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BCA Indicators/Model

  Highlights While the Caixin PMI is pointing to improving economic conditions, other data series still reflect weak growth. China’s business cycle is likely to bottom in Q1 of next year, rather than in Q4. The failure of Chinese stocks to significantly outperform the global benchmark and the continued underperformance of cyclical stocks underscore the near-term risks to equities if this month’s trade & manufacturing data disappoint. We continue to recommend a neutral tactical stance (0-3 months) towards Chinese equities versus global stocks, but expect them to outperform on a cyclical (6-12 month) time horizon after economic growth firmly bottoms. Feature Tables 1 and 2 on pages 2 and 3 highlight key developments in China’s economy and its financial markets over the past month. On the growth front, the data remains mixed: the strength in the October Caixin PMI and the September pickup in electricity production are positive signs, but other important datapoints still point to weak conditions. We continue to expect that China’s business cycle is likely to bottom in Q1 of next year, rather than in Q4. We continue to expect that growth will bottom in Q1 of next year, rather than in Q4. Table 1China Macro Data Summary Table 2China Financial Market Performance Summary Within financial markets, Chinese stocks have rallied in absolute terms over the past month in response to greatly increased odds of a trade truce between China and the US, but have failed to outperform the global benchmark. This, in combination with the continued underperformance of cyclical stocks, suggests that hard evidence of an economic improvement in China will be required before Chinese stocks begin to rise in relative terms. The risk of near-term underperformance is still present, especially if October’s hard trade and manufacturing data disappoint. We continue to recommend a neutral tactical stance (0-3 months) towards Chinese equities versus global stocks, but expect them to outperform on a cyclical (6-12 month) time horizon after economic growth firmly bottoms. In reference to Tables 1 and 2, we provide below several detailed observations concerning developments in China’s macro and financial market data: Chart 1Not Yet A Clear Change In Trend The Bloomberg Li Keqiang index (LKI) ticked up in September, led by an improvement in electricity production. An improvement in the LKI in lockstep with a rising Caixin manufacturing PMI (discussed below) raises the odds that the Chinese economy may be bottoming earlier than we expect, but for now only modestly so. Chinese economic data is highly volatile, and Chart 1 shows that the improvement in the LKI is very muted when shown as a 3-month moving average. In addition, a slight improvement also occurred earlier this year, but proved to be a false signal. All told, for now we continue to expect that growth will bottom in Q1 of next year, rather than in Q4. Our leading indicator for the LKI was essentially flat in September on a smoothed basis, with sequential declines in M3 growth and the credit components of the indicator offsetting improvements in monetary conditions and M2. From a big picture perspective, the story of our LKI leading indicator remains unchanged: it continues to trend higher, at a much shallower pace than has been the case during previous easing cycles. The uptrend is the basis of our forecast that China’s growth will soon bottom, but the uncharacteristically shallow nature of the rise suggests that the eventual recovery will be modest. On a smoothed basis, Chinese residential floor space sold improved again in September, following a very significant rise in August. Over the past 12-18 months, we had emphasized that the double-digit pace of growth in China’s housing starts was unsustainable because it had entirely decoupled from the trend in sales (which have reliably led construction activity over the past decade). This gap disappeared over the summer due to a significant slowdown in starts, which is what we predicted would occur. However, the recent acceleration in floor space sold represents a legitimate fundamental improvement in the housing market, that for now is difficult to attribute to the recent drivers of housing demand (Chart 2).1 Still, investors should continue to watch China’s housing demand data closely over the coming few months, for further signs of a potential re-acceleration in housing construction. Investors need to see meaningful sequential improvements in China’s October trade and manufacturing data. The October improvement in China’s Caixin PMI was quite notable, as it appears to confirm the full one-point rise in the index that occurred in September and suggests that manufacturing in China’s private-sector is now durably expanding. Still, conflicting signals remain: the official PMI fell in October and remains below 50, and the significant September improvement in the Caixin PMI was not corroborated by an improvement in producer prices or nominal import growth (Chart 3). As PMIs are simply timely coincident indicators that do not generally have leading properties, investors will need to see meaningful sequential improvements in China’s October trade and manufacturing data in order to have confidence that the Caixin PMI improvement is not a false signal. Chart 2It Is Not Yet Apparent What Is Driving A Pickup In Housing Demand Chart 3If The Caixin PMI Is Not A False Signal, A Hard Data Improvement Must Occur Soon Chinese stocks have rallied 6-7% over the past month in absolute terms, but have modestly underperformed global equities. The rally in global stock prices has occurred largely in response to the mid-October announcement of a trade truce between China and the US. The failure of Chinese stocks to outperform during this period suggests hard evidence of an economic improvement in China will be required before Chinese stocks begin to outpace their global peers. At the regional equity level, the other notable development over the past month has been the continued outperformance of the MSCI Taiwan Index versus the global benchmark. Taiwan’s outperformance has been boosted by a rising TWD versus the dollar, but Taiwanese stocks have also outperformed in local currency terms. Taiwan province is highly exposed to global trade, and it is not surprising that equities have reacted positively to the prospect of a trade truce between the US and China. Further meaningful outperformance, however, will likely require a re-acceleration in Taiwanese exports, as export growth has merely halted its contraction (Chart 4). Within China’s investable equity market, cyclicals have underperformed defensives over the past month after having rallied significantly from late-August to mid-September (Chart 5). We noted in our October 30 Special Report that these cyclical sectors have historically been positively correlated with pro-cyclical macroeconomic and equity market variables,2 and their underperformance versus defensives is thus consistent with the failure of Chinese stocks in the aggregate to outperform global equities over the past month. In both cases, outperformance likely requires hard evidence of an upturn in China’s business cycle. Chart 4Export Growth Needs To Improve In Order To Expect Further Taiwanese Relative Outperformance Chart 5Cyclical Underperformance Underscores The Near-Term Risks To Chinese Vs. Global Stocks We do not take the rise in Chinese government bond yields as necessarily indicative of an imminent breakout in relative equity performance. Chart 6Chinese Relative Equity Performance Leads Bond Yields, Not The Other Way Around Chinese 10-year government bond yields have risen roughly 15bps over the past month, and are now 30bps off of their mid-August low. Many market participants view Chinese government bond yields as a leading growth barometer, but 10-year yields have actually lagged Chinese investable stock performance over the past two years (Chart 6). As such, we do not take the rise in yields as necessarily indicative of an imminent breakout in relative equity performance. Chinese onshore corporate bond spreads have declined over the past month as government bond yields have been rising, continuing a pattern of negative correlation between the two that has prevailed since early-2018. A negative correlation between yields and corporate bond spreads is a normal relationship, and it suggests that spreads may narrow over the coming year if the Chinese economy bottoms in Q1, as we expect. Spreads remain elevated despite the substantial easing in monetary conditions that occurred last year, due to persistent concerns about rising onshore defaults. While we acknowledge that defaults are indeed occurring, we have argued on several occasions that the pace of defaults would have to be much faster in order for current spreads to be justified.3 We continue to recommend a long RMB-denominated position in China’s onshore corporate bond market. The RMB has appreciated over the past month in response to news of a likely trade truce between the US and China, with most of the rise having occurred versus the US dollar. USD-CNY is likely to sustainably trade below the 7 mark in a trade truce scenario, but how much further downside is possible in the near-term absent a re-acceleration in Chinese economic activity remains an open question. With the Fed very likely on hold for the next year, stronger than expected economic growth in China would likely catalyze a persistent selloff in USD-CNY barring a re-emergence of the Sino-US trade war. This, however, is not our base-case view, meaning that we expect modest post-deal strength in the RMB.   Jonathan LaBerge, CFA Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com Jing Sima China Strategist JingS@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1. Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, “China’s Property Market: Where Will It Go From Here?” dated September 13, 2018. 2. Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “A Guide To Chinese Investable Equity Sector Performance,” dated October 30, 2019. 3. Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Reports, “A Shaky Ladder,” dated June 13, 2018, "Investing In The Middle Of A Trade War,” dated September 19, 2018 and "2019 Key Views: Four Themes For China In The Coming Year,” dated December 5, 2018. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights Our leading gauges of EM commodity-demand growth indicate global industrial-commodity demand has troughed and will be moving higher in the wake of supportive global financial conditions. The magnitude and speed of any commodity-demand rebound hinges on the joint evolution of the USD, which remains close to record highs, and global economic policy uncertainty. Reduced policy uncertainty will translate to a weaker USD, which, all else equal, will be bullish for commodity demand. Chinese economic stimulus remains weak, suggesting policymakers are holding off deploying aggressive fiscal and monetary policy until later this year or next year. Policy risk remains the chief threat to a robust recovery of industrial-commodity demand globally. A ceasefire in the Sino-US trade war will not resolve deeper trade and security issues, which means global financial easing must offset still-pronounced economic uncertainty that is keeping the USD well bid. If policy uncertainty remains high, it will continue to be a headwind for commodity-demand growth.  Feature EM GDP growth is showing signs of accelerating, based on our EM Commodity-Demand Nowcast model. This will translate to higher commodity demand in coming months (Chart of the Week). Our EM Commodity-Demand Nowcast is a coincident indicator of commodity demand, comprised of our Global Industrial Activity (GIA) Index, and our Global Commodity Factor (GCF) and EM Import Volume (EMIV) models (Chart 2). The GIA index uses trade data, FX rates, manufacturing data, and Chinese industrial activity statistics to gauge current global industrial activity, which is highly correlated with trade-related activity. The GCF uses principal component analysis to distill the primary driver of 28 different commodity prices traded globally. Lastly, the EMIV model is driven by EM import volumes reported with a two-month lag by the CPB in the Netherlands, which we update to current time using FX rates for trade-sensitive currencies, commodity prices and interest rates variables. Chart of the WeekEM Commodity-Demand Nowcast Hooking Up Chart 2BCA EM Commodity-Demand Nowcast Components Show Growth Resuming Globally We expect the recovery in global economic growth to reduce the marginal impact of the global policy uncertainty on the USD, and on oil demand. Our EM Commodity-Demand Nowcast is strongly correlated with y/y growth in nominal EM GDP and non-OECD oil consumption. Its improvement supports our view oil demand will continue to strengthen, particularly next year, when we expect growth to average 1.4mm b/d. We expect the recovery in global economic growth to reduce the marginal impact of the global policy uncertainty on the USD, and on oil demand.1 As demand strengthens – and recession fears subside – economic policy uncertainty’s contribution to safe-haven demand for the USD will diminish. This means economic growth will once again be the main driver of cyclical commodity demand growth. The GIA component of our Nowcast is sensitive to real activity in China, which is the largest consumer of base metals, iron ore and steel. Here, it is instructive to see the components other than manufacturing appear to have bottomed, which, at the margin, should be supportive of base metals, iron ore and steel products (Chart 3). The China Economy Component of the index has hooked higher last month, but it still is lagging. This suggests policymakers are holding off on deploying fiscal and monetary stimulus aggressively for now. We expect this will change by 1H20, if organic growth fails to materialize.2 Chart 3BCA GIA Index Components Point Toward Demand Growth Global Financial Conditions Support Commodity Demand For the better part of this year, systemically important central banks globally have been running accommodative monetary policies. With this week’s rate cut, the Fed now has lowered rates three times this year, and the ECB is preparing to roll out QE once again. We expect monetary policy to continue to support a revival of industrial-commodity demand (Chart 4). The easing of global financial conditions has been a pillar of our view. The easing of global financial conditions has been a pillar of our view that globally accommodative monetary policy will reverse the damage done to global commodity demand growth by the Fed’s rates-normalization policy last year and China’s deleveraging campaign of 2017-18. Financial markets have responded to this stimulus, as our colleague Rob Robis points out in this week’s Global Fixed Income Strategy.3 Global equity markets have moved 10% higher y/y, as financial conditions ease (Chart 5): Chart 4Global Financial Conditions Remain Supportive For Commodities Chart 5Global Equities, LEIs Move Higher “Equity prices are an excellent leading indicator of global growth, while bond yields typically reflect current economic conditions. … We see no reason to discount the positive message on growth from rallying equity markets, especially when confirmed by an improvement in our global leading economic indicator (LEI), led by the more cyclical emerging market (EM) countries.” (Chart 6). The real economy also is responding to stimulative global financial conditions, as EM manufacturing activity indicates. EM manufacturing is outpacing activity in DM markets (Chart 7). This is bullish for trade volumes and EM income growth, which will, all else equal, be supportive of industrial-commodity demand (Chart 8). Chart 6EM Equity, FX Markets Strengthen Chart 7EM Manufacturing Outperforms DM Chart 8EM Manufacturing Correlates With Trade Growth Economic Policy Uncertainty Continues To Dog Growth As promising as these indications of a revival in commodity demand may be, global economic policy uncertainty – particularly as regards the Sino-US trade war and trade in general – will remain a hindrance to reviving commodity demand. We have shown that global economic uncertainty stifles oil-demand growth, and commodity demand generally.4These policy risks are exogenous to the commodity markets and are, therefore, very difficult to hedge. While we expect economic uncertainty globally to decline, it will not completely evaporate. It will remain elevated vs. its historical average, despite the decline from its recent record-high level. Presently, commodity markets are positively discounting the likely “phase one” trade deal expected to be agreed between Presidents Trump and Xi Jinping. We expect this to reduce economic uncertainty and weaken the USD, at the margin. In addition, as our colleague Matt Gertken notes in last week’s Geopolitical Strategy, other sources of uncertainty – particularly a disorderly Brexit – also are being addressed: “Not only are U.S.-China relations slightly thawing, but also the risk of the U.K. leaving the EU without a withdrawal agreement has collapsed. This will reinforce Europe’s underlying political stability despite the manufacturing recession and help create a drop in global uncertainty.”5 Still, while we expect economic uncertainty globally to decline, it will not completely evaporate. It will remain elevated vs. its historical average, despite the decline from its recent record-high level. Consequently, monetary policy will have to remain accommodative in order for the momentum in global growth – mainly in EM economies – to increase and reach the threshold where fears of recession dissipate, a necessary condition required to reduce the correlation between global economic policy uncertainty and the USD. For the USD to no longer be a headwind to commodity-demand growth, monetary policy globally will be forced to offset the remaining, lingering economic policy uncertainty that is keeping the USD well bid.  There still are significant risks going into 2020, as our geopolitical strategists note: “Uncertainty will remain elevated beyond the fourth quarter, however, for two main reasons. First, US uncertainty will rise, not fall, as a result of the impending 2020 election. Second, the trade ceasefire is highly unlikely to resolve the slate of disagreements and underlying strategic distrust plaguing U.S.-China relations. This will cap the rebound we expect in global business sentiment.” So, while uncertainty will fall as President Trump retreats from his previously intransigent trade position vis-à-vis China, its diminution will be limited. All the same, the chances markets will return to the status quo ante are close to zero. This means that for the USD to no longer be a headwind to commodity-demand growth, monetary policy globally will be forced to offset the remaining, lingering economic policy uncertainty that is keeping the USD well bid. So far, it would appear this is happening, given the improvement in global financial conditions currently visible in the data. However, it is not a given this will continue, and markets will be forced to keep a weather eye on these conditions going forward. Bottom Line: Global financial conditions are easing significantly and propelling financial markets higher, particularly global equity markets. We expect the real economy – i.e., commodity markets – also will benefit from monetary accommodation and that aggregate demand will lift as EM income growth improves. This likely will put downward pressure on the USD. Importantly, if the divergence between EM and DM increases, it could offset the impact of global economic policy uncertainty’s impact on the USD and reduce the demand for dollars. We continue to expect oil demand to be supported by monetary accommodation globally and fiscal stimulus as 2019 winds down and into 2020. We also expect real interest rates will remain soft, as central banks try to keep financial conditions loose enough to encourage risk taking and investment. This will continue to support demand for industrial commodities, particularly oil and base metals.   Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger Senior Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy HugoB@bcaresearch.com   Market Round-Up NB: This week we are adopting a new format and moving our short summaries of other commodity markets to the back of our Weekly Report, which will align our layout with BCA Research’s new look. Energy: Overweight. Saudi Aramco is set to IPO November 3, 2019, according to Reuters. The company is looking at a float of 1 – 2% on the Tadawal, which could be the largest IPO in history.6 Separately, the Trump administration renewed Chevron’s waiver to operate in Venezuela for three months last week. Chevron produces ~ 47k b/d in Venezuela. Sanctions waivers for Halliburton, Schlumberger, Baker Hughes and Weatherford International also were renewed.7 Base Metals: Neutral. LME nickel closed close to 12% below the five-year high registered September 2, following the announcement of an immediate ban in exports of nickel ore from Indonesia on Monday. Although LME nickel stocks are at an 11-year low refined nickel production is expected to rise 4.5% next year to 2.5mm MT, according to MB Fastmarkets. Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold traded sideways going into this week’s FOMC meeting. We remain long gold as a portfolio hedge, and continue to expect it to move higher as 4Q19 progresses. Ags/Softs: Underweight. Grains remain lackluster, despite President Trump's expectations of cementing his “phase one deal” with Chinese President Xi Jinping, which will open the way for China to purchase some $40-$50 billion worth of US ag products. Footnotes 1 We discuss the impact of global economic policy uncertainty on oil prices at length in Policy Uncertainty Lifts USD, Stifles Global Oil Demand Growth, which we published October 17, 2019.  2 Our China Investment Strategy team cautions investors to wait for “hard data” to confirm recent indications the economy has bottomed and will be moving toward stronger growth.  Please see our China Macro And Market Review published October 2, 2019.  It is available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see Big Mo(mentum) Is Turning Positive, published by BCA Research’s Global Fixed Income Strategy October 29, 2019.  It is available at gfis.bacresearch.com. 4 Please see Policy Uncertainty Lifts USD, Stifles Global Oil Demand Growth, which we published October 17, 2019, for more detail on the transmission mechanism from global economic uncertainty to the USD to commodity demand.  Briefly, as uncertainty increases safe-haven demand for the USD increases.  This stifles demand growth for commodities generally, because it increases the local-currency costs of commodities ex-US. 5 Please see Is China Afraid Of The Big Bad Warren?, a Special Report published by BCA Research’s Geopolitical Strategy October 25, 2019.  It is available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see Saudi Aramco aims to begin planned IPO on Nov. 3: sources published by reuters.com on October 29, 2019. 7 Please see US Extends Chevron's Venezuela waiver published by Argus Media’s argusmedia.com service October 21, 2019. Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades TRADE RECOMMENDATION PERFORMANCE IN 2019 Q3 Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in Summary Of Trades Closed In 2018 Summary Of Trades Closed In 2017 Summary Of Trades Closed In 2016
Highlights The U.S. and China are moving toward formalizing a trade ceasefire that reduces geopolitical risk in the near term. The risk of a no-deal Brexit is finished – removing a major downside to European assets. Spanish elections reinforce our narrative of general European political stability. Go long 10-year Italian BTPs / short 10-year Spanish bonos for a trade. Geopolitical risks will remain elevated in Turkey, rise in Russia, but remain subdued in Brazil. A post-mortem of Canada’s election suggests upside to fiscal spending but further downside to energy sector investment over the short to medium term. Feature After a brief spike in trade war-related geopolitical risk just prior to the resumption of U.S.-China negotiations, President Trump staged a tactical retreat in the trade war. Chart 1Proxy For Trade War Shows Falling Risk Negotiating in Washington, President Trump personally visited the top Chinese negotiator Liu He and the two sides announced an informal “phase one deal” to reverse the summer’s escalation in tensions: China will buy $40-$50 billion in U.S. agricultural goods while the U.S. will delay the October 15 tariff hike. More difficult issues – forced tech transfer, intellectual property theft, industrial subsidies – were punted to later. The RMB is up 0.7% and our own measures of trade war-related risk have dropped off sharply (Chart 1). We think these indicators will be confirmed and Trump’s retreat will continue – as long as he has a chance to save the 2020 economic outlook and his reelection campaign. Odds are low that Trump will be removed from office by a Republican-controlled senate – the looming election provides the republic with an obvious recourse for Trump’s alleged misdeeds. However, Trump’s approval rating is headed south. While it is around the same level as President Obama’s at this point in his first term, Obama’s started a steep and steady rise around now and ended above 50% for the election, a level that is difficult to foresee for Trump (Chart 2). So Trump desperately needs an economic boost and a policy victory to push up his numbers. Short of passing the USMCA, which is in the hands of the House Democrats, a deal with China is the only way to get a major economic and political win at the same time. Hence the odds of Presidents Trump and Xi actually signing some kind of agreement are the highest they have been since April (when we had them pegged at 50/50). Trump will have to delay the December 15 tariff hike and probably roll back some of the tariffs over next year as continuing talks “make progress,” though we doubt he will remove restrictions on tech companies like Huawei. Still, we strongly believe that what is coming is a détente rather than the conclusion of the Sino-American rivalry crowned with a Bilateral Trade Agreement. Strategic tensions are rising on a secular basis between the two countries. These tensions could still nix Trump’s flagrantly short-term deal-making, and they virtually ensure that some form of trade war will resume in 2021 or 2022, if indeed a ceasefire is maintained in 2020. Both sides are willing to reduce immediate economic pain but neither side wants to lose face politically. Trump will not forge a “grand compromise.” Our highest conviction view all along has been – and remains – that Trump will not forge a “grand compromise” ushering in a new period of U.S.-China economic reengagement in the medium or long term. China’s compliance, its implementation of structural changes, will be slow or lacking and difficult to verify at least until the 2020 verdict is in. This means policy uncertainty will linger and business confidence and capex intentions will only improve on the margin, not skyrocket upward (Chart 3). Chart 2Trump Needs A Policy Win And Economic Boost Chart 3Sentiment Will Improve ... Somewhat The problem for bullish investors is that even if global trade uncertainty falls, and the dollar’s strength eases, fear will shift from geopolitics to politics, and from international equities to American equities (Chart 4). Trump, hit by impeachment and an explosive reaction to his Syria policy, is entering into dangerous territory for the 2020 race. Trump’s domestic weakness threatens imminent equity volatility for two reasons. Chart 4American Outperformance Falls With Trade Tensions Chart 5Democratic Win In 2020 Is Market-Negative First, if Trump’s approval rating falls below today’s 42%, investors will begin pricing a Democratic victory in 2020, i.e. higher domestic policy uncertainty, higher taxes, and the re-regulation of the American economy (Chart 5). This re-rating may be temporarily delayed or mitigated by the fact that former Vice President Joe Biden is still leading the Democratic Party’s primary election race. Biden is a known quantity whose policies would simply restore the Obama-era status quo, which is only marginally market-negative. Contrary to our expectations Biden's polling has not broken down due to accusations of foul play in Ukraine and China. Nevertheless, Senator Elizabeth Warren will gradually suck votes away from fellow progressive Senator Bernie Sanders and in doing so remain neck-and-neck with Biden (Chart 6). When and if she pulls ahead of Biden, markets face a much greater negative catalyst. (Yes, she is also capable of beating Trump, especially if his polling remains as weak as it is.) Chart 6Warren Will Rise To Front-Runner Status With Biden Second, if Trump becomes a “lame duck” he will eventually reverse the trade retreat above and turn into a loose cannon in his final months in office. Right now we see a decline in geopolitical risk, but if the economy fails to rebound or the China ceasefire offers little support, then Trump will at some point conclude that his only chance at reelection is to double down on his confrontation with America’s enemies and run as a “war president.” A cold war crisis with China, or a military confrontation with Iran (or North Korea, Venezuela, or some unexpected target) could occur. But since September we have been confirmed in believing that Trump is trying to be the dealmaker one last time before any shift to the war president. Bottom Line: The “phase one” trade deal is really just a short-term ceasefire. Assuming it is signed by Trump and Xi, it suggests no increase in tariffs and some tariff rollback next year. However, as recessionary fears fade, and if Trump’s reelection chances stabilize, U.S.-China tensions on a range of issues will revive – and there is no getting around the longer-term conflict between the two powers. For this and other reasons, we remain strategically short RMB-USD, as the flimsy ceasefire will only briefly see RMB appreciation. BoJo's Brexit Bluff Is Finished Our U.K. indicator captured a sharp decline in political risk in the past two weeks and our continental European indicators mirrored this move (Chart 7). The risk that the U.K. would fall out of the EU without a withdrawal agreement has collapsed even further than in September, when parliament rejected Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s no-deal gambit and we went long GBP-USD. We have since added a long GBP-JPY trade. Chart 7Collapse In No-Deal Risk Will Echo Across Europe Chart 8Unlikely To See Another Tory/Brexit Rally Like This The risk of “no deal” is the only reason to care about Brexit from a macro point of view, as the difference between “soft Brexit” and “no Brexit” is not globally relevant. What matters is the threat of a supply-side shock to Europe when it is already on the verge of recession. With this risk removed, sentiment can begin to recover (and Trump’s trade retreat also confirms our base case that he will not impose tariffs on European cars on November 14). Since Brexit was the only major remaining European political risk, European policy uncertainty will continue to fall. The Halloween deadline was averted because the EU, on the brink of recession, offered a surprising concession to Johnson, enabling him to agree to a deal and put it up for a vote in parliament. The deal consists of keeping Northern Ireland in the European Customs Union but not the whole of the U.K., effectively drawing a new soft border at the Irish Sea. The bill passed the second reading but parliament paused before finalizing it, rejecting Johnson’s rapid three-day time table. The takeaway is that even if an impending election returns Johnson to power, he will seek to pass his deal rather than pull the U.K. out without a deal. This further lowers the odds of a no-deal Brexit as it illuminates Johnson's preferences, which are normally hidden from objective analysis. True, there is a chance that the no-deal option will reemerge if Johnson’s deal totally collapses due to parliamentary amendments, or if the U.K. and EU have failed to agree to a future relationship by the end of the transition period on December 31, 2020 (which can be extended until the end of 2022). However, the chance is well below the 30% which we deemed as the peak risk of no-deal back in August. Johnson created the most credible threat of a no-deal exit that we are likely to see in our lifetimes – a government with authority over foreign policy determined to execute the outcome of a popular referendum – and yet parliament stopped it dead in its tracks. Johnson does not want a no-deal recession and his successors will not want one either. After all, the support for Brexit and for the Tories has generally declined since the referendum, and the Tories are making a comeback on the prospect of an orderly Brexit (Chart 8). All eyes will now turn toward the impending election. Opinion polls still show that Johnson is likely to be returned to power (Chart 9). The Tories have a prospect of engrossing the pro-Brexit vote while the anti-Brexit opposition stands divided. No-deal risk only reemerges if the Conservatives are returned to power with another weak coalition that paralyzes parliament. Chart 9Tory Comeback As BoJo Gets A Deal Chart 10Brexit Means Greater Fiscal Policy Whatever the election result, we maintain our long-held position that Brexit portends greater fiscal largesse (Chart 10). The agitated swath of England that drove the referendum result will not be assuaged by leaving the European Union – the rewards of Brexit are not material but philosophical, so material grievances will return. Voter frustration will rotate from the EU to domestic political elites. Voters will demand more government support for social concerns. Johnson’s own government confirms this point through its budget proposals. A Labour-led government would oversee an even more dramatic fiscal shift. Our GeoRisk indicator will fall on Brexit improvements but the question of the election and next government will ensure it does not fall too far. Our long GBP trades are tactical and we expect volatility to remain elevated. But the greatest risk, of no deal, is finished, so it does make sense for investors with a long time horizon to go strategically long the pound. The greatest risk, of a no deal Brexit, is finished. Bottom Line: Brexit posed a risk to the global economy only insofar as it proved disorderly. A withdrawal agreement by definition smooths the process. Continental Europe will not suffer a further shock to net exports. The Brexit contribution to global policy uncertainty will abate. The pound will rise against the euro and yen and even against the dollar as long as Trump’s trade retreat continues. Spain: Further Evidence Of European Stability We have long argued that the majority of Catalans do not want independence, but rather a renegotiation of the region's relationship with Spain (Chart 11). This month’s protests in Barcelona following the Catalan independence leaders’ sentencing are at the lower historical range in terms of size – protest participation peaked in 2015 along with support for independence (Table 1). Table 1October Catalan Protests Unimpressive Our Spanish risk indicator is showing a decline in political risk (Chart 12). However, we believe that this fall is slightly overstated. While the Catalan independence movement is losing its momentum, the ongoing protests are having an impact on seat projections for the upcoming election.  Chart 11Catalonians Not Demanding Independence Chart 12Right-Wing Win Could Surprise Market, But No Worries Since the April election, the right-wing bloc of the People’s Party, Ciudadanos, and Vox has been gaining in the seat projections at the expense of the Socialist Party and Podemos. Over the course of the protests, the left-wing parties’ lead over the right-wing parties has narrowed from seven seats to one (Chart 13). If this momentum continues, a change of government from left-wing to right-wing becomes likely. However, a right-wing government is not a market-negative outcome, and any increase in risk on this sort of election surprise would be short-lived. The People’s Party has moderated its message and focused on the economy. Besides pledging to limit the personal tax rate to 40% and corporate tax rate to 20%, the People’s Party platform supports innovation, R&D spending, and startups. The party is promising tax breaks and easier immigration rules to firms and employees pursuing these objectives. Chart 13Spanish Right-Wing Parties Narrow Gap With Left Another outcome of the election would be a governing deal between PSOE and Podemos, along with case-by-case support from Ciudadanos. After a shift to the right lost Ciudadanos 5% in support since the April election, leader Albert Rivera announced in early October that he would be lifting the “veto” on working with the Socialist Party. If the right-wing parties fall short of a majority, then Rivera would be open to talks with Socialist leader Pedro Sanchez. A governing deal between PSOE, Podemos, and Ciudadanos would have 175 seats, as of the latest projections, which is just one seat short of a majority. As we go to press, this is the only outcome that would end Spain’s current political gridlock, and would therefore be the most market-positive outcome. Bottom Line: Despite having a fourth election in as many years, Spanish political risk is contained. This is reinforced by a relatively politically stable backdrop in continental Europe, and marginally positive developments in the U.K. and on the trade front. We remain long European versus U.S. technology, and long EU versus Chinese equities. We will also be looking to go long EUR/USD when and if the global hard data turn. Following our European Investment Strategy, we recommend going long 10-year Italian BTPs / short 10-year Spanish bonos for a trade. Turkey, Brazil, And Russia Chart 14Turkish Risk Will Rise Despite 'Ceasefire' Turkey’s political risk skyrocketed upward after we issued our warning in September (Chart 14). We maintain that the Trump-Erdogan personal relationship is not a basis for optimism regarding Turkey’s evading U.S. sanctions. Both chambers of the U.S. Congress are preparing a more stringent set of sanctions, focusing on the Turkish military, in the wake of Trump’s decision to withdraw U.S. forces from northeast Syria. At a time when Trump needs allies in the senate to defend him against eventual impeachment articles, he is not likely to veto and risk an override. Moreover, Turkey’s military incursion into Syria, which may wax and wane, stems from economic and political weakness at home and will eventually exacerbate that weakness by fueling the growing opposition to Erdogan’s administration and requiring more unorthodox monetary and fiscal accommodation. It reinforces our bearish outlook on Turkish lira and assets. Chart 15Brazilian Risk Will Not Re-Test 2018 Highs Brazil’s political risk has rebounded (Chart 15). The Senate has virtually passed the pension reform bill, as expected, which raises the official retirement age for men and women to 65 and 63 respectively. This will generate upwards of 800 billion Brazilian real in savings to improve the public debt profile. Of course, the country will still run primary deficits and thus the public debt-to-GDP ratio will still rise. Now the question shifts to President Jair Bolsonaro and his governing coalition. Bolsonaro’s approval rating has ticked up as we expected (Chart 16). If this continues then it is bullish for Brazil because it suggests that he will be able to keep his coalition together. But investors should not get ahead of themselves. Bolsonaro is not an inherently pro-market leader, there is no guarantee that he will remain disciplined in pursuing pro-productivity reforms, and there is a substantial risk that his coalition will fray without pension reform as a shared goal (at least until markets riot and push the coalition back together). Therefore we expect political risk to abate only temporarily, if at all, before new trouble emerges. Furthermore, if reform momentum wanes next year, then Brazil’s reform story as a whole will falter, since electoral considerations emerge in 2021-22. Hence it will be important to verify that policymakers make progress on reforms to tax and trade policy early next year. Our Russian geopolitical risk indicator is also lifting off of its bottom (see Appendix). This makes sense given Russia’s expanding strategic role (particularly in the Middle East), its domestic political troubles, and the risks of the U.S. election. The latter is especially significant given the risk (not our base case, however) that a Democratic administration could take a significantly more aggressive posture toward Russia. Political risk in Turkey and Russia will continue to rise. Bottom Line: Political risk in Turkey and Russia will continue to rise. Russia is a candidate for a “black swan” event, given the eerie quiet that has prevailed as Putin devotes his fourth term to reducing domestic political instability. Brazil, on the other hand, has a 12-month window in which reform momentum can be reinforced, reducing whatever spike in risk occurs in the aftermath of the ruling coalition’s completion of pension reform. Canada: Election Post-Mortem Prime Minister Justin Trudeau returned to power at the head of a minority government in Canada’s federal election (Chart 17). The New Democratic Party (NDP) lost 15 seats from the last election, but will have a greater role in parliament as the Liberals will need its support to pass key agenda items (and a formal governing coalition is possible). The NDP’s result would have been even worse if not for its last-minute surge in the polls after the election debates and Trudeau’s “blackface” scandal. Chart 17Liberals Need The New Democrats Now The Conservative Party won the popular vote but only 121 seats in parliament, leaving the western provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan aggrieved. The Bloc Québécois, the Quebec nationalist party, gained 22 seats to become the third-largest party in the House. Energy investment faces headwinds in the near-term. The Liberal Party will face resistance from the Left over the Trans Mountain pipeline. Trudeau will not necessarily have to sacrifice the pipeline to appease the NDP. He may be able to work with Conservatives to advance the pipeline while working with the NDP on the rest of his agenda. But on the whole the election result is the worst-case scenario for the oil sector and political questions will have to be resolved before Canada can take advantage of its position as a heavy crude producer near the U.S. Gulf refineries in an era in which Venezuela is collapsing and Saudi Arabia is exposed to geopolitical risk and attacks. More broadly, the Liberals will continue to endorse a more expansive fiscal policy than expected, given Canada’s low budget deficits and the need to prevent minor parties from eating away at the Liberal Party’s seat count in future. Bottom Line: The Liberal Party failed to maintain its single-party majority. Trudeau’s reliance on left-wing parties in parliament may prove market-negative for the Canadian energy sector, though that is not a forgone conclusion. Over the longer term the sector has a brighter future.   Matt Gertken Geopolitical Strategist mattg@bcaresearch.com Ekaterina Shtrevensky Research Analyst ekaterinas@bcaresearch.com Appendix GeoRisk Indicator U.K.: GeoRisk Indicator France: GeoRisk Indicator Germany: GeoRisk Indicator Spain: GeoRisk Indicator Italy: GeoRisk Indicator Canada: GeoRisk Indicator Russia: GeoRisk Indicator Turkey: GeoRisk Indicator Brazil: GeoRisk Indicator Taiwan: GeoRisk Indicator Korea: GeoRisk Indicator What's On The Geopolitical Radar? Section III: Geopolitical Calendar
Following up on our “chart of the year candidate” we published two weeks ago,1 we drilled deeper and discovered two additional economically sensitive indexes that have consistently peaked prior to the SPX in the past three cycles. They now comprise the U.S. Equity Strategy’s Equity Leading Indicator – an equally weighted composite of the S&P Banks index, the Russell 2000 index and the Value Line Geometric index. Importantly, our new indicator is now signaling that the easy money has already been made this cycle in the SPX (top panel) – a message that is also shared by another in-house computed gauge: Corporate Pricing Power Indicator (CPPI). Following its sharp decline in late 2018, CCPI is now contracting (middle panel) arguing that companies’ pricing power, and consequently margins, are headed south (bottom panel). Bottom Line: Caution is still warranted on the prospects of the broad market. For a detailed update on our CPPI, please refer to the most recent Weekly Report.   1 Please See U.S. Equity Strategy, "Peak Margins," dated October 7, 2019.
Highlights In this Weekly Report, we present our semi-annual chartbook of the BCA Central Bank Monitors. All of the Monitors are now below the zero line, indicating a growing need to ease global monetary policy (Chart of the Week). Central bankers have already gone down that path in several countries over the past few months (the U.S., the euro area, Australia and New Zealand), helping sustain the powerful 2019 rally in global bond markets. Feature With the global manufacturing & trade downturn now threatening to spill over into domestic demand in the major developed markets, policymakers will need to stay dovish to stave off recession. This will keep global bond yields at depressed levels in the near term, at least until widely-followed data like manufacturing PMIs stabilize and/or there is positive news on U.S.-China trade negotiations. Chart of the WeekStrong Pressures To Ease Global Monetary Policy Yields already discount a lot of bad economic news, however, and there is a ray of hope visible in the bottoming out of our global leading economic indicator. A sustainable bottom in global bond yields, though, will require some change in the current downward growth or inflation momentum highlighted in our Central Bank Monitors. Yields already discount a lot of bad economic news, however, and there is a ray of hope visible in the bottoming out of our global leading economic indicator. A sustainable bottom in global bond yields, though, will require some change in the current downward growth or inflation momentum highlighted in our Central Bank Monitors.  An Overview Of The BCA Central Bank Monitors* Chart 2Low Bond Yields Are Consistent With Our CB Monitors The BCA Central Bank Monitors are composite indicators designed to measure the cyclical growth and inflation pressures that can influence future monetary policy decisions. The economic data series used to construct the Monitors are not the same for every country, but the list of indicators generally measure the same things (i.e. manufacturing cycles, domestic demand strength, commodity prices, labor market conditions, exchange rates, etc). The data series are standardized and combined to form the Monitors. Readings above the zero line for each Monitor indicate pressures for central banks to raise interest rates, and vice versa. Through the nexus between growth, inflation, and market expectations of future interest rate changes, the Monitors do exhibit broad correlations to government bond yields in the Developed Markets (Chart 2). All of the Monitors are currently pointing in a bond-bullish direction, making them less useful as a country allocation tool within global bond portfolios. With easing pressures most intense in the euro area, given that the ECB Monitor has the lowest reading, our recommended overweight stance on core euro area government bonds (hedged into U.S. dollars) remains well supported. In each BCA Central Bank Monitor Chartbook, we include a new chart for each country that we have not shown previously. In this edition, we show the components of the Monitors, grouped into those focusing on economic growth and inflation, plotted against our central bank discounters that indicate the amount of rate cuts/hikes priced into global Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curves. Fed Monitor: Signaling A Need For More Cuts Our Fed Monitor has fallen below the zero line (Chart 3A), indicating that the Fed’s summer rate cuts were justified with more easing still required. The Monitor, however, has not yet fallen to levels seen during U.S. recessions and is more consistent with the below-trend growth periods in 2016 and the late-1990s. The views of the FOMC on U.S. monetary policy are more deeply divided now than has been seen in many years. The doves can point to slumping global growth, persistent trade uncertainty, contracting capital spending and falling inflation expectations as reasons to continue cutting rates. The hawks can look at continued labor market tightness, elevated asset prices and realized inflation rates holding near the Fed’s 2% inflation target (Chart 3B) as reasons to keep monetary policy steady. That mixed picture can be seen in the components of our Fed Monitor, with the growth components showing the biggest pressure for more rate cuts compared to more stable readings from the inflation and financial components (Chart 3C). Chart 3AU.S.: Fed Monitor Chart 3BU.S. Realized Inflation Holding Firm Chart 3CGreatest Pressure For Fed Rate Cuts From Growth Components Of Our Fed Monitor The U.S. Treasury market may have gotten ahead of itself after the latest decline in yields, which looks stretched versus the Fed Monitor. The U.S. Treasury market may have gotten ahead of itself after the latest decline in yields, which looks stretched versus the Fed Monitor (Chart 3D). We still expect the Fed to deliver just one more rate cut at the FOMC meeting at the end of October, as the “hard” U.S. data is outpeforming the “soft” data like the weak ISM surveys. That leaves Treasury yields vulnerable to some rebound if global growth stabilizes, although that is conditional on no new breakdown of the U.S.-China trade negotiations – a factor that continues to weigh on U.S. business confidence. Chart 3DTreasury Yields More Than Fully Discount Fed Easing Pressures BoE Monitor: Easier Policy Needed Our Bank of England (BoE) Monitor, which was in the “tighter money required” zone from 2016-18, has been below the zero line since April of this year (Chart 4A). The market agrees with the message from the Monitor and is now pricing in -12bps of rate cuts over the next twelve months. The relentless uncertainty surrounding Brexit has triggered sharp downgrades of growth expectations and weakened business confidence, which the BoE is now factoring into its own projections. In the August Inflation Report, the BoE lowered its 2020 inflation forecast to below 2% - no surprise given the sharp fall in realized inflation that has already occurred even as economic growth has still not yet fallen substantially below trend (Chart 4B). Chart 4AU.K.: BoE Monitor Chart 4BFalling U.K. Inflation Opens The Door To A BoE Ease Still, weakening growth components have been the main driver of the BoE Monitor into rate cut territory (Chart 4C). While a strong jobs market is helping support consumer spending, the Brexit turmoil is having a lasting impact on future growth. Since the 2016 Brexit referendum, business confidence and real business investment have collapsed which, in turn, has hurt productivity growth, as we discussed in a Special Report last month.1 Chart 4CBrexit Uncertainty + Slumping Growth = Pressure For BoE Rate Cuts The uncertainty around Brexit dominates the economic outlook and any future BoE decisions. Our Geopolitical Strategy service anticipates that Brexit will be delayed beyond October 31st. As a result, uncertainty will continue to weigh on Gilt yields, even though yields have already fallen in line with our BoE Monitor (Chart 4D). We continue to recommend an overweight stance on U.K. Gilts. Chart 4DGilt Yields Have Fallen In Line With Our BoE Monitor ECB Monitor: Intense Pressure For Easier Monetary Policy Our European Central Bank (ECB) Monitor is now well below the zero line, signaling a strong need for easier monetary policy (Chart 5A). The global manufacturing downturn has hit the export-dependent economies of the euro area hard, with Germany now likely in a technical recession. Our European Central Bank (ECB) Monitor is now well below the zero line, signaling a strong need for easier monetary policy. Despite the weaker growth momentum, there remains far less spare capacity in the euro area economy than at any time since before the 2009 global recession (Chart 5B). This is keeping realized inflation in positive territory, in contrast to what was seen during the previous downturn in 2015-16. Chart 5AEuro Area: ECB Monitor Chart 5BEuro Area Inflation Is Subdued, Despite Tight Labor Markets The ECB has already responded to the weakening growth & inflation pressures, introducing a new TLTRO program back in March and then cutting the overnight deposit rate and restarting its Asset Purchase Program in September. The latest policy moves were reported to be more contentious, with the “hard money” northern euro area countries opposed to restarting bond purchases. The new incoming ECB President, Christine Lagarde, will likely have her hands full trying to gain consensus on any further easing measures from here, even as both the growth and inflation components of our ECB Monitor indicate that more stimulus is needed (Chart 5C). Chart 5CA Consistent Message On The Need For Future ECB Easing From Growth & Inflation The big decline in euro area bond yields, which has pushed large swaths of sovereign yields into negative territory, does not look particularly stretched relative to the plunge in the ECB Monitor (Chart 5D). Without signs that the global manufacturing downturn is ending, however, euro area yields will stay mired at current deeply depressed levels. We recommend a moderate overweight on core European government bonds, on a currency-hedged basis into U.S. dollars. Chart 5DBund Rally Looks In Line With The ECB Monitor BoJ Monitor: A Rate Cut On The Horizon? Our Bank of Japan (BoJ) Monitor has drifted slightly below the zero line into “rate cut required” territory (Chart 6A). Over the past few years, the BoJ’s monetary policy has remained unchanged for the most part and its messaging has grown less dovish, citing an expanding economy. However, recent Japanese economic data shows widespread deterioration in growth momentum, as the nation has been hit hard by the global manufacturing and trade recession. Yet even with weaker growth, Japan’s unemployment rate keeps hitting all-time lows. This has not helped boost inflation much, though, with Japan’s CPI inflation still struggling to reach even the 1% level (Chart 6B). Still, the latest leg lower in our BoJ Monitor has been driven by the growth, rather than inflation, components (Chart 6C). Chart 6AJapan: BoJ Monitor Chart 6BNo Spare Capacity In Japan, But Still No Inflation Weakening confidence has resulted in significant declines in both consumer spending and business investment. Due to the struggling domestic economy, it was expected that the Abe government would postpone the scheduled consumption tax hike, but it was finally initiated on October 1st. The timing could not be worse given the ongoing contraction in global manufacturing and trade activity that has clearly spilled over into Japan’s export and industrially-focused economy. Chart 6CThe Slumping Japanese Economy Could Use Some More BoJ Assistance The BoJ will likely try and deliver some sort of easing in the next few months, but its options are limited after years of already hyper-easy policy. A modest rate cut is likely all that will be delivered, on top of a continuation of the Yield Curve Control policy. That will be enough to keep JGB yields at depressed levels (Chart 6D), even if global yields were to begin climbing. Chart 6DJGB Yields Look Fairly Valued Vs The BoJ Monitor BoC Monitor: Rate Cuts Needed, But Will The BoC Deliver? The Bank of Canada (BoC) Monitor has been below zero since April of this year, indicating a need for easier monetary policy (Chart 7A). Although the BoC has maintained its policy rate at 1.75%, dovish Fed policy and softening domestic economic growth are making it harder for the BoC to continue sitting on its hands Although the Canadian labor market remains solid, household consumption has continued to weaken alongside falling consumer confidence. However, the inflation rate for both headline and core CPI measures is still hovering near the mid-point of BoC 1-3% target range (Chart 7B). Chart 7ACanada: BoC Monitor Chart 7BRising Inflation Making The BoC’s Job Harder At the moment, our BoC Monitor is more influenced by weaker growth components than stabilizing inflation components (Chart 7C). Similar mixed messages are also evident in other data. According to the latest BoC Business Outlook Survey, the overall outlook has edged up to the historical average,2 but real capex growth remains in negative territory and manufacturing new orders are still falling. In contrast, the Canadian labor market remains tight and both wage and price inflation are holding firm. Chart 7CBoC Growth & Inflation Components Signaling Moderate Pressure To Ease Canadian government bonds have rallied strongly this year, but the yield momentum has appeared to overshoot the decline in our BoC Monitor (Chart 7D). The Canadian OIS curve is discounting -27bps of rate cuts over the next twelve months, but the BoC is not signaling that they will ease. We upgraded our recommended stance on Canadian government bonds to neutral back in May, and we see no need to alter that view without further evidence of more deterioration in Canadian growth or inflation data.3 Chart 7DCanadian Bond Rally Looks A Bit Stretched RBA Monitor: Expect Another Cut The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) Monitor has been below the zero line since September 2018, indicating a need for easier monetary policy (Chart 8A). The RBA has already delivered on that signal this year, cutting the Cash Rate twice to an all-time low of 0.75%. Markets are still expecting more, with the Australian OIS curve discounting another -29bps of cuts over the next year, although most of those cuts are expected to occur within the next six months. The signal from our RBA Monitor suggests that Australian bond yields should remain under downward pressure, although the yield momentum has been excessive relative to the fall in the Monitor. Both headline and core CPI inflation remain below the RBA’s 2-3% target range (Chart 8B), and the central bank continues to lower its inflation forecasts, suggesting an entrenched dovish bias. Chart 8AAustralia: RBA Monitor Chart 8BNo Inflation For The RBA To Worry About The latest downturn in our RBA Monitor is related to declines in both the inflation and growth components (Chart 8C). The weakness in the growth components is led by falling exports to Asia, in addition to the sharp drop in house prices in the major cities. The fall in the inflation components reflects both weak inflation expectations and spare capacity in labor markets. Chart 8CA Loud & Clear Message On The Need For RBA Easing The signal from our RBA Monitor suggests that Australian bond yields should remain under downward pressure, although the yield momentum has been excessive relative to the fall in the Monitor (Chart 8D). Australia’s economy will not begin to outperform again, however, until China’s current growth slump starts to bottom out, which is unlikely to occur until the first quarter of 2020 at the earliest. Thus, we expect the RBA to deliver another rate cut before the end of the year, justifying a continued overweight stance on Australian government bonds. Chart 8DA Lot Of Bad News Discounted In Australian Bond Yields RBNZ Monitor: More Easing To Come Our Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) monitor remains well below zero, indicating that easier monetary policy is still required (Chart 9A). The central bank has already delivered two rate cuts this year: a -25bps cut in May and, more importantly, a shock rate cut of -50bps in August. Forward guidance remains dovish, with RBNZ Governor Adrian Orr signaling more easing is likely and even hinting at negative rates in the future. This rhetoric is reflected in the NZ OIS curve, which is pricing in a further -42bps of easing over the next twelve months. High inflation is not a constraint for the RBNZ. Both headline and core measures of inflation are currently at 1.7% (Chart 9B). As the RBNZ targets a 1-3% range over the medium term, the prospect of overshooting the 2% longer-term target will not restrict policymakers from acting as appropriate to boost growth. Chart 9ANew Zealand: RBNZ Monitor Chart 9BNZ Inflation Creeping Higher Most of the pressure to ease has come from the continued deterioration in the growth component of our RBNZ Monitor (Chart 9C), reflecting weakness in manufacturing and consumption. The manufacturing PMI is currently in contractionary territory at 48.4, having fallen almost five points since February of this year. Annual growth in retail sales has been slowing for the past two years while consumer confidence is at 7-year lows. Chart 9CWeak Growth Is The Reason RBNZ Rate Cuts Are Needed We feel confident in reiterating our bullish recommendation on NZ government bonds versus U.S. and German sovereign debt. The RBNZ Monitor suggests that policy will stay dovish for some time, while NZ yields still offer a relatively attractive yield, unlike deeply overbought Treasuries and Bunds (Chart 9D). Chart 9DStill A Bullish Case For New Zealand Government Bonds Riksbank Monitor: Watching And Waiting Our Riksbank Monitor remains very slightly below zero and the market is currently priced for -4bps of rate cuts over the next year (Chart 10A). The Riksbank has decided to hold the Repo Rate constant at -0.25% while forecasting a hike towards the end of this year or the beginning of 2020. Given the policy environment, rate cuts remain unlikely. At most, the Riksbank can further delay rate hikes if the data continues to disappoint. The Riksbank noted in its September Monetary Policy Report that the unexpectedly weak development of the labor market indicates that resource utilization will normalize sooner than expected. This is reflected in Chart 10B, where the unemployment gap is now negative. Meanwhile, inflation readings are giving a mixed signal for the central bank. While the headline CPI measure has declined precipitously year-to-date, owing to the dramatic fall in oil prices, core inflation has continued to climb steadily. Chart 10ASweden: Riksbank Monitor Chart 10BMixed Messages From Swedish Inflation As a result, the inflation components of our Riksbank monitor - driven by a spike in the Citigroup Inflation Surprise Index, wage growth hooking upward and inflation expectations holding firm around 2% - are signaling the need for tighter monetary policy (Chart 10C). However, the growth components – led by weak exports, employment, and manufacturing data - are exerting pressure in the opposite direction. This is evident in the Swedish Manufacturing PMI, which tumbled from 51.8 to 46.3 in September, deep into contractionary territory. Chart 10CThere Is A Reason Why The Riksbank Has Been On Hold Keeping in mind the inflation constraint, it remains unlikely that the Riksbank will cut rates unless the economic data disappoints more significantly to the downside. This should help put a floor under Swedish bond yields in the near term (Chart 10D). Chart 10DSwedish Yields Have Fallen Too Far, Too Fast Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com   Ray Park, CFA Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com   Shakti Sharma Research Associate shaktis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes * NOTE: All information in this report reflects our knowledge of global events as of Thursday, October 10. 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report “United Kingdom: Cyclical Slowdown Or Structural Malaise?” dated September 20, 2019, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2019/06/business-outlook-survey-summer-2019/ 3 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Weekly Report, “Reconcilable Differences” dated May 8, 2019, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Q3/2019 Performance Breakdown: Our recommended model bond portfolio underperformed the custom benchmark by -30bps during the third quarter of the year. Winners & Losers: The biggest underperformance came from underweight positions in U.S. Treasuries (-28bps) and Italian government bonds (-18bps) as yields plunged, dwarfing gains from overweights in corporate bonds in the U.S. (+11bps) and euro area (+4bps). Scenario Analysis For The Next Six Months: We are maintaining our current positioning, staying below-benchmark on duration while overweighting U.S. and euro area corporates vs. government debt. In our base case scenario, global growth will begin to stabilize but the Fed will deliver one more “insurance” rate cut by year-end, leading to corporate bond outperformance. Feature Global bond markets have enjoyed a powerful bull run throughout 2019, as yields have plummeted alongside weakening global growth and growing political uncertainty. Those two forces came to a head in the third quarter of the year, with U.S.-China trade tensions ratcheting up another notch after the imposition of higher U.S. tariffs in early August and global manufacturing PMI data moving into contraction territory – especially in the U.S. The result was a significant fall in government bond yields as markets discounted both lower inflation expectations and more aggressive monetary easing from global central banks, led by the Fed and ECB. The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yield and 10-year German Bund yield plunged -40bps and -25bps, respectively, during the July-September period. Yet at the same time, global credit markets remained surprisingly stable, as the option-adjusted spread on the Bloomberg Barclays Global Corporates index was unchanged over the same three months. In this report, we review the performance of the BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy (GFIS) model bond portfolio during the eventful third quarter of 2019. We also present our updated scenario analysis, and total return projections, for the portfolio over the next six months. As a reminder to existing readers (and to new clients), the model portfolio is a part of our service that complements the usual macro analysis of global fixed income markets. The portfolio is how we communicate our opinion on the relative attractiveness between government bond and spread product sectors. This is done by applying actual percentage weightings to each of our recommendations within a fully invested hypothetical bond portfolio. Q3/2019 Model Portfolio Performance Breakdown: Good News On Credit Trumped By Bad News On Duration Chart of the WeekDuration Losses Dwarf Credit Gains In Q3/19 The total return for the GFIS model portfolio (hedged into U.S. dollars) in the third quarter was 2.0%, lagging the custom benchmark index by -30 bps (Chart of the Week).1 This brings the cumulative year-to-date total return of the portfolio to +7.8%, which has underperformed the benchmark by a disappointing –67bps. The Q3 drag on relative returns came entirely from the government bond side of the portfolio; specifically, the underweight allocation to U.S. Treasuries and Italian government bonds (Table 1). Those allocations reflected our views on overall portfolio duration (below benchmark) and a relative value consideration within European spread product (preferring corporates to Italy). Both those recommendations went against us as global bond yields dropped during Q3, with Italian yields collapsing (the benchmark 10-year yield was down –126bps) as investors chased any positive yield denominated in euros after the ECB signaled a new round of policy easing. The total return for the GFIS model portfolio (hedged into U.S. dollars) in the third quarter was 2.0%, lagging the custom benchmark index by -30 bps  Table 1GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q3/2019 Overall Return Attribution Providing some partial offset to the U.S. and Italy allocations were gains from overweight positions in government bonds in the U.K., Australia and Japan. More importantly, our overweights in corporate debt in the U.S. and euro area made a strong positive contribution to the performance of the portfolio. The bar charts showing the total and relative returns for each individual government bond market and spread product sector are presented in Charts 2 and 3. The most significant movers were: Chart 2GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q3/2019 Government Bond Performance Attribution Chart 3GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q3/2019 Spread Product Performance Attribution By Sector Biggest outperformers Overweight U.S. high-yield Ba-rated (+4bps) Overweight U.S. high-yield B-rated (+3bps) Overweight U.S. investment grade industrials (+3bps) Overweight Japanese government bonds with maturity of 5-7 years (+2bps) Overweight euro area corporates, both investment grade (+2bps) and high-yield (+2bps) Biggest underperformers Underweight U.S. government bonds with maturity beyond 10+ years (-15bps) Underweight Italy government bonds with maturity beyond 10+ years (-10bps) Underweight U.S. government bonds with maturity of 7-10 years (-5bps) Underweight Japanese government bonds with maturity beyond 10+ years (-4bps) Underweight U.S. government bonds with maturity of 3-5 years (-4bps) Chart 4 presents the ranked benchmark index returns of the individual countries and spread product sectors in the GFIS model bond portfolio for Q3/2019. The returns are hedged into U.S. dollars (we do not take active currency risk in this portfolio) and are adjusted to reflect duration differences between each country/sector and the overall custom benchmark index for the model portfolio. We have also color-coded the bars in each chart to reflect our recommended investment stance for each market during Q3/2019 (red for underweight, blue for overweight, gray for neutral).2 Ideally, we would look to see more blue bars on the left side of the chart where market returns are highest, and more red bars on the right side of the chart were returns are lowest. Chart 4Ranking The Winners & Losers From The Model Bond Portfolio In Q3/2019 One thing that stands out from Chart 4 is that every fixed income sector generated a positive return, except for EM USD-denominated corporates. This is a fascinating outcome given the sharp falls in risk-free government bond yields which typically would correlate to a selloff in risk assets and widening of credit spreads. The soothing balm of looser global monetary policy seems to have offset the impact of elevated uncertainty on trade and future economic growth, allowing both bond yields and credit spreads to stay low. The soothing balm of looser global monetary policy seems to have offset the impact of elevated uncertainty on trade and future economic growth, allowing both bond yields and credit spreads to stay low.  We maintained an overweight stance on global spread product throughout Q3, as we felt that the monetary policy effect would continue to overwhelm uncertainty. We did, however, make some tactical adjustments to our duration stance after the U.S. raised tariffs on Chinese imports, upgrading to neutral on August 6th.3 We had felt that higher tariffs were a sign that a potential end to the U.S.-China trade conflict was now even less likely, which raised the odds of a potential risk-off financial market event that would temporarily push bond yields lower. We shifted back to a below-benchmark duration stance on September 17th, given signs of de-escalation in the trade dispute and, more importantly, some improvement evident in global leading economic indicators.4 Bottom Line: Our recommended model bond portfolio underperformed the custom benchmark index during the third quarter of the year, with the drag on performance from an underweight stance on U.S. Treasuries and Italian BTPs overwhelming the gains from corporate credit overweights in the U.S. and euro area. Future Drivers Of Portfolio Returns Looking ahead, the performance of the model bond portfolio will continue to be driven by two main factors: our below-benchmark duration bias and our overweight stance on global corporate debt versus government bonds. Chart 5Overall Portfolio Allocation: Overweight Credit In terms of the specific high-level weightings in the model portfolio, we currently have a moderate overweight, equal to eight percentage points, on spread product versus government debt (Chart 5). This reflects a more constructive view on future global growth. Early leading economic indicators are starting to bottom out and global central bankers are maintaining a dovish policy bias despite low unemployment rates – both factors that will continue to benefit growth-sensitive assets like corporate debt. Early leading economic indicators are starting to bottom out and global central bankers are maintaining a dovish policy bias despite low unemployment rates – both factors that will continue to benefit growth-sensitive assets like corporate debt. We are maintaining our below-benchmark duration tilt at 0.6 years short of the custom benchmark (Chart 6). We recognize, however, that the underperformance from duration in the model portfolio will not begin to be clawed back until there are signs of a bottoming in widely-followed cyclical economic indicators like the U.S. ISM index and the German ZEW. We think that will happen given the uptick in our global leading economic indicator (LEI), but that may take a few more months to develop based on the usual lead time from the LEI to the survey data like the ISM. The hook up in the global LEI does still gives us more confidence that the big decline in global bond yields seen this year is over, especially if a potential truce in the U.S.-China trade war is soon reached, as our political strategists believe to be increasingly likely. Chart 6Overall Portfolio Duration: Moderately Below Benchmark Turning to country allocation, we are sticking with overweights in countries where central banks are likely to be more dovish than the Fed over the next 6-12 months (Germany, France, the U.K., Japan, and Australia). We are staying underweight the U.S. where inflation expectations appear too low and Fed rate cut expectations look too extreme. The Italy underweight has become a trickier call. We have long viewed Italian debt as a growth-sensitive credit instrument rather than the yield-driven rates vehicle it became in Q3 as markets priced in fresh monetary easing measures from the ECB (including restarting government purchases). We will revisit our Italy views in an upcoming report but, until then, we will continue to view Italian BTPs within the context of our European spread product allocation. Thus, we are maintaining an overweight on euro area corporate debt (by 1% each in investment grade and high-yield) while having an equal-sized underweight (-2%) in Italian government bonds. Our combined positioning generates a portfolio that has “positive carry”, with a yield of 3.1% (hedged into U.S. dollars) that is +25bps over that of the custom benchmark index (Chart 7). That same portfolio, however, generates an estimated tracking error (excess volatility of the portfolio versus its benchmark) of 55bps - well below our self-imposed 100bps ceiling and still within the 40-60bps range we have targeted since the start of 2019 (Chart 8). Chart 7Portfolio Yield: Positive Carry From Credit Chart 8Portfolio Risk Budget Usage: Cautious Scenario Analysis & Return Forecasts In April 2018, we introduced a framework for estimating total returns for all government bond markets and spread product sectors, based on common risk factors.5 For credit, returns are estimated as a function of changes in the U.S. dollar, the Fed funds rate, oil prices and market volatility as proxied by the VIX index (Table 2A). For government bonds, non-U.S. yield changes are estimated using historical betas to changes in U.S. Treasury yields (Table 2B). Table 2AFactor Regressions Used To Estimate Spread Product Yield Changes Table 2BEstimated Government Bond Yield Betas To U.S. Treasuries This framework allows us to conduct scenario analysis of projected returns for each asset class in the model bond portfolio by making assumptions on those individual risk factors. In Tables 3A & 3B, we present our three main scenarios for the next six months, defined by changes in the risk factors, and the expected performance of the model bond portfolio in each case. The scenarios, described below, all revolve around our expectation that the most important drivers of future market returns will continue to be the momentum of global growth and the path of U.S. monetary policy. The scenario inputs for the four main risk factors (the fed funds rate, the price of oil, the U.S. dollar and the VIX index) are shown visually in Chart 9. Table 3AScenario Analysis For The GFIS Model Bond Portfolio For The Next Six Months Table 3BU.S. Treasury Yield Assumptions For The 6-Month Forward Scenario Analysis Chart 9Risk Factor Assumptions For The Scenario Analysis Base Case (Global Growth Bottoms): The Fed delivers one more -25bp rate cut by the end of 2019, the U.S. dollar weakens by -3%, oil prices rise by +10%, the VIX hovers around 15, and there is a bear-steepening of the UST curve. This is a scenario where the U.S. economy ends up avoiding recession and grows at roughly a trend-like pace. The Fed, however, still delivers one more “insurance” rate cut to mitigate the risk of low inflation expectations becoming more entrenched. Global growth is expected to bottom out as heralded by the global leading indicators. A truce (but not a full deal) is expected on the U.S.-China trade front, helping to moderately soften the U.S. dollar through reduced risk aversion. The model bond portfolio is expected to beat the benchmark index by +91bps in this case. Global Growth Strongly Rebounds: The Fed stays on hold, the U.S. dollar weakens by -5%, oil prices rise by +20%, the VIX declines to 12, there is a modest bear-steepening of the UST curve. In this tail-risk scenario, global growth starts to reaccelerate in lagged response to the global monetary easing seen this year, combined with some fiscal stimulus in major countries (China, the U.S., perhaps even Germany). The U.S. dollar weakens as global capital flows shift to markets which are more sensitive to global growth. The model bond portfolio is expected to beat the benchmark index by +106bps in this case. U.S. Downturn Intensifies: The Fed cuts rates by -75bps, the U.S. dollar is flat, oil prices fall by -15%, the VIX rises to 30; there is a bull-steepening of the UST curve. Under this tail-risk scenario, the current slowing of U.S. growth momentum gains speed, pushing the economy towards recession. The Fed cuts rates aggressively in response, helping weaken the U.S. dollar, but not before global risk assets sell off sharply to discount a worldwide recession. The model portfolio will underperform the benchmark by -38bps in this scenario. In terms of our conviction level among the main drivers of the model portfolio returns – duration allocation (across yield curves and countries) and asset allocation (credit versus government bonds) – we are most confident that credit returns will exceed those of sovereign debt over the next six months. In terms of our conviction level among the main drivers of the model portfolio returns – duration allocation (across yield curves and countries) and asset allocation (credit versus government bonds) – we are most confident that credit returns will exceed those of sovereign debt over the next six months. The underweight duration position, however, will also eventually begin to pay off if the message from the budding improvement in global leading economic indicators turns out to be correct. A collapse of the U.S.-China trade negotiations is the biggest threat to our base case, which would make the “U.S. Downturn Intensifies” scenario a more likely outcome. Bottom Line: We are maintaining our current positioning, staying below-benchmark on duration while overweighting U.S. and euro area corporates governments. In our base case scenario, global growth will begin to stabilize but the Fed will deliver one more “insurance” rate cut by year-end, leading to spread product outperformance.   Robert Robis, CFA, Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, CFA, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The GFIS model bond portfolio custom benchmark index is the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index, but with allocations to global high-yield corporate debt replacing very high quality spread product (i.e. AA-rated). We believe this to be more indicative of the typical internal benchmark used by global multi-sector fixed income managers. 2 Note that sectors where we made changes to our recommended weightings during Q3/2019 will have multiple colors in the respective bars in Chart 4. 3 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, “Trade War Worries: Once More, With Feeling”, dated August 6, 2019, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, “The World Is Not Ending: Return To Below-Benchmark Portfolio Duration”, dated September 17, 2019, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, “GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2018 Performance Review: A Rough Start”, dated April 10th 2018, available at gfis.bcareseach.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights We still don’t see a recession occurring in the next twelve months, … : Recessions only occur when monetary policy is restrictive. It’s easy now, and it will be a while before conditions push the Fed to execute the requisite series of rate hikes to make it tight. … but that doesn’t mean that we don’t worry anyway, … : Although the inverted yield curve looks more like a reflection of the Fed’s asset purchases than a telltale sign of trouble, leading indicators have been moving in the wrong direction all year. … as survey data clearly indicate that household and business confidence is fragile: Consumer confidence indexes and the latest ISM surveys testify to a worsening mood. Hard data are faring better than soft data, but there is a danger that anxiety could become self-fulfilling. We remain constructive, but alert for risks to the growth outlook: The labor market remains vibrant enough to exert downward pressure on the unemployment rate, and services continue to expand despite the contraction in manufacturing, both here and abroad. The expansion has slowed, but it’s not finished yet. Feature Although the oil market quickly shrugged off last month’s attack on Saudi energy infrastructure (Chart 1), investors don’t lack for other concerns. It’s not easy for a business to commit to longer-term investment spending when U.S.-China negotiations yo-yo between thawing and frigid depending on the day, Brexit remains a pratfall wrapped in a farce inside an absurdity, and trenches are being dug for a bitter impeachment battle in Washington. Global export volumes have contracted on a year-over-year basis in six of eight months through July (Chart 2), casting a chill over multinationals’ profit outlooks. Workers know that companies cut headcount when profits fall, so consumer confidence is also subject to the ebb and flow of the trade negotiations. Chart 1Middle East Tensions Are So Last Month The worries are well known, but they could spark a recession themselves if they persist long enough. Chart 2If You Want Less Of Something, Tax It It would be hard to see the glass as half-full if markets hadn’t long since priced in the China and Brexit pressures. The impeachment spectacle is new, but we’re not sure what investors and businesses would have to fear from a Pence administration. It would be hard to see the glass as half-empty if survey data weren’t flagging a steady deterioration in sentiment that could sow the seeds of a recession. The bottom line is that it’s late in the cycle, and the combination of softening data and geopolitical tensions is chipping away at what’s left of investor optimism. Our Recession/Bear Market Indicator Tight monetary policy is a necessary, if not sufficient, condition for a recession. Over the 60-year period that we maintain estimates of an equilibrium fed funds rate, expansions have not stopped in their tracks when the fed funds rate crossed above our equilibrium estimate, but no recession has occurred unless it did (Chart 3). We currently estimate that the equilibrium rate is well above the 2% target rate, which appears to be headed for 1.75% at the FOMC meeting at the end of the month. Given the benign pace of current inflation, monetary policy should remain accommodative for all of 2020, provided our equilibrium estimate is in the ballpark. Chart 3Monetary Policy Is Easy And Getting Easier: Green Though we are confident that the Fed isn’t about to kill the expansion, the other components of our simple recession indicator are sending worrisome signals. The yield curve has been inverted for five straight months. An inverted curve has historically been a reliable indicator that monetary policy is too tight, and has therefore compiled an enviable track record for calling recessions (Chart 4). Today’s unprecedentedly negative term premium may well be scrambling the yield curve’s message, however, distorting comparisons with past periods.1 Chart 4The Curve Has Inverted, But ... : Yellow The year-over-year change in the Conference Board’s Leading Economic Index (LEI) is the other component of our recession indicator. The LEI has been just as reliable as the yield curve, and it is rapidly decelerating (Chart 5). We note, however, that the LEI has previously pulled out of two similar dives in this expansion, and it has not yet contracted. Given its heavy manufacturing focus, the LEI won’t likely begin to accelerate without a material easing of trade tensions, but a limited deal between the U.S. and China is not out of the realm of possibility. Chart 5LEI Growth Is Rapidly Decelerating: Yellow Bottom Line: One green light and two yellow lights are less than a resounding endorsement of the business cycle’s prospects, but the mix nonetheless argues for staying the risk-friendly course that has amply rewarded investors throughout the expansion. A Dismal Manufacturing ISM … The U.S. is impacted by global conditions with a lag, but September’s manufacturing ISM report confirmed that it is eventually impacted by them. Last Tuesday’s dreary manufacturing ISM report sparked a two-day sell-off in the S&P 500 that financial TV networks were quick to highlight as the worst start to a fourth quarter since the crisis. The composite index came in far below the 50 consensus, falling to its lowest level since June 2009, and spent a second consecutive month below the 50 boom/bust line for the first time since the 2015-16 global manufacturing recession (Chart 6, top panel). Crumbling exports (Chart 6, second panel) and stalled new orders (Chart 6, third panel) weighed on the composite reading. The only slight glimmer of hope was that a good-sized inventory contraction (Chart 6, fourth panel) allowed the New-Orders-to-Inventories ratio to rise (Chart 6, bottom panel). Chart 6The Global Manufacturing Slowdown Reaches The U.S. Chart 7Consumers Didn't Sweat The ISM ... The surprisingly bad report stoked another round of recession hand-wringing in the media, though not, apparently, among the broader public (Chart 7). The potential economic threat stems from the possibility that the release will discourage hiring and investment. The NFIB monthly jobs report released Thursday afternoon suggests that smaller businesses are still actively seeking to fill positions, though the pool of qualified applicants continues to shrink. The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model trimmed its projection of nonresidential fixed investment’s contribution to 3Q GDP from +10 to -10 basis points following the manufacturing ISM release, but it sees overall growth of 1.8%. … And Eroding Consumer Confidence … The leading consumer sentiment surveys have also been slipping, though they remain at high levels relative to their history (Chart 8). That dichotomy sustains the bull-versus-bear debate, as bulls point to the lofty level while bears cite the flagging direction. We will not resolve the level-versus-direction question here, but note that real consumption growth has exhibited a robust correlation with the expectations components of the surveys. Declining expectations point to a decline in consumption, but as long as the expectations index remains at or above the mid-90s, it appears that consumption will keep economic growth around its trend level (Chart 9). Chart 8... And They Remain Fairly Optimistic Chart 9Consumption Still Looks Fine … Square Off With Still-Solid Hard Data While the survey data have been steadily disappointing expectations (including, last week, the formerly redoubtable non-manufacturing ISM), hard data have been a source of positive surprises. Since the beginning of July, when the economic surprise index finally bottomed and went about the business of mean-reverting, measures of real activity have been encouraging (Chart 10). Though the September employment situation report showed that the pace of hiring is also slowing, and wage growth puzzlingly hit a wall, the broader definition of the unemployment rate broke below 7% for the first time since the peak of the dot-com boom and is only one tick above its all-time low (Chart 11). Robust year-to-date equity gains have pushed the multiple of household net worth to disposable personal income right back to its all-time highs, suggesting that there is little need for households in the aggregate to increase their savings rate (Chart 12). Chart 10Hard Data Have Cleared A Low Bar Chart 11The Labor Market Is Still Absorbing Slack Chart 12There's Room For The Savings Rate To Come Down Putting It All Together The U.S. is a comparatively closed economy that customarily reacts to global developments with a longer lag than its major-economy peers. It was due to slow this year from a declining domestic fiscal impulse, but global weakness has now begun to wash up on its shores. The question for investors is how far will the deceleration go? Is it simply a mid-cycle slowdown that will dent growth for a quarter or two, or is it the end of the expansion? The Fed has promised to act appropriately to sustain the expansion so many times this year that it’s become a mantra. Markets are taking it to heart, just as they did last Thursday, when the S&P 500 turned a 1% decline immediately after the release of the non-manufacturing ISM into a 1% gain, and Friday, when a mixed employment situation report gave rise to another 1% bump. Bad news is still good news for equities as long as investors believe the Fed is willing and able to ease monetary policy to mitigate risks to the growth outlook. In a world where monetary accommodation is currently the rule among central banks large and small, and the Fed has dry powder to ease, we think stocks are getting it right. There’s no lack of things for investors to worry about, but they shouldn’t forget that worry fuels bull markets. Our sanguine take is also supported by a useful trading maxim. When a stock doesn’t go down on bad news (or up on good news), it’s telling you something. In this case, we think the S&P 500’s repeated failure to capsize in the face of wave after wave of bad news reveals that it has already discounted a considerable amount of pessimism. If some significantly good news were to come out of U.S.-China trade negotiations, for example, stocks could resume their march higher in line with the historical bull market pattern of sprinting to the finish line. Investment Implications Fears that weak surveys could morph into weak activity are well-founded. There is clear potential for poor corporate and consumer sentiment to become a self-fulfilling prophecy. If corporate managers sit on their hands amidst uncertainty over trade rules, corporate investment and hiring could dry up. One person’s spending is another person’s income, and vice versa, and if households divert spending to saving, income will fall. If households turn tail at a time when skittish businesses have little appetite for investment, their savings will lie fallow, doing nothing but lowering interest rates, which could stoke additional anxiety about the growth outlook. We may not have much more to fear than fear itself, but that’s enough, given fear’s viral, self-reinforcing nature. The good news from our perspective is that we do not believe that businesses or households have reached the point of no return. Real final domestic demand (GDP ex-inventory adjustments and net exports) is holding up well despite the sharp market sell-offs in last year’s fourth quarter, the month-long federal government shutdown and the ongoing tariff follies. The labor market remains tight, which should help wage gains accelerate at a time when there’s little chance that the Fed will intervene to counter budding inflation pressures, opening the door to a virtuous circle. No cycle lasts forever, and this one is surely in its latter stages, though we remain positive over the three-to-twelve-month cyclical timeframe. We are more cautious in the near term, and it may well be appropriate to position portfolios more conservatively than normal over the zero-to-three-month tactical timeframe while keeping positions on a shorter leash. Though investors will have to live with an elevated sense of worry over the coming months, they shouldn’t lose sight of the fact that bull markets climb a wall of it. Doug Peta, CFA Chief U.S. Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA’s U.S. Investment Research Weekly Report titled “Everybody Into The Pool!,” published June 24, 2019. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Global LEI Upturn: Our Global leading economic indicator (LEI) has started to climb higher, signaling a potential end to the current global growth slowdown. LEI Components: This improvement is broad-based across countries and regions, focused mostly within EM countries (with the U.S. and Germany lagging the global move). The uptick in the global LEI is well-supported when looking at the individual components that go into the overall indicator. Implications for Bond Yields: Given the historically strong correlation between our global LEI and global bond yields, we view the improving LEI as a core element behind our current below-benchmark stance on global duration exposure. Feature Chart of the WeekGlobal LEI Rising - Are Bond Yields Next? We have received many client questions recently regarding the latest uptick in our BCA Global Leading Economic indicator (LEI), which bottomed back in July of this year and has since steadily climbed. This pickup in the global LEI has been broad-based across countries, as evidenced by the run up in our global LEI diffusion index, which measures the percentage of countries with a rising LEI versus a falling LEI. That diffusion index is itself a reliable leading indicator of the global LEI, and of both the level and rate-of-change of global bond yields (Chart of the Week), and is flagging an end to the massive government bond rally of 2019. For our global LEI, we prefer to use a smaller set of countries but with a bigger weighting on EM economies (Table 1), given the larger share of global economic growth generated in the EM world (including, most notably, China).  At a time when U.S.-China trade uncertainty has yet to subside significantly, and with reliable coincident cyclical indicators like manufacturing PMIs still showing that global growth momentum is decelerating, this naturally invites questions on what is in our global LEI and what could possibly be driving it higher. In this Weekly Report, we try to answer those questions visually by breaking down the details of our global LEI by region, country and individual component data series. What Is In The BCA Global LEI? The BCA global LEI is a composite index that combines the LEIs of 23 individual countries using GDP-weights. The underlying list of countries differs from that of the widely-followed OECD LEI, which is comprised of data from 33 countries but with a heavy weighting on developed market (DM) economies. The overall OECD LEI excludes important EM exporting countries such as Taiwan and Singapore, which are highly sensitive to changes in global growth. For our global LEI, we prefer to use a smaller set of countries but with a bigger weighting on EM economies (Table 1), given the larger share of global economic growth generated in the EM world (including, most notably, China). Table 1Country Weightings Of The BCA & OECD Global LEIs According to our calculations using global growth data from the IMF, 58% of global growth has come from EM or developing economies (including China) since the 2009 global recession, with that number projected to rise to 64% by 2024. That compares to a nearly 50/50 split, on average, between 2001 and 2010. Thus, the 33% weight of EM countries in our global LEI (which is based on GDP level weights and not GDP growth weights) provides a much better measure of future global prospects than the OECD LEI which has only a 13% weight in EM. That can be seen in the much higher correlation (Chart 2) between the BCA global LEI (advanced by one year) and global real GDP growth relative to a similar correlation using the OECD LEI (also advanced one year so it leads growth). Chart 2The BCA Global LEI Is A Better Predictor Of Future Growth For most of the nations in our global LEI, we do use the country-level LEIs produced by the OECD.1 That also includes several large and important non-OECD EM countries that the OECD calculates LEIs for - a list that includes China, Brazil, India, Russia, Indonesia and South Africa. For a few selected countries, however, we use the following data: U.S., Korea, Taiwan and Singapore: LEIs produced by national government data sources or, in the case of the U.S., the Conference Board Argentina, Malaysia and Thailand: LEIs produced in-house at BCA, a necessary step given the lack of domestically-produced LEIs in those countries at the time our global LEI was first constructed. Where Is The Current Uptick In The BCA Global LEI Coming From? Chart 3The Latest Global LEI Uptick Is All About EM When we separate our global LEI into “sub-LEIs” for the DM and EM countries, we see that the current uptick in the global LEI has come entirely from EM (Chart 3). A potential bottoming of the DM LEI, however, is also on the horizon given the sharp run-up in the DM-only global LEI diffusion index. We have also broken down the list of countries in our global LEI into regional sub-indices (Chart 4). On this basis, the LEIs paint an optimistic picture for South America and Eastern Europe, while the Asian and Western Europe LEIs are in the process of bottoming out. The regional LEI for North America, however, remains in a downtrend, although the most recent data point did hook upward. Chart 4The Global LEI Uptick Is Regionally Broad-Based Pages 8-18 of this report contain charts showing the underlying data series that go into the individual country LEIs that comprise our global LEI. The charts are presented with the top panel showing the relationship between the LEI and GDP growth for each country, with the remaining panels of each chart containing the individual components of each country’s LEI. Shown this way, we can show both the reliability of the each LEI in predicting economic growth, as well as what is contributing to the change in the LEI. When we separate our global LEI into “sub-LEIs” for the DM and EM countries, we see that the current uptick in the global LEI has come entirely from EM (Chart 3). A potential bottoming of the DM LEI, however, is also on the horizon given the sharp run-up in the DM-only global LEI diffusion index. It should be noted that we are presenting the underlying LEI data series with very little of the usual de-trending and smoothing that the OECD uses to turn more volatile data into less noisy measures that correlate better with economic growth. We chose to do this in the interest of transparency, as the goal of this report is to “look under the hood” of our global LEI to see the raw, untransformed data that is driving the current upturn. For the most part, the choice of data that goes into the LEIs does show some similarity across countries. The most common LEI components are those related to equity markets, money supply growth, export orders, business/consumer confidence, inventories, short-term interest rates (or by association, the slope of yield curves) and for some EM countries, consumer price inflation. We can make a few summary comments on the latest trends within the country LEIs: Key Asian emerging markets such as Malaysia, Thailand, and Taiwan have been supported by a growing money supply. However, hard data relating to exports and domestic demand remain mixed. The Chinese LEI, on a standardized and de-trended basis, has rebounded back above zero. Despite trade tensions, hard data has helped push up expected Chinese growth. Growth in fertilizer and motor vehicles production has hooked up, while crude steel production continues to grow at a healthy 9% pace. In developed Asian markets, the picture has been more mixed. Japan and Korea have been hurt by a decline in small business and consumer confidence, respectively. Stock prices in Japan have remained flat while they have actually declined in Korea. Data relating to construction is weak in both countries. At the same time, Singapore, an important barometer of global growth, has been hurt by the falling imports and business expectations. In Latin American markets, we have seen improvement in the soft data measured through business tendency surveys focused on manufacturers. An expanding money supply has seen Argentina and Chile begin to dig themselves out of negative territory. Also, a narrowing yield spread between Mexican and U.S. sovereign debt and strong production tendency numbers have helped the Mexican LEI hit a 10-year high, on a standardized and de-trended basis. So, where is the weakness in the global economy? If you were to consider only the LEIs, the U.S. and Germany appear to be the main culprits. The U.S. LEI has steadily drifted into negative territory in 2019, owing to a downtrend in average weekly hours in manufacturing, contracting new orders for consumer goods and materials, and the inverted U.S. Treasury yield curve. Although the latest readings from building permits, equity prices and M2 growth are sending a more hopeful message on future U.S. growth. With all the geopolitical uncertainties stemming from the U.S.-China tariff battles, Brexit, bubbling Mideast tensions and even the 2020 U.S. Presidential cycle, the value of using forward-looking indicators with a successful track record of forecasting economic growth – rather than watching contemporaneous or even lagging data - has never been greater. In Germany, however, the picture is much worse. The soft data indicates that a deep pessimism has set in among German manufacturers. The IFO business climate index and manufacturing expectations of export order books have both been on a sharp decline year-to-date and showed only the slightest of upticks in the month of September. This pessimism is also reflected on the non-manufacturing side, where expected demand for services and consumer confidence have tumbled. We can draw some hope from the recent uptick in manufacturing new orders, but we will have to see sustained improvement across more LEI components before we can call a turnaround in German growth. Given how widely followed the U.S. and German economic data releases are among investors, it should not be surprising that there is a palpable fear in the markets of potential global recession. Yet the U.S. and German economies typically lag the global business cycle. EM economies, especially in China and non-Japan Asia, are where growth upturns begin and the LEIs there are now bottoming out and, in some cases, outright improving. Investment Implications Our final assessment of our global LEI is that: a. there is nothing in the construction of the index that is distorting the message from the current uptick in the LEI b. the rise in the global LEI is still in its early days c. The improvement in the LEI is coming from a significant share of the global economy, and has roots in hard data and not just liquidity-based measures like rising equity prices or money supply growth. With all the geopolitical uncertainties stemming from the U.S.-China tariff battles, Brexit, bubbling Mideast tensions and even the 2020 U.S. Presidential cycle, the value of using forward-looking indicators with a successful track record of forecasting economic growth – rather than watching contemporaneous or even lagging data - has never been greater. Given the historically strong correlation between our global LEI and the level and change of global bond yields, we view the improving LEI as a core element behind our current below-benchmark stance on global duration exposure. Chart 5Argentina LEI: Bottoming Out Chart 6Brazil LEI: Modestly Improving   Chart 7Canada LEI: Hooking Up Chart 8Chile LEI: Bottoming Out Chart 9China LEI: Strong Improvement Chart 10Czech Republic LEI: Deteriorating     Chart 11France LEI: Hooking Up Chart 12German LEI: Steadily Falling   Chart 13Hungary LEI: Falling Chart 14Italy LEI: Bottoming Out   Chart 15Japan LEI: Still Falling Chart 16Korea LEI: Stabilizing   Chart 17Malaysia LEI: Bottoming Out Chart 18Mexico LEI: Booming Chart 19Poland LEI: Stabilizing Chart 20Russia LEI: Stabilizing Chart 21Singapore LEI: Still Falling Chart 22South Africa LEI: Stabilizing Chart 23Taiwan LEI: Solid Uptrend Chart 24Thailand LEI: Solid Uptrend   Chart 25Turkey LEI: Very Strong Uptrend Chart 26U.K. LEI: Inching Upward   Chart 27U.S. LEI: Weakening Ray Park, CFA, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Shakti Sharma, Research Associate shaktis@bcaresearch.com Robert Robis, CFA, Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1Details on how the OECD calculates the individual country leading economic indicators can be found here: http://www.oecd.org/sdd/leading-indicators/compositeleadingindicatorsclifrequentlyaskedquestionsfaqs.htm   The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
GAA DM Equity Country Allocation Model Update The GAA DM Equity Country Allocation model is updated as of September 30, 2019.  The country model downgraded Australia from overweight to underweight in order to boost Canada and Sweden to a slight overweight. The other overweight countries remain Italy, Spain, Switzerland, Germany, and the Netherlands. Japan and the U.K. are still deep in underweight territory even though they performed very well in September, as shown in Table 1.  Table 1Model Allocation Vs. Benchmark Weights As Table 2 and Charts 1, 2, and 3 all show, the overall model performed in line with the MSCI World benchmark in September, driven by 15 bps of underperformance from the Level 2 model, offset by 5 bps of outperformance from the Level 1 model. Since going live, the overall model has outperformed by 82 bps, with 278 bps of outperformance by the Level 2 model, offset by 44 bps of underperformance from the Level 1 model. 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)   Furthermore, please refer to our 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 as well when making overall recommendations.   GAA Equity Sector Selection Model Chart 4Overall Model Performance The GAA Equity Sector Model (Chart 4) is updated as of September 30, 2019. The model’s relative tilts between cyclicals and defensives have changed compared to last month. The global growth proxies embedded in the model are behind the bearish tilt on cyclical sectors. The only cyclical sector currently overweight by the model – Information Technology – is favored due to positive inputs from both its liquidity and momentum components. The valuation component has triggered a buy signal in the Energy sector. However, negative inputs from the remaining components do not justify an outright overweight position. All remaining sectors, on the other hand, continue to have a muted valuation component. The model is now overweight 4 sectors in total, 1 cyclical and 3 defensive sectors. These are Information Technology, Consumer Staples, Health Care and Utilities. Table 3Model’s Performance (March 1, 2019 - Current) For more details on the model, please see the Special Report “Introducing the GAA Equity Sector Selection Model,” dated July 27, 2016, as well as the Sector Selection Model section in the Special Alert “GAA Quant Model Updates,” dated March 1, 2019 available at https://gaa.bcaresearch.com. Table 4Current Model Allocations   Xiaoli Tang, Associate Vice President xiaoliT@bcaresearch.com Amr Hanafy, Research Associate amrh@bcaresearch.com      
Highlights Corporate Bonds: High corporate debt levels will be a problem for corporate bond investors during the next downturn, but spreads will not respond to them until inflationary pressures mount and monetary policy turns restrictive. Maintain an overweight allocation to corporate bonds versus Treasuries, with a preference for the Baa and high-yield credit tiers. MBS: Agency MBS spreads are competitive with high-rated (Aaa, Aa, A) corporate bonds, and look even more attractive on a risk-adjusted basis. We recommend that investors swap the Aaa, Aa and A-rated corporate bonds in their portfolios for agency MBS. Municipal Bonds: Investors should upgrade municipal bonds from neutral to overweight, given the recent back-up in Municipal / Treasury yield ratios. Within munis, investors should retain a preference for long-maturity Aaa-rated bonds, where yields are most compelling. Feature We attended BCA’s annual Investment Conference last week. The event always provides a good opportunity to hear from some expert panelists and find out what issues are front and center in our clients’ minds. More than anything else, two themes kept popping up in the different presentations and in conversations with attendees: Large corporate debt balances Under-priced inflation risk We can’t help but see a strong connection between the two. On Corporate Debt The consensus among panelists and attendees was very much in line with our own view: Highly levered balance sheets will be a problem for corporate bond investors during the next default cycle, but don’t help us determine when that default cycle will occur. Chart 1 shows that, despite the persistent increase in the debt-to-profits ratio, corporate bankruptcies are well contained. We examined the reasons for this divergence in a recent report, concluding that accommodative monetary policy is holding down the default rate by keeping interest costs low and giving banks the confidence to roll over maturing debt.1 Essentially, banks will look through signs of deteriorating corporate balance sheet health until the Fed shifts to a more restrictive policy stance. Chart 1Corporate Balance Sheets Are In Bad Shape, But Defaults Are Low On Inflation This is where inflation becomes important. The Fed is currently running an accommodative monetary policy because many years of low prices have convinced investors that inflation might never return. As a result, the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is only 1.53%, well below the 2.3% - 2.5% range consistent with the Fed’s target. The Fed must maintain an accommodative policy stance until it achieves its goal of re-anchoring inflation expectations. Only then will monetary policy turn restrictive, raising the risk of a corporate default cycle. We have long held the view that a 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate above 2.3% would cause us to turn much more cautious on corporate credit. It might take many months of core inflation printing near the Fed’s target before investors start to believe that it will stay there indefinitely. Many conference panelists thought that inflation risks are currently under-priced, and while we tend to agree that it is premature to declare the death of the Phillips curve, we expect it will still take some time before inflation expectations hit our 2.3% - 2.5% target range. We have shown in prior research that inflation expectations adapt only slowly to changes in the actual inflation data.2  At present, the fair value reading from our Adaptive Expectations Model of the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is only 1.94% (Chart 2). This fair value will move higher if inflation continues to print near current levels, but that process will take some time. In other words, it might take many months of core inflation printing near the Fed’s target before investors start to believe that it will stay there indefinitely. Chart 2Adaptive Expectations Model Chart 3Inflation Not Far From Target While the adaptive process might take a long time, it’s important to note that inflation is already quite close to the Fed’s target. Trailing 12-month trimmed mean PCE inflation came in at 1.96% in August, while year-over-year core PCE hit 1.77% (Chart 3). Trimmed mean inflation has been more stable than other inflation measures since the financial crisis, and core PCE has tended to drift toward the trimmed mean over time.      On Corporate Debt & Inflation In our view, the two themes of high corporate debt and under-priced inflation risk are tightly linked. It has taken a very long time for the economy to recover from the financial crisis. As a result, inflation has been low for a prolonged period and the Fed has been forced to maintain an accommodative policy stance. That accommodative policy stance encourages banks to extend credit, and encourages firms to issue debt. Eventually, inflation pressures will mount, the Fed’s policy will turn restrictive and weak corporate balance sheets will be exposed. Only then, will corporate spreads widen significantly. Until that time, the pertinent question is whether corporate spreads offer adequate compensation for the risk that inflationary pressures emerge earlier than anticipated. For now, our answer is yes, with the caveat that the risk/reward trade-off is more attractive in the lower credit tiers. The 12-month high-yield breakeven spread is very attractive, well above its historical median (Chart 4). But within investment grade, we view only the Baa-rated credit tier as offering adequate compensation (Chart 4, bottom panel). There are better alternatives to owning Aaa, Aa and A-rated corporate bonds, as discussed in the next section. Chart 4Corporate Bond Valuation Favor Agency MBS Over High-Rated Corporate Credit Chart 5MBS More Attractive Than High-Rated Corporate Bonds As noted above, investment grade corporate bonds rated A or higher don’t offer much expected compensation at current spread levels. In fact, our prior research notes that their spreads are already below our cyclical targets.3 But on the plus side, the average option-adjusted spread (OAS) for conventional 30-year agency MBS has widened in recent months and now looks like an attractive alternative to high-rated corporate credit. We recommend that investors shift out of Aaa, Aa and A-rated corporate credit and into agency MBS for three reasons. 1) Expected Compensation Is Competitive The average OAS for conventional 30-year agency MBS now stands at 52 bps. This is only 6 bps below the average OAS offered by a Aa-rated corporate bond, and 37 bps less than that offered by an A-rated credit (Chart 5). That’s not bad for a Aaa-rated bond with agency backing. 2) Risk-Adjusted Compensation Is Stellar MBS spreads look much more attractive when we consider the risk profile. Specifically, when we consider that the average duration of the MBS index has fallen sharply this year, while the average duration of the investment grade corporate bond index has risen (Chart 5, panel 2). In fact, the average duration of the MBS index is only 2.9, compared to 7.8 for an A-rated corporate bond. This means that the MBS spread needs to widen by 18 bps over the next 12 months for an investor to see losses, while the A-rated spread needs to widen by only 11 bps (Chart 5, bottom panel). We recommend that investors shift out of Aaa, Aa and A-rated corporate credit and into agency MBS. Because MBS exhibit negative convexity, their duration declines when yields fall. By contrast, non-callable investment grade corporate bonds have positive convexity and have seen their durations rise. This means that, all else equal, negatively convex securities start to look more attractive on a risk-adjusted basis after a large decline in bond yields. This is also the main reason why negatively convex high-yield corporate bonds currently look much more attractive than investment grade corporate bonds.4 Interestingly, MBS did not look so attractive relative to corporate bonds in 2015/16, the last time that MBS index duration fell sharply. That’s because corporate bond spreads also widened during that period. This time around, corporate bond spreads have been stable as MBS index duration has plunged. Unless you think that Treasury yields have further downside, which we do not,5 agency MBS look like a good buy. 3) Macro Risks Are Lower While, as discussed above, we are not yet sounding the alarm about the macro risks to corporate bonds, we are even less concerned about the macro risks surrounding agency MBS. Mortgage refinancing activity is the most important macro driver of MBS spreads, and it should stay relatively low for a very long time. At such low mortgage rates, most homeowners have already had an opportunity to refinance, so refi burnout is currently very high. This is obvious when we observe that there was only a small spike in refi activity this year, despite a very large decline in mortgage rates (Chart 6). Chart 6Muted Refi Activity Will Keep Nominal Spreads Low Chart 6 also shows that the nominal MBS spread is highly correlated with refi activity, and that it remains near its historical tights. This spread contains both the OAS – which is a proxy for an MBS investor’s expected return – and the portion of the spread that is expected to be lost as a result of prepayment activity. The fact that the OAS is reasonably elevated compared to history while the overall nominal spread remains low means that MBS are pricing-in very little buffer for prepayment losses. Given the macro back-drop, this seems appropriate. Beyond refi risk, we also note that the credit quality of outstanding mortgages remains very high. The median FICO score on new mortgages has barely come down since the financial crisis (Chart 7). Further, while mortgage lending standards have been easing for the bulk of the post-crisis period, the Fed’s July Senior Loan Officer survey reported that the banks that view lending standards as tighter than the post-2005 average outnumber those that view standards as easier. Stronger housing activity data generally lead to higher mortgage rates, which in turn limit refi activity. Finally, there is very little reason to be concerned about significant weakness in housing activity. Of the six major housing activity data series that we track, all have rebounded sharply since this year’s drop in mortgage rates (Chart 8). Stronger housing activity data generally lead to higher mortgage rates, which in turn limit refi activity. Chart 7Mortgage Lending Standards Are Tight Chart 8Housing Activity Hooking Up   Bottom Line: Agency MBS spreads are competitive with high-rated (Aaa, Aa, A) corporate bonds, and look even more attractive on a risk-adjusted basis. We recommend that investors swap the Aaa, Aa and A-rated corporate bonds in their portfolios for agency MBS. Upgrade Municipal Bonds On July 23, we advised investors to reduce municipal bond exposure from overweight to neutral.6 The rationale was purely valuation driven. We saw no immediate signs of municipal credit distress, but noted that yields were simply too low relative to the alternatives. Today, we similarly see no signs of immediate credit distress. In fact, municipal bond ratings upgrades continue to outpace downgrades, our Municipal Health Monitor remains in “improving health” territory and state & local government interest coverage is strong (Chart 9).7 Chart 9Muni Credit Quality Is Not A Concern The difference, however, is that yield ratios have rebounded dramatically since early August, and municipal bonds have once again become attractive (Chart 10). Chart 10Munis Attractive Once Again Bottom Line: Investors should upgrade municipal bonds from neutral to overweight, given the recent back-up in Municipal / Treasury yield ratios. Within munis, investors should retain a preference for long-maturity Aaa-rated bonds, where yields are most compelling.   Ryan Swift, U.S. Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Corporate Bond Investors Should Not Fight The Fed”, dated September 17, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Adaptive Expectations In The TIPS Market”, dated November 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Corporate Bond Investors Should Not Fight The Fed”, dated September 17, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 The high-yield bond index is negatively convex because most high-yield credits carry embedded call options. Investment grade corporate bonds tend to be non-callable. 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “What’s Up In U.S. Money Markets?”, dated September 24, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “A Message To The TIPS Market”, dated July 23, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 For further details on our Municipal Health Monitor please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “Trading The Municipal Credit Cycle”, dated October 18, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification