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Special Report Highlights The ECB is not repressing interest rates and penalizing savers. The Eurozone shows none of the symptoms associated with financial repression. Global excess savings are keeping US rates depressed. If US rates are low, then European rates must be lower because of structural problems in the region’s economy, independent of the ECB’s preferences. Structurally, there is still no case for European yields to rise meaningfully compared to the rest of the world. Despite positive forces over the next year or two, European financials will remain long-term underperformers. European utilities will outperform US ones. The euro is transforming into a safe haven like the yen and the Swiss franc. Feature By maintaining negative short rates, the European Central Bank is conducting severe financial repression, which distorts rates of return and penalizes savers. This is a common refrain among many insurers and pension plan managers investing in Europe and among a large number of the region’s politicians. Chart 1The ECB's Financial Repression? At first glance, this criticism is apt. For the past five years, negative policy rates have forced safe-haven Bund yields to trade well below the Euro Area’s nominal GDP growth (Chart 1). Moreover, the real ECB deposit rate remains well below the Holston, Laubach-Williams estimate of R-star (the real neutral rate of interest). If we go beyond these superficial observations, it is far from clear that the ECB is conducting financial repression or distorting market rates any more than other major global central banks. Is It Financial Repression? The ECB is not conducting financial repression; rather, it is responding to powerful economic forces in Europe and beyond that are depressing interest rates. The definition of financial repression is crucial to this assessment. Financial repression involves monetary authorities actively suppressing interest rates to the advantage of the borrowers and users of capital at the expense of the savers, whose risk-free investments then provide subpar rates of returns. Following this definition, financial repression shows these clear symptoms: A low savings rate. Suppressed interest rates do not adequately compensate savers to forgo consumption. Thus, they are less likely to put money aside. A significant build-up of debt. Real interest rates are below fair market value, which subsidizes borrowing. A significant expansion of the money supply. Money supply expands rapidly in response to strong credit demand in the economy. Plentiful capital expenditures. Savers must take on more financial risk to make appropriate returns on their assets, which compresses risk premia. Depressed internal rates of return boost the net present value of investment projects and thus cause investments to account for a large share of output. A current account deficit. A nation’s current account balance equals its savings minus its investments. By depressing savings and stimulating investments, financial repression results in a current account deficit or a sharply deteriorating current account balance. Above-trend GDP growth. By depressing savings and boosting investments, financial repression lifts cyclical spending and forces the GDP to rise above its potential. The problem for commentators who argue that the ECB is conducting financial repression is that the Euro Area meets none of these criteria. First, Eurozone money and credit growth has run well below that of the US ever since the euro crisis, despite ECB policy rates that are constantly lower than the Fed Funds rate. Moreover, since the ECB cut rates to zero, the pace of money and credit creation has decelerated significantly compared to their pre-crisis trends (Chart 2). Second, the Euro Area’s real GDP per capita, nominal GDP per capita, and the GDP deflator have also fallen 4.6%, 5.2% and 5%, respectively, behind those of the US, since the ECB has cut interest rates to zero (Chart 3). Moreover, the growth of these variables has also decelerated significantly over this period, which is consistent with depressed credit demand. Additionally, despite the inferior performance of European activity metrics compared to those of the US since the introduction of the common currency, European government bonds have performed exactly in line with those of the US (Chart 3, bottom panel) and have therefore outperformed in real terms. This is inconsistent with financial repression by the ECB. Chart 2Europe's Money And Credit Trends Are Too Tame... Chart 3... So Are Output Volume And Price Trends Finally, the Euro Area runs a current account surplus of 2.3% of GDP, which has grown by 4.1% of GDP since late 2008. This is the clearest sign that Eurozone savings have become excessive relative to investment, despite the surge in government deficits in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Excess savings are not typically associated with central banks artificially distorting interest rates. Bottom Line: The economic developments in the Euro Area do not correspond to what would be anticipated if the ECB were repressing interest rates. The growth rate of money and credit has structurally slowed both in absolute terms and compared to that of the US. The same deceleration is evident in both real and nominal output per person, as well as in price levels. Finally, the Eurozone’s current account surplus has widened, which highlights that savings have grown in excess of investments. The Eurozone Needs Lower Interest Rates Than The US The ECB must set appropriately low interest rates, if US yields are low across the curve. In a way, the case that the Federal Reserve is conducting financial repression is stronger than the case against the ECB. Over the past twelve years, nominal and real output per capita have grown more robustly in the US, while money as well as credit expansion and inflation have also been stronger. The US runs a persistent current account deficit of 3.1% of GDP, which also indicates that it is not awash in excess domestic savings. Chart 4Maybe The Fed Is Repressing Interest Rates We could even argue that the case for the Fed repressing interest rates is growing stronger. The federal budget deficit has expanded to 19% of GDP, even as the unemployment rate tumbles (Chart 4). Moreover, US quarterly GDP growth has averaged 8.5% since the fourth quarter of 2020 and, according to Bloomberg consensus estimates, is anticipated to average 6.3% for the remainder of the year. US inflation is also strong. Annual core CPI Inflation hit 3% in April; monthly core inflation was 0.92%, or an annualized rate of 11.6%, the strongest reading in almost 40 years. Yet, even in the US, the argument that the Fed is repressing interest rates is ultimately weak, despite the aforementioned economic strength. The Fed is accommodating global market pressures that are greater than those of the US economy. In other words, even if the Fed did not set short rates, US interest rates would be low across the curve because of global excess savings. Chart 5Too Much Savings, Everywhere Excess savings around the world constitute an exceptionally strong gravitational force that anchor global rates at low levels. As Chart 5 shows, since the early 1990s, global private savings have outpaced investments by a cumulative 163% of GDP. Accumulated government deficit, which has accounted for 99% of global GDP, has been far too small to absorb fully this surplus of savings. The resulting imbalance places downward pressure on global inflation (a consequence of demand falling short of supply) and real interest rates, which means it depresses nominal interest rates across the curve. US interest rates also feel the yield-compressing effect of these excess global savings, even if the US economy does not generate excess savings itself (it runs a current account deficit). The major DM central banks are removing a greater proportion of the float of safe-haven from their jurisdictions than the Fed (Chart 6). The resulting scarcity of safe-haven securities means that US fixed-income products remain the natural outlet for global investors seeking safety and liquidity. Thus, despite the US lack of excess savings, Treasury yields have traded below nominal GDP growth 55% of the time over the past 30 years, no matter how strong US activity is or how wide federal deficits become. If the Fed has little choice but to accept low US interest rates, then the Eurozone must accept even lower interest rates because of its large excess savings. As Chart 7 illustrates, the 2-year and 10-year interest rate spreads (both in nominal and real terms) between the Eurozone and the US track the gap between the US current account deficit and the Europe’s current account surplus. Chart 6Treasurys Are The World Only Plentiful Safe-Haven Chart 7Europe's Excess Savings Justify Lower Rates Across The Curve The Eurozone lower rate of return on capital is another force depressing rates relative to the US (Chart 8). This lower return on capital reflects the following structural problems with the European economies: Excess capital stock. The Eurozone peripheral nations have abnormally large capital stocks in relation to their GDPs (Chart 9). As we previously argued, this feature means that Europe suffers from large amounts of misallocated capital, which hurt the return on capital. Chart 8Capital Is Not Rewarded In Europe Chart 9Too Much Capital! Ageing capital stock. Not only is the Eurozone capital stock too large relative to the size of its economy, it is also older than that of the US (Chart 10). An ageing capital stock, especially in a world where ICT spending is one of the key sources of innovation and growth, further hurts the Euro Area’s return on capital. Lower incremental output-to-capital ratio (Chart 11). The Euro Area generates significantly less output per unit of investment than the US. This confirms the notion that capital is misallocated and that it is used less productively than in the US. Chart 10Europe's Capital Is Ageing Too Chart 11Poor Capital Utilization Chart 12Europe's Inferior Productivity Problem The final force limiting European interest rates compared to the US is the Euro Area’s inferior potential growth rate. The Eurozone’s population is ageing, and it will start to contract in 2030. Moreover, multifactor productivity growth is weaker than in the US (Chart 12). A lower potential GDP growth accentuates the discount in the Euro Area neutral rate of interest compared to the US. Bottom Line: Despite the relative economic vigor of the US, global excess savings lower US rates across the curve. The ECB has no choice but to accept even lower European rates, because the European economy suffers from greater excess savings than the US: its return on capital is inferior, and its neutral rate of interest is hampered by its lower potential GDP growth. Investment Conclusions For European rates to avoid the fate of Japan and to circumvent suffering many more decades wedged near zero, some important changes must take place. First, at the global level, excess savings must recede. This will allow global interest rates to increase, especially those of the US. Even if Eurozone rates continue to trade at a discount to the US, safe-haven yields in Europe would nonetheless climb in absolute terms. The fall in the global ratio of workers relative to dependent people, most notably in China where the 2020 population census has just highlighted the trend, is one factor pointing toward a potential gradual decline in global savings. For the moment, absorbing excess savings means that global fiscal policy must remain accommodative. Although fiscal authorities around the world continue to display greater profligacy than they did in the wake of the Great Financial Crisis, there is no guarantee that they will not revert to their old ways. In fact, BCA’s Global Investment Strategy service recently showed that the US fiscal policy is set to become more of a constraint on growth next year than it has been in 2020 and 2021 (Chart 13).  One factor to monitor is the international shift in voters’ preferences toward left-wing economic policies, which often results in more generous fiscal spending. If this trend persists, then global fiscal deficits will close more slowly than the private sector savings will decline. This process will both be inflationary over the long run and impose upward pressure on real interest rates worldwide. But the fiscal excesses of the current moment may force opposition parties to restrain spending whenever they come into power. Chart 13Will Global Fiscal Policy Morph Into a Headwind? Second, to narrow the spread between the Eurozone and US interest rates, the Euro Area must tackle its low rate of return on capital. Practically, this means that much of the excess capital stock weighing on European rates of returns must be written down. Doing so will require more cross border mergers and acquisitions within sectors in the Eurozone. However, the loss-recognition process on nonviable capital will be deflationary. Thus, to facilitate these asset write-downs, the region’s fiscal policy and monetary policy must first remain extremely accommodative. It is far from certain that European authorities will resist reverting to their old ways. A structural underweight on European financial equities remains appropriate. Even if the Eurozone enacts the reforms necessary to invite the peripheral asset write-downs required to boost rates of return in the long-run, in the interim, these reforms will be deflationary. Consequently, no matter what, Eurozone yields will remain well below the US for years to come. Moreover, European credit demand is unlikely to outperform the rest of the world for the coming few years. In this context, the RoE of European banks will remain low. Therefore, our current recommendation to overweight this sector is only valid as a near-term play on the global economic recovery and is not a strategic recommendation. By contrast, European utilities will structurally outperform their US counterparts. European utilities offer higher RoE than US ones and have healthier leverage (Chart 14). Moreover, European utilities trade at discounts to US firms on a price-to-book, price-to-cash flow, price-to-sales and dividend yield basis (Chart 15). Additionally, as yield plays, structurally lower European yields relative to those of the US will advantage European utilities on a long-term basis. Chart 14European Utilities Offer More Appealing Operating Metrics... Chart 15... And Are More Attractively Priced Than US Ones Finally, the euro will increasingly trade as a safe-haven currency like the yen and the Swiss franc. First, after a decade of trial by fire, EU integration and solidarity have gained rather than lost momentum and the EU break-up risk has proved to be limited to Brexit. Second, although the Eurozone economy is pro-cyclical, so are the Swiss and Japanese economies. Instead, the Euro Area’s structurally elevated savings rate and current account balance are transforming this economy into a net creditor, with a positive net international investment position equal to -0.1% of GDP. Moreover, the bloc’s low inflation will continue to put upward pressure on the euro’s long-term fair value. If we add the Euro Area’s low interest rates to the mix, then the euro is likely to behave increasingly as a funding currency. Thus, while the euro will benefit from the USD’s weakness forecasted by our Foreign Exchange Strategists, it will underperformed more pro-cyclical currencies such as the SEK, the NOK, or the GBP, which do not suffer from the same ills as the Eurozone.   Mathieu Savary, Chief European Investment Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com
Highlights Global currencies are at a critical level versus the dollar. From a positioning standpoint today, a break below 89-90 on the DXY index will be extremely bearish, while a bounce from current levels should be capped in the 3-4% range. Two key factors have pushed the dollar down: lower real rates in the US and recovering economic momentum outside the US. There could be some seasonal strength in the dollar as equity markets churn in May. However, this will provide an opportunity for fresh short positions. The Federal Reserve will maintain its resolve to view the current inflation overshoot as transitory, while it will still focus on the labor market. This will keep real rates in the US depressed relative to other countries. New trade idea: Go long CHF/NZD as a play on rising currency volatility. Also sell USD/JPY if it touches 110. Feature Chart I-1The Dollar Is At A Critical Juncture After a brief rally from January to March, the dollar is once again on the verge of a technical breakdown. Both the DXY index, the Federal Reserve trade-weighted dollar and EM currency benchmarks are sitting at critical levels (Chart I-1). A breakdown will confirm that the dollar bear market that began in March 2020 remains intact. It will also trigger a flurry of speculative outflows from the dollar. In our December FX outlook,1 our view was that the DXY was headed towards 80 on a cyclical (12-18- month horizon). However, we also predicted the DXY index would hit 94-95 in the first quarter, a view we have reinforced multiple times since then. With the DXY index having peaked at 93.5, it is now instructive to explore the most likely next move. To do this, we will revisit what has changed and what has remained the same since our December piece.  Gauging Investor Positioning Chart I-2Dollar Bulls Are Capitulating Going into 2021, selling the dollar was a consensus trade and the currency was very much oversold. For contrarians, it paid to be bullish (Chart I-2). Since then, investors have closed their short positions on the dollar, shifting their focus to JPY- and CHF-funded carry trades. Speculators are still long the euro, but the magnitude of this bet has declined from a net 30% of open interest to around 10% today. Positioning in GBP and CAD are still elevated, which suggests that these currencies remain vulnerable to a technical pullback.  Interestingly, the Citigroup sentiment indicator for the USD is close to its January nadir. From the vantage point of this gauge, there has been an accumulation of dollar short positions in recent weeks. This helps explain recent dollar weakness. Going forward, positioning will not be particularly useful in dictating the next move in the dollar since it only works well at extremes. Even then, it is only useful for gauging countertrend moves. For much of the early 2000s, sentiment on the dollar was bearish yet rallies were capped at 4-6%. During last decade’s dollar bull market, sentiment remained mostly in bullish territory, but the dollar achieved escape velocity (Chart I-3). Chart I-3The Dollar And Regime Shifts From today’s positioning standpoint, a break below 89-90 on the DXY index will be an extremely bearish sign, while a bounce from current levels should be capped in the 3-4% range. This puts the greenback at a critical crossroad in technical terms. The Federal Reserve, Inflation And Interest Rates At the start of 2021, interest rates were moving in favor of the dollar, which continued a trend that has been in place since the middle of last year. The gap between the US and German 10-year yields rose from a low of around 100 basis points last year to a high of over 200 basis points in March. More recently, interest rate differentials have started to move against the dollar, explaining the broad reversal in dollar indices since March. The US-German 10-year spread now sits at 180 basis points. Exchange rates tend to reflect real interest rate differentials, since inflation erodes the purchasing power of a currency. As such, it is important to gauge not only what is happening to nominal rates, but also to underlying inflation trends. This complicates matters because inflation is often a lagging variable, so getting a sense of where inflation is headed can be greatly useful for currency strategy. As a starting point, the US does not rank well when it comes to real interest rates. Chart I-4 shows the broad correlation between real interest rates and the dollar. For low interest rate countries such as Switzerland, Sweden and the euro area, the peak in US real rates also coincided with a cyclical rebound in these currencies. Even for a currency such as the Japanese yen, real rates are favorable compared to the US. Nominal 10-year rates are 10bps and inflation swaps at the 10-year tenor are 23bps. This pins Japanese real rates almost 100bps above rates in the US. Chart I-4AInterest Rates Have Moved Against The Dollar Chart I-4BInterest Rates Have Moved Against The Dollar Chart I-4CInterest Rates Have Moved Against The Dollar Of course, with inflation surprising to the upside in the US, the Fed could taper sooner than they have communicated and/or raise interest rates faster than the market expects. This will not be surprising given other central banks such as the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England have already telegraphed reduced asset purchases. However, even if the Fed does decide to taper its asset purchases, the impact on the dollar will not be as straightforward as some market participants expect. To understand why, consider Chart I-5, which shows that relative to other central banks, the Fed’s balance sheet impulse is already shrinking by approximately 13% of GDP. In essence, the Fed has already been "stealthily" tapering asset purchases compared to other G10 central banks. This action supported the dollar this year. It has also pushed market pricing of the Fed funds rate well above the median dots of the FOMC in 2 years (Chart I-6). Thus the prospect of the Fed tapering asset purchases might already be embedded in the price of assets. Chart I-5Stealth Tapering By The Fed? Chart I-6Markets Have Already Priced A Hawkish Fed Going forward, our Global Fixed Income colleagues have noted that the Fed is already moving down the ladder in terms of who is expected to taper next.2 The Bank of Japan and the European Central Bank have barely tapered their asset purchases. They might not announce anything significant in their June 10 and June 18 meetings respectively, but markets will still be squarely focused on any change in language. Chart I-7A Profligate US Government Has Historically Been Dollar Bearish If investors decide to take the Fed’s messaging at face value, which suggests that the FOMC will look through any upside surprises in inflation, then real rates will remain depressed in the US—which will pressure the dollar lower. We have little conviction about whether US inflation is transient or more permanent. However, we do know that the US economy is more inflationary than most other developed markets because the US is stimulating domestic demand by much more than is required to close the output gap. Historically, this is a bearish development for the US dollar (Chart I-7). Economic Momentum As A Catalyst To the extent that monetary policy is tailored to suit domestic economic conditions, growth momentum is clearly rotating from the US to other countries. This suggests that the case for other central banks, such as the ECB or the RBA, to follow the steps of the BoE or BoC is rising at the margin. Manufacturing PMIs around the world have overtaken US levels, and it is only a matter of time before the services PMIs catchup. Chart I-8 shows that euro area data continues to surprise to the upside, with the economic surprise index between the euro area and the US at a decade high. This has historically been synonymous with modestly higher Eurozone bond yields relative to the US, which has also provided some support for the currency. The expectations component of both the ZEW and the Sentix surveys came out stronger this month, which confirms that both European and German growth should remain healthy over the summer (Chart I-9). Chart I-8Small Window For European Yields To RiseChart I-9Euro Area Data To Stay Strong As for the slowdown in Chinese stimulus, we agree it is a risk to global growth as our China Strategists highlight, but two opposing  factors are also at play: Chinese stimulus leads the economy by a long lag. Last cycle, the apex of Chinese credit was in 2016, but it took until 2018 for global trade to slow down (Chart I-10). This partly explains why commodity prices have not relapsed, despite slowing credit creation from their largest buyer. An economy cannot rely on credit formation alone. At some point, the baton has to be passed to the forces of animal spirits. The velocity of money, or how many units of GDP are created for every unit of money creation, is one of these forces. Chart I-11 shows that the velocity of money has been rising faster outside the US, led by China. Chart I-10Chinese Credit Impulse Works With A Lag Chart I-11Money Velocity Versus The US The above trends give us conviction that any strength in the dollar is a countertrend move that should be faded until the Federal Reserve does a volte face and tightens monetary policy faster than they have telegraphed. A period of weak global growth would constitute another risk to our view. Interestingly, the Chinese RMB has hit new cyclical lows, despite a narrowing of interest rate differentials between the US and China. We suggested in our February Special Report that USD/CNY was headed for 6.2, even if interest rate differentials between the US and China narrowed. If Chinese economic activity is able to stay relatively robust despite slowing credit formation, then USD/CNY will decline further. Chart I-12EM Growth Remains Weak A break lower in USD/CNY is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for EM currencies to outperform. Relative to the US, EM growth remains worse than at the depths of the COVID-19 recession last year (Chart I-12). Our Emerging Market Strategists reckon a change in economic conditions will be necessary for EM currencies to outperform on a sustained basis. A broadening of the vaccination campaign toward EM countries is likely to hold the key to this change. The Real Risk To Dollar Short Positions The risk from shorting the dollar at current levels comes from the equity market. Developed market currencies have run ahead of the relative performance of their domestic bourses. This is a departure from historical correlations (Chart I-13). A reset in equity markets that favors defensive equities will lead to inflows into the US equity and bond markets, which will hurt DM currencies and buffet the dollar. It is worrisome that this earnings season, the US enjoyed stronger positive earnings revisions. Correspondingly, the US put/call ratio remains very depressed, with complacency reigning across most equity bourses (Chart I-14). Chart I-13ACurrencies Have Ran Ahead Of Equity Outperformance Chart I-13BCurrencies Have Ran Ahead Of Equity Outperformance Chart I-14Lots Of Exuberance In US Stocks Chart I-15Equities And The Dollar Have Diverged The nature of a potential market reset is important to consider. For example: Global equities correct, but technology and healthcare lead the drop. In this scenario, the dollar underperforms, as is happening now (Chart I-15) because the US has a heavy weighting in these defensive sectors. The reverse will happen if value stocks or cyclicals lead the drop in global equities. Global equities correct, but bond yields drop as well. The initial reaction will be a stronger dollar as US inflows accelerate, but this will also curb the appeal of the US dollar since Treasury yields will converge towards those of Bunds or JGBs. Moreover, US real rates will collapse even further. We will be sellers of the dollar on strength in this scenario. Global equities correct as yields increase. If US yields lead this rise, the dollar will rally at first, but outflows from the US equity market will also accelerate. If this rotation is durable, the dollar will eventually depreciate, because foreign bourses are highly levered to rising yields. In a nutshell, the US bond market offers attractive yields and the US stock market could behave defensively (as has historically been the case) in a market correction. This creates a risk to shorting the dollar today. Currency Strategy Currency markets are at a critical juncture (Chart I-1) where either a breakdown in the dollar or a countertrend reversal is imminent. Our strategy remains the same it has been so far in 2021. Continue to short the USD against a basket of the most attractive currencies. On this basis, we are already long the Scandinavian currencies. Go short USD/JPY given lopsided positioning. We are placing a limit sell on USD/JPY today at 110. We are also raising our limit buy on the euro to 1.18. It is interesting that the EUR/JPY cross broke out from a multi-year downtrend. This cross has an inverse correlation with the dollar. Buy CHF/NZD today as a play on rising currency volatility. This is a good bet as markets grapple with the next central bank taper policy (Fed versus other DM economies) (Chart I-16). Wait for the equity market correction to play out, after which a green light to short the dollar outright will once again emerge. Historically, May is a good month for the dollar and a volatile one for equities (Chart I-17). That said, dollar bear markets often run in long cycles. Chart I-16Buy CHF/NZD As Insurance Chart I-17The Dollar And Seasonality   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "2021 Key Views: Tradeable Themes," dated December 4, 2020. 2Please see Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "Who Tapers Next?," dated December 04, 2020. Currencies US Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 The recent data out of the US have been mixed: Average hourly earnings improved by 0.7% in April versus March, beating the expected 0.1% increase. Non-farm payrolls increased by 266K in April, far below the expected 978K and 770K in March. The unemployment rate worsened slightly from 6% in March to 6.1% in April, versus an expected improvement to 5.8%.  The NFIB Small Business Optimism survey edged higher to 99.8 in April from 98.2 the prior month. CPI came in at 4.2% year on year in April, outpacing expectations of a 3.6% rise. Month on month, CPI grew by 0.8% in April, crushing the 0.2% consensus. Core CPI came in at 3% year on year in April, beating the expected 2.3%. PPI also surprised to the upside, clocking in at 6.2% year on year in April, versus an expected rise of 5.8%. The US dollar DXY index dropped by 1.3% this week. While CPI surged ahead, employment severely lagged expectations. The Fed’s “maximum employment” target, a gateway to any asset purchase tapering, is unlikely to be reached when the market expects it. This combination of persistent Fed dovishness and potential sizable inflation is bearish for the dollar.   Report Links: Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears - March 19, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar? - February 19, 2021 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Recent data from the euro area have been strong: March German imports strengthened by 6.5% month on month, crushing the expected 0.7%. German ZEW current condition registered at -40.1 in May, far ahead of the -48.8 in April. German ZEW economic sentiment also surprised to the upside in May at 84.4 versus the anticipated 72.  For the entire euro area, the ZEW economic sentiment increased to 84 in May from 66 in April. Sentix investor confidence improved to 21 in May from 13.1 in April, beating the expected 14. Sentix investor expectations climbed to an all-time high of 36.8. The current situation crossed into positive territory for the first time since February 2020. March industrial production was up by 0.1% month on month, lower than the expected 0.7%. The euro strengthened by 1.3% this week against the USD. The uplifting ZEW survey results reinforce our expectation of a global growth rotation in favor of the euro area. While the ECB may not taper asset purchases, a forceful vaccination campaign should lead to further upside data surprises, especially in services. The Euro Area Economic Surprise Index (ESI) remains elevated in contrast with the US ESI, which has declined sharply from its July 2020 peak.   Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 There was scant data out of Japan this week: Household spending strengthened by 7.2% in March versus February, comfortably beating the expected 2.1% increase. The Japanese current account weakened to JPY 2.65tn in March from JPY 2.9tn in February. The Eco Watchers Survey disappointed in April, with current conditions declining from 49 to 39.1 and the expectations component falling from 49.8 to 41.7. The yen was up by 0.5% against the USD this week. The recent extension of the already months-long state of emergency will put downward pressure on the yen in the near term. However, with Japanese equities and the currency in oversold conditions, we are cautiously optimistic on the yen further along in the year.   Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020   British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 The recent data out of the UK have been weak: Construction PMI remained mostly unchanged at 61.6 in April. GDP weakened, quarter on quarter, by 1.5% in Q1. More disappointing was business investment that dropped in Q1 by 11.9% quarter on quarter and 18.1% year on year. March GDP strengthened by 2.1% month on month, suggesting the pullback in the first quarter was mostly due to lockdowns. Manufacturing production was up by 2.1% in March versus February, beating the 1% consensus. The trade deficit narrowed to GBP11.71B in March.  The pound was up by 1.7% this week against the USD. The soft Q1 output data, primarily a result of the winter lockdown, mask improvements in March. With restrictions being lifted, services output and household consumption (induced by excess savings) should quickly catch up with the recent bounce in manufacturing. However, markets may have priced in too much of the UK’s vaccination outperformance as is reflected in the overpriced small-cap equities.   Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 The recent data out of Australia have been positive: The NAB Business confidence increased to 26 in April from 17 the prior month. The NAB business survey index also edged higher to 32 in April from 25 in March. Retail sales increased by 1.3% in March month on month, slightly below the expected 1.4%. Quarter on quarter, Q1 retail sales weakened by 0.5% versus the estimated drop of 0.4%. Q1 CPI came in below expectations at 0.6% quarter on quarter and 1.1% year on year. The AUD was up by 1.2% this week against the USD. While the NAB business confidence and conditions indices came in at record highs, the price pressures remain weak in Australia and vaccination progress continues to lag. That said, leading indicators such as capex intentions and forward orders are improving. We are short AUD/MXN mainly to capitalize on Mexico’s proximity to the rebounding US.   Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency? - January 20, 2021 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 The recent data out of New Zealand have been scant: Electronic card retail sales increased by 4% month on month in April after a 0.8% drop in March. The food price index came in at 1.1% month on month in April, compared to 0% in March. The NZD was up by 0.8% this week against the dollar. With positive data coming out of New Zealand recently, our Global Fixed Income Strategy colleagues judge the RBNZ to be the next central bank most likely to taper sometime in the second half of 2021. However, with Q2 inflation expectations that remain soft and the tourism sector still held back by broad border shutdowns, we remain cautious on the kiwi.   Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 The recent data out of Canada have been mildly disappointing: The employment report was disheartening. Canada lost 207.1K jobs in April, and the participation rate dropped from 65.2% to 64.9%. The unemployment rate also weakened from 7.5% to 8.1% in April, higher than expected.  The Ivey PMI dropped to 60.6 in April from 72.9 in March, in line with expectations. The CAD was up by 1.35% against the USD this week. Despite the already months-long rallying of the loonie and the housing prices, the CAD is still cheap by its real effective exchange rate. Strengthening oil prices should continue to support the currency. A potential extension to the current COVID-19 lockdown and lagging vaccination progress remain downside risks.   Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? - February 12, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020   Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 The recent Swiss data have been neutral: Unemployment rate remained relatively unchanged at 3.3% in April, in line with expectations. The Swiss franc was up by 1% this week against the USD. The franc is cheap with a real effective exchange rate that is at one standard deviation below fair value. Should the pickup in global trade continue, this will buffet the franc. However, our bias is that the SNB will continue to fight excessive franc strength, especially against the euro. So we think the franc will lag the euro over the longer term. We are also going long CHF/NZD today should currency volatility pick up.    Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020   Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 The recent data out of Norway have been mixed: CPI came in at 3% in April, in line with expectations. PPI growth registered at 22.5% in April, year on year. GDP dropped by 0.6% in Q1 quarter on quarter, a disappointment given an estimated 0.4% decrease. Mainland GDP also undershot expectations, decreasing by 1% in Q1 quarter on quarter. The NOK was up by 1% this week against the dollar. The soft Q1 data may hold back the NOK in the very near term, especially considering its remarkable performance since its March 2020 lows. That said, the rally in oil prices will continue to provide support to the NOK. Vaccination progress, on par with that of the euro area, should also benefit the currency.    Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020   Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Recent Swedish data have been mildly positive: The unemployment rate came down from 8.4% in March to 8.2% in April. CPI came in at 2.2% year on year and 0.2% month on month in April, in line with expectations. CPIF registered at 2.5% year on year and 0.3% month on month in April, both beating the consensus. The SEK was up by 2% this week against the USD. Vaccination progress in Sweden is only notches below that of the euro area. A potential shift of sentiment out of the crowded commodity-driven trades could also lend support to the export-driven SEK, on the back of a recovery in Europe in the near term.   Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019   Footnotes 1     Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "2021 Key Views: Tradeable Themes," dated December 4, 2020. 2     Please see Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "Who Tapers Next?," dated December 04, 2020. Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Highlights The US is only one deflationary shock away from a European level of bond yields. On a multi-year horizon, a deflationary shock is a near-certainty. The shock will be deflationary, because even if it starts inflationary, it will quickly morph into deflationary. The reason is that the sharp backup in bond yields resulting from an inflationary shock would undermine the value of $300 trillion worth of global real estate, and thereby unleash a massive deflationary impulse. Hence, the US 30-year bond will ultimately deliver an absolute return approaching 100 percent, in absolute terms… …and relative to core European and Japanese bonds. Fractal trade shortlist: Stocks to consolidate versus bonds; Commodities look dangerously frothy; Buy USD/CAD. Feature Chart of The WeekThe Structural Level Of Bond Yields Depends On The Number Of Lasting Deflationary Shocks Ten years ago, 30-year bond yields in the US, UK and Germany stood at near-identical levels, around 3 percent. Today though, those yields are widely dispersed: the US at 2.3 percent, the UK at 1.3 percent, and Germany at 0.3 percent. What happened? In 2012, the German bond yield decoupled from the UK and the US, because the deflationary shock from the euro debt crisis was focussed in the euro area. Then, in 2016, the UK bond yield decoupled from the US, because the deflationary shock from Brexit was focussed in the UK and EU27 (Chart Of The Week). The ‘Shock Theory’ Of Bond Yields Welcome to a new concept – the ‘shock theory’ of bond yields. According to this theory, the structural level of high-quality government bond yields is simply a function of the number of lasting deflationary shocks that the economy has suffered. Each successive deflationary shock takes the bond yield to a lower structural level until it can go no lower (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Each Successive Deflationary Shock Takes The Bond Yield To A Lower Structural Level, Until It Can Go No Lower Since 2011, US, UK and German bond yields have decoupled because the US has suffered the legacies of one fewer deflationary shock than the UK, and two fewer deflationary shocks than Germany. But the important corollary is that the US is only one deflationary shock away from a European level of bond yields. When that deflationary shock arrives and the US 30-year bond yield reaches the recent low achieved in the UK, it will equate to a price gain of over 50 percent. And if the yield reaches the recent low achieved in Germany, it will equate to a price gain of well over 100 percent. Many people say that such gains are impossible. Yet ten years ago these same people were saying that UK and German long-duration bonds could never reach near-zero yields, and look what happened! Our high-conviction view is that the long-duration US bond will ultimately deliver a stellar absolute return, and a stellar relative return versus core European and Japanese bonds. The simple reason is that another deflationary shock is just a matter of time away. Long-Term Investors Must Always Plan For A Shock Most strategists and investors claim that shocks, such as the pandemic, are inherently unpredictable, and therefore that you cannot plan for them. We disagree. Yes, the timing and nature of individual shocks are inherently unpredictable. But as we explained in How To Predict Shocks, the statistical distribution of shocks is highly predictable. What constitutes a shock? There is no established definition, so our definition is any event that causes the long-duration bond price in a major economy to rally or slump by at least 25 percent.1 (Chart I-3) Using this definition through the last 50 years, we can say that the statistical distribution of the number of shocks in any ten-year period is Poisson (3.33) and the statistical distribution of the time between shocks is Exponential (3.33). Chart I-3A Shock Is A 25 Percent Move In The Long Duration Bond Price, And A Shock Tends To Come Every 3 Years It follows that in any ten-year period, the likelihood of suffering a shock is a near-certain 96 percent (Chart I-4). And even in any five-year period, the likelihood of a shock is an extremely high 81 percent. Chart I-4On A Multi-Year Horizon, A Shock Is A Near-Certainty For many people, this creates a cognitive dissonance. Even though a shock is a near-certainty, they cannot visualise its exact nature or timing, so they resist planning for it. Yet long-term investors must always plan for shocks. Not to do so is unforgiveable. An Inflationary Shock Will Quickly Morph Into A Deflationary Shock The crucial question is, will the next shock be deflationary, or inflationary? Our high-conviction view is that it will be net deflationary. Meaning that even if the shock starts as inflationary, it will quickly morph into deflationary. The simple reason is that the sharp backup in bond yields that would come from an inflationary shock would undermine the value of $300 trillion worth of global real estate, and thereby unleash a massive deflationary impulse. The 2010s housing boom was unprecedented in its penetration and regional breadth, simultaneously encompassing cities, suburbs, and rural areas across North America, Europe, Asia and Australasia. As prices doubled almost everywhere, the value of global real estate surged by $150 trillion (Chart I-5), of which $75 trillion was due to the valuation uplift from lower bond yields (Chart I-6). To put this into context, lower bond yields have boosted the value of global real estate by the equivalent of world GDP! Chart I-5In The 2010s Housing Boom, The Value Of Global Real Estate Surged By $150 Trillion… Chart I-6…Of Which $75 Trillion Was Due To Lower Bond Yields Many people believe that real assets, such as real estate and equities, perform well in an inflationary shock, but this is a misunderstanding. Granted, the income generated by real assets should keep pace with nominal GDP. But the valuation paid for that income will collapse if it starts off at an elevated level, such as now. The starting valuation needed to generate a given real return during an inflationary shock is much lower than during price stability. For example, for equities in the low-inflation 1990s and 2000s, a starting price to earnings multiple of 15 consistently generated a prospective 10-year real return of 10 percent. But in the inflation shock of the 1970s, the same starting multiple of 15 generated a real return of zero. To generate a real return of 10 percent, the starting multiple had to halve to 7 (Chart I-7). Chart I-7In The 1970s Inflationary Shock, Valuations Collapsed How much can bond yields rise before undermining the value of global real estate? Over the past decade the global rental yield has not been able to deviate from the global long-duration bond yield by more than 100 bps.2 Given that the bond yield is already around 25 bps above the rental yield, we deduce that the long-duration bond yield can rise by no more than 75 bps before global real estate prices start getting hurt (Chart I-8).  Chart I-8The Bond Yield Can Rise By No More Than 75 Bps Before Global Real Estate Prices Get Hurt To repeat our key structural recommendation, the long-duration US bond will ultimately deliver a stellar absolute return, and a stellar relative return versus core European and Japanese bonds. Candidates For Countertrend Reversal This week we note that the rally in stocks versus bonds (MSCI All Country World versus 30-year T-bond) is likely to consolidate in the coming months – given the fragility in the 260-day fractal structure similar to previous turning points in 2008, 2010, 2013, and 2020 (Chart I-9). Chart I-9The Rally In Stocks Versus Bonds Is Likely To Consolidate In The Coming Months We also repeat our warning to steer clear of commodities. The rally in all commodities is becoming dangerously frothy, displaying the extremes of fractal fragility seen in 2008. (Chart I-10and Chart I-11). Chart I-10The Rally In Commodities Is Becoming Dangerously Frothy... Chart I-11...Displaying The Extremes Of Fractal Fragility Seen In 2008 A good trade right now is to short the Canadian dollar. Based on the loonie’s composite fractal structure, a lot of good news is already priced in, including the dangerously frothy commodity markets and the Bank of Canada’s (hawkish) taper of asset purchases. As such we expect the Canadian dollar to reverse in the coming months (Chart I-12). Chart I-12Short The Canadian Dollar Go long USD/CAD, setting a profit-target and symmetrical stop-loss at 3.7 percent. Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist Footnotes 1 As bond yields approach their lower limit, this definition of a shock will need to change as it will become impossible for long-duration bond prices to rally by 25 percent. 2 Here, the global long-duration bond yield is defined as the average of the 30-year yields in the US and China. Fractal Trading System Fractal Trades 6-Month Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Equity Market Performance   Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area     Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed     Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations     Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations    
EM stocks, including Chinese equities, tend to perform well during periods of stronger global growth, rising commodity prices and a weaker US dollar.  However, a falling dollar index since April has failed to boost Chinese investable stock prices. …
Highlights Important leading indicators of Eurozone activity point to record growth in the coming quarters. Progress on the vaccination front, global pent-up demand, and easing fiscal policy will fuel the Euro Area recovery. Consensus growth expectations for the Eurozone do not reflect this upbeat outlook; hence, European economic surprises will remain firm. Robust economic surprises will help European stocks, especially small-cap ones. They will also allow for a stronger EUR/USD and rising German 10-year yields. The UK economy is strong, and the BoE will be among the first central banks to tighten policy meaningfully. However, investors understand the UK’s strength well. While the cyclical outlook for the pound is bright against both the USD and the EUR, the GBP is vulnerable to some near-term profit taking. Downgrade UK small-cap stocks to neutral on a tactical basis.  Feature The case for the Eurozone’s recovery is only growing stronger. However, consensus growth forecasts for the Euro Area remain modest. Faced with this dichotomy, the European economy has ample room to generate positive surprises in the coming months. This process will support European financial assets, small-cap stocks in particular. This contrasts with UK assets, where investors have already embedded generous growth assumptions in response to the country’s rapid pace of vaccination. A tactical downgrade of UK small-cap equities is appropriate. Surprise! Two indicators from outside the Eurozone point to an elevated likelihood that the European economy will generate some exceptionally strong growth numbers over the coming 12 months. First, the Swiss KOF Economic Barometer hit an all-time high in April. The KOF series is an excellent leading indicator of Switzerland’s economic activity, and it currently forecasts record GDP growth and PMIs for that country (Chart 1). This message of strength for Switzerland bodes well for the Eurozone. While the Swiss market is defensive, owing to its heavy exposure to healthcare and consumer staple stocks, the Swiss economy is pro-cyclical. Exports represent 60% of GDP, and exports to the Eurozone account for 40% of this total. Moreover, the growth-sensitive machinery, consumer goods, and chemicals categories account for almost 50% of shipments. Based on these observations, the KOF Economic Barometer forecasting ability unsurprisingly extends beyond Swiss economic variables; it also anticipates positive growth for the Global Manufacturing PMI, the Euro Area Manufacturing PMI, and the Eurozone’s forward earnings (Chart 2). Chart 1Climbing Swiss Peaks Chart 2A Good Sign For The Eurozone Second, an aggregation of Swedish economic data confirms the KOF indicator’s message and also calls for record economic activity in Europe. Our Swedish Economic Diffusion Index, which incorporates 14 data series from the Nordic country, points toward a further acceleration in the Euro Area PMIs relative to the US (Chart 3). It is also consistent with a pick-up in the performance of European equities relative to the US. These important indicators of the European economy reflect a variety of forces at play that increasingly point toward stronger growth. Among them, the improvement in the pace of vaccination is crucial to lifting the mood across the continent. As the top panel of Chart 4 illustrates, the number of daily vaccine doses administered across major Euro Area economies is accelerating sharply. While it took three months to inoculate 20% of the population, it only took one month to raise the vaccinated population to nearly 40% (Chart 4, bottom panel). Chart 3Sweden Leads The Eurozone Chart 4Accelerating Vaccinations Euro Area fiscal policy is also moving in a more growth-friendly direction. The Italian Budget announced on April 26 will add EUR248 billion in spending over the next six years. For the moment, Germany has abandoned its debt brake, and, as we wrote three weeks ago, the September election is likely to reify this outcome and further ease fiscal policy in Europe’s biggest economy. Spain is the second largest recipient of the NGEU funds, and it is expected to increase fiscal spending by EUR167 billion over the coming six years. In addition, France has yet to give clear hints about its plan, but next year’s elections are likely to result in further stimulus measures as well. Thus, fiscal easing in Europe will only increase from this point on (Chart 5). Chart 5The Expanding European Stimulus Accumulated pent-up demand remains another potent fuel for growth in the Euro Area. Unlike in the US, spending on durable goods in the Eurozone has not overtaken its pre-pandemic levels (Chart 6). Furthermore, global inventory-to-sales ratio are low, which hints at a coming inventory restocking cycle. These two trends will benefit Euro Area economic activity. The service sector recovery has more to go. Despite some recent improvements, the Eurozone’s Service PMI remains depressed compared to that of the US (Chart 7, top panel). However, the acceleration in the European vaccination campaign and the continued injection of fiscal support at the same time as the lockdowns ebb should result in a significant catch up in service activity in the Euro Area. Thus, the double-dip recession is on the verge of ending and giving way to a robust GDP expansion (Chart 7, bottom panel). Chart 6Ample European Pent-up Demand Chart 7The Service Sector Recovery Is Paramount Even though the recovery in GDP growth will lead to strong positive economic surprises for the Euro Area, consensus growth expectations for the region remain conservative. According to Bloomberg, Eurozone annual GDP growth is expected to reach 12.6% in Q2 because of an extremely strong base effect. However, growth will decelerate suddenly and hit 2.3% in Q3 and 4.3% in Q4. Growth is anticipated to be 4.1% in 2022. These are low thresholds to beat, and thus, economic surprises will remain positive. Chart 8Decomposing The Surprises The source of positive economic surprises is likely to be broad-based. If the service sector recaptures some of its previous shine, the Surveys and Business Cycle component and the Labor Market component of the Bloomberg surprises index will improve and remain positive for many months (Chart 8). Moreover, the absorption of pent-up demand will allow the Retail and Wholesale as well the Personal/Household components to remain robust or firm up further. Finally, the strength of the global manufacturing sector and the elevated potential for a global inventory restocking will allow the Industrial component to firm up anew. Bottom Line: The European economy is in a good place to validate the upbeat message from the KOF Economic Barometer or the Swedish Economic Diffusion Index. Since expectations for European economic activity are still limited for the second half of 2021, this strong growth performance will result in positive economic surprises. Investment Implications The heightened odds that Europe will generate significant positive economic surprises for the coming quarters means that investors’ perspective of the Euro Area will gradually improve. While this process will ultimately curtail the ability of Europe to beat expectations, it will also lift Eurozone assets. If our forecast is correct that European economic surprises will largely be positive over the coming 6 to 12 months, then European equities are more likely to generate generous returns than otherwise. Table 1 highlights that positive changes in the Economic Surprise Index (ESI) on a 3-month, 6-month, and 12-month horizon coincide with returns of the Euro Area MSCI equity benchmarks that have positive batting averages of 72%, 70%, and 73%, respectively. Moreover, the average and median returns are significantly higher than when the ESI deteriorates. Table 1Forecasting Strong Surprises Means Forecasting Strong Equity Returns The signal from the ESI is weaker if we do not make forecasts about its direction. The batting averages of subsequent 3-month and 6-month equity returns following an improving ESI are 63% and 69%, respectively, and the median subsequent returns are higher than if today’s ESI is deteriorating, but not to the same extent as when we make a forecast of the ESI. 12-month returns for the Eurozone MSCI index have a 58% chance of being positive, if the ESI increases over a 12-month window, which is lower than the 63% batting average if the ESI worsens. Moreover, average and median 12-month expected returns are somewhat higher if the ESI has been deteriorating rather than improving over the past 12-month period. European small cap equities will be prime beneficiaries of the coming growth outperformance. From an economic perspective, this makes sense because small-cap stocks are geared more toward domestic growth than large-cap equities, which are dominated by multinationals. Table 2 shows that 3-month, 6-month, and 12-month periods of improvement in the surprise index precede an outperformance of small-cap relative to large-cap stocks over similar windows of time. Thus, the current positive level of the European ESI and its ability to rise further should favor small-cap European equities. Table 2Favor Small-Cap Stocks Table 3A Bullish Backdrop For EUR/USD The same exercise shows that the outlook also favors the euro. European economic surprises should continue to outpace the US, because Eurozone growth will catch up to the US, but investors already have much loftier expectations for US activity than for the Euro Area. Table 3 illustrates that periods when the Eurozone’s ESI is greater than that of the US, EUR/USD generates a positive 3-month return 65% of the time, with a median gain of 1.3%. When the US ESI is higher, the EUR/USD depreciates 55% of the time, with a median loss of -0.5%. Chart 9Rising German Yields? Finally, the potential for stronger European ESI is negative for Bunds. Speeches by various members of the European Central Bank Governing Council indicate that the ECB will tolerate higher yields, if they reflect stronger economic activity. As the European vaccination campaign advances and the fiscal stimulus increases, the need to maintain depressed Bunds yields recedes. Hence, a continuation of positive ESI readings is now more likely to boost these yields. Additionally, the gap between the European ESI and the US one will remain positive, thus, a period of rising German yields relative to the US is more likely (Chart 9).  Bottom Line: The ability of the European economy to continue to surprise positively should generate attractive equity returns on the continent. Moreover, this economic backdrop is consistent with an outperformance of small-cap equities, as well as an appreciating EUR/USD. Under these circumstances, Bunds yields should experience more upside. Country Focus: The UK’s Outlook Is Brightening, Unsurprisingly Last week, the Bank of England left the total size of its asset purchase program in place at GBP875 billion, even if the weekly pace of purchases was slowed to GBP3.4 billion from GBP4.4 billion. The BoE also raised its 2021 growth forecast to 7.5%, from 5% in February.  The BoE is joining the Bank of Canada as one of the first central banks to taper its asset purchase program. It will also be one of the first central banks to increase interest rates, after the Norges Bank, but ahead of the Fed. In a way, the UK shares many similarities with our recent positive depiction of the Swedish economy. Chart 10Support For Household Net Worth The rapid pace of vaccination in the UK allows for a vigorous economic recovery. In all likelihood, the UK economy will have contracted in Q1 2021 because of the severe lockdowns that prevailed then; however, these lockdowns are being eased and economic fundamentals point up. Our Global Fixed Income and Foreign Exchange strategists recently demonstrated that house prices are increasing on the back of rising mortgage approvals and falling household debt-servicing obligations (Chart 10). The robust readings of the RICS House Prices survey only confirm the positive outlook for housing prices. Expanding house prices will elevate consumption. An appreciating housing stock boosts the wealth of households and leads to higher UK consumer confidence. Moreover, business confidence is improving; the rise in capex intentions not only indicates that investments will increase, but is also a precursor to climbing job vacancies (Chart 11). Brighter labor market prospects often result in rising consumption, especially if wages firm up, as we argued seven weeks ago. The current bout of economic strength points to some upside in UK inflation as well. The elevated PMI readings and the rapid increase in construction activity are reliable forecasters of higher CPI prints (Chart 12). However, this not a uniquely British phenomenon, and it remains to be seen how durable this rising inflation will be. Chart 11UK Consumption Will Rise More Chart 12Accelerating UK Inflation   Despite this positive economic outlook, investors should adopt a more cautious tactical stance toward UK markets. The problem for British assets is that investors have understood UK’s vaccination strength so well that they embed much optimism in the price of financial instruments levered to domestic economic activity. In contrast to the Eurozone, Bloomberg consensus forecast anticipate Q2 year-on-year GDP growth of 20.7%, 6.1% for Q3 and 6.5% for Q4. Cable is particularly ripe for some near-term profit taking. Our Intermediate-Term Technical Indicator and the 52-week rate of change of GBP/USD, as well as net speculative positions and sentiment, all point to a correction in that pair (Chart 13). Moreover, the 13-week momentum measure for EUR/GBP shows that the rapid decline in this cross is also overdone. As a result, BCA’s Foreign Exchange strategists closed their short EUR/GBP position to book some gains.  It is also time to downgrade British mid- and small-cap stocks from our current overweight stance, at least on a tactical basis. Compared to large-cap UK stocks, small-cap names have moved in a parabolic fashion, and the ratio’s elevated 52-week rate-of-change measure warns of a pullback, especially in light of the deterioration in near-term momentum (Chart 14). The message from technical indicators is particularly concerning, because the forward earnings of small-cap stocks are plunging relative to large cap ones (Chart 15). Additionally, valuation multiples on UK small-cap stocks have vastly outpaced those of their larger counterparts, despite a rapid decline in relative RoE (Chart 16). Chart 13Cable Is Ripe For Some Near-Term Profit Taking Chart 14UK Small-Cap Stocks Are Technically Vulnerable Chart 15Deteriorating Profit Performance Chart 16Quite The Valuation Premium Ultimately, these cautious views are of a short-term nature. BCA’s Foreign Exchange strategists remain upbeat on the pound on a 12- to 24-month basis. Cable continues to trade at a deep discount to our purchasing-power parity estimate, which adjusts for the composition of price indexes in the UK and the US (Chart 17). Moreover, real short rate differentials still favor GBP/USD. The pound also trades at a discount to the euro based on long-term valuation metrics. Most importantly, real interest rates differentials at both the short- and long-end of the curve, as well as the outlook for the evolution of monetary policy in the UK relative to the Euro Area, indicate a significantly lower EUR/GBP (Chart 18). Chart 17Despite Nera-term risks, Cable's Cyclical Underpinning Is Strong Chart 18Lower EUR/GBP Ahead For small-cap equities, the cyclical picture is more complex. On the one hand, their domestic exposure and a higher pound over the coming 12 to 24 months should help them, unlike the large-cap UK stocks, which derive most of their income from abroad and are negatively affected by a higher GBP. On the other hand, UK small-cap stocks have become so expensive that we need to see how an appreciating pound will boost their earnings relative to large-cap stocks before adjusting our neutral stance. Bottom Line: The strong UK economy will allow the BoE to be one of the first major DM central banks to tighten policy. This will support a further appreciation of the pound against both the dollar and the euro over the coming 12 to 24 months. Nonetheless, the GBP has been overbought on a tactical basis and is vulnerable to a near-term pullback. Similarly, compared to large-cap equities, we are downgrading small-cap UK stocks from overweight to neutral on a tactical basis.   Mathieu Savary, Chief European Investment Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Jeremie Peloso, Associate Editor JeremieP@bcaresearch.com   Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Trades Currency Performance Fixed Income Performance Government Bonds Corporate Bonds Equity Performance Major Stock Indices Geographic Performance Sector Performance​​​​​​​ Closed Trades
Special Report Highlights The Scottish parliamentary election does not present a near-term risk of a second referendum on Scottish independence. Independence is possible down the road but very unlikely due to a host of economic and geopolitical challenges still relevant in the twenty-first century. Book gains on long CHF-GBP. Go long FTSE 100 versus developed markets excluding the United States. Feature British equities have underperformed developed markets over the past decade – even if we exclude the market-leading United States (Chart 1). The British equity market is heavily concentrated in cyclical sectors like financials and materials and has a low concentration in information technology and communications services. As such the bourse has sprung to life since the advent of the COVID-19 vaccine and the prospect of a government-stimulated global growth recovery. In keeping with our strategic preference for value over growth we also look constructively at British equities. A potential source of geopolitical and political risk is Britain’s ongoing constitutional crisis, which flared up with the failed Scottish independence referendum in 2014 and the successful referendum to leave the EU in 2016. Tensions within the UK and between the UK and EU are part of the same problem – a loss of popular confidence and trust in the current nation-state and governing institutions in the aftermath of hyper-globalization.1 This constitutional crisis added insult to injury for UK stocks by jacking up policy uncertainty and undermining the attractiveness of domestic-oriented UK companies that suffered from trade disruptions with the European Union. Chart 1UK Referendums Added Insult To Injury Chart 2Post-Brexit Trading Range For GBP-EUR Now the COVID-19 pandemic and its aftermath have changed the global scene entirely and Brexit is no longer Britain’s chief concern. But there is still a lingering question over Scotland’s status. The Scottish question has recently weighed on the British pound and reinforced the new trading range for the GBP-EUR exchange rate in the aftermath of a “hard” exit from the European Union (Chart 2). Scotland voted for a new parliament on May 6 and the preliminary results are coming in as we go to press. The pro-independence Scottish National Party is still the most popular party and even if it falls short of a majority, as online betting markets expect, it has pro-independence allies with which it could form a coalition (Chart 3). Its leader, Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, has promised to pursue a second popular referendum on seceding from the United Kingdom by 2023. Chart 3Betting Markets Doubt Single-Party Majority For SNP British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, backed by a strong Conservative Party parliamentary majority, has vowed not to allow a second referendum, arguing that the 2014 plebiscite was supposed to lay the question to rest for a while. Scottish opinion in favor of secession stands at 43.6% today, right near the 44.7% that nationalists achieved in 2014 (Chart 4). Chart 4Support For Independence Ticks Down, Still Shy Of Majority Our takeaway is to fade the Scottish risk. Book gains on our long CHF-GBP tactical trade. Go long British equities relative to DM-ex-US on the expectation of global economic normalization, which is beneficially for the outwardly oriented British multinationals that dominate the British bourse. Does Scotland Have Grand Strategy? The history of Scotland is marked by internal differences that prevent it from achieving unity and independence. Even in the twenty-first century, when many factors have coalesced to make Scottish independence more likely than at any time since the eighteenth century, the 2014 referendum produced a 10% gap in favor of remaining in the United Kingdom. This majority is all the more compelling when viewed from the perspective of geography because cross-regional support for the union is clear (Map 1). Map 1Scottish Independence Referendum Result, 2014 Why is Scotland always divided? Because it is trapped by the sea and adjacent to a greater power, England. England is usually strong enough to keep Scotland from consolidating power and asserting control over its maritime and land borders. Specifically, Scotland contains a small population (at 5.5 million today) and small economic base (GBP 155 billion in economic output at the end of 2022) dispersed over an inconvenient geography. The low-lying plains around the Firth of Forth that form the historic core of Scotland share a porous border with England. The highlands provide a retreat for Scottish forces during times of conflict, which makes it extremely difficult for southern forces, whether Roman or Anglo-Saxon, to conquer Scotland. But the highlands are equally hard for any standalone Scottish state to rule. Meanwhile the western isles are even more remote from the seat of Scottish power and vulnerable to foreign maritime powers. Since England could never conquer Scotland, its solution was to coopt the Scottish elite, who reciprocated, culminating in a merger of the two monarchies and then the two states in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The British empire provided Scotland with peace, prosperity, and access to the rest of the world. History and geopolitics do not imply that Scottish independence is impossible, i.e. that union with the rest of Britain is inevitable and permanent. The Anglo-Scots union is only 314 or 418 years old, whereas Scotland existed as a recognizable kingdom for roughly six centuries prior to the joining of the crowns in 1603. It is entirely possible for Scotland to secede and break up the union known as Great Britain. The principle of rule by consent and modern democratic ideology make it difficult for London and Westminster to force Scotland into subjection like in the old days. In particular, American hegemony over Europe since WWII and the rise of the European Union have created a pathway for Scottish independence. England is no longer the indispensable gateway to peace and prosperity. Scotland can exist independently under the EU’s economic umbrella and the American security umbrella.   Europe has always played a major role in Scotland’s political fate and has always held the key to independence. Independence usually failed because European powers failed to devote large and steady resources to supporting Scotland militarily and economically. France was Scotland’s greatest patron and would lend its support for Scottish rebellion. But France also consistently failed Scotland (and Ireland) at critical junctures when independence might have been obtained. This is because France’s interests lay in distracting England rather than adopting Scotland. Chart 5Scottish Energy Production In Decline Today’s unified European continent could be a much greater patron than France ever was alone. The EU could assure Scotland of investment and access to markets even in the face of British resistance. However, the EU is still not politically unified: some members fear separatism in their own borders and therefore tend to oppose Scottish accession. It is possible that the EU could overcome this difficulty but only after a series of major events (on which more below). It took an American empire to clear the way for Irish independence. But Ireland has the moat of the Irish Sea – and the United Kingdom still retained Northern Ireland. Today the United States can be expected to keep its distance from quarrels within the UK or between the UK and EU. However, it does not have an interest in Scottish secession or any other disintegration of the UK, whether from a global security point of view (the West’s conflict with Russia) or even from the point of view of US grand strategy relative to Europe (prevention of a European empire that could challenge the US). An independent Scotland would struggle economically. Its declining base of fossil fuel reserves illustrates the problem of generating sufficient revenue to maintain the Scandinavian-style social welfare state that Scotland’s nationalists imagine (Chart 5). Scottish nationalists are keen to embrace renewable energy – and the Scottish Greens are pro-independence – yet Scotland is not a manufacturing powerhouse that will produce its own solar panels and windmills. In the face of economic difficulties, Scotland would become politically divided like it was for most of its history prior to union with England. England would revert to an obstructive or sabotaging role. It is telling that the Scottish voter turnout in the 2014 independence referendum was very strong – much stronger than in other recent elections and plebiscites, including the Brexit referendum in Scotland (Table 1). The implication is that it is much harder for Scotland to strike out on its own than it appears. Opinion polling cited above suggests that neither Brexit nor the COVID-19 pandemic has moved the needle decisively in the direction of independence. If anything it is the opposite. The Scottish National Party has lost momentum since 2014 and is losing momentum in advance of today’s local election, which has been pitched as the opportunity to make a second go at independence (Chart 6). Table 1Scotland: High Turnout In 2014 Independence Referendum Implies Firm Conclusion To Stay In UK Chart 6Scottish National Party Losing Momentum Just Ahead Of Holyrood Election Bottom Line: History suggests that the geopolitical and macroeconomic barriers to a unified and independent Scottish state are higher and stronger than they may appear at any given time, including the inevitable periods of tensions with England like today. The UK’s Saving Graces A fair question is whether the UK’s decision to leave the EU since 2016 has changed Scotland’s calculus. Brexit may also have affected the international context, reducing the EU’s willingness to intervene on the UK’s behalf and discourage Scottish ambitions. However, a handful of factors supports the continuation of the union despite Scotland’s grievances. The UK proved a boon amid COVID-19: While 62% of Scots voted against Brexit, the COVID-19 pandemic and recession have supplanted Brexit as the nation’s chief cause of concern. The UK and Scotland saw a higher rate of deaths during the biggest waves of the pandemic but now the pandemic is effectively over in the UK and Scotland, in stark contrast with the European Union (Chart 7). The UK has provided a net benefit to Scotland by inventing the vaccine and distributing it effectively (Chart 8). Scottish voters would have been worse off had they left the UK in 2014. Of course, Scottish nationalism is apparent in the fact that voters give the credit to Edinburgh while blaming London over its handling of the pandemic (Chart 9). But the underlying material reality – that being part of the UK provided a net benefit – will discourage independence sentiment. The Scottish Conservative Party and Labour Party are both in favor of sustaining the union and have benefited in opinion polling since the pandemic peaked. Chart 7COVID Deaths Collapse In ##br##United Kingdom Chart 8Scotland Benefited From UK Vaccine And Rollout   Chart 9Scots Praise Edinburgh, Blame London On COVID Handling Brexit is a cautionary economic tale: If Brexit is relevant to Scottish voters, it is not the source of grievance that it could have been. Prime Minister Boris Johnson achieved an exit and trade deal at the end of 2019-20 that largely preserves economic ties with the EU. True, the deal has problems that undermine the UK economy and enhance Scottish grievances. But these also serve as a warning to Scots who would attempt to exit the UK, highlighting the economic pitfalls of raising borders and barriers against one’s chief market. The UK’s trade is far more critical to Scotland’s economy than that of the EU (Chart 10).   Chart 10Major Constraint On Scottish Independence Unlike in the case of the UK and EU, Scotland shares the same currency and central bank with the UK. Scotland’s large banking sector stands to suffer drastically if the Bank of England ceases to be a lender of last resort. This would become a major problem at least until Scotland could be assured of admission into the EU and Euro Area. Otherwise redenomination into a national currency would deal an even greater financial and economic blow. Scots  would face a far more painful economic divorce from the UK than the UK faced with the EU. The UK’s fiscal blowout helped Scotland: Since the bank run at Northern Rock in 2007, the UK and Scotland have suffered a series of crises. This instability should discourage risk appetite today when contrasted with the possibility of stimulus-fueled economic recovery. In particular, the UK government is no longer pursuing fiscal austerity – an economic policy that fanned the flames of Scottish secession back in 2012. Indeed, the UK tops the ranks of global fiscal stimulus, according to the change in government net lending and borrowing as reported by the IMF. The UK’s outlier status ensures that Scotland receives more fiscal support than it otherwise would have (Chart 11). A brief comparison with comparable countries – Ireland, Belgium, France, Norway, Portugal – reinforces the point. Chart 11Scotland Benefited From UK Fiscal Blowout The UK’s aggressive policy of monetary and fiscal reflation is not a coincidence. It stems from the past two decades’ constitutional and political struggles – it is an outgrowth of domestic instability and populism. It includes an industrial policy, a green energy policy, and other rebuilding measures to combat the erosion of the state in the wake of hyper-globalization. Essentially the UK, even under a Tory government, is now about debt monetization and nation-building. While Scotland would have trouble bargaining for its share of EU resources, it benefits from the UK’s shift to government largesse and can use the threat of independence to receive greater funds from the United Kingdom. Geopolitics discourages a fledgling Scottish nation. Scotland hosts naval and air bases of considerable value to the UK, US, and broader NATO alliance. Former US President Trump’s punitive measures against the European allies and open doubts about the US’s commitment to NATO’s collective security illustrated the dangers of western divisions in the face of autocratic regimes like Russia and China. The US and EU are now recommitting to their economic and security bonds under the Biden administration. Scottish independence would undermine this recommitment and as such the small country would pit itself against the US, EU, and NATO. While the US and NATO would ultimately admit Scotland into collective security, for fear of cultivating a neutral Scotland that could eventually be exploited by Russia, they would likely discourage independence ahead of time to prevent a historic division within the UK and NATO. Chart 12No Urgency For A Second Referendum As for the EU, the Spanish government has indicated that it would be willing to make an exception for Scottish independence if it were negotiated amicably with the United Kingdom.2 Such statements are doubtful, however, as any successful secession would lend ideological credibility to Spanish secessionism – not only in Catalonia but also in the Basque country and elsewhere. And Spain is not the only country that harbors deep hesitations over Scottish accession to the European Union. Belgium, Slovakia, and Cyprus could also oppose it. It only takes a single veto to halt the whole accession process. Ultimately the EU could accept Scotland, just as would NATO, to avoid the dangers of having a neutral state in a strategic location. But the point is that Scottish voters cannot be certain. For example, Scotland cannot secure EU accession prior to leaving the UK and yet to leave the UK and fail to achieve EU accession would render it a fledgling. This explains why Scottish voters are not eager to hold a new independence referendum (Chart 12). Bottom Line: The UK offers medical, economic, fiscal, and geopolitical advantages to Scotland that independence would revoke. The context of Great Power struggle with Russia and China means that an independent Scotland would probably ultimately be admitted into NATO and the EU – but Scottish voters cannot be certain, a factor that discourages independence at least in the short and medium run. Scottish Hurdles Table 2 highlights the historic results of Scottish elections according to political party, popular vote share, and share of seats in parliament. Early, tentative signs suggest that the Scottish National Party maxed out in 2011. The party has suffered from a leadership schism, offshoot parties, and a distraction of its key message since 2014. The implication is not only that Scottish independence is on ice for now but also that the tumultuous constitutional disagreements are subsiding and voters want to focus on economic recovery. Table 2Scottish National Party Hit High-Water Mark In 2011? If the Scottish National Party manages to form a majority coalition capable of pushing forward a second referendum, it will face several hurdles. It will need a UK Supreme Court ruling on the legality of a referendum. If a referendum is declared legal (as it very likely will be), Scotland will need to forge an agreement with Prime Minister Boris Johnson to hold a referendum. If a referendum eventually is held and passes, an exit will need to be negotiated. In a post-Brexit world, investors cannot assume that any referendum will fail or that a referendum is a domestic political ploy that the ruling party has no serious intention of following through. Nevertheless it is true that the Scottish National Party could use the threat of a referendum to agree to negotiate a greater devolution of power from Westminster. The party could hold up England’s concessions as a victory while retaining the independence threat as leverage for a later date. Devolution in the past has strengthened the independence cause, as in the creation of the Scottish parliament in 1999. After all, a referendum loss would be devastating for the nationalists, whereas the threat of a referendum could yield victories without depriving the nationalists of their reason for being. It is notable that First Minister Nicola Sturgeon promised not to hold a “wildcat” referendum, in which Scotland holds a referendum regardless of what Westminster or the UK Supreme Court say. The implication is that Scottish nationalism is looking for a stable way to exit. But if stability is the hope then there is dubious support for independence in the first place. A wildcat referendum is theoretically still an option but a formal process with popular support is much more likely to result in a successful referendum than an informal process with dubious popular support. Chart 13Scotland’s Chronic Deficits If Scottish independence succeeded in any wildcat referendum, an extreme controversy would follow as Edinburgh tried to translate this result to the formal political and constitutional sphere. If the referendum were not recognized by the UK then Scotland would be forced to secede unilaterally at greater economic cost. Otherwise a third referendum (second formal referendum) would need to be held to confirm the results. Any third referendum would be irrevocable. As with Brexit, the secessionists would have to carry one or more subsequent elections to execute the political will in the event of secession. The point for investors is that volatility would be prolonged as was the case with Brexit. A major complication in Scottish independence remains the problem of public finances. Scotland’s fiscal standing is weak. Scotland ran a 9.4% of GDP budget deficit prior to COVID-19, excluding transfers from the UK, which compensates for a gap of about 6% of GDP (Chart 13).3 The country maintains generous social spending alongside a low-tax regime. There is no sign of correction as all Scottish parties are proposing more expansive social spending in the parliamentary election. The Scottish National Party is even proposing universal basic income. Scotland’s emergency COVID deficits are larger than the UK’s as well and projections over the coming years suggest that they will stay elevated. Historically economic growth keeps closely in line with the rest of the UK and there is no reason to believe independence would boost growth. The implication is that Scotland would have to curtail spending or raise taxes to come into line with UK-sized deficits, which are not small (Chart 14).4 Of course Scotland would not embrace austerity unless financial market pressure forced it to do so. Chart 14Scottish Deficit Projected Larger Than UK Scotland would become a high-debt economy. Its public debt-to-GDP ratio would be about 97%, on a back-of-the-envelope calculation. Back in 2013 estimates ranged around 80% of GDP.5 The Scottish National Party’s Sustainable Growth Commission projected in 2018 – before the pandemic blew an even wider hole in the budget deficit – that deficits would nearly have to be cut in half (i.e. capped at 5% of GDP and falling) to achieve a 50% debt-to-GDP ratio over 10 years.6 This is not going to happen. Scotland would also have to take on a portion of the UK’s national debt if it were to have an amicable divorce from the UK and retain the pound sterling. But then much of its newfound independence would be compromised from the beginning by legacy debt and monetary policy shackles. Similar restrictions would come with EU and euro membership. Any accession process after the pandemic would require conformity to the EU’s growth and stability pact, which limits deficits and debt. Redenomination into a national currency, as noted, would dilute domestic wealth, zap the financial industry, and self-impose austerity. Bottom Line: Even if the Scottish nationalists manage to put together a pro-independence majority in Edinburgh, they face a complex process in setting up a referendum. Its passage is doubtful based on the current evidence. But obviously in the wake of Brexit investors should not assume that a referendum attempt will fail or that a successful referendum will be thwarted by parliament after a “leave” vote. The timeline for a second referendum is not imminent – and Scottish independence is highly unlikely, albeit possible at some future date given that middle-aged Scots lean in favor of independence.   Investment Takeaways We will conclude with two market takeaways: Chart 15UK Stocks Recovering From Referendum Fever Chart 16Hindsight On How To Play A Constitutional Struggle The UK’s referendum fever has compounded political uncertainty and contributed to negative factors for the UK equity market over the past decade. A segmentation of the FTSE 100 according to country shows that Scottish-based companies’ share prices rolled over in the aftermath of the 2014 referendum, while the non-Scottish segment performed better (Chart 15). The implication is not that the referendum caused stocks to fall but that the 2014 independence push was the result of national exuberance supercharged by high commodity prices. Enthusiasm for independence has been flat since that time. What is clear is that financial markets look even less favorably upon Scottish equities than other British equities – another sign of the economic problems that will ultimately discourage Scottish voters from going it alone. In advance of the Scottish election, we went tactically long the Swiss franc relative to the British pound to capitalize on jitters that we expected to hit the currency. This trade was in keeping with the long fall of GBP-CHF over the past decade (Chart 16). But the stronger forces of global stimulus, vaccination, economic normalization, and recovery will soon provide a tailwind for sterling yet again. Therefore we are booking 1% gains and shifting to a more optimistic outlook on the pound. With the Brexit saga and the COVID crisis in the rear view mirror, and the tail risk of Scottish independence unlikely, the pound can resume its upward trajectory – at least relative to the Swiss franc. International equities and cyclicals are also poised to continue rising as the world recovers. We recommend investors go long the FTSE 100 relative to developed markets excluding the United States. Matt Gertken Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Jeremy Black, “The Legacy of the Scottish Referendum,” Foreign Policy Research Institute E-Notes, September 22, 2014, fpri.org. 2 See Akash Paun et al, "Scottish Independence: EU Membership And The Anglo-Scottish Border," Institute For Government, March 2021, instituteforgovernment.org.uk. 3 See Eve Hepburn, Michael Keating, and Nicola McEwen, "Scotland’s New Choice: Independence After Brexit," Centre on Constitutional Change, 2021, centreonconstitutionalchange.ac.uk. 4 See David Phillips, "Updated projections of Scotland’s fiscal position – and their implications," Institute for Fiscal Studies, April 29, 2021, ifs.org.uk. 5 Granting that the UK’s general government gross debt stood at GBP 1.88 trillion at the end of 2020, and assuming that Scotland takes on a share of this debt equivalent to Scotland’s share of the UK’s total population and output (roughly 8%), the Scottish debt would stand at GBP 150 billion out of a Scottish GDP at current market prices of GBP 156 billion, or 97% of GDP. For the 2013 estimate of at least 80% of GDP, see David Bell, "Scottish Independence: Debt And Assets," Centre on Constitutional Change, December 3, 2013, centreonconstitutionalchange.ac.uk.  6 Scottish National Party, "Part B: The Framework & Strategy for the Sustainable Public Finances of an Independent Scotland," Sustainable Growth Commission, May 2018, sustainablegrowthcommission.scot. The commission’s debt curbs will have to be revised in the wake of COVID-19. For discussion see Chris Giles and Murie Dickie, "Independent Scotland would face a large hole in its public finances," Financial Times, April 2, 2021, ft.com.  
Colombian assets are reeling after President Ivan Duque withdrew a tax reform proposal on Sunday following deadly street protests and political opposition. Finance Minister Alberto Carrasquilla, who designed the bill, resigned on Monday but warned that reform…
Highlights Sweden’s economic recovery is robust and will deepen. Policy is accommodative. Very few advanced economies will benefit as much from the global economic rebound. The labor market will tighten, capacity utilization will increase, and inflation will rise faster than the Riksbank forecasts. On a one- to two-year investment horizon, the SEK is a buy against both the USD and the EUR. Despite their pronounced outperformance, Swedish stocks possess significantly more upside against both Eurozone and US equities over the remainder of the cycle. Swedish industrials will beat their competitors in both these markets. Nonetheless, China’s policy tightening creates a meaningful tactical risk, which selling Norwegian stocks can hedge. Italy’s fiscal plan constitutes a new salvo in Europe’s efforts to avoid last decade’s mistakes. Feature Last week, the Swedish Riksbank did not follow in the footsteps of the Norges Bank. The Swedish central bank acknowledged that the economy is performing better than anticipated and that the housing market is gaining in strength; yet, it refrained from hinting at any forthcoming adjustment to its policy rate or the pace of its asset purchase program. The positive outlook for the Swedish economy will force the Riksbank to tighten policy significantly before the ECB. As a result, we expect the Swedish Krona to outperform the euro and the US dollar. Moreover, investors should continue to overweight Swedish equities due to their large exposure to industrials and financials, even if they have already significantly outperformed the Euro Area. Sweden’s Economic Outlook The Swedish economy will accelerate, which will put pressure on resource utilization and fan inflationary risk in the years ahead. The degree of stimulus supporting Sweden is consequential. Chart 1A Dual Labor Market On the fiscal front, the government support measures that have been announced since the beginning of the COVID-19 crisis currently amount to SEK420bn, or SEK197bn for 2020 (4% of GDP), and SEK223bn for 2021 (4.5% of GDP). Moreover, generous labor market protection and part-time employment schemes meant that the number of employees in permanent employment contracts remained stable during the pandemic (Chart 1). Thus, the bulk of the rise in Swedish unemployment came from workers on fixed-term contracts. Monetary policy remains very accommodative as well. The Riksbank left its repo rate unchanged at 0% through the crisis, but cut its lending rate from 0.75% to 0.1%. More importantly, the Swedish central bank is aggressively injecting liquidity into the economy. It set up a SEK500bn funding-for-lending facility in order to incentivize bank lending to the nonfinancial private sector, and started a SEK700bn QE program, which as of Q1 2021 had purchased SEK380bn securities and which will purchase another SEK120bn in Q2, with covered bonds issued by banks accounting for 70% of it. As a result, the amount of securities held on the Riksbank balance sheet will nearly triple by year end (Chart 2). Chart 2The Riksbank Is Open For Business Beyond the monetary and fiscal stimulus, many factors point to greater economic strength for Sweden. Despite a slow start to the process, as of last week, nearly 30% of the Swedish population had received at least one vaccine dose, which is broadly in line with vaccination rates prevalent in France or Germany. Crucially, the pace of vaccination is accelerating at a rate of 13% per week. Even if this second derivative slows, more than 70% of the population will have received at least one dose by this summer. Thus, greater mobility is in the cards during the second quarter, which will boost household spending. Chart 3The Wealth Effect The housing market also favors a pick-up in consumption. The HOX housing price index is growing at a 15% annual rate, its fastest expansion in over 5 years. As a result of the wealth effect, this rapid appreciation is consistent with a swift improvement in the growth rate of household expenditures (Chart 3). Moreover, spending on durable goods now stands 1.3% above its pre-pandemic levels, while spending on non-durables is back to pre-pandemic levels. This context suggests that increased mobility translates into greater spending. The industrial sector remains a particularly bright spot in the Swedish economy. Sweden is extremely sensitive to the global industrial and trade cycle, because exports represent 45% of GDP. Moreover, the highly cyclical intermediate and capital goods comprise 56% of the country’s foreign shipments, which accentuates the beta of the Swedish economy. BCA Research remains optimistic about the global industrial cycle. Sweden will reap a significant dividend. Already the Swedish PMI points to stronger industrial production, and the index’s exports component is roaring ahead (Chart 4). The potential for a greater uptake in consumption, capex, and durable goods spending in the rest of the EU (Sweden’s largest trading partner) bodes well for the Swedish manufacturing sector. Additionally, if the collapse in the US inventory-to-sales ratio is any indication for the rest of the world, a global restocking cycle is forthcoming, which will further boost Swedish industrial activity (Chart 4, bottom panels). Finally, global public infrastructure plans are on the rise, which will also help Sweden. Chart 4Sweden Is well Placed Chart 5Brightening Labor Market Prospects In this context, the Swedish labor market should tighten significantly in the approaching quarters. Already, job vacancies are rebounding, and redundancy notices have normalized, which matches both the GDP growth surprise in Q1 and the continued rise in the NIER Sweden Economic Tendency Indicator. Furthermore, the employment component of the PMIs stands at 58.9 and is consistent with a sharp improvement in job growth over the coming year (Chart 5). The expected labor market growth will contribute to an increase in capacity utilization, which will place upward pressure on wages and inflation. When the 12-month moving average of US and Eurozone imports rises, so does the Riksbank Resource Utilization Indicator, because global trade has such a pronounced effect on the Swedish economy (Chart 6). Meanwhile, greater resource utilization leads to accelerated inflation, greater labor shortages, and rising unit labor costs (Chart 7).  Chart 6CAPU Will Rise Chart 7The Coming Pressure Buildup Bottom Line: As a result of generous stimulus and the global economic recovery, the Swedish economy is set to continue its rebound. Consequently, employment and capacity utilization will improve meaningfully, which will lead to a resurgence of inflation and wages in the coming 24 months. Investment Implications On a 12 to 24 months horizon, we remain positive on the Swedish krona and Swedish equities. Fixed Income And FX Chart 8Three Hikes By 2025 The backend of the Swedish OIS curve only discounts 75bps of hikes by 2025. This pricing is too modest (Chart 8). The Swedish economy will rebound further as the vaccination campaign advances, and rising house prices and household indebtedness will fan growing long-term risk to financial stability, both of which suggest that the Riksbank will have to change its tack in 2022. The great likelihood that the Fed will start tapering off its asset purchase toward the end this year, that the ECB will follow sometime in 2022, and that the Norges Bank will be increasing interest rates next year will give more leeway to the Swedish central bank. A wider Sweden/Germany 10-year government bond spread is not an appealing vehicle to play a more hawkish Riksbank down the road. This spread hit a 23-year high in March and now rests at 62bps or its 98th percentile since 2000. Moreover, the terminal rate proxy embedded in the German money market curve is currently so low that the spread between Sweden’s and the Eurozone’s terminal rate proxy stands near a record high. Hence, German yields already embed much more pessimism than Swedish ones. Nonetheless, BCA recommends a below benchmark duration exposure within the Swedish fixed-income space, as we do for other government bond markets around the world.1 A bullish bias toward the SEK is a bet on the Riksbank that offers a very appealing risk/reward ratio, according to BCA Research’s Foreign Exchange Strategy strategists.2 The krona is very cheap against both the euro and the US dollar, trading at 9% and 29% discounts to purchasing power parity, respectively. Moreover, the Swedish current account stands at 5.2% of GDP, compared to 2.3% and -3.1% for the Euro Area and the US, creating a natural underpinning under the SEK. Chart 9The SEK Loves Growth Over the coming 12 to 24 months, cyclical forces favor selling EUR/SEK and USD/SEK on any strength. The SEK is one of the most cyclical G-10 currencies and has one of the strongest sensitivities to the US dollar. Hence, our positive global economic outlook and our FX strategists negative view on the greenback are synonymous with a weak USD/SEK. These same factors also mean that the krona will appreciate more than the euro, as the negative correlation between EUR/SEK and our Boom/Bust Indicator and global earnings growth illustrate (Chart 9). Equities We also like Swedish equities, but the state of the Swedish economy and the evolution of the Riksbank policy surprise have a limited impact on Swedish equities. The Swedish bourse is mostly about the evolution of the global business cycle. The Swedish benchmark heightened sensitivity to the global business cycle reflects its massive overweight in deep cyclicals, with industrials, financials, consumer discretionary, and materials accounting for 38.4%, 26.1%, 9.7% and 3.7% of the MSCI index respectively, or 78% altogether (Table 1). As a result, BCA’s preference for global cyclicals at the expense of defensives and this publication’s fondness for the recovery laggards like the industrial and financial sectors automatically translate into a favorable bias toward Sweden’s stocks.3 Table 1Mamma Mia! That’s A Lot Of Cyclicals Valuations offer a more complex picture, but they do not diminish our predilection for Sweden. Swedish equities trade at a discount to US stocks but at a premium to Euro Area ones (Chart 10). However, Swedish stocks offer higher RoEs and profit margins than both the US and the Euro Area, while also sporting lower leverage (Chart 11). Thus, their valuation premium to Euro Area stocks is warranted and their discount to US ones is excessive, especially when rising yields hurt the relative performance of the growth stocks that dominate US indexes. Chart 10Swedish Discounts And Premia Chart 11Profitable Sweden The outlook for Swedish earnings is appealing, both in absolute and relative terms. The Swedish market’s extreme sensitivity to global economic activity means that Sweden’s EPS increase and beat US profits when the Riksbank Resource Utilization Indicator expands (Chart 12). These relationships are artefacts of the Swedish economy’s pro-cyclicality, which causes capacity utilization to interweave tightly with the global business cycle (Chart 6). Chart 12The Winner Takes It All Chart 13Better Capex Play Than You Global capex and infrastructure spending favor Swedish equities compared to Euro Area ones. Over the past thirty years, Sweden’s stocks have outperformed those of the Eurozone when capital goods orders in the advanced economies have expanded (Chart 13). This reflects the Swedish benchmark’s large overweight in industrials, a sector that is the prime beneficiary of global capex. Capital goods orders are recovering well, and their growth rate can climb higher, especially as western multinationals announce capex plans and as governments from the US to Italy intend to ramp up infrastructure spending. Moreover, the large pent-up demand for durable goods in the Eurozone further enhances the potential of industrial firms, and thus, of Swedish equities.4  Chart 14Another Sign Of Pro-Cyclicality BCA Research’s positive cyclical stance on commodities offers another reason to overweight Sweden’s market relative to that of the US and the Euro Area. Our Commodity and Energy Strategy sister service anticipates significant further upside for natural resources, especially base metals, over the remainder of the business cycle.5 Commodity prices still have room to rally, because demand will grow as the global economy continues to recover and because the supply of natural resources has been constrained by a decade of low investment. As a result, rising metal prices will symptomatize strong economic activity around the world and will incentivize capex in commodity extraction, both of which will boost the revenue of industrial firms. Furthermore, commodity price inflation often corresponds with rising yields, which boosts financials as well. These relationships explain the Swedish stocks’ outperformance of US and Eurozone stocks, when natural resource prices rally, despite the former’s low exposure to materials (Chart 14). At the sector level, the appeal of Swedish industrials relative to those of the Eurozone and the US completes the rationale to favor Swedish equities in a global portfolio. Swedish industrials are just as profitable as US ones and are more so than Euro Area ones, while having significantly lower leverage than either of them (Chart 15). Additionally, for the past two years, the EPS growth of Swedish industrials has bested that of US and Eurozone ones. Yet, their forward P/E ratio trades in line with the US and the Euro Area, while the sell-side’s long-term relative earnings growth estimate is too depressed (Chart 16). The same observations are valid when comparing Swedish industrials to French or German ones. Hence, in the context of a global business cycle upswing, buying Swedish industrials while selling their US and Euro Area competitors is an appealing pair trade, especially since it also involves short USD/SEK and short EUR/SEK bets. Chart 15Attractive Swedish Industrials... Chart 16...And Not Expensive Despite our optimism toward Swedish stocks on a 12 to 24 months basis, investors must hedge a near-term risk. Chinese authorities are aiming to contain financial excesses and trying to restrain credit growth. As we showed four weeks ago, China’s excess reserve ratio is contracting, which points toward a slowdown in the Chinese credit impulse.6 Historically, such a development can hurt global cyclicals, and thus, also Swedish equities. However, BCA Research’s China strategists believe that Beijing will not kill off the Chinese business cycle; thus, the recent disappointment in the Chinese PMI is transitory.7   Chart 17Industrials vs Materials: Europe vs China Materials more than industrials will suffer the brunt of a China slowdown, as the re-opening trade and capex cycle among advanced economies will create a buffer for the latter. Indeed, the performance of global industrials relative to materials stocks correlates with the evolution of the spread between the Euro Area and Chinese PMI (Chart 17). Thus, we recommend selling Norwegian equities to hedge the tactical risk inherent in an overweight on Sweden. As Table 1 above shows, Norway overweighs materials and energy (two sectors greatly exposed to China), hence, a temporary pullback in commodity prices should hurt Norwegian stocks more than Swedish ones. Bottom Line: The SEK is an inexpensive and attractive vehicle to bet on both the global business cycle strength and the Swedish economic recovery. Thus, investors should use any rebound in EUR/SEK and USD/SEK to sell these pairs. Moreover, Swedish stocks greatly overweight cyclical sectors, particularly industrials and materials. This sectoral profile renders Swedish equities as attractive bets on the global economy. Additionally, Swedish shares display alluring operating metrics. As a result, we recommend investors go long Swedish industrials relative to those of the US and Euro Area. They should also overweight Swedish equities against the US and the Eurozone. Consequent to some China-related tactical risks, an underweight stance on Norwegian stocks constitutes an attractive hedge to this Swedish exposure. A Few Words On Italy’s National Recovery And Resilience Plan Mario Draghi’s plan to revive the Italian economy, announced last week, is an important marker of Europe’s changing relationship with fiscal policy. Last decade, excessive austerity contributed to subpar growth, ultimately firing up concerns about debt sustainability in many peripheral economies, and fueled risk premia in Italy and Spain. Under the cover of the current crisis, and in the face of the changing political winds in Brussel and Berlin where fiscal rectitude is not the mantra it once was, national European governments are beginning to propose ambitious fiscal stimulus plans. The National Recovery and Resilience program illustrates these dynamics. The EUR248bn plan is a testament to the importance of the NGEU recovery program as well as the REACT EU recovery fund. Through these facilities, the EU will contribute EUR191.5bn to the fiscal plan via grants and loans. Italy will contribute the remainder of the funds. While the total amount disbursed over the next six years corresponds to 14% of Italy’s 2019 GDP, the Draghi government estimates that the program will add 3.2 percentage points to GDP between 2024 and 2026. Importantly, markets are not rebelling. Despite expectations that Italy would continue to run an accommodative fiscal policy, the BTP/Bund spreads remain stable. We can expect this trend of greater stimulus to be mimicked around the EU. Spain is another large recipient of the NGEU program, and it too is likely to increase stimulus beyond what the EU will fund. France will hold an election in May 2022, and President Macron has all the incentives to stimulate the economy between now and then. If, as we wrote last week, Germany shifts to the left in September, then this outcome will be guaranteed. Bottom Line: The Draghi plan is the first salvo of greater fiscal stimulus in the EU. This trend will help Eurozone growth improve relative to the US over the coming few years. Despite a loose fiscal policy, BTPs and other peripheral bonds will continue to outperform on the back of declining risk premia.   Mathieu Savary, Chief European Investment Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1Please see Global Fixed Income Strategy “GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Q1/2021 Performance Review & Current Allocations: Grand Reopening,” dated April 6, 2021, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com 2Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy “2021 Key Views: Tradeable Themes,” dated December 4, 2020, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 3Please see European Investment Strategy “Summer Of ‘21,” dated March 22, 2021, available at eis.bcaresearch.com 4Please see European Investment Strategy “Winds Of Change: Germany Goes Green,” dated April 23, 2021, available at eis.bcaresearch.com 5Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy “Industrial Commodities Super-Cycle Or Bull Market?” dated March 4, 2021, available at ces.bcaresearch.com 6Please see European Investment Strategy “The Euro Dance: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward,” dated March 29, 2021, available at eis.bcaresearch.com 7Please see China Investment Strategy “National People’s Congress Sets Tone For 2021 Growth,” dated March 17, 2021, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Currency Performance Fixed Income Performance Government Bonds Corporate Bonds Equity Performance Major Stock Indices Geographic Performance Sector Performance Closed Trades
New Zealand has been one of the few countries to get the COVID-19 pandemic under control in short order. Since June of last year, the number of new infections has been practically zero. The travel bubble with Australia has also opened up the service sector to…
Highlights The kiwi will continue to benefit from a pandemic-free recovery and normalization in monetary policy from the RBNZ. However, the kiwi is becoming expensive according to most of our models. This will begin to impact growth via the trade channel. For the rest of the year, the NZD/USD could hit 75 cents, but will likely underperform other developed market currencies. Feature Chart I-1NZD And Relative Economic Growth New Zealand has been one of the few countries to get the COVID-19 pandemic under control in short order. Since June of last year, the number of new infections has been practically zero. The vaccination program is lagging most other developed countries, but the authorities expect most citizens will be inoculated by the end of this year. The travel bubble with Australia has opened up the service sector to a recovery that remains the envy of most other developed economies. The New Zealand dollar has responded in tandem with the improvement in domestic conditions (Chart I-1). While the USD is up this year, NZD has still appreciated by about 1% against the dollar. From the March lows last year, the kiwi is up 22%, only trailing the Australian dollar and Norwegian krone within the G10. In this report, we explore the outlook for the kiwi, looking at key drivers such as the pandemic, the commodities boom, and the prospect for monetary policy amidst a hot housing market. In our view, the NZD still faces upside, but less so than other developed market currencies. A Robust Recovery Together with Singapore and Australia, Bloomberg ranks New Zealand as one of the safest places to be during the pandemic. This has allowed the manufacturing PMI in New Zealand to hit fresh highs, easily surpassing very robust activity in the US. Relative economic performance between New Zealand and its trading partners has tended to define the trend in the currency. The services sector is still trailing behind, as most of the world remains under lockdown (Chart I-2). However, a travel bubble has opened up with Australia, and it is fair to assume that service-sector activity is a coiled spring ready to rebound, especially as tourism constitutes a non-negligible share of New Zealand GDP (Chart I-3). Chart I-2A Recovery In Services Underway Chart I-3Tourism Will Boost NZ GDP Employment in New Zealand has already seen a sizeable recovery. The unemployment rate hit 4.9% in December, very close to the Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s (RBNZ) own estimate of NAIRU. Next week’s release should show an even more robust rebound. Inflation remains well contained at 1.5%, but as the economy begins to bump against supply-side constraints, this should change. The quarterly employment survey showed that wages are rising at a 4% clip. Eventually, a labour market that has fully recovered, burgeoning inflationary pressures and an economy open for business will mean the need for the RBNZ to maintain emergency monetary policy settings will be eliminated. A Terms-Of-Trade Boom While the domestic economy has benefited from strong government support, and very accommodative monetary policy settings, the external environment has also provided a gentle tailwind for the New Zealand economy. Over the last few decades, one of the key primary drivers of the NZD exchange rate has been terms of trade. New Zealand’s top exports are predominantly in agricultural commodities. Strong export growth has boosted the trade balance, both in volume and price terms (Chart I-4). An increasing trade balance naturally means that NZDs are being buffeted with demand. China has led the pack in imports from New Zealand vis-à-vis other countries by simple virtue of the fact that the authorities started injecting stimulus much earlier on, which helped ease domestic financing conditions. China is also New Zealand’s biggest export market. While the credit impulse in China is set to slow this year, demand for foodstuffs is less sensitive compared to demand for other higher-beta commodities. This will support New Zealand exports. At the same time, there has been a supply component to the boom in agricultural commodity prices. Adverse weather has impacted the planting season for many agricultural goods. As a result, stock-to-use ratios have begun to roll over, particularly in some of the goods that New Zealand exports (Chart I-5). This is likely to reverse, as farmers take advantage of higher prices and increase productivity. Chart I-4A Terms Of Trade ##br##Boom Chart I-5Falling Stocks Have Boosted Agricultural Prices In a nutshell, the outperformance of the kiwi has been a combination of supply shocks in the agricultural market, and an economy that has had an impressive rebound. Going forward, the kiwi should continue to do well versus the dollar as economic momentum picks up. The Housing Mandate Housing prices in New Zealand have been on a tear (Chart I-6). As a result, the government has mandated that house price considerations be tied into monetary policy decisions. The direct implication of this is that interest rates in New Zealand are set to increase. In the coming months, the labor market mandate for the RBNZ is about to become a lot tougher, because of the opposing forces between financial and economic stability. Tightening monetary policy too fast and too soon will expose the economy to a potential relapse in growth. But allowing housing prices to continue to become unaffordable for most residents is both politically untenable and economically unsustainable. The end game is likely to be as follows: The RBNZ will be quick to tighten monetary policy on domestic grounds and housing market concerns. This will provide a further boost to the kiwi. Yields in New Zealand are already among the highest in the G10, which will only accelerate with tighter monetary conditions. By the same token, the Chinese economy will likely slow as the credit impulse is peaking. This means New Zealand domestic growth will become more important for the NZD than external conditions. Countries with relatively easier monetary policy will see some benefit. Particularly, the Reserve Bank of Australia might lag the RBNZ. If this eventually benefits the Aussie economy, it might hurt the AUD/NZD cross now, but might make way for fresh long positions later (Chart I-7). Chart I-6A Housing Market Boom Chart I-7Where Next For AUD/NZD? Historically, housing prices in New Zealand have correlated quite strongly with the exchange rate. If the RBNZ is successful in engineering lower housing prices, it will also succeed in weakening the NZD (Chart I-8). Chart I-8House Prices And The Kiwi We were stopped out of our long AUD/NZD trade last week for a modest profit of 2.3%. We are standing aside for the time being, but will be buyers of the cross at 1.05. This will likely be realized towards the end of this year when optimism on the kiwi is likely to peak. How High Can The NZD Bounce? Another reason why the rise in the NZD might soon face strong upside resistance is valuation. Usually, a rise in the NZD over a cycle goes uninterrupted until the cross becomes expensive. On this basis, the kiwi might soon peak. Our purchasing power parity (PPP) models point to a 10% overvaluation in the New Zealand dollar (Chart I-9) versus the USD. Chart I-9The NZD Is Expensive One of our favorite metrics for the kiwi’s fair value is its real effective exchange rate relative to its terms of trade. On this basis, the New Zealand dollar is around fair value. On a longer-term real effective exchange rate basis (REER), the kiwi is 7.4% expensive, or 0.7 standard deviation above the mean (Chart I-10). Chart I-10The NZD Is Expensive The equity market in New Zealand looks particularly vulnerable. Heavily weighted in defensive sectors, this bourse will be particularly vulnerable to a rise in yields that will derail potential equity inflows (Chart I-11). Chart I-11Kiwi Stocks Are Expensive Chart I-12CHF/NZD Could Rise With Volatility Another opportunity is to buy the CHF/NZD cross, which looks attractive at current levels (Chart I-12). Should markets experience some form of turbulence, the cross will benefit. Meanwhile, CHF/NZD just dipped to the upward sloping trend line that has dictated support levels for this cross since 2007. Thus, we recommend investors initiate a long position in CHF/NZD.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 The data out of the US were mildly positive this week. Quarter-on-quarter annualized GDP growth came in at 6.4% in Q1, rising from 4.3% in the previous quarter. Initial jobless claims fell to 553K in the week ended April 23, from 566K the previous week. Consumer Confidence for April came in at 121.7 beating the expected 113. The S&P/Case-Shiller House Price Index rose 11.9% year-on-year in February. Fed maintained the target range for the Fed Funds rate at 0 to 0.25%. The US dollar DXY index was flat this week. Although the dollar advanced earlier in the week with treasury yields posting small gains, it weakened on Wednesday ahead of the Fed meeting. Compared to the record-breaking preliminary PMIs of last Friday, milder data this week and the dovish tone of the Fed aren’t helping the downward trend of the dollar. Report Links: Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears - March 19, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar? - February 19, 2021 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Recent euro area data have been soft. The IFO Business Climate Index inched up only 0.2 points to 96.8 and disappointed expectations of a much more significant increase to 97.8.  The BNB Business Barometer of Belgium surprised to the upside and jumped to a decade high of 4.4 from a revised 1.04. The German GfK Consumer Confidence contracted to -8.8 for May and the French Consumer Confidence stayed the same in April. The euro strengthened by 0.5% against the US dollar this week. The uneven data out of Europe reflects differences in COVID restrictions throughout the region. Tighter measures were announced in some German regions and Belgium is easing restrictions. However, overall, we remain optimistic on the outlook for the entire region as the accelerating vaccination effort should support the economy reopening this summer. We are long EUR/CHF. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 The data out of Japan was scant this week. Bank of Japan maintained interest rates at -0.1%. Retail Sales in March grew 5.2% year-on-year, beating forecasts of 4.7%. The Japanese yen weakened by 0.5% this week. Due to the current state of emergency throughout the country, the Bank of Japan is ready to further ease monetary policy as needed and warned of the likelihood for consumption to stay depressed. That said, our intermediate term indicator is hinting at a rebound in the currency. Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 The data out of the UK this week was positive. The Confederation of British Industry (CBI) retail sales volume balance rose to 20 in April from -45 in March, recording the sharpest growth since 2018. The British pound rose by 0.7% against the US dollar this week. The strong retail sales numbers came amidst lockdowns being lifted. While May will continue to see further restrictions eased, cable faces threats from its own success so far this year as well as UK’s recent political turmoil. Also, both the speculative positioning and our intermediate-term indicator are at elevated levels.  Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 The data out of Australia have been soft lately. CPI in Q1 rose 0.6% versus Q4 last year, below the expected 0.9%. The year-on-year growth of 1.1% also undershot the 1.4% forecast. Trimmed mean CPI grew 0.3% on the prior quarter and 1.1% versus a year ago, both failing to beat expectations.  The Q1 export price index rose 11.2% over the prior quarter, compared to the 5.5% rise in Q4. The Australian dollar rose by 1% against the US dollar this week. In addition to both CPI measures disappointing to the downside, a foreseeable peak in the commodity market driven by the slowdown in China can also be a downward drag on the currency especially when the sentiment on the Aussie is elevated. We are short AUD/MXN and were stopped out of our long AUD/NZD trade. Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency? - January 20, 2021 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 The data out of New Zealand have been neutral. Trade Balance in March improved by NZD 33M over a month ago and NZD 1690M a year ago.  ANZ business confidence came in at -2 in April, higher than the -4.1 the prior month. The New Zealand dollar strengthened by 1% against the US dollar this week. We discuss the kiwi at length in the front section of this week’s report. The conclusion is that NZD faces near-term upside, but will lag other procyclical currencies over the longer term. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 The data out of Canada this week continue to be positive. Both Retail Sales and Core Retail Sales in February grew 4.8% over the prior month, comfortably exceeding the expectations of 3.7% and 4% growth, respectively. The Canadian dollar rose 0.8% against the US dollar this week. The loonie reacted positively to the strong retail numbers as it continues its path upward on strong inflation data of recent months and a hawkish Bank of Canada. However, even as the COVID case count appears to have peaked, there remains downside risks of very elevated commodity prices and our intermediate-term indicator still just off a recent peak. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? - February 12, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 There was scant data out of Switzerland this week. ZEW expectations for April came in at 68.3, slightly higher than the 66.7 from the prior month. The Swiss franc rose 0.4% against the US dollar this week. While the waning of investors’ sentiment and net speculative positioning may point to some softening in the near term, the recent COVID crisis in India can provide support to this risk-off currency. We are long EUR/CHF. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 The data out of Norway this week was positive. Core Retail Sales came in unchanged in March versus the prior month, but beat expectations of a 0.9% decline. The Norwegian krone was 0.8% higher against the USD this week. Norway fits the bill in terms of a post-pandemic boom. New COVID-19 cases are under control, the economy is rebounding, oil prices are strong and the central bank is on a path the raise interest rates this year. Being long the NOK is one of our strongest convictions calls in FX. We are long NOK/USD and NOK/EUR. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Data out of Sweden this week have been mixed.  The Riksbank maintained the policy rate at 0%. Trade Balance in March came in at SEK4.1B versus SEK6B in the prior month. Retail sales in March grew by 2.6% month-on-month and 9.1% year-on-year, both an improvement versus the prior period. The unemployment rate in March rose to 10% versus 9.7% the prior month. The Swedish Krona strengthened 0.5% against the US dollar this week, continuing its upward momentum throughout April. The recent accommodative signals from the Riksbank meeting were within expectations amidst elevated COVID case counts and restrictions. Despite its commendable gains so far this month, we remain optimistic on this high beta currency as the eurozone recovery and global reflation are in sight. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades