for most of 2018, it squeezes European real spending. Conversely, when energy prices plunge as they have more recently, it boosts real spending. Chart I-6Oil: Another Driver Of European Growth Somewhat contrary to received wisdom, one thing that does not generally drive euro area growth oscillations is the euro exchange rate. When the euro weakens, it does of course make the euro area’s exporters more competitive. But working against this, a weaker euro also raises the prices of imported energy and food, thereby squeezing euro area consumers’ real incomes. And vice-versa when the euro strengthens. Hence, while the euro’s moves do create growth winners and losers within the euro area, these tend to cancel out at the aggregate economy level. The Bounce Back The main headwinds to euro area growth in 2018 are easing in 2019, at least in part and for the time being. Regarding the vulnerabilities in emerging markets, many ECB governors argue that “everything we know says that the Chinese government is taking strong measures to address its slowdown”. Recent improvements in China’s monetary statistics provide strong evidence for this view (Chart I-7). Chart I-76-Month Credit Impulses Are Bouncing Back Everywhere Meanwhile, credit growth in the euro area itself is also accelerating, albeit modestly. This is hardly surprising given that financing conditions are very favourable. Even though the ECB has done nothing to policy interest rates, more dovish forward guidance has effectively made euro area monetary policy more accommodative: since October, core euro area 10-year bond yields are down 40 bps. And with banks’ balance sheets stronger, the ECB claims “the conditions for a continuation of credit to the economy are in place.” Over the same three month period, the crude oil price has plunged by 35 percent (Chart I-8). Draghi confirmed our observation above: lower energy prices support real disposable income for euro area households. Chart I-8Double Boost: Lower Bond Yields And Lower Oil Draghi also pointed out another positive impulse: fiscal policy in the euro area has now flipped from contractionary to slightly expansionary. As regards the idiosyncratic sector specific setbacks, the Italian 10-year BTP yield has unwound its budget spat spike, and is down 100 bps since October. It follows that Italian bank credit growth is likely to recover. And Draghi explained that “the specific episode of the car industry in Germany will soon wash out because there is going to be a rebound in the sector.” Still, two significant tail-risks could smother the bounce back: Uncertainties related to geopolitical factors and the threat of protectionism, specifically, a messy Brexit. Financial market volatility. The Investment Implications Our central case is that the tail-risks do not materialise. And that the recent combination of more favourable financing conditions in the euro area and globally, lower energy prices, fiscal thrust, and the removal of specific setbacks in Italy and Germany should engineer some sort of growth bounce back in the euro area. One important implication is that the strong recent rally in German bunds is close to exhaustion, and even vulnerable to a short-term retracement. This is supported by our trusted technical indicator warning of an imminent liquidity shortage and a corrective price reversal (Chart I-9). Go underweight German bunds on a short term horizon. Chart I-9The Rally In The German Bund Is Exhausted A mirror-image implication is that the underperformance of the German DAX relative to German long-dated bunds is now at euro debt crisis extremes (Chart I-1 and Chart I-10). This relative performance also appears technically exhausted and ripe for a reversal. As an asset allocation position, go overweight the DAX versus German long-dated bunds on a tactical. Chart I-10The Extreme Underperformance Of The DAX Will Reverse In line with the growth rebound thesis, stock market selection – through the underlying sector exposures – should now have a modest tilt towards cyclicality. Stay overweight the Eurostoxx50 versus the S&P500. Within Europe, our current long positions in France, Ireland, and Switzerland combined with short positions in Norway and Denmark do provide the required tilt towards cyclicality. Nevertheless, today we are adding the oversold German DAX to our long stock markets basket. Fractal Trading System* In line with the fundamentals-based arguments in the main body of this report, this week’s recommended trade is to go long the DAX versus the 30-year bund. Set a profit target of 2.5 percent with a symmetrical stop-loss For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment’s fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-11 The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System Recommendations Asset Allocation Equity Regional and Country Allocation Equity Sector Allocation Bond and Interest Rate Allocation Currency and Other Allocation Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations