Currencies
Highlights The odds of a continued earnings contraction have not yet fallen to the point that would warrant an overweight stance towards Chinese versus global stocks over the coming 6-12 months. While we maintain Chinese stocks on upgrade watch and may recommend increasing exposure soon, the bottom line for investors is that it is still too early for us to confidently project a sustained uptrend. While most investors attribute the chronic discount of Chinese stocks relative to the global average as being due to a sizeable equity risk premium, our analysis suggests that China’s low payout ratio and mediocre earnings growth are the true causes. This implies that China’s re-rating potential is capped barring a major structural improvement in earnings growth. Investors should pay close attention to the details of a U.S./China currency stability pact that will reportedly be included in any trade deal between the two countries. Such a pact may set up an important natural experiment for CNY/USD, and could be a revelatory event for China’s exchange rate regime. Feature Last week’s FOMC meeting dominated the headlines of the financial press, and for good reason. The Fed surprised investors with a material downgrade to their expected path of the federal funds rate over the next three years, a shift that largely reflected concerns about global growth. The subsequent inversion of the U.S. 10-year / 3-month yield curve in response to the very disappointing euro area flash manufacturing PMI for March confirms that many investors remain convinced that Fed policy is too tight and that easing is likely over the coming year.1 On the positive side, investor concerns that reflationary policy is needed in the U.S. and euro area are likely overblown: the plunge in the euro area PMI at least in part reflects the near-term uncertainty over the possibility of a hard Brexit (which will probably be avoided), whereas the Fed is pausing at a level of real interest rates that is well below real GDP growth, which means that monetary policy is still stimulative for the U.S. economy (Chart 1). Chart 1U.S. Monetary Policy Is Still Stimulative But Chart 2 highlights that a generalized slowdown in global growth is responsible for at least part of the sharp weakness in Chinese export growth over the past few months, which we had been mostly attributing to a catch-up phase following a (perversely and ironically) beneficial tariff front-running effect that had temporarily boosted trade growth last year. Chart 2Global Weakness At Least Partly Responsible For A Sharp Export Slowdown Ongoing weakness in the global economy, were it to persist, would imply that China’s external demand outlook is even less encouraging than we had previously assumed. This would raise the stakes for a trade deal with the U.S. to be agreed upon soon, as well as a continued uptrend in the pace of Chinese credit growth. Investors should closely watch the new export orders component of the March NBS manufacturing PMI later this week for signs that exporter sentiment is improving, as well as the overall Caixin PMI to confirm that smaller firms continue to benefit from the PBOC’s targeted easing efforts. When Should Investors Upgrade Chinese Stocks On A Cyclical Basis? In our view, most global investors have been focused on the wrong risk factor for Chinese stocks for the better part of the past year. In the wake of the near-vertical February rise in Chinese domestic stocks, the most common question we have received from clients is whether they should be increasing their cyclical exposure to Chinese stocks in general, and A-shares in particular. In response to the January surge in credit we placed Chinese stocks on upgrade watch in our February 27 Weekly Report,2 but we are not yet ready to recommend an outright cyclical overweight. Investors should be at the ready and aiming, but should not yet fire. In our view, most global investors have been focused on the wrong risk factor for Chinese stocks for the better part of the past year. We have noted in several previous reports that investors have focused nearly exclusively on the U.S.-China trade war since the beginning of 2018, and have largely ignored a slowing domestic economy (Chart 3). Given this, it is not surprising that a sharp improvement in the odds of a deal (which occurred at the beginning of November) has led to a material rally over the past few months versus global stocks. Chart 3The Prospect Of A Trade Deal Has Been The Primary Driver Of China-Related Assets In fact, we predicted in our December 5 Weekly Report that positive sentiment about a deal would boost the relative performance of Chinese stocks over the coming few months, and recommended a tactical overweight stance at that time.3 A cyclical (i.e. 6-12 month) overweight, however, is a different story. Sentiment alone rarely drives financial markets over a 1-year time horizon, meaning that investors need to have some degree of confidence that domestic demand will meaningfully improve over the next 12 months to justify a cyclical upgrade. Certainly, we acknowledge that there have been several positive developments pointing to such an outcome. Chinese monetary conditions have become extremely easy, credit is no longer contracting and surged in January, the Caixin PMI rose notably in February, and some form of a trade deal remains the most likely outcome of the ongoing talks. In addition, Chinese stocks still remain significantly below their 2018 peak (Chart 4), meaning that there is still material potential upside if Chinese earnings do not contract. Chart 4Chinese Stocks Still Have Room To Rise If The Earnings Outlook Stabilizes A moderate credit expansion appears to be underway, but coincident activity continues to weaken and earnings appear to have more downside. However, there are also several reasons to be cautious cyclically: Chart 5The Past Three Months Imply A Moderate Credit Uptrend Chart 6Chinese Coincident Economic Activity Continues To Weaken Chinese and U.S. policymakers have not only failed to set a date for an agreement to be signed by President’s Xi and Trump, but recent new reports suggest that momentum may be slowing and that a meeting may be postponed until June or later.4 Even if the deal does not fall through, material further delays could cause investors to get anxious and vote with their feet. Such a selloff could be violent, given the extremely sharp rise in domestic stock prices over the past six weeks. The evidence so far points to a moderate expansion in credit (Chart 5), reflecting the fact that policymakers are still somewhat concerned about financial stability and the need to prevent significant further leveraging of the private sector. This means that the odds are not yet in favor of a credit “overshoot” like what occurred in 2015/2016, implying that the pickup in growth is likely to be comparatively weaker this time around. Since 2010, monetary conditions and money & credit growth appear to be the best predictors of investment-relevant Chinese economic activity.5 While a moderate credit expansion appears to be underway, there has been no discernable pickup in money growth.6 This discrepancy likely means that the recent improvement in credit has occurred due to non-bank financial institutions, further suggesting that this economic recovery will probably be less powerful and less broad-based than during past cycles. While a moderate expansion in credit does suggest that China’s economy will bottom at some point in the coming months, coincident economic activity continues to decelerate (Chart 6). A continuation of this trend, particularly if coupled with an investor “crisis of faith” in the trade talks, could lead to a very significant retracement in Chinese equity prices before durably bottoming for the year. Trailing EPS growth is decelerating, but it has yet to contract on a year-over-year basis as would be implied by the net earnings revisions ratio (Chart 7) and the coincident activity indicators shown in Chart 6. Chinese investable EPS fell 30% during the 2015/2016 episode (20% for domestic stocks), implying meaningful further downside even if economic activity does not weaken as significantly over the coming months. Chart 7Net Earnings Revisions Point To More Downside For Earnings Chart 8 presents a helpful way for investors to make a net assessment of all of the factors highlighted above. The chart shows our earnings recession model for the MSCI China Index, and shows what is likely to occur if a trade deal causes a full recovery in Chinese exporter sentiment, China’s export-weighted RMB stays roughly at current levels, and the very recent pace of credit growth (Dec-Feb) continues along its trend. Chart 8A Trade Deal And A Moderate Credit Expansion Will Likely Stabilize The Earnings Outlook This scenario, were it to occur, would reduce the odds of a continued earnings contraction to the point that we would be comfortable recommending an overweight stance towards Chinese versus global stocks over the coming 6-12 months. While such a recommendation could come as soon as mid-April, the bottom line for investors is that it is still too early for us to confidently project this outcome. Should Chinese Stocks Be Priced At A Premium Or A Discount To Global Stocks? Most investors attribute the discount applied to Chinese stocks to a high equity risk premium (ERP), but our work paints a different picture. Besides questions about the appropriate cyclical allocation to Chinese stocks, the recent spike in interest among global investors towards A-shares has also led to a renewed focus about the degree to which Chinese stocks are cheap versus the global average. In a world where many financial assets are chronically expensive and Chinese policymakers appear to be responding to weaker economic activity, some investors question whether Chinese stocks deserve to be priced at a discount (Chart 9). Our sense is that most investors attribute the discount to a high equity risk premium (ERP) stemming from the enormous rise in Chinese non-financial corporate debt over the past decade, but our research paints a different picture. Chart 9The Chinese Equity Discount: A High ERP, Or Something More Sinister? One way of analyzing the risk premium of an equity market is to use the well-known constant Gordon growth model. Equation 1 below presents the theoretically justified 12-month trailing P/E ratio as a function of the payout ratio, the risk-free rate, the ERP, and the long-term dividend growth rate (which is equal to the long-term earnings growth rate given a constant payout ratio). Equations 2 and 3 re-arrange equation 1 to express the ERP and long-term growth rate, respectively, on the left-hand side of the equation. Equation 1: P0/E0 = (D1/E0)/(rf + ERP – g) Equation 2: ERP = [(D1/E0)/(P0/E0)] + g - rf Equation 3: g = rf + ERP-[(D1/E0)/(P0/E0)] To illustrate the approach, Chart 10 applies equation 2 to the U.S. equity market and compares it with the annual dividend discount model equity risk premium published by Professor Aswath Damodaran from New York University’s Stern School of Business,7 a well-known expert in the theory and practice of asset valuation. While there are some differences in the level of the series owing to slightly different methodologies, the overall profile of the two series is generally similar. Chart 10Our DDM Methodology For The U.S. Generates Results Similar To Other Important Estimates Proxying the market’s long-term growth expectations in a large, mature economy such as the U.S. is materially easier than is the case in an emerging market such as China. As such, instead of solving for the equity risk premium directly when judging whether China’s discount is “deserved”, we use equation 3 to solve for the implied long-term growth rate given an assumed (and very conservative) ERP range of 2-3%, using the global P/E ratio. In other words, we ask the following question: what kind of earnings growth do Chinese stocks need to achieve over the long run in order to justify the same earnings multiple as the global average, given an equity risk premium of 2-3%? Chart 11 presents the answer to this question, for both the domestic and the investable market. We use domestic 10-year bond yields as the risk-free rate in the case of the A-share market, and U.S. 10-year bond yields in the case of the MSCI China index as a proxy for the global risk-free rate. Finally, in each panel, the dashed horizontal lines denote the actual compound annual growth rate in earnings per share for each market, since the year noted next to each line. Chart 11A Low But Still Difficult L/T Earnings Hurdle Rate To Be Priced In Line With Global Stocks Two important points are apparent from the chart: The required growth rate for both markets to be priced in line with global stocks are quite low, well below Chinese nominal GDP growth. At first blush, this might suggest that the valuation discount applied to China reflects a sizeable equity risk premium that could shrink over the coming 6-12 months (i.e. a beneficial re-rating of Chinese stocks). Since 2010 or 2011, actual growth rates in EPS are materially above the required growth range in both markets. However, over more recent time horizons, particularly 2013 and later, actual earnings growth has not only been below the range but has also been extremely poor in absolute terms. This is particularly true for the investable market, which has actually recorded negative growth in 12-month trailing EPS since 2014 or 2015. A dividend discount model approach suggests that the Chinese equity market discount is justified, barring a major structural improvement in earnings growth. Chart 12 highlights the problem with China’s stock market in a nutshell. For both the investable and domestic equity markets, the dividend payout ratio is well below the global average. This is a normal circumstance for small companies with high growth potential; firms re-invest a high portion of their earnings back into the company in order to build out their asset base and deliver even higher earnings in the future. Chart 12The Chinese Discount Visualized: A Low Payout Ratio, And Mediocre Earnings Growth But panel 2 of Chart 12 shows that relative earnings for Chinese stocks versus the global average have not trended higher over the past decade, meaning that a higher earnings retention ratio among Chinese stocks has not led to a superior earnings profile. In response, global investors have rightly discounted Chinese stocks versus their global peers, a circumstance that is likely to continue unless Chinese earnings growth materially and sustainably improves. Our analysis implies that there is a natural limit to how far Chinese equities can ultimately be re-rated barring a major structural improvement in the economy, a factor that we may eventually have to contend with were we to recommend a cyclical overweight stance. Capped re-rating potential is unlikely to prevent Chinese stocks from trending higher in relative terms if economic fundamentals warrant an uptrend, but it may suggest that the duration or magnitude of the rise may be shorter than many investors hope. A Sino-U.S. Trade Deal: A Natural Currency Experiment In The Making? What explains the link between CNY-USD and the interest rate differential between the two countries? Finally, a brief note on the RMB. Since June 2018, changes in CNY-USD appear to have been closely aligned with the magnitude of proposed tariffs as a share of Chinese exports to the U.S., as would be implied in a simple open economy model with flexible exchange rates. Chart 13shows the levels implied by this framework in a variety of tariff scenarios, calculated based on the percent decline from the peak in the exchange rate in 1H 2018. As noted in our March 13 Weekly Report,8 CNY-USD today is consistent with the current tariff regime, implying potential upside if a trade deal with the U.S. rolls back some of the tariffs that have been imposed. Chart 13A Simple Equilibrium Framework Suggests CNY-USD May Rise Materially Further If Tariffs Are Rolled Back However, Chart 14 shows that CNY-USD has been closely correlated with the interest rate differential between the two countries for several years, with the relationship having recently become a leading one. Chart 14 highlights that CNY-USD has moved higher than the rate differential would imply (painting the opposite picture as that shown in Chart 13), suggesting that the currency is more likely to depreciate than appreciate over the coming 6-12 months barring tighter monetary policy in China or outright rate cuts in the U.S. Chart 14Will Policymakers Or Rate Differentials Drive CNY-USD Over The Coming Year? The relationship shown in Chart 14 is surprising, and we have struggled to understand the exact dynamics at play. As we highlighted in a September report,9 many global investors take the relationship for granted, given the strong historical link between interest rate differentials and exchange rates in developed countries. However, a major problem that arises in explaining Chart 14 is the fact that uncovered interest rate arbitrage (or the “carry trade”) cannot easily occur or cannot occur at all when one or both countries involved maintains capital controls. It is an important conundrum, and one that we have not been able to solve. From our perspective, there are only two scenarios that explain the close relationship between the exchange rate and interest rate differentials between the two countries: The relationship is causal, implying that capital flows in and out of the country are sufficiently large to enable a carry trade. The two series are correlated because of a third factor related in some way to the other two. In our view, scenario 1 is not likely. Capital is flowing out of China, but at a much slower rate than before,10 and the relationship shown in Chart 14 did not break down following China’s capital crackdown in 2015/2016. Ruling out scenario 1 necessarily implies that scenario 2 is correct. Our best guess concerning the missing third factor is that Chinese policymakers are looking to the rate differential as a guide to set the exchange rate, in order to mimic a market-based exchange rate in support of China’s goals to progressively liberalize (and internationalize) the currency. If true, this implies that China has full control of their exchange rate regardless of the prevailing interest rate differential, but that they are often choosing to follow what the differential implies. This is significant, because if Chinese and U.S. negotiators do agree to a “yuan stability pact” as has been reported in the press, a trade deal may set up an important natural experiment for the currency. In our view, a major upward move in the rate differential is unlikely over the coming year, implying that CNY-USD will persistently deviate from the relationship shown in Chart 14 if President Trump is not inclined to tolerate any real weakness in the RMB over the coming year. While the details of the currency agreement and the trade agreement more generally could allow for some decline in CNY-USD if coupled with an offsetting benefit for the U.S. (such as materially higher U.S. exports to China for some period), our bias is to believe that President Trump does not want to see a stronger dollar over the coming year in the lead-up to the 2020 election. If true, investors should pay close attention to the behavior of CNY-USD, as it is stands to be a revelatory event for China’s exchange rate regime. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy and Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Reports “The New Battleground For Monetary Policy” and “Forward Guidance On Steroids”, dated March 26, 2019, for a detailed update on our view for Fed rate hikes and how investors should interpret the recent inversion in the yield curve. 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Dealing With A (Largely) False Narrative”, dated February 27, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “2019 Key Views: Four Themes For China In The Coming Year”, dated December 5, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see “Some U.S. Officials Said To See China Walking Back Trade Pledges”, Bloomberg News, dated March 19, 2019, and “Donald Trump-Xi Jinping meeting to end US-China trade war may be pushed back to June, sources say”, South China Morning Post. 5 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, “The Data Lab: Testing The Predictability Of China’s Business Cycle”, dated November 30, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, “EM: A Sustainable Rally Or A False Start?”, dated March 7, 2019, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see Professor Damodoran’s website for more information on his estimates of the equity risk premium. 8 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “China Macro And Market Review”, dated March 13, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 9 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Moderate Releveraging And Currency Stability: An Impossible Dream?”, dated September 5, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 10 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, “Monitoring Chinese Capital Outflows”, dated March 20, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
In 2010, only about 6% of global crude output came from the U.S. Fast forward to today and the U.S. produces almost 15% of global crude, having grabbed market share from both OPEC and non-OPEC countries. At the same time, the positive correlation between…
Highlights The correlation between oil and petrocurrencies has deeply weakened in recent years. One of the reasons has been the prominence of new, important producers, notably the U.S. Oil prices should trend towards $75/bbl by year-end. This will favor the NOK, but the CAD and AUD will be held hostage to domestic slowdowns. Sell the CAD/NOK at current levels. Meanwhile, aggressive investors could begin accumulating USD/NOK shorts, given the Fed’s complete volte-face. Both the SNB and the BoE have delivered dovish messages, joining the chorus echoed by other central banks. However, the BoE remains a sideshow until the final chapter of the Brexit imbroglio unfolds. Feature Oil price dynamics have tended to have a profound impact on the trend of petrocurrencies. In theory, rising oil prices allow for increased government spending in oil-producing countries, making room for the resident central bank to tighten monetary policy. This is usually bullish for the currency. An increase in oil prices also implies rising terms of trade, which further increases the fair value of the exchange rate. Balance-of-payments dynamics also tend to improve during oil bull markets. Altogether, these forces combine to be powerful undercurrents for petrocurrencies. In the case of Canada and Norway, petroleum represents around 20% and 60% of total exports. For Saudi Arabia, Iran or Venezuela, this number is much higher than in Norway. It is easy to see why a big fluctuation in the price of oil can have deep repercussions for their external balances. Getting the price of oil right is usually the first step in any petrocurrency forecast. The Outlook For Oil1 Our baseline calls for Brent prices to touch $75/bbl by year-end. Oil demand tends to follow the ebbs and flows of the business cycle, with demand having slowed sharply in the fourth quarter of 2018 (Chart I-1). With over 60% of global petroleum consumed fueling the transportation sector, the slowdown in global trade brought a lot of freighters, bulk ships, large crude carriers and heavy trucks to a halt. If, as we expect, the impact of easier global financial conditions begins to seep into the real economy, these trends should reverse in the second half of the year. BCA’s Commodity & Energy Strategy group estimates that this would translate into a 1.5% increase in oil demand this year. Chinese oil imports have already started accelerating, and should Indian consumption follow suit, this will put a floor under global demand growth (Chart I-2). Chart I-1Global Oil Demand Has Been Weak Chart I-2Oil Demand Green Shoots This increase in oil demand will materialize at a time when OPEC spare capacity is only at 2%. In its most recent meeting, OPEC decided not to extend the window for production cuts beyond May, waiting to see whether the U.S. eases sanctions on either Venezuela, Iran or both. At first blush, this appeared bearish for oil prices. However, the bottom line is that global spare capacity cannot handle the loss of both Venezuelan and Iranian exports. Unplanned outages wiped off about 1.5% of supply in 2018. Lost output from both countries will nudge the oil market dangerously close to a negative supply shock (Chart I-3). Bottom Line: If Venezuelan sanctions continue, we expect the U.S. will likely extend the current waivers to Iranian exports further out into the future. Meanwhile, demonstrated flexibility by OPEC makes it increasingly the fulcrum of the oil market. That said, the balance of risks for oil prices remain to the upside since a miscalculation by both sides is a possibility. The Good Old Days Historically, the above analysis would have been largely sufficient to buy most petrocurrencies, especially given the gaping wedge that has opened vis-à-vis the price of oil (Chart I-4). But the reality is that the landscape for oil production is rapidly shifting, with the U.S. shale revolution grabbing market share from both OPEC and non-OPEC members. Chart I-4Opportunity Or Regime Shift? In 2010, only about 6% of global crude output came from the U.S. Collectively, Canada, Norway and Mexico shared about 10% of the oil market. Meanwhile, OPEC’s market share sat just north of 40%, having largely been stable among constituents like Saudi Arabia, Iran and even Venezuela. Fast forward to today and the U.S. produces almost 15% of global crude, having grabbed market share from both developed and politically-fragile economies (Chart I-5). Chart I-5A New Oil Baron At the same time, the positive correlation between petrocurrencies and oil has been gradually eroded as the U.S. economy has become less and less of an oil importer. Put another way, rising oil prices benefit the U.S. industrial base much more than in the past, while the benefits for countries like Canada and Norway are slowly fading. U.S. shale output in the Big 5 basins rose by about 1.5 million barrels in 2018, close to the equivalent of total Libyan production. Meanwhile, Norwegian production has been falling for a few years. The reality is that the landscape for oil production is rapidly shifting, with the U.S. shale revolution grabbing market share from both OPEC and non-OPEC members. In statistical terms, petrocurrencies had a near-perfect positive correlation with oil around the time U.S. production was about to take off (Chart I-6). Since then, that correlation has fallen from around 0.8 to around 0.3. At the same time, the DXY dollar index is on its way to becoming positively correlated with oil as the U.S. becomes a net energy exporter. Chart I-6Shifting Landscape For Petrocurrencies Bottom Line: Both the CAD and NOK remain positively correlated with oil. So do the Russian ruble, and the Colombian and Mexican pesos. That said, a loss of global market share has hurt the oil sensitivity of many petrocurrencies. Transportation bottlenecks for Canadian crude and falling production in Norway are also added negatives. The conclusion is that rising petrodollar reserves have historically been bullish for the currency (Chart I-7) but expect this correlation to be weaker than in the past. Chart I-7Rising Petrodollar Reserves Will Be Bullish The Fed As A Catalyst The Federal Reserve recently completed the volte-face that it launched at its January FOMC meeting. The dots now forecast no rate hikes in 2019 and only one for 2020. Previously, three hikes were baked in over the forecast period. GDP growth has been downgraded slightly, and CPI forecasts have also been nudged down. Rising petrodollar reserves have historically been bullish for the currency but expect this correlation to be weaker than in the past. The reality is that U.S. growth momentum relative to the rest of the world started slowly rolling over at a time when external demand remained weak.2 Recent data confirm this trend persists: Industrial production peaked last year and continues to decelerate; the NAHB housing market index came in a nudge below expectations; and the U.S. economic surprise index is sitting close to its one-year low of -40. With bond yields having already made a downward adjustment by circa 100 basis points, the valve for financial conditions to get looser could easily be via the U.S. dollar (Chart I-8). We have been selectively playing USD shorts, mostly via the SEK and the euro, as per our March 8th report. Today, we add the Norwegian krone to the list. Chart I-8Bond Yields Down, Dollar Next? Sell CAD/NOK The Norges Bank hiked interest rates to 1% at yesterday’s meeting, which was widely expected, but the hawkish shift took the market by surprise. Governor Øystein Olsen signaled further rate increases later this year, at a time when global central banks are turning dovish. This lit a fire under the Norwegian krone. The 6.60 level for the CAD/NOK has proven to be a formidable resistance since 2015. The Norwegian economy remains closely tied to oil, with the bottom in oil prices in 2016 having jumpstarted employment growth, business confidence and wage growth. With inflation slightly above the central bank’s target and our expectation for oil prices to grind higher, we agree with the central bank’s assessment that the future path of interest rates is likely higher (Chart I-9). Chart I-9The Norwegian Economy Is Faring Well Our recommendation is that NOK long positions should initially be played via selling the CAD, as an indirect way to express USD shorts (Chart I-10). The 6.60 level for the CAD/NOK has proven to be a formidable resistance since 2015, and our intermediate-term indicators suggest the next move is likely lower. Meanwhile, relative economic surprises are moving in favor of Norway, with export growth, retail sales and employment growth all outpacing Canadian data. The discount between Western Canadian Select crude oil and Brent has closed, but our contention is that the delay in Enbridge’s Line 3 replacement will likely push the discount back closer to $20/bbl. Chart I-10Sell USD Via CAD/NOK Over the longer term, both the Canadian and Norwegian housing markets are bubbly, but in the latter it has been concentrated in Oslo, with Bergen and Trondheim having had more muted increases. In Canada, the rise in house prices could rotate to smaller cities, as macro-prudential measures implemented in Toronto and Vancouver nudge investors away from those markets (Chart I-11). Chart I-11Bubbly Housing In Norway And Canada The Canadian government has decided to provide residents with a potential line of credit in exchange for equity stakes of up to 10% in residential homes. The maximum home value that qualifies for this line of credit has been capped at C$480,000. While this does little to improve the affordability of houses in expensive cities, it almost guarantees that those in competitive markets will be bid up. This will encourage a continued buildup of household leverage. Historically, when the leverage ratio for Canada peaked vis-à-vis the U.S., it was a negative development for the Canadian dollar (Chart I-12). Chart I-12The CAD Looks Vulnerable Bottom Line: Go short CAD/NOK for a trade, but more aggressive investors should begin accumulating short positions versus the U.S. dollar outright. Hold USD/SEK shorts established a fortnight ago, currently 3% in the money. Housekeeping We are taking profits on our short AUD/CAD position this week, with a 1.4% profit. As highlighted in our March 8th report, the Australian dollar has been severely knocked down, and is becoming more and more immune to bad news. Despite home prices falling by more than 5% year-on-year, worse than during the financial crises, the Aussie was actually up on the week. Meanwhile, Australian exports will be at the top of the list to benefit from China’s reflationary efforts. Chester Ntonifor, Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, titled “OPEC 2.0: Oil’s Price Fulcrum,” dated March 21, 2019, available at ces.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, titled “Into A Transition Phase,” dated March 8, 2019, available at fes.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 The recent data in the U.S. have shown more signs of a slowdown: February industrial production growth missed expectations, coming in at 0.1% month-on-month. Michigan consumer sentiment in March came in higher than expected at 97.8. NAHB housing market index in March came in at 62, below consensus. January factory orders slowed to 0.1% month-on-month. Philadelphia Fed business outlook came in at 13.7, surprising to the upside. Initial jobless claims in March were 221k, also outperforming analysts’ forecast. The DXY index slumped by 0.8% post-FOMC, and is now slowly recovering on the strong data from the Philly Fed business outlook and initial jobless claims. The Fed left interest rates unchanged on Wednesday, while further signaling that no rate hike is likely through 2019. Moreover, 2019 GDP forecast was downgraded to 2%. The dovish turn by the Fed could weigh on the dollar in the coming weeks. Report Links: Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 The recent data in the euro zone have been mostly positive: February consumer price index came in line at 1.5% year-on-year; core consumer price index also stayed at 1% year-on-year. The seasonally-adjusted trade balance in January improved to 17 billion euros. Q4 labor cost fell to 2.3%. ZEW economic sentiment survey came in at -2.5 in March, outperforming the consensus of -18.7. EUR/USD increased by 0.5% this week. The FOMC-led sharp rebound sent EUR/USD to a new week-high of 1.145 on Wednesday. We expect more positive data coming from the euro zone, which will further lift the euro. Report Links: Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 A Contrarian Bet On The Euro - March 1, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan have continued to soften: The merchandise trade balance came in at 339 billion yen in February. Total imports contracted by 6.7% year-on-year, while total exports fell by 1.2% year-on-year. Industrial production increased by 0.3% year-on-year in January. Capacity utilization in January fell by 4.7% month-on-month, missing expectations. The leading economic index in January fell to 95.9 from a previous reading of 97.2. USD/JPY slumped by 0.9% this week. Last Friday, the Bank of Japan left its key interest rate unchanged at -0.1%, as wildly expected. The 10-year government bond yield target also stayed unchanged at around 0%. Like many global central banks, the BoJ has been blindsided by the deep external slowdown that is beginning to seep into the domestic economy. Report Links: A Trader’s Guide To The Yen - March 15, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. have been mostly positive: Average earnings excluding bonuses in January grew in line by 3.4%. ILO unemployment rate in January fell to 3.9%. The retail price index in February stayed in line at 2.5% year-on-year. The February consumer price index increased to 1.9% year-on-year. Retail sales growth in February increased to 4% year-on-year, outperforming expectations. GBP/USD fell by 1.1% this week, erasing the gains triggered by dollar weakness earlier on Wednesday. The BoE left its interest rate unchanged at 0.75%, and the sterling continues to show more volatility with a delayed Brexit. Report Links: A Trader’s Guide To The Yen - March 15, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Recent data in Australia have shown the housing market is toppling over: The housing price index in Q4 fell sharply by 5.1% year-on-year. New jobs created in February were 4,600, missing the expectations by 9,400. Moreover, 7,300 full-time employment jobs were lost, while 11,900 positions were created for part-time employment. The unemployment rate in February fell to 4.9%, while the participation rate decreased to 65.6%. AUD/USD appreciated by 0.6% this week. It pulled back a little after reaching a 0.7168 high on Wednesday following the dovish Fed decision. During a speech this week, RBA highlighted the concerns over the ability of households to service their debt. Both external and internal constraints remain headwinds for the Australian dollar. Report Links: Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Recent data in New Zealand have been weak: Credit card spending growth in February slowed to 6.4% year-on-year. Q4 GDP growth came in at 2.3% year-on-year, underperforming consensus of 2.5%. The current account deficit widened to 3.7% of GDP in Q4. NZD/USD appreciated by 0.5% this week. The Q4 GDP breakdown showed that growth was mainly driven by the rise in service industries. Primary industries, however, fell by 0.8%. Agriculture was down 1.3%, mining was down 1.7%, forestry and logging fell 1.6%, and lastly, the fishing activity was down 0.9% quarter-on-quarter. The Kiwi will benefit from any dollar weakness, but is not our preferred currency. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Recent data in Canada continue to paint a mixed picture: January manufacturing shipments increased to 1% month-on-month. Foreign portfolio investment in Canadian securities saw an increase of C$49 billion in January, while Canadian portfolio investment in foreign securities decreased by C$8.4 billion. January wholesale sales growth increased to 0.6% month on month. USD/CAD rebounded overnight after falling sharply on a dovish Fed. CAD finally ended the week flat. On Tuesday, Bill Morneau, the Finance Minister of Canada, unveiled the new federal budget for 2019. It showed several new measures aiming to assist young and senior Canadian citizens, including first-time home buyers. While these measures might appease Canadian millennial voters, they will also result in significant deficits. The deficit projection for the year 2019-2020 widened to $19.8 billion, which could crowd out private spending. Report Links: Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 The trade balance in February came above expectations at 3,125 million CHF. Exports came in at 19,815 million CHF, while imports came in at 16,689 million CHF, respectively. USD/CHF depreciated by 1% this week. The Swiss National Bank left the benchmark sight deposit rate unchanged at -0.75%, as wildly expected. We struggle to see any upside potential for the franc, amid a dovish central bank, an expensive currency and muted inflation. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Waiting For A Real Deal - December 7, 2018 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Recent data in Norway has been positive. The trade balance in February fell to 15.8 billion NOK, from a previous reading of 28.8 billion NOK. USD/NOK fell by 1.3% this week. The Norges Bank raised rates by 25 bps to 1%, in line with expectations, while signaling further rate hikes in the second half of this year. The Norges Bank once again demonstrated to be the most hawkish among G10 members. The bank reiterated that the economy is running at a solid pace and capacity utilization is above normal levels, while inflation keeps navigating above the bank’s target. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Global Liquidity Trends Support The Dollar, But... - January 25, 2019 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 There has been no major data release from Sweden this week. USD/SEK fell by 1.5% this week. Our short USD/SEK position is now 3% in the money since we initiated it 2 weeks ago. As we see more signs of recovery in the euro zone, we expect the exports of Sweden to pick up, which is a tailwind for the Swedish krona. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Global Liquidity Trends Support The Dollar, But... - January 25, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Dear Client, I had the pleasure of visiting clients in Seattle, Anchorage, and Juneau last week. In this week’s report, I address some of the questions that routinely came up during our meetings. Among other things, the topics discussed include our optimistic global growth outlook, waning dollar bullishness, implications of a more dovish Fed on the business cycle, and where we think equities are headed. Next week we will be publishing our Quarterly Strategy Outlook, which will provide a detailed discussion of our key global macro and investment views. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Feature Q: You have predicted that global growth will stabilize in the second quarter and then accelerate in the second half of the year. Are you seeing much evidence in support of this view? A: We are seeing signs of green shoots, but they are still fairly tentative. Current activity indicators appear to have stabilized (Chart 1). The global manufacturing PMI edged lower in February, but the services component increased. Consumer confidence has risen, although that may simply reflect the rebound in global equities. Chart 1Global Growth Appears To Have Stabilized The data on international trade has been quite soft. That said, the weekly Harpex shipping index, which measures global container shipping activity, has improved. The Baltic Dry Index has also shown some signs of bottoming (Chart 2). Chart 2Shipping Data Pointing To A Recent Pickup In Global Trade The diffusion index of our global leading economic indicator, which tracks the share of countries with rising LEIs, has also moved higher (Chart 3). It generally leads the global LEI. The fact that global financial conditions have eased significantly since the start of the year is also an encouraging sign. Chart 3The Uptick In The LEI Diffusion Index Suggests Global Growth Will Firm Up Q: What’s your take on the most recent Chinese economic data? A: It has been generally soft, but not abysmal. Manufacturing output continues to decelerate. Retail sales remain lackluster, with auto sales showing little evidence of improvement. Property prices are still rising, but floor space sold has begun to contract. Fixed-asset investment has held up so far this year. However, this is mainly due to a pickup in spending among state-owned companies. Both exports and imports contracted in February. In a rather unusual step, the government announced last week that exports increased by nearly 40% in the first nine days of March compared with the same period last year.1 Electricity production has also apparently rebounded. We would not place a huge weight on these statements, as the data probably has been skewed by the timing of the lunar new year, but it does seem that economic momentum may be starting to turn the corner. We are seeing signs of green shoots, but they are still fairly tentative. There is little doubt that the government is trying to jumpstart growth. Household and business taxes have been cut. The PBOC has reduced reserve requirements by 350 bps over the past year. Interbank rates have dropped. Despite the fact that the February credit data fell short of expectations, the six-month credit impulse has turned decisively higher. The Chinese credit impulse leads imports by about six-to-nine months (Chart 4). This bodes well for global trade in the second half of the year. Chart 4Global Trade Will Benefit From A Chinese Reflationary Impulse Q: Given that Chinese debt levels are already quite high, by how much more can they realistically increase? A: We do not expect credit growth to rise by as much as it did in 2009 or 2016. However, this is because the economy is in better shape, not because there is some intrinsic constraint to increasing debt from current levels. China’s elevated savings rate has kept interest rates well below trend nominal GDP growth, which is the key determinant of debt sustainability (Chart 5).2 As long as the government maintains an implicit guarantee on most local and corporate debt, as it is currently doing, default risk will remain minimal. Chart 5China's High Savings Rate Has Kept Interest Rates Well Below Trend Nominal GDP Growth In any case, given that debt now stands at 240% of GDP, a mere one percentage-point increase in credit growth would still produce a hefty 2.4% of GDP in credit stimulus. In this sense, China may be better off with a higher debt-to-GDP ratio since in steady state this will allow for a larger flow of credit-financed stimulus into the economy. Q: A revival in Chinese growth would presumably help Europe? A: Yes. Our conversations with clients revealed an ongoing negative bias towards Europe among investors (Chart 6). This is echoed in the latest BofA Merrill Lynch Global Fund Manager Survey which, for the first time in history, identified “short European equities” as the most crowded trade. Chart 6European Equities: Unloved And Unwanted We think that such deep pessimism about Europe is largely unwarranted. Faster global growth will help the European export sector later this year, while domestic demand will benefit from more accommodative fiscal policy and lower bond yields, especially in Italy. The ECB will not raise rates this year even if growth speeds up, but the market will probably price in a few more rate hikes in 2020 and beyond. This will allow for a modest re-steepening in the yield curves in core European bond markets, which should be positive for long-suffering bank profits. Political risk remains a concern. The Brexit saga has reached the farcical stage where: 1) The U.K. has voted to leave the EU; but 2) Parliament has voted to stay in the EU unless it reaches a satisfactory deal with Brussels; while 3) rejecting the only deal with Brussels that was on offer. Given that most British voters no longer want Brexit (Chart 7), we think that the government will kick the proverbial can down the road until a second referendum is announced or a “soft Brexit” deal is formulated. Either outcome would be welcomed by markets. Chart 7U.K.: In The Case Of A Do-Over, The Remain Side Would Likely Win Q: You seem less bullish on the U.S. dollar than you were last year? A: That is correct. As we discussed last week, the dollar is a countercyclical currency, meaning that it tends to move in the opposite direction of global growth (Chart 8). If global growth strengthens later this year, the trade-weighted dollar will probably weaken. Chart 8The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency Moreover, as this week’s FOMC meeting highlighted, the Fed’s reaction function has shifted in a more dovish direction. The median Fed dot now foresees no rate hikes this year and only one rate hike in 2020. In contrast, the December Summary of Economic Projections envisioned two rate hikes this year and one next year. The dollar is a countercyclical currency, meaning that it tends to move in the opposite direction of global growth. In a far cry from his October “rates are far from neutral” comment, Jay Powell stressed during this week's post-FOMC meeting press conference that the fed funds rate is currently in the “broad range of estimates of neutral.” While we would not rule out the possibility that the FOMC will raise rates at some point later this year, we now expect a more gradual pace of rate tightening than we had earlier envisioned. Q: Does a more dovish Fed imply that the economic expansion has even further to run? A: Yes. Expansions tend to end when monetary policy turns restrictive. We had previously thought that this point could be reached in late-2020, but it is now starting to look as though it will occur later than that. Broadly speaking, we see the Fed tightening cycle unfolding in two stages. In the first stage, which is the one we are in today, the Fed will raise rates in baby steps in response to better-than-expected growth and falling unemployment. In the second stage, the Fed will hike rates more aggressively as inflation starts to accelerate. Risk assets will be able to digest the first stage, but not the second. The good news is that most of our favorite indicators are not yet pointing to a major inflationary upswing (Chart 9): Despite higher tariffs, consumer import price inflation has slowed; core intermediate producer price inflation has decelerated; the prices paid components of the ISM and regional Fed surveys have plunged; inflation surprise indices have rolled over; and both survey and market-based measures of inflation expectations remain below where they were last summer. In keeping with these developments, BCA’s propriety Inflation Pipeline Indicator has fallen to a two-and-a-half-year low. Chart 9No Signs Of An Imminent Major Inflationary Upswing In The U.S. ... Wage growth has accelerated, but productivity growth has increased by even more. Unit labor cost inflation has actually been coming down since the middle of last year. Unit labor costs lead core CPI inflation by about 12 months (Chart 10). This implies that consumer price inflation is unlikely to reach uncomfortably high levels at least until the second half of next year. Chart 10... And Decelerating Unit Labor Costs Will Dampen Inflationary Pressures For The Time Being Beyond then, the risks are high that inflation will move up as the economy continues to overheat. This could force the Fed to start raising rates aggressively late next year, a course of action that will push up the dollar and cause equities and spread product to sell off. The resulting tightening in financial conditions will probably plunge the U.S. and the rest of the world into recession in 2021. Q: So stay overweight stocks for now, but consider selling at some point next year? A: Correct. The MSCI All-Country World Index (ACWI) has risen by over 14% since we upgraded it in December after having moved to the sidelines six months earlier. Given this run-up, we are not as bullish now as we were at the start of the year. Most of our favorite indicators are not yet pointing to a major inflationary upswing. Nevertheless, the path of least resistance for equities remains to the upside. While the forward P/E ratio for the MSCI ACWI has returned to where it was last September, analyst earnings expectations are currently much more conservative: Bottom-up estimates foresee EPS rising by 4.1% in the U.S. and 5.3% in the rest of the world in 2019 (Chart 11). The combination of faster growth, easier financial conditions, and ongoing corporate buybacks implies some upside to those estimates. Chart 11Analyst Expectations Are Quite Muted Moreover, real yields have fallen over the past five months – the 10-year U.S. TIPS yield is 48 basis points below its Q4 average, for example. A simple dividend discount model would suggest that global equities are about 10%-to-15% cheaper than they were prior to last year’s autumn selloff. The path of least resistance for equities remains to the upside. Q: Aren’t you worried that rising labor costs will push down profit margins even if GDP growth accelerates? A: Not really. As noted above, productivity growth has picked up. Whether this is the start of a new trend remains to be seen, but at least for now, it is dampening unit labor costs. Historically, real unit labor costs – nominal unit labor costs divided by the corporate price deflator – have tracked economy-wide profit margins very closely (Chart 12). Chart 12Real U.S. Unit Labor Costs Historically Have Tracked Economy-Wide Profit Margins Very Closely In practice, it is very rare for earnings to contract outside of recessions (Chart 13). This is why recessions and equity bear markets generally overlap (Chart 14). With the next recession still two years away, it is too early to turn defensive. Indeed, as Table 1 shows, the second-to-last year of business-cycle expansions is often the most lucrative for stock market investors. Chart 13Earnings Rarely Contract Outside Of Recessions Chart 14Recessions And Bear Markets Usually Overlap Table 1Too Soon To Get Out Q: What do you recommend in terms of regional equity allocation? A: If global growth accelerates later this year and the dollar weakens, this will create an excellent environment for international stocks – EM and Europe in particular. Investors should prepare to overweight those regions at the expense of the United States (currency unhedged). Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Elaine Chan, “China spreading ‘positive news’ of strong export rebound in early March after February plunge,” South China Morning Post, March 11, 2019. 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Is There Really Too Much Government Debt In The World?” dated February 22, 2019. Strategy & Market Trends MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
An improvement in leading economic indicators in the spring will set the stage for a reacceleration in global growth and a decline in the dollar in the second half of this year. The combination of stronger growth and a weaker dollar later this year should…
After all of the chaos from last week’s U.K. parliamentary sessions, an extension will likely be granted untill the May 23-26 European Union elections. For long-term sterling investors, what is clear is that developments over the next few weeks will be…
Highlights Global equities will remain rangebound for the next month or so, but should move decisively higher as economic green shoots emerge in the spring. A revival in global growth will cause the recent rally in the U.S. dollar to stall out and reverse direction, setting the stage for a period of dollar weakness that could last until the second half of next year. Rising inflation will force the Fed to turn considerably more hawkish in late-2020 or early-2021. This will cause the dollar to surge once more. The combination of a stronger dollar and higher interest rates will trigger a recession in the U.S. in 2021, which will spread to the rest of the world. Investors should maintain a bullish stance towards global equities for the next 12 months, but look to reduce exposure at some point next year. Feature Stocks Temporarily Stuck In The Choppy Trading Range We argued at the end of February that global equities and other risk assets would likely enter a choppy trading range in March as investors nervously awaited the economic data to improve.1 Recent market action has been consistent with this thesis, with the MSCI All-Country World Index falling nearly 3% at the start of the month, only to recoup its losses over the past few days. We expect stocks to remain in a holding pattern over the coming weeks, as investors look for more evidence that global growth is bottoming out. The U.S. dollar is a countercyclical currency, meaning that it moves in the opposite direction of global growth (Chart 1). This countercyclicality stems from the fact that the U.S. economy is more geared towards services than manufacturing compared with the rest of the world. This makes the U.S. a low-beta play on global growth (Chart 2). As such, when global growth accelerates, capital tends to flow from the U.S. to the rest of the world, translating into more demand for foreign currency and less demand for dollars. Chart 1The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency Chart 2The U.S. Is A Low-Beta Play On Global Growth Given the dollar’s countercyclical nature, it is not surprising that the slowdown in global growth over the past 12 months has given the greenback a lift. The broad trade-weighted dollar has strengthened by almost 8% since February 2018, putting it near the top of its post 2015-range (Chart 3). Chart 3The Dollar Has Gotten A Lift From Global Growth Disappointments Stocks Will Rally And The Dollar Will Weaken Starting In The Spring We expect the U.S. dollar to strengthen over the coming weeks as global economic data continues to underwhelm. However, an improvement in leading economic indicators in the spring will set the stage for a reacceleration in global growth and a decline in the dollar in the second half of this year. The combination of stronger growth and a weaker dollar later this year should be highly supportive of global equities. Equity investors with a 12-month horizon should overlook any near-term weakness and maintain a bullish bias towards stocks. We do not have a strong view on U.S. versus international equities at the moment, but expect to upgrade the latter once we see more confirmatory evidence that global growth is bottoming out. Equity investors with a 12-month horizon should overlook any near-term weakness and maintain a bullish bias towards stocks. A Stronger China Will Lead To A Weaker Dollar Our expectation that the dollar will weaken in the second half of this year hinges on what happens to China. The deceleration in global growth in 2018 was largely the consequence of China’s deleveraging campaign. China’s slowdown led to a falloff in capital spending throughout the world. Weaker Chinese growth also put downward pressure on the yuan, pulling other EM currencies lower with it (Chart 4). All this occurred alongside an escalation in trade tensions, further dampening business sentiment. Chart 4EM Currencies Are Off Their Early 2018 Highs While it is too early to signal the all-clear on the trade front, the news of late has been encouraging. A recent Bloomberg story described how Trump watched approvingly as Asian stocks rose and U.S. futures rallied following his decision to delay the scheduled increase in tariffs on Chinese goods.2 As a self-professed master negotiator, Trump needs to secure a deal with China before next year‘s presidential election, while also convincing American voters that the deal was concluded on favorable terms for the United States. Reaching a deal with China early on in his term would have been risky if the agreement had failed to bring down the bilateral trade deficit — an entirely likely outcome given how pro-cyclical U.S. fiscal policy currently is. At this point, however, Trump can crow about making a great deal with China while reassuring voters that the product of his brilliance will be realized after he has been re-elected. This means that we are entering a window over the next 12 months where Trump will want to strike a deal. For their part, the Chinese want as much negotiating leverage with the Trump administration as they can muster. This means being able to convincingly demonstrate that their economy is strong enough to handle the repercussions from turning down a trade deal that fails to serve their interests. Since the credit cycle is the dominant driver of Chinese growth, this requires putting the deleveraging campaign on the backburner. Admittedly, credit growth surprised on the downside in February. However, this followed January’s strong showing. Averaging out the two months, credit growth appears to be stabilizing on a year-over-year basis. Conceptually, it is the change in credit growth that correlates with GDP growth.3 Thus, merely going from last year’s pattern of falling credit growth to stable credit growth would still imply a positive credit impulse and hence, an uptick in GDP growth. In practice, we suspect that the Chinese authorities will prefer that credit growth not only stabilize but increase modestly. In the past, this outcome has transpired whenever credit growth has fallen towards nominal GDP growth (Chart 5). The prospect of a rebound in credit growth in March was hinted at by the PBOC, which spun the weak February data as being caused by “seasonal factors.” Chart 5Historically, China Has Scaled Back On Deleveraging When Credit Growth Has Fallen Close To Nominal GDP Growth Europe: Down But Not Out Stronger growth in China will help European exporters. Euro area domestic demand will also benefit from a rebound in German automobile production, the winding down of the “yellow vest” protests in France, and incrementally easier fiscal policy. In addition, the ECB’s new TLTRO facility should support credit formation, particularly in Italy where the banks remain heavily reliant on ECB funding. Our expectation that the dollar will weaken in the second half of this year hinges on what happens to China. Euro area financial conditions have eased significantly over the past three months, which bodes well for growth in the remainder of the year. It is encouraging that the composite euro area PMI has rebounded to a three-month high. The expectations component of the euro area confidence index has also moved up relative to the current situation component, which suggests further upside for the PMI in the coming months (Chart 6). Chart 6Easing Financial Conditions Bode Well For Euro Area Growth The selloff in EUR/USD since last March has been largely driven by a decline in euro area interest rate expectations (Chart 7). If euro area growth accelerates in the back half of the year, the market will probably price back in a few rate hikes in 2020 and beyond. Chart 7EUR/USD Sell-Off Has Been Driven By Falling European Rate Expectations What Will The Fed Do? Of course, the degree to which a steeper Eonia curve benefits EUR/USD will depend on what the Fed does. The 24-month discounter has fallen from over +100 bps in March 2018 to -25 bps today, implying that investors now believe that U.S. short rates will fall over the next two years (Chart 8). Chart 8The Fed's Dovish Messaging Has Worked... Almost Too Well We expect the Fed to raise rates more than what is currently priced into the curve, thus justifying a short duration position in fixed-income portfolios. However, the Fed’s newfound “baby step” philosophy will probably translate into only two hikes over the next 12 months. Such a gradual pace of Fed rate hikes is unlikely to prevent the euro from appreciating against the dollar starting in the middle of this year, especially in the context of a resurgent global economy. We do not expect any major inflationary pressures to emerge in the near term. In contrast to the euro, the yen should depreciate against the dollar in the back half of this year. The yen is a “risk-off” currency and thus tends to weaken whenever global risk assets rally (Chart 9). The government is also about to raise the sales tax again in October, a completely unnecessary step that will only hurt domestic demand and force the Bank of Japan to prolong its yield curve control regime. We would go long EUR/JPY on any break below 123. Chart 9The Yen Is A Risk-Off Currency A Blow-Off Rally In The Dollar Starting In Late-2020 What could really light a fire under the dollar is if the Fed began raising rates aggressively while the global economy was slowing down. In what twisted parallel universe could that happen? The answer is this one, provided that inflation rose to a level that evoked panic at the Fed. We do not expect any major inflationary pressures to emerge in the near term. The growth in unit labor costs leads core inflation by about 12 months (Chart 10). Thanks to a cyclical pickup in productivity growth, unit labor cost inflation has been trending lower since mid-2018. However, as we enter late-2020, if the labor market has tightened further by then, wage growth will likely pull well ahead of productivity growth, causing inflation to accelerate. Chart 10Decelerating Unit Labor Costs Will Dampen Inflationary Pressures For The Time Being All things equal, higher inflation is bearish for a currency because it implies a loss in purchasing power relative to other monies. However, if higher inflation spurs a central bank to hike policy rates by more than inflation has risen – thus implying an increase in real rates – the currency will tend to strengthen. Chart 11 shows the “rational expectations” response of a currency to a scenario where inflation suddenly and unexpectedly rises by one percent relative to partner countries and stays at this higher level for five years while nominal rates rise by two percent. The currency initially appreciates by 5%, but then falls by 2% every year, eventually finishing down 5% from where it started.4 The yen should depreciate against the dollar in the back half of this year. The real world is much messier of course, but we suspect that the dollar will stage a final blow-off rally late next year or in early-2021 (Chart 12). Since the Fed will be hiking rates in a stagflationary environment at that time, global growth will weaken, further boosting the dollar. The resulting tightening in both U.S. and global financial conditions will likely trigger a global recession and a bear market in stocks. Investors should maintain a bullish stance towards global equities for the next 12 months, but look to reduce exposure at some point next year. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Gretzky’s Doctrine,” dated March 1, 2019. 2 Jennifer Jacobs and Saleha Mohsin, “Trump Pushes China Trade Deal to Boost Markets as 2020 Heats Up,” Bloomberg, March 6, 2019. 3 Recall that GDP is a flow variable (how much production takes place every period), whereas credit is a stock variable (how much debt there is outstanding). By definition, a flow is a change in a stock. Thus, credit growth affects GDP and the change in credit growth affects GDP growth. 4 The 2% annual decline in the currency is necessary for the real interest parity condition to be satisfied. Strategy & Market Trends MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights Every diversified currency portfolio should hold the yen as insurance against rising market volatility. However, for tactical investors, the latest dovish shift by global central banks almost guarantees the Bank of Japan will err on the side of stronger stimulus (explicitly or indirectly). Our bias is that USD/JPY could trade sideways in the next three to six months, but EUR/JPY could test 132 by year-end. Carefully monitor any shift in yen behavior in the coming months, in particular its role as a counter-cyclical currency. Investors who need to hedge out sterling volatility should favor GBP calls. Hold onto the USD/SEK shorts established last week, currently 1.6% in the money. USD/NOK shorts are looking increasingly attractive, as will be discussed in next week’s report. Feature The yen has proven an extremely tough currency to forecast in the last few years. Carry-trade investors who used widening interest rate differentials between the U.S. and Japan in 2018 to forecast yen weakness got decimated in the February and March 2018 equity drawdowns. More agile investors who timed the global equity market bottom in early 2016 have been shifted to the wayside on yen shorts, as the currency has strengthened since then. For value-based investors, the yen that was 14% cheap on a fundamental basis in 2015 is 19% cheaper vis-à-vis fair value today. Seasoned investors recognize the need to pay heed to correlation shifts, as they can make or break forecasts. In the currency world, the most recent have been dollar weakness after the Federal Reserve first tightened policy in December 2016, dollar weakness in 2017 despite four Fed rate hikes and more recently, yen resilience despite the equity market rally since 2016. In this report, we revisit traditional yen relationships to identify which have been broken down, and which still stand the test of time. Trading Rules A rule of thumb still holds true for yen investors: buy the currency on any equity market turbulence (Chart I-1). In of itself, this advice is not sufficient. If one could perfectly time equity market corrections, being long the yen will be low on a long list of alpha-generating ideas. Chart I-1The Yen Is A Risk-Off Currency The power of the signal comes when macroeconomic conditions, valuations and investor sentiment all align in a unifying message. Back in late 2016, global growth was soft, the yen was very cheap and everyone was short the currency on the back of a dovish shift by the Bank of Japan (BoJ). Having recently introduced yield curve control (YCC), the market was grappling with the dovish implications for the currency, arguably the most significant change in monetary policy by any central bank over the last several years. In retrospect, this was the holy grail for any contrarian investor. Given that backdrop, the yen strengthened by circa 10% from December 2016 to mid-2017, even as equity markets remained resilient. When the equity market drawdown finally arrived in early 2018, it carried the final legs for the yen rally. This backdrop underlines the golden rule for trading the yen, primarily as a safe-haven currency. Economically, the net international investment position of Japan is almost 60% of GDP, one of the largest in the world. On a yearly basis, Japan receives almost 4% of GDP as income receipts, which more than offsets the trade deficit it has been running since the middle of last year (Chart I-2). It is therefore easy to see why any volatility in markets could lead to powerful repatriation flows back to Japan. Chart I-2Japan's Income Receipts Are Quite Large One other factor to consider is that during bull markets, countries that have negative interest rates are subject to powerful outflows from carry trades. The impact of these are difficult to measure, but it is fair to assume that periods of low hedging costs (which tend to correspond to periods of lower volatility) can be powerful catalysts. As markets get volatile and these trades get unwound, unhedged trades become victim to short-covering flows (Chart I-3). Chart I-3Hedging Costs Have Risen The global picture today has some echoes from 2016. Growth is slowing everywhere and markets have staged a powerful bounce from the December lows. This has been in anticipation of a better second half of this year. In the occasion that data disappointments persist beyond the first half, especially out of China, stocks will remain in a “dead zone,” which will be potent fuel for the yen. This is not our baseline scenario, as we expect growth to bottom in the second half of this year, but it remains an important alternative to consider at a time when Japanese growth is surprising to the downside. If the BoJ is preemptive and eases monetary policy, the yen will weaken. But the odds are highly in favor of the yen strengthening before. Bottom Line: Every diversified currency portfolio should hold the yen as insurance against rising market volatility. The BoJ’s Next Move By definition, any data dependent central bank will be behind the curve, but the incentive for the BoJ to act preemptively this time around is getting stronger. The starting point is that history suggests the consumption tax hike, scheduled for October this year, will be disastrous for the economy. Since the late 1990s, every time the consumption taxed has been hiked, the economy has slumped by an average of over 1.3% in subsequent quarters. For an economy with a potential growth rate of just 0.5%-1%, this is a highly unpalatable outcome (Chart I-4). More importantly, similar to past episodes, the consumption tax is being hiked at a time when the economy is slowing, with growth in the third quarter of last year clocking in at -2.4%. Chart I-4The Consumption Tax Hike Will Be Negative However, things are not that simple for the Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s administration. Despite relatively robust economic conditions since the Fukushima disaster, consumption has remained tepid, even though there has been tremendous improvement in labor market conditions. By the same token, the savings ratio for workers has surged (Chart I-5). If consumers are caught in a Ricardian equivalence negative feedback loop,1 exiting deflation becomes a pipe dream for the central bank. Chart I-5Strong Labor Market, Weak Consumption The good news is that the government realizes this and has been taking steps to remedy the situation. At the margin, this is positive: The Japanese government recently passed a law that will allow the largest inflow of foreign workers into the country. There are about 1.5 million foreign workers in Japan today, who collectively constitute circa 2% of the labor force. The importance of foreign labor cannot be understated. Due to Japan’s demographic cliff, foreign workers were responsible for 30% of all new jobs filled in 2017. Assuming public aversion towards immigration remains benign, as is the case now (these are mostly lower-paying jobs in sectors with severe labor shortages), the government’s target to attract 350,000+ new workers by 2025 will go a long way in alleviating the country’s chronic labor shortage. This will also be marginally beneficial for consumption. Abe’s government hopes to offset the consumption tax hike with increased social security spending, especially on child education. For example, preschool and tertiary education will be made free of charge, financed by the tax hike. Labor reform has gone a long way to increase the participation ratio of women in the labor force (Chart I-6), but the reality is that almost 50% of single mothers in Japan still live below the poverty line, according to the BoJ. This is because many of them remain temporary workers. Temporary workers receive about half the pay of full-time workers’ and are not privy to most social security benefits. This has contributed to the surge in the worker’s savings ratio. Alleviating this source of uncertainty could help solve the consumption problem. Chart I-6Rising Female Participation In The Labor Force Transactions made via cashless payments (for example, via mobile pay) will not be subject to the 2% tax increase for nine months. Cashless payments in Japan account for less than 25% of overall transactions – among the lowest of developed economies. Increasing the share of cashless payments will help lift the velocity of money, which will be a positive development for the BoJ (Chart I-7). Chart I-7Money Velocity Is Still Falling Finally, the Phillip’s curve appears to be finally working in Japan, with wages accelerating at a 1.4% pace. Provided the government continues to indirectly put pressure on big firms to raise wages by at least 2-3% in upcoming Shunto wage negotiations, this trend should continue. An extended period of rising wages will help shift the adaptive mindset of Japanese households away from deflation (Chart I-8). Chart I-8Rising Wages Will Help At The Margin The BoJ pays attention to three main variables when looking at inflation: Core CPI prices, the GDP deflator and the output gap, in addition to other measures. The recent slowdown in the economy has tipped two of those indicators in the wrong direction (Chart I-9). This makes it difficult for the Abe administration to declare victory over deflation – something he plans to do before his term expires by September 2021. Chart I-9Inflation Variables Are Softening The perfect cocktail for the Japanese economy will be expansionary monetary and fiscal policy. But despite government efforts to offset the consumption tax hike with higher spending, the IMF still projects the fiscal drag in Japan to be 0.7% of GDP in 2019. This puts the onus on the BoJ to ease financial conditions. At minimum, this suggests that either the stealth tapering of asset purchases by the BoJ could reverse and/or new stimulus could be announced. Bottom Line: The swap markets are currently pricing some form of policy easing in Japan over the next 12 months. Ditto for Japanese banks (Chart I-10A and Chart 10B). Given the recent dovish shift by global central banks, the probability of a move by the BoJ has risen. Any surprise move will initially strengthen USD/JPY. However, given the probability that the dollar weakens in the second half of this year, our bias will be to fade this move. Portfolio investors can use this as an opportunity to buy insurance, should markets become turbulent in the next few months. Chart I-10AThe Market Is Pricing In A Dovish BoJ (1) Chart I-10BThe Market Is Pricing In A Dovish BoJ (2) Corporate Governance, Profits And The Equity/Yen Correlation Once global growth eventually bottoms, inflows into Japan could accelerate, given cheap equity valuations and improved corporate governance that has been raising the relative return on capital (Chart I-11). Depending on whether investors choose to hedge these inflows or not, this will dictate the yen’s path. At present, the cost of hedging does not justify sterilizing portfolio flows (see Chart I-3). Chart I-11Corporate Governance Could Lift Return On Capital The traditional negative relationship between the yen and the Nikkei still holds (Chart I-12). Weakening global growth is negative for the export-dependent Nikkei, and positive for the yen. This is because weakening global growth dips Japanese inflation expectations, and leads to higher real rates. This tends to lift the cost of capital for Japanese firms. Chart I-12The Yen/Equity Correlation Could Shift That said, another factor has been at play. Over the past few years, an offshoring of industrial production has been eroding the benefit of a weak yen/strong Nikkei. In a nutshell, if company labor costs are no longer incurred in yen, then the translation effect for profits is minimized on currency weakness. Investors will need to monitor the equity market/yen correlation over the next few years. It remains deeply negative, but could easily shift, dampening the yen’s counter-cyclical nature. Back in the 80s and 90s, the yen did shift into a pro-cyclical currency. Bottom Line: A dovish shift is increasingly likely by the BoJ. Meanwhile, our bias remains that if markets rebound in the second half of this year, this will be marginally negative for JPY. This could also put EUR/JPY near 132 by year end. A Few Notes On The Pound Recent market developments have become incrementally bullish for sterling. After Tuesday’s second defeat for Prime Minister Theresa May's Brexit deal, and again Wednesday’s rejection of a no-deal Brexit by 312 votes to 308, the probability is rising that the U.K. will either forge a deal for a more orderly separation with the EU or hold a new referendum altogether. Tuesday’s loss was expected because the EU had not offered a viable compromise to the Irish backstop - a deal that will keep Northern Ireland in the EU customs union beyond the transition date of December 2020. Meanwhile, Wednesday’s vote to leave the union sans arrangement was simply unpalatable for Parliament, given economics 101. Almost 50% of U.K. exports go to the E.U. A no-deal Brexit at a time when global exports are in a soft patch, and with much higher tariffs, was a no go for the majority.2 Complete sovereignty of a nation is and has always been a desirable fundamental right. For the average U.K. voter that has not benefited much from globalization, the risk was that Parliament repeatedly failed to pass a motion asking for an extension to the March 29 deadline. As we go to press, this risk has faded as MPs have voted 412 to 202 for a delay. An extension will likely be granted till the May 23-26 EU elections. The preference for an extension has been echoed by EU Commissioner President Jean-Claude Junker, Chief Negotiator Michel Barnier and Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, all heavyweights in this imbroglio. For sterling investors, what is clear is that developments over the next few weeks will be volatile, but increasingly bullish. Admittedly, GBP has already rallied from its December lows. But long-term GBP calls still remain cheap, despite rising volatility (Chart I-13). Our fundamental models also suggest cable is cheap relative to its long-term fair value and it will be tough to the pound to depreciate if the dollar weakens in the second half of this year (Chart I-14). Chart I-13GBP Calls Are Cheap Chart I-14The Pound Is Cheap Bottom Line: The probability of a no-deal Brexit has fallen. Going forward, risk reversals suggest sterling calls remain relatively cheap to puts. Investors who need to hedge out any sterling volatility should therefore favor GBP calls. Housekeeping Our short AUD/NZD position hit its target of 1.036 this week. We are closing this trade for a 7% profit. As highlighted in last week’s report,3 a lot of bad news is already priced into the Australian dollar, which is down 37% from its 2011 peak. Outright short AUD bets are therefore at risk from either upside surprises in global growth, or simply the forces of mean reversion. Chester Ntonifor, Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Ricardian equivalence suggests in simple terms that public sector dissaving will encourage private sector savings. 2 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, titled “The Witches’ Brew Keeps Bubbling…,” dated March 13, 2019, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled “Into A Transition Phase,” dated March 8, 2019, available at fes.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 Data in the U.S. continue to soften: The nonfarm payrolls came in at 20k in February, missing the forecast by 160k. Core consumer prices in February decelerated to a 2.1% year-on-year growth. Nonetheless, February average hourly earnings increased 3.4% year-on-year. Moreover, the unemployment rate in February fell to 3.8%. Lastly, retail sales in January grew at 0.2% month-on-month, outperforming expectations. The DXY index depreciated by 0.7% this week. The U.S. economy keeps growing above trend, but at a slower pace than last year. During the 60 minutes interview with CBS last weekend, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell emphasized that while it is difficult for the economy to keep growing near 4% every year, it remains very healthy and any near-term recession is unlikely. We favor underweighting the dollar as we enter into a transition phase, where non-U.S. growth outperforms. Report Links: Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Recent data in the euro area have been promising: German factory orders in January came in at -3.9% year-on-year, improving from the last reading of -4.5%. The euro area industrial production month-on-month growth came in at 1.4% in January, outperforming expectations. In France, the Q4 nonfarm payrolls increased to 0.2% quarter-on-quarter, double the forecast. German consumer prices stayed at 1.7% year-on-year in February. EUR/USD appreciated by 1.2% this week. We favor overweighting the euro as easing financial conditions put a floor under growth. Report Links: Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 A Contrarian Bet On The Euro - March 1, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan have been negative: M2 money supply missed expectations in February, coming in at 2.4%. Besides, machine tool orders fell by -29.3% year-on-year in February. Total machinery orders were also weak in January, coming in at -2.9% on a year-on-year basis. Lastly, foreign investment in Japanese stocks was -1.2 trillion yen, while investment in Japanese bonds fell to 245.7 billion yen. USD/JPY has been flat this week. A dovish move by the BoJ is likely and it could further cheapen the yen. If global growth bottoms in the later half of this year, this will be bad news for the yen, given its counter-cyclical nature. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Yen Fireworks - January 4, 2019 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. have been mostly positive: In January, industrial production and manufacturing production both outperformed expectations, with industrial production coming in at -0.9% year-on-year and manufacturing production coming in at -1.1% year-on-year. GDP growth in January came in at 0.5% month-on-month, higher than expectations. GBP/USD appreciated by 1.1% this week. Cable rallied after the parliament vote on Wednesday. The sentiment remains positive since chances of a no-deal Brexit have diminished. We recommend long-term call options on cable to capture any upside potential. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Deadlock In Westminster - January 18, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Recent data in Australia continue to deteriorate: Home loan growth in January contracted to -2.6%. The National Australian Bank business confidence index fell to 2 in February, while the business conditions index fell to 4. Consumer confidence in March decreased to -4.8%. AUD/USD moved up by 0.4% this week. The housing market and overall economy continue to weaken in Australia. However, the Australian dollar is at a 10-year low suggesting much of the bad news is priced in. Report Links: Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Recent data in New Zealand have been negative: Electronic card retail sales came in at 3.4% yoy, slightly lower than the previous reading of 3.5%. Food price index in February fell to 0.4% month-on-month. NZD/USD increased by 0.9% this week. We remain underweight NZD/USD, on overvaluation grounds. We are also closing our short AUD/NZD position for a 7% profit. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Recent data in Canada have confirmed robust labor market conditions: The unemployment rate in February came in line at 5.8% while the participation rate increased to 65.8%. New jobs created in February were 55.9k, the strongest since 1981, beating analysts’ forecasts of zero job creation. February average hourly wage growth also increased to 2.25% year-on-year. However, housing starts in February fell to 173.1k, underperforming expectations. USD/CAD fell by 0.6% this week. The Canadian economy, especially the housing sector continues to show signs of weakness, despite a strong labor market. The risk is that overvaluation in the housing market and elevated debt levels impair consumer spending power. While the rising oil price helps, we think the benefits are more marginal than in the past. Report Links: Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland has been negative: Producer and import price growth in February fell to -0.7% year-on-year. EUR/CHF appreciated by 0.3% this week. Our long EUR/CHF trade is now 0.5% in the money since initiated on December 7, 2018. We continue to favor the euro versus the swiss franc as the later benefits less from a bottoming in global growth. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Waiting For A Real Deal - December 7, 2018 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Recent data in Norway have been mostly positive: Overall consumer price inflation in February fell to 3% year-on-year; however, core inflation increased to 2.6% yoy. Producer prices also increased by 8% year-on-year in February. USD/NOK depreciated by 1.8% this week. Our long NOK/SEK trade is 2.8% in the money over two months. We continue to overweight NOK due to the cheap valuations and rising oil prices. The pickup in inflation also allows the Norges bank to become incrementally hawkish. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Global Liquidity Trends Support The Dollar, But... - January 25, 2019 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Recent data in Sweden have been disappointing: In February, consumer price inflation fell to 1.9% yoy. The unemployment rate climbed to 6.6% in February. USD/SEK depreciated by 1.5% this week, mainly due to the recent weakness in the dollar. We remain positive on the SEK versus USD based on an expected pickup in the Swedish economy and cheap valuations. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Global Liquidity Trends Support The Dollar, But... - January 25, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades