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Highlights After this week’s drama, the Brexit political process remains extremely complex, but the probability of a hard Brexit is still below 10%. No easy compromise will come through as Brexit suffers a fundamental contradiction: balancing the desire to maximize British sovereignty versus minimizing the pain of leaving the common market. While cross-party talks will prove unfruitful, an extension of the Article 50 deadline is very likely. A new referendum is the most probable solution to the current impasse, but it will likely require a new election. The pound is cheap, but volatility will stay elevated. Buying the pound versus the euro on politically induced drawdowns remains the optimal strategy to gain exposure. Long-term GBP/USD calls are also attractive. The dollar cyclical bull market is intact, but the greenback correction is likely to deepen, especially against growth-sensitive currencies, the AUD in particular. Feature Theresa May’s soft Brexit deal has suffered the largest defeat since 1924 for a bill submitted by a sitting government. The proposed EU Withdrawal Agreement was voted down by 432 members of Parliament, including a whopping 118 members of the Conservative Party. This suggests that both hard Brexit and Bremain Tories voted against May. What lies at the heart of this historic collapse? The fundamental problem is that a soft Brexit is incompatible with the principal demand of Brexit voters: Sovereignty. Any relationship entailing continued access to EU institutions and markets will require two elements that reduce sovereignty: Paying an access fee and accepting the acquis communautaire of the EU without having a say in how it is formulated.1 We do not see how this impasse will be overcome. The financial community’s preferred option – that Prime Minister May breaks ranks and appeals to the Labour Party for a super-soft “Norway Plus” option – is a fantasy. First, the Labour Party smells blood and will likely oppose any deal. Second, a Norway Plus option would entail the highest loss of sovereignty imaginable, given that the U.K. would essentially pay full EU membership fees with no ability to influence the regulatory policies that London would have to abide by. There is also a debate as to whether London would be able to constrict immigration from the EU under that option over the long term, a key demand of Brexiters.2 Members of Parliament may also be getting cold feet due to the shifting poll numbers, which have slowly but steadily increased the gap between those who think that Brexit was the right choice and those who think it was the wrong choice to just under double digits (Chart I-1). This gap reveals that the U.K. public is having second thoughts, no doubt influenced by the incoherent process itself, but also by the combination of geopolitical factors that have changed the appeal of “going it alone.” Chart I-1A Serious Case Of Bregret First, the EU is no longer mired in an epic migration crisis, as it was in the months before the referendum (Chart I-2). Second, terrorist attacks committed by home-grown Islamic State adherents have abated in continental Europe, whereas they seemed to be a monthly affair ahead of the June 2016 vote. Third, the U.K.’s main ally, the United States, which is often cited as a key post-Brexit partner, has elected a president who is unpopular in the U.K. (Chart I-3), putting the “special relationship” in doubt. Chart I-2The Refugee Crisis Is Over   Since the fateful referendum in 2016, the world has become less stable. As such, voters in the U.K. are no doubt wondering whether leaving the EU really would entail greater sovereignty – or whether “going it alone” would mean having to take the fait accompli of large powers such as the U.S., China, and Russia – whose values they share even less than those of their fellow Europeans across the Channel. Sovereignty, in other words, does not operate under Newtonian laws, but is rather relative to one’s vantage point. In short, Brexit cannot be resolved merely with an extension of the negotiating period. Furthermore, our high-conviction view is that even if it were possible to pass the withdrawal agreement today by promising an even softer exit, the process will ultimately fail when, in two- or three-years’ time, Westminster pushes to vote on implementing such an arrangement. Investors should remember that there is another vote waiting after the transition period. In the meantime, we see the following options as a way to resolve the current impasse (Diagram I-1): Article 50 extension: The EU is on record stating that it would agree to extend the Article 50 deadline, currently set at March 29. The EU can do so with a unanimous vote of the EU Council. If there is one thing that the Euro Area crisis has taught investors, it is that deadlines are set in policy and legislation, not in stone. London can extend Article 50 with a simple legislative act, amending the March 29 deadline set in the EU Withdrawal Act (passed in June 2018). The EU is on record stating that it would be simple to extend the current negotiating period until July, when a new European Parliament (EP) would sit in its first session. Any extension beyond July would require U.K. members of European parliament (MEPs) to sit in the legislative body, as the country would remain part of the EU. This would mean that the U.K. would have to hold EP elections. We think this is a minor technicality. But it would be highly embarrassing for PM May if she had to organize EP elections a few months from now, especially if it galvanized the Bremain movement to turn out en masse and send Europhile MEPs to Strasbourg. The bigger question is what the extra time would accomplish. Given the size of the loss for the government on its Brexit bill, we think that both Labour Party members and Bremain supporters have been emboldened and will hold out for either a new election or a new referendum, or in case of Labour Party members, both.   New referendum: A new referendum would require an Article 50 extension. The rules for referendums are set out in the Political Parties, Elections, And Referendums Act of 2000. Westminster would have to pass legislation, which would then have to be considered by the Electoral Commission. The process would very likely go beyond March. The easiest path to a new referendum is through a Labour Party victory in an early election. For PM May to reverse her longstanding policy and call a new referendum, we would need another round of negotiations to fail. As such, it is difficult to see PM May concede to a second referendum, at least not until late in 2019.   A new election: Even though the January 16 vote of no confidence against the government failed, PM May could decide that she needs an early election. Why would she take this route? Because it could give her a political mandate with which to pursue renewed negotiations with the EU and her version of soft Brexit. Under the terms of the Fixed Term Parliaments Act, May would need two-thirds of all MPs in the House of Commons to approve a new election. Current polls show that the election would be too close to call (Chart I-4). We think May would stand a good chance of renewing her mandate by painting Opposition Leader Jeremy Corbyn as too left-leaning and as indecisive on Brexit. Chart I-4An Election May Not Provide A Clear Answer One option not on the table is another leadership challenge to PM May. She already survived the challenge in December and is therefore safe from a new one for 12 months. These rules could of course be changed or PM May could simply resign, but we do not expect either option. Simply put, a change of leadership in the Conservative Party is unlikely as hard Brexit supporters cannot get a majority of Tory MPs to support them, while soft Brexit MPs continue to support May. Could a no-deal Brexit occur? Technically, yes. According to the EU Withdrawal Act, the U.K. will leave the EU on March 29. As such, with no further legislative acts, the U.K. could “sleepwalk” into a hard Brexit. However, we believe that the probability of this is under 10%. There is not even close to a majority in Westminster for a hard Brexit. We estimate that, at most, only 10% of 650 MPs in the House of Commons favor a hard Brexit. As such, the government would certainly win a large majority for a piece of legislation that extends the deadline. And, according to the European Court of Justice ruling in December, London could stop the Article 50 process unilaterally, without EU approval. If the probability of hard Brexit is below 10%, isn’t the pound a screaming buy at this point? After all, if the probability of a major dislocation in the economic relationship between the U.K. and the continent is so low, it also means the probability that the Bank of England maintains as easy a monetary policy as its current one is minimal. Our low-conviction answer to this question is yes, the pound is indeed attractive. The reason why buying the pound is a low-conviction view is that one of the three alternative scenarios listed above could have mixed implications for the British economy as well as U.K. assets and the pound: A new election that produces a Labour government. Corbyn’s legislative agenda is the most left-leaning that Europe has seen since François Mitterrand. He is also on record stating that he would pursue his own negotiations with Brussels. Corbyn’s government would therefore prolong the uncertainty of Brexit while enacting an ambitious left-wing agenda. Ultimately, he may reverse both of these positions: succumbing to pressure to call a new referendum while moderating his economic policy. However, as was the case with Mitterrand in the early 1980s, it would require a deep market riot to force him to do so, which means that closing one’s eyes and buying the pound at these levels is not for risk-averse investors. Bottom Line: The political battle for Brexit is far from over. The risk of a hard Brexit has receded considerably to a less than 10% probability, but volatility will continue due to the inherent conflict between the desire to maximize British sovereignty and the objective to minimize economic pain. While cross-party talks are unlikely to yield any decisive changes, an extension of the Article 50 deadline is likely. A new referendum is the most probable end game of this saga, but it will probably require a new election. While the pound is an attractive long-term play, GBP pairs will continue to suffer from politically induced volatility. Investment Implications In September, we argued that the geopolitical risk premium in the GBP was too low in the face of the uncertainty ahead. Moreover, we recognized that the pound was cheap on many long-term metrics, limiting its downside potential. As a result, instead of shorting GBP outright, we recommended investors buy GBP-volatility, a view that panned out well for us. We closed this recommendation in mid-November, when Cabinet Ministers McVey, Raab, and Vara resigned from the government. Since that time, GBP volatility has receded as investors have increasingly agreed with our assessment that the probability of a hard Brexit is very low. However, the political reality in London continues to suggest that the GBP will trade in a volatile fashion, even if its long-term attractiveness remains alive. Hence, we continue to recommend investors use dips in the GBP to slowly begin moving capital into sterling. Practically, we have expressed this view by selling EUR/GBP. EUR/GBP trades toward the top end of its historical distribution (Chart I-5) and is likely to sell off violently on any whiff that a resolution of any kind is coming. Furthermore, since British interest rates are higher than in the euro area, investors are paid to wait while shorting this cross. Chart I-5EUR/GBP Is A Coiled Spring The pound is particularly cheap against the U.S. dollar (Chart I-6). As a result, buying GBP/USD offers the most attractive long-term potential. However, the intermediate-term hurdles for this position are greater than those present in selling EUR/GBP. First, long cable offers a negative carry of 1.89%, thus buying GBP/USD means that investors are paying to take on a lot of volatility. Second, our negative intermediate-term outlook for the global economy implies a strong dollar over the coming six to nine months, creating risks for GBP/USD holders while helping the profile of selling EUR/GBP (Chart I-7). Finally, since Brexit risks are weighing on the euro as well as the pound, if a hard Brexit were indeed to materialize, GBP would suffer much deeper losses against the dollar than against the euro. Chart I-6Lot Of Value In Cable   Chart I-7Our Strong Dollar Theme Favors Shorting EUR/GBP To Play Rebounds In Sterling This inherent conflict in GBP/USD between potentially large long-term gains but heightened short-term risk suggests that the best way to play cable is to buy long-term call options on this pair. As Chart I-8 shows, the implied volatility on 2-year GBP/USD options is elevated, but has been much higher in the past. Additionally, the implied volatility on these long-term options is abnormally low relative to that offered by 3-month options (Chart I-8, bottom panel), suggesting they are comparatively cheap. Thus, since the long-term outlook for cable is much more attractive than the short-term one, favoring long-term options as a vehicle to gain exposure to GBP/USD makes sense. It is a risky bet only deserving of a small portfolio allocation. Chart I-8Long-Term Call Options On Cable Are Attractive Bottom Line: Only investors with either long-term horizons or a deep capacity to handle volatility should begin garnering some exposure to the pound. Selling EUR/GBP when the pound weakens in response to political shocks remains the best vehicle to do so. While buying cable offers more attractive long-term potential returns than selling EUR/GBP, it is a riskier bet over a six- to nine-month horizon. Nonetheless, investors wanting to get some pound exposure via buying GBP/USD should allocate funds to 2-year GBP/USD call options. Short-Term Risks For The Greenback As we argued last week, continued downside in global growth as well as U.S. interest rate markets having already priced in a year-long pause by the Fed together point to continued upside for the dollar. However, we also highlighted that the dollar currently possesses significant tactical downside, especially against commodity currencies. Five reasons underpin our cautious tactically view: First, the dollar is currently over-owned. Both net speculative positions in the dollar and sentiment toward the DXY are near bullish extremes (Chart I-9). The dollar is a momentum currency, hence the progressive deterioration in our favored momentum signal for the greenback – the crossover of the one-month and six-month moving averages – suggests that the dollar could soon experience a momentum-induced liquidation. Chart I-9If Our Dollar Momentum Signal Turns Negative, There Is No Shortage Of USD Sellers Second, the most recent BAML Investor survey not only showed that investors are more pessimistic on global growth than at any point in the past decade, but also that a trade war was highest on the list of concerns. Today, the probability of a truce in Sino-U.S. trade relations is growing. A declining trade-war risk should temporarily support assets levered to global growth and hurt the defensive U.S. dollar. Moreover, a consequence of the warm-up between Beijing and Washington has been a weakening USD/CNY. Historically, a strengthening RMB is associated with rebounding commodity currencies (Chart I-10). Chart I-10A Strong CNY Points To Stronger Commodity Currencies Third, global growth could also temporarily positively surprise beaten-down expectations. Today, the highly mean-reverting Citi Economic Surprise Index is very stretched to the downside, suggesting scope for a reversal (Chart I-11). With Chinese fiscal stimulus building up, and the recent pick-up in the six-month Chinese credit impulse, a temporary bout of positive economic surprises is a growing risk for dollar bulls. Chart I-11There Is Scope For Economic Surprises To Rebound Fourth, our China Investment Strategy service’s Market-Based China Growth Indicator has rebounded (Chart I-12). This further reinforces the risk that global growth could positively surprise abysmal expectations. Chart I-12Markets Signalling A Pause In The Economic Slowdown Fifth, gold prices have rebounded significantly, implying an improvement in the global liquidity backdrop (Chart I-13). Since tightening global liquidity was a contributor to the deterioration in non-U.S. growth, rebounding gold prices also confirm that the slowdown in international economic activity may take a breather. Chart I-13Gold As A Liquidity Gauge Altogether, these five factors suggest that the corrective episode in the countercyclical dollar may deepen. Because Chinese reflation and a truce in Sino-U.S. tensions lie at the crux of the potential for positive economic surprises, the growth-sensitive currencies like the AUD, the CAD and EM currencies should outperform, especially vis-à-vis the yen. In this environment, Scandinavian currencies should also rise versus the euro. EUR/CHF is set to benefit from this backdrop. For the time being, we continue to view any weakness in the dollar as a correction, not the end of the bull market. Ultimately, the respite in the Chinese economy is likely to prove transitory. The six-month credit impulse is improving, but the 12-month credit impulse is not, even when fiscal stimulus is taken into account (Chart I-14). Since the noise-to-signal ratio is much greater in the six-month impulse than in the 12-month one, we believe that only once the longer-term credit impulse rebounds will Chinese economic activity form a durable bottom. Moreover, Chinese exports are beginning to suffer from a payback period after having been artificially supported by front-running ahead of the trade sanctions. As things stand today, the recent weakness in Chinese export growth looks set to worsen (Chart I-15). This will cause yet another shock to Chinese growth, one likely to percolate to domestic demand. Once it does, global industrial activity should soften again, creating a strong support for the dollar. Chart I-14China's 12-Month Credit Impulse Doesn't Point To An Imminent Economic Turnaround... Chart I-15 ...And Exports Are Set To Become A Significant Drag Bottom Line: Cyclically, fundamentals remain supportive for the greenback. However, the tactical picture shows that the dollar should correct further, especially against growth-sensitive currencies like the AUD, which could rally to 0.75. This view is because the dollar’s momentum is deteriorating sharply, the yuan is rising on the back of a growing likelihood of a trade truce, global economic surprises have room to brighten, China is implementing some reflationary efforts, and global liquidity is improving at the margin.   Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com   Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The acquis communautaire refers to the collection of accumulated legislation, legal acts, and judicial decisions that constitute the body of the EU law. 2 Proponents of the Norway Plus option point out that Article 112(1) of the European Economic Area (EEA) Agreement allows for restriction of movement of people within the area. However, these restrictions are intended to be used in times of “serious economic, societal or environmental difficulties.” It certainly appears to be an option for London to restrict EU migration, but it is not clear whether Europe would agree for this to be a permanent solution. Liechtenstein has been using Article 112 to impose quantitative limitations on immigration for decades, but that is because its tiny geographical area is recognized as a “specific situation” that justifies such restrictions.
Highlights After this week’s drama, the Brexit political process remains extremely complex, but the probability of a hard Brexit is still below 10%. No easy compromise will come through as Brexit suffers a fundamental contradiction: balancing the desire to maximize British sovereignty versus minimizing the pain of leaving the common market. While cross-party talks will prove unfruitful, an extension of the Article 50 deadline is very likely. A new referendum is the most probable solution to the current impasse, but it will likely require a new election. The pound is cheap, but volatility will stay elevated. Buying the pound versus the euro on politically induced drawdowns remains the optimal strategy to gain exposure. Long-term GBP/USD calls are also attractive. The dollar cyclical bull market is intact, but the greenback correction is likely to deepen, especially against growth-sensitive currencies, the AUD in particular. Feature Theresa May’s soft Brexit deal has suffered the largest defeat since 1924 for a bill submitted by a sitting government. The proposed EU Withdrawal Agreement was voted down by 432 members of Parliament, including a whopping 118 members of the Conservative Party. This suggests that both hard Brexit and Bremain Tories voted against May. What lies at the heart of this historic collapse? The fundamental problem is that a soft Brexit is incompatible with the principal demand of Brexit voters: Sovereignty. Any relationship entailing continued access to EU institutions and markets will require two elements that reduce sovereignty: Paying an access fee and accepting the acquis communautaire of the EU without having a say in how it is formulated.1   We do not see how this impasse will be overcome. The financial community’s preferred option – that Prime Minister May breaks ranks and appeals to the Labour Party for a super-soft “Norway Plus” option – is a fantasy. First, the Labour Party smells blood and will likely oppose any deal. Second, a Norway Plus option would entail the highest loss of sovereignty imaginable, given that the U.K. would essentially pay full EU membership fees with no ability to influence the regulatory policies that London would have to abide by. There is also a debate as to whether London would be able to constrict immigration from the EU under that option over the long term, a key demand of Brexiters.2  Members of Parliament may also be getting cold feet due to the shifting poll numbers, which have slowly but steadily increased the gap between those who think that Brexit was the right choice and those who think it was the wrong choice to just under double digits (Chart I-1). This gap reveals that the U.K. public is having second thoughts, no doubt influenced by the incoherent process itself, but also by the combination of geopolitical factors that have changed the appeal of “going it alone.” Chart I-1A Serious Case Of Bregret First, the EU is no longer mired in an epic migration crisis, as it was in the months before the referendum (Chart I-2). Second, terrorist attacks committed by home-grown Islamic State adherents have abated in continental Europe, whereas they seemed to be a monthly affair ahead of the June 2016 vote. Third, the U.K.’s main ally, the United States, which is often cited as a key post-Brexit partner, has elected a president who is unpopular in the U.K. (Chart I-3), putting the “special relationship” in doubt. Chart I-2The Refugee Crisis Is Over   Since the fateful referendum in 2016, the world has become less stable. As such, voters in the U.K. are no doubt wondering whether leaving the EU really would entail greater sovereignty – or whether “going it alone” would mean having to take the fait accompli of large powers such as the U.S., China, and Russia – whose values they share even less than those of their fellow Europeans across the Channel. Sovereignty, in other words, does not operate under Newtonian laws, but is rather relative to one’s vantage point.   In short, Brexit cannot be resolved merely with an extension of the negotiating period. Furthermore, our high-conviction view is that even if it were possible to pass the withdrawal agreement today by promising an even softer exit, the process will ultimately fail when, in two- or three-years’ time, Westminster pushes to vote on implementing such an arrangement. Investors should remember that there is another vote waiting after the transition period.  In the meantime, we see the following options as a way to resolve the current impasse (Diagram I-1): Article 50 extension: The EU is on record stating that it would agree to extend the Article 50 deadline, currently set at March 29. The EU can do so with a unanimous vote of the EU Council. If there is one thing that the Euro Area crisis has taught investors, it is that deadlines are set in policy and legislation, not in stone. London can extend Article 50 with a simple legislative act, amending the March 29 deadline set in the EU Withdrawal Act (passed in June 2018). The EU is on record stating that it would be simple to extend the current negotiating period until July, when a new European Parliament (EP) would sit in its first session. Any extension beyond July would require U.K. members of European parliament (MEPs) to sit in the legislative body, as the country would remain part of the EU. This would mean that the U.K. would have to hold EP elections. We think this is a minor technicality. But it would be highly embarrassing for PM May if she had to organize EP elections a few months from now, especially if it galvanized the Bremain movement to turn out en masse and send Europhile MEPs to Strasbourg. The bigger question is what the extra time would accomplish. Given the size of the loss for the government on its Brexit bill, we think that both Labour Party members and Bremain supporters have been emboldened and will hold out for either a new election or a new referendum, or in case of Labour Party members, both.    New referendum: A new referendum would require an Article 50 extension. The rules for referendums are set out in the Political Parties, Elections, And Referendums Act of 2000. Westminster would have to pass legislation, which would then have to be considered by the Electoral Commission. The process would very likely go beyond March. The easiest path to a new referendum is through a Labour Party victory in an early election. For PM May to reverse her longstanding policy and call a new referendum, we would need another round of negotiations to fail. As such, it is difficult to see PM May concede to a second referendum, at least not until late in 2019.   A new election: Even though the January 16 vote of no confidence against the government failed, PM May could decide that she needs an early election. Why would she take this route? Because it could give her a political mandate with which to pursue renewed negotiations with the EU and her version of soft Brexit. Under the terms of the Fixed Term Parliaments Act, May would need two-thirds of all MPs in the House of Commons to approve a new election. Current polls show that the election would be too close to call (Chart I-4). We think May would stand a good chance of renewing her mandate by painting Opposition Leader Jeremy Corbyn as too left-leaning and as indecisive on Brexit. Chart I-4An Election May Not Provide A Clear Answer One option not on the table is another leadership challenge to PM May. She already survived the challenge in December and is therefore safe from a new one for 12 months. These rules could of course be changed or PM May could simply resign, but we do not expect either option. Simply put, a change of leadership in the Conservative Party is unlikely as hard Brexit supporters cannot get a majority of Tory MPs to support them, while soft Brexit MPs continue to support May. Could a no-deal Brexit occur? Technically, yes. According to the EU Withdrawal Act, the U.K. will leave the EU on March 29. As such, with no further legislative acts, the U.K. could “sleepwalk” into a hard Brexit. However, we believe that the probability of this is under 10%. There is not even close to a majority in Westminster for a hard Brexit. We estimate that, at most, only 10% of 650 MPs in the House of Commons favor a hard Brexit. As such, the government would certainly win a large majority for a piece of legislation that extends the deadline. And, according to the European Court of Justice ruling in December, London could stop the Article 50 process unilaterally, without EU approval. If the probability of hard Brexit is below 10%, isn’t the pound a screaming buy at this point? After all, if the probability of a major dislocation in the economic relationship between the U.K. and the continent is so low, it also means the probability that the Bank of England maintains as easy a monetary policy as its current one is minimal. Our low-conviction answer to this question is yes, the pound is indeed attractive. The reason why buying the pound is a low-conviction view is that one of the three alternative scenarios listed above could have mixed implications for the British economy as well as U.K. assets and the pound: A new election that produces a Labour government. Corbyn’s legislative agenda is the most left-leaning that Europe has seen since François Mitterrand. He is also on record stating that he would pursue his own negotiations with Brussels. Corbyn’s government would therefore prolong the uncertainty of Brexit while enacting an ambitious left-wing agenda. Ultimately, he may reverse both of these positions: succumbing to pressure to call a new referendum while moderating his economic policy. However, as was the case with Mitterrand in the early 1980s, it would require a deep market riot to force him to do so, which means that closing one’s eyes and buying the pound at these levels is not for risk-averse investors. Bottom Line: The political battle for Brexit is far from over. The risk of a hard Brexit has receded considerably to a less than 10% probability, but volatility will continue due to the inherent conflict between the desire to maximize British sovereignty and the objective to minimize economic pain. While cross-party talks are unlikely to yield any decisive changes, an extension of the Article 50 deadline is likely. A new referendum is the most probable end game of this saga, but it will probably require a new election. While the pound is an attractive long-term play, GBP pairs will continue to suffer from politically induced volatility. Investment Implications In September, we argued that the geopolitical risk premium in the GBP was too low in the face of the uncertainty ahead. Moreover, we recognized that the pound was cheap on many long-term metrics, limiting its downside potential. As a result, instead of shorting GBP outright, we recommended investors buy GBP-volatility, a view that panned out well for us. We closed this recommendation in mid-November, when Cabinet Ministers McVey, Raab, and Vara resigned from the government. Since that time, GBP volatility has receded as investors have increasingly agreed with our assessment that the probability of a hard Brexit is very low. However, the political reality in London continues to suggest that the GBP will trade in a volatile fashion, even if its long-term attractiveness remains alive. Hence, we continue to recommend investors use dips in the GBP to slowly begin moving capital into sterling. Practically, we have expressed this view by selling EUR/GBP. EUR/GBP trades toward the top end of its historical distribution (Chart I-5) and is likely to sell off violently on any whiff that a resolution of any kind is coming. Furthermore, since British interest rates are higher than in the euro area, investors are paid to wait while shorting this cross. Chart I-5EUR/GBP Is A Coiled Spring The pound is particularly cheap against the U.S. dollar (Chart I-6). As a result, buying GBP/USD offers the most attractive long-term potential. However, the intermediate-term hurdles for this position are greater than those present in selling EUR/GBP. First, long cable offers a negative carry of 1.89%, thus buying GBP/USD means that investors are paying to take on a lot of volatility. Second, our negative intermediate-term outlook for the global economy implies a strong dollar over the coming six to nine months, creating risks for GBP/USD holders while helping the profile of selling EUR/GBP (Chart I-7). Finally, since Brexit risks are weighing on the euro as well as the pound, if a hard Brexit were indeed to materialize, GBP would suffer much deeper losses against the dollar than against the euro. Chart I-6Lot Of Value In Cable   Chart I-7Our Strong Dollar Theme Favors Shorting EUR/GBP To Play Rebounds In Sterling This inherent conflict in GBP/USD between potentially large long-term gains but heightened short-term risk suggests that the best way to play cable is to buy long-term call options on this pair. As Chart I-8 shows, the implied volatility on 2-year GBP/USD options is elevated, but has been much higher in the past. Additionally, the implied volatility on these long-term options is abnormally low relative to that offered by 3-month options (Chart I-8, bottom panel), suggesting they are comparatively cheap. Thus, since the long-term outlook for cable is much more attractive than the short-term one, favoring long-term options as a vehicle to gain exposure to GBP/USD makes sense. It is a risky bet only deserving of a small portfolio allocation. Chart I-8Long-Term Call Options On Cable Are Attractive Bottom Line: Only investors with either long-term horizons or a deep capacity to handle volatility should begin garnering some exposure to the pound. Selling EUR/GBP when the pound weakens in response to political shocks remains the best vehicle to do so. While buying cable offers more attractive long-term potential returns than selling EUR/GBP, it is a riskier bet over a six- to nine-month horizon. Nonetheless, investors wanting to get some pound exposure via buying GBP/USD should allocate funds to 2-year GBP/USD call options. Short-Term Risks For The Greenback As we argued last week, continued downside in global growth as well as U.S. interest rate markets having already priced in a year-long pause by the Fed together point to continued upside for the dollar. However, we also highlighted that the dollar currently possesses significant tactical downside, especially against commodity currencies. Five reasons underpin our cautious tactically view: First, the dollar is currently over-owned. Both net speculative positions in the dollar and sentiment toward the DXY are near bullish extremes (Chart I-9). The dollar is a momentum currency, hence the progressive deterioration in our favored momentum signal for the greenback – the crossover of the one-month and six-month moving averages – suggests that the dollar could soon experience a momentum-induced liquidation. Chart I-9If Our Dollar Momentum Signal Turns Negative, There Is No Shortage Of USD Sellers Second, the most recent BAML Investor survey not only showed that investors are more pessimistic on global growth than at any point in the past decade, but also that a trade war was highest on the list of concerns. Today, the probability of a truce in Sino-U.S. trade relations is growing. A declining trade-war risk should temporarily support assets levered to global growth and hurt the defensive U.S. dollar. Moreover, a consequence of the warm-up between Beijing and Washington has been a weakening USD/CNY. Historically, a strengthening RMB is associated with rebounding commodity currencies (Chart I-10). Chart I-10A Strong CNY Points To Stronger Commodity Currencies Third, global growth could also temporarily positively surprise beaten-down expectations. Today, the highly mean-reverting Citi Economic Surprise Index is very stretched to the downside, suggesting scope for a reversal (Chart I-11). With Chinese fiscal stimulus building up, and the recent pick-up in the six-month Chinese credit impulse, a temporary bout of positive economic surprises is a growing risk for dollar bulls. Chart I-11There Is Scope For Economic Surprises To Rebound Fourth, our China Investment Strategy service’s Market-Based China Growth Indicator has rebounded (Chart I-12). This further reinforces the risk that global growth could positively surprise abysmal expectations. Chart I-12Markets Signalling A Pause In The Economic Slowdown Fifth, gold prices have rebounded significantly, implying an improvement in the global liquidity backdrop (Chart I-13). Since tightening global liquidity was a contributor to the deterioration in non-U.S. growth, rebounding gold prices also confirm that the slowdown in international economic activity may take a breather. Chart I-13Gold As A Liquidity Gauge Altogether, these five factors suggest that the corrective episode in the countercyclical dollar may deepen. Because Chinese reflation and a truce in Sino-U.S. tensions lie at the crux of the potential for positive economic surprises, the growth-sensitive currencies like the AUD, the CAD and EM currencies should outperform, especially vis-à-vis the yen. In this environment, Scandinavian currencies should also rise versus the euro. EUR/CHF is set to benefit from this backdrop. For the time being, we continue to view any weakness in the dollar as a correction, not the end of the bull market. Ultimately, the respite in the Chinese economy is likely to prove transitory. The six-month credit impulse is improving, but the 12-month credit impulse is not, even when fiscal stimulus is taken into account (Chart I-14). Since the noise-to-signal ratio is much greater in the six-month impulse than in the 12-month one, we believe that only once the longer-term credit impulse rebounds will Chinese economic activity form a durable bottom. Moreover, Chinese exports are beginning to suffer from a payback period after having been artificially supported by front-running ahead of the trade sanctions. As things stand today, the recent weakness in Chinese export growth looks set to worsen (Chart I-15). This will cause yet another shock to Chinese growth, one likely to percolate to domestic demand. Once it does, global industrial activity should soften again, creating a strong support for the dollar. Chart I-14China's 12-Month Credit Impulse Doesn't Point To An Imminent Economic Turnaround... Chart I-15 ...And Exports Are Set To Become A Significant Drag Bottom Line: Cyclically, fundamentals remain supportive for the greenback. However, the tactical picture shows that the dollar should correct further, especially against growth-sensitive currencies like the AUD, which could rally to 0.75. This view is because the dollar’s momentum is deteriorating sharply, the yuan is rising on the back of a growing likelihood of a trade truce, global economic surprises have room to brighten, China is implementing some reflationary efforts, and global liquidity is improving at the margin.   Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com   Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The acquis communautaire refers to the collection of accumulated legislation, legal acts, and judicial decisions that constitute the body of the EU law. 2 Proponents of the Norway Plus option point out that Article 112(1) of the European Economic Area (EEA) Agreement allows for restriction of movement of people within the area. However, these restrictions are intended to be used in times of “serious economic, societal or environmental difficulties.” It certainly appears to be an option for London to restrict EU migration, but it is not clear whether Europe would agree for this to be a permanent solution. Liechtenstein has been using Article 112 to impose quantitative limitations on immigration for decades, but that is because its tiny geographical area is recognized as a “specific situation” that justifies such restrictions. Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.S. has been mixed: Core inflation came in line with expectations at 2.2%. Meanwhile, initial jobless claims outperformed expectations, coming it at 216 thousand. Finally, the ISM Non-manufacturing survey also surprised negatively, coming in at 57.6. DXY has been flat since the beginning of the year. After falling through the end of 2018 and the start of 2019, the dollar has staged a small recovery, managing to be flat year to date. We believe that while the greenback could experience tactical weaknesses in the coming three months, our cyclical outlook for the dollar remains positive. After all, the Fed will be able to deliver more hikes than the markets currently anticipates, and global growth remains soggy. Report Links: So Donald Trump Cares About Stocks, Eh? - January 9, 2019 Waiting For A Real Deal - December 7, 2018 2019 Key Views: The Xs And The Currency Market - December 7, 2018 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Recent data in the euro are has been negative: Industrial production yearly growth surprised negatively, coming in at a 3.3% contraction. Moreover, headline inflation also underperformed expectations, coming in at 1.6%. Finally, the Markit Composite PMI also surprised to the downside, coming in at 51.1. EUR/USD has been flat since the beginning of the year. We are positive on EUR/USD on a tactical basis, given that China could be experiencing a temporary rebound, and given that the fall in the dollar and bond yields at the end of 2018 improved financial conditions around the world. These factors should be positive for the euro over the next 3-months. Report Links: 2019 Key Views: The Xs And The Currency Market - December 7, 2018 Six Questions From The Road - November 16, 2018 Evaluating The ECB’s Options In December - November 6, 2018 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan has been mixed: Domestic Goods prices yearly growth underperformed expectations, coming in at a 1.5%. Moreover, overall household spending also underperformed expectations, coming in at a 0.6% contraction. However, bank lending yearly growth outperformed expectations, coming in at 2.4%. USD/JPY has fell at the beginning of the year but then managed to recover a bit. We are bearish on the yen on a tactical basis, given that the easing of financial conditions that started in late 2018 should continue to help risk assets. Consequently, safe havens like the yen should remain under pressure on a 3-month horizon. Report Links: Yen Fireworks - January 4, 2019 2019 Key Views: The Xs And The Currency Market - December 7, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. has been mixed: Core inflation came in above expectations, coming in at 1.9%. However, industrial production surprised negatively, coming in at a 1.5% contraction. Finally, retail price growth also surprised to the downside, coming in at 2.7%. GBP/USD has risen by 2% since the beginning of the year. The low probability of a hard Brexit will support the pound, however, as the British political situation remain extremely fluid, GBP will continue to experience elevated volatility. Nonetheless, we believe that the best vehicle to play the strength in the pound is to short EUR/GBP. This cross is now trading at the upper range of its historical distribution, and therefore, any good news coming out of Britain could make it sell off violently. Report Links: Six Questions From The Road - November 16, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Clashing Forces: The Fed And EM Financial Conditions - October 19, 2018 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Recent data in Australia has been mixed: Retail sales month-on-month growth outperformed expectations, coming in at 0.4%. However, the trade balance for November also surprised negatively, coming in at 1.925 million. Finally, building permits month-on-month growth also surprised to the downside, coming in at -9.1%. AUD/USD has risen by 2.6% since the beginning of the year. We are positive on the AUD on a tactical basis, given that the current fall in the dollar and yields have eased monetary conditions and have provided a reflationary force helping risk assets. Moreover, the warming in Sino-U.S. relations and the recent strength in the yuan is adding another tailwind behind growth sensitive currencies like the Aussie. That being said, we are still bearish on the AUD on a cyclical timeframe, as the dual forces of Chinese deleveraging and Fed tightening should resume later this year. Report Links: Waiting For A Real Deal - December 7, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Policy Divergences Are Still The Name Of The Game - August 14, 2018 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Recent data in New Zealand has been negative: Gross domestic product yearly growth came in below expectations, coming in at 2.6%. Moreover, electronic card retail sales month on month growth declined further from last month to -2.3%. NZD/USD has risen by 1.1% since the beginning of the year. While we are positive on the kiwi on a 3-month basis, as Chinese growth has started to rebound temporarily and global financial conditions have eased, we nonetheless prefer the AUD to the kiwi over this timeframe. That being said, the NZD will most likely depreciate against the dollar on a cyclical timeframe, as both the Fed and China reinitiate their tightening campaigns. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Clashing Forces: The Fed And EM Financial Conditions - October 19, 2018 In Fall, Leaves Turn Red, The Dollar Turns Green - October 12, 2018 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Recent data in Canada has been positive: Seasonally adjusted housing starts growth came in above expectations, coming in at 213 thousand. Moreover, the unemployment rate surprised positively, coming in at 5.6%. Finally, the net change in employment also surprised to the upside, coming in at 9.3 thousand. USD/CAD has plunged by 2.5% since the beginning of the year. We are bullish on the CAD on a tactical basis, as oil prices should continue to rise on the back of tighter supply from OPEC. Moreover, the fall in yields which had led to easier financial conditions should continue to put upward pressure on commodity currencies like the Canadian dollar, a currency that very much enjoy falling risk-asset volatility. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Clashing Forces: The Fed And EM Financial Conditions - October 19, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland has been mixed: Headline inflation underperformed expectations, coming in at 0.7%. Moreover, the KOF leading indicator also surprised to the downside, coming in at 96.3. However, the SVME Purchasing Manager’s Index outperformed expectations, coming in at 57.8. EUR/CHF has risen 0.5% since the beginning of the year. We are bullish on EUR/CHF as global financial conditions are easing. Moreover, disappointing Swiss inflation and economic data highlight that the SNB remain unable to achieve its target. To achieve growing prices, Switzerland will need a weaker currency. Therefore, the SNB will pull all the necessary levers to put a natural floor under this cross. Report Links: Waiting For A Real Deal - December 7, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Recent data in Norway has been positive: Headline inflation outperformed expectations, coming in at 3.5%. Moreover, core inflation also surprised positively, coming in at 2.1%. Finally, retail sales growth also surprised to the upside, coming in at 0.9%. USD/NOK has fallen by 1.3% since the beginning of the year. We are bearish on USD/NOK on a tactical time horizon, as global financial conditions are easing while oil prices are also rising. Report Links: Waiting For A Real Deal - December 7, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Clashing Forces: The Fed And EM Financial Conditions - October 19, 2018 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Recent data in Sweden has been mixed: Consumer confidence underperformed expectations, coming in at 96.4. However, retail sales month-on-month growth outperformed expectations, coming in at 0.8%. Finally, headline inflation came in line with expectations, coming in at 2%. USD/SEK has risen by 1.6% since the beginning of the year. On a long-term basis, we like the SEK. Not only is the krona exceptionally cheap, but also, strong inflationary pressures in Sweden should eventually force the Riksbank to tighten monetary policy. Despite these structural positives for the SEK, the cyclical outlook is much more tenuous as this currency historically responds most poorly among G10 currencies to dollar strength. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights The U.S. economy is slowing in a completely predictable manner. With inflationary pressures largely dormant, the Fed can afford to stay on hold for the next few FOMC meetings. Growth in the U.S. and the rest of the world should stabilize by mid-year. This will enable the Fed to resume raising rates in June. A bearish stance towards U.S. Treasurys is warranted over a 12-month horizon. As long as the Fed is hiking rates in response to above-trend GDP growth rather than accelerating inflation, risk assets will fare well. Investors should overweight global equities and spread product for now, but monitor inflation trends closely for signs of when to get out. Brexit fears are overdone. Stay long the pound versus the euro. We were stopped out of our short AUD/JPY trade for a gain of 10%. Feature A Predictable Slowdown Investors are misunderstanding the nature of the current slowdown in the United States and much of the world. Completely predictable slowdowns, such as this one, rarely morph into recessions. Real U.S. GDP rose at a blistering 3.8% average annualized pace in Q2 and Q3 of 2018. There is no way that sort of growth rate could have been sustained. Financial conditions also tightened sharply in Q4, which has inevitably weighed on growth. Given the stock market rout, it is actually surprising that the economy has not weakened more than it has. The New York Fed GDP Nowcast points to growth of 2.5% in Q4 of 2018 and 2.1% in Q1 of 2019. This is still above the Fed’s long-term estimate of potential GDP growth of 1.9%. Most of the slowdown has been concentrated in the manufacturing sector, but even there, the bloodletting may be ending. The latest Philadelphia Fed survey — arguably the most important of the regional Fed manufacturing reports — showed an uptick in activity, with the new orders component hitting the highest level since last July. Despite the tightening in financial conditions, bank lending to the business sector has accelerated over the past three months (Chart 1). The Conference Board’s Leading Credit Index remains in expansionary territory (Chart 2). While business capex intention surveys have come off their highs, they still point to robust spending plans over the next few quarters (Chart 3). Chart 1Credit Is Still Flowing To U.S. Businesses Chart 2Little Sign Of A Looming Credit Crunch Chart 3Capex Plans Still Solid The labor market remains healthy, as evidenced by ongoing strong payroll growth and low initial unemployment claims. Faster wage growth is boosting consumer spending. Holiday sales rose by 5.1% from a year earlier according to the Mastercard SpendingPulse report, the fastest growth in six years. The Redbook same-store index tells a similar story (Chart 4). Chart 4Same-Store Sales Are Robust The housing market struggled for much of 2018, but the recent stabilization in mortgage rates should help matters (Chart 5). Notably, mortgage applications for purchase have surged to their highest levels since 2010 (Chart 6). Homebuilder confidence improved in January, mirroring the rally in homebuilder shares (Chart 7). We are long homebuilders versus the S&P 500, a trade that is up 5.3% since we recommended it on November 1, 2018. Chart 5aThe U.S. Housing Sector Will Stabilize (I) Chart 5BThe U.S. Housing Sector Will Stabilize (II) Chart 6A Positive Signal For U.S. Housing Chart 7U.S. Homebuilder Stocks Have Been Outperforming Recently U.S. Government Shutdown: A Near-Term Hit To Growth The government shutdown poses a near-term risk to the U.S. economy. If it lasts until the end of March, it will shave about 1.7% off Q1 GDP based on White House estimates. While this represents a potentially significant hit to the economy, the effect is likely to be completely reversed once the shutdown ends. Moreover, the drag to growth from the shutdown pales in comparison to the overall stance of fiscal policy. According to the IMF, the cyclically-adjusted budget deficit is set to reach 5.7% of GDP this year, up from 3.2% of GDP in 2015. There is also a reasonable chance that any deal to end the shutdown will involve a commitment to increase spending beyond currently budgeted levels. This would increase the overall amount of fiscal stimulus the economy is receiving. Taking The Pulse Of Global Growth The slowdown in growth has been deeper and more protracted outside the United States. Nevertheless, rays of sunshine are emerging. Our global Leading Economic Indicator diffusion index, which measures the proportion of countries with rising LEIs compared to those with falling LEIs, has bottomed. The diffusion index leads the global LEI by a few months (Chart 8). Chart 8The Uptick In The LEI Diffusion Index Suggests Global Growth Could Stabilize As is increasingly the case, the fate of the Chinese economy will be critical in determining when global growth begins to reaccelerate. The latest Chinese activity data has been disappointing, with this week’s downright awful export figures being the latest example. That said, credit growth may be starting to stabilize, as evidenced by stronger-than-expected loan growth for December. With credit growth now running only slightly above nominal GDP growth, the need for the authorities to maintain their deleveraging campaign has diminished. In an encouraging sign, the Market-Based China Growth Indicator developed by our China Investment Strategy service has been moving higher (Chart 9). Chart 9Encouraging Sign For The Chinese Economy A revival in Chinese growth would aid trade-sensitive economies such as Japan and Germany. The former saw a decline in economic momentum in the second half of 2018, exacerbated by typhoons and an earthquake in Hokkaido. With the consumption tax set to increase from 8% to 10% in October, the Bank of Japan will need to maintain its yield curve control regime at least until 2020. This could weigh on the yen. With that in mind, we tightened the stop on our short AUD/JPY trade two weeks ago and subsequently exited the position with a gain of 10%. The German economy has taken it on the chin recently. Real GDP contracted in the third quarter and barely grew in the fourth quarter. The economy should rebound in 2019 as external demand improves. The drag on growth from the decline in automobile assemblies following the introduction of new emission standards should also turn into a modest tailwind as production resumes. In addition, fiscal policy is set to turn more stimulative, while robust wage growth, lower oil prices, and rising home prices should support consumption. Elsewhere in Europe, the Italian economy should recover as bond yields come down from their highs and confidence improves following the resolution of the impasse with the EU over budget targets. The modest easing in Italy’s fiscal policy of about 0.5% of GDP in 2019 should also benefit growth. It is too early to quantify the effect on the French economy from the “yellow vest” protests. France is no stranger to protests of this sort, so our guess is that the impact on the economy will be minimal. President Macron’s pledge to loosen fiscal policy in hopes of placating the protestors should also support demand. Brexit: A “No Deal” Outcome Looks Less Likely The Brexit saga could end in one of three ways: 1) A “no deal” where the U.K. leaves the EU with no alternative in place; 2) A “soft Brexit” involving an agreement to form a permanent customs union or some sort of “Norway plus” arrangement; 3) A decision to reverse the results of the original referendum and stay in the EU. In thinking about which of these three outcomes is most likely, one should keep the following in mind: Any course of action that the U.K. takes must have the support of the British parliament. A no deal outcome does not have parliament’s support. Not even close. Thus, it will not happen. This leaves options 2 and 3. This publication has argued since the day after the Brexit vote that the European establishment, following the example of the Irish and Danish referendums over various EU treaties, will keep insisting on do-overs until it gets the result it wants. If one referendum is good, two is even better – it’s twice as much democracy! The betting markets seem to be coming around to our view. As we go to press, PredictIt shows a one-in-three chance that a new referendum will be called by March 31 (Chart 10). Polling trends suggest that if another referendum were held, the remain side would probably prevail (Chart 11). Chart 11U.K.: A Change Of Heart? In some sense though, it does not matter for investors whether the original referendum is reversed or a soft-Brexit deal is reached. Either outcome would be welcomed by markets. We continue to advocate buying GBP/EUR. My colleague Dhaval Joshi, BCA’s Chief European strategist, also recommends that equity investors purchase the FTSE 250 index, which comprises from the 101st to the 350th largest companies listed on the London Stock Exchange. Unlike its large-cap counterpart, the FTSE 100, the FTSE 250 index is more geared to what happens in the U.K. than in the rest of the world. Investment Conclusions Global inflation remains subdued, which gives central banks the luxury of taking a wait-and-see approach to tightening monetary policy. Growth in the U.S. and the rest of the world should stabilize by mid-year. This will enable the Fed to resume raising rates in June. Given that the market is no longer pricing in any Fed hikes, a bearish stance towards U.S. Treasurys is warranted over a 12-month horizon (Chart 12). Outside of Japan, bond yields will also rise in the major developed economies. Chart 12Treasurys Will Underperform If The Fed Hikes Rates By More Than Expected We downgraded global equities in June as our leading indicators began to point to slower growth ahead, but upgraded them back to overweight after stocks plunged following the December FOMC meeting. The rally over the past three weeks has reversed deeply oversold conditions and our tactical MacroQuant model is once again flagging some near-term risk to stocks. Nevertheless, if the global economy avoids a recession this year, as we expect, equities should fare well over a 12-month horizon. The MSCI All-Country World index is trading at a modest 13.6-times forward earnings (Chart 13). Profit estimates have been revised down meaningfully, suggesting that the bar for upward earnings surprises is now quite low. Chart 13A Lot Of Bad News Already Discounted? Risk assets can tolerate higher rates as long as tighter monetary policy is the result of stronger growth. What risk assets cannot withstand is a stagflationary environment where growth is slowing but the Fed is hiking rates in order to bring down inflation. That is not the situation today, but could be the situation next year. Bottom line: Investors should overweight global equities and spread product for now, but monitor inflation trends closely for signs of when to get out. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com Strategy & Market Trends MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights Please note that country sections on Mexico and Colombia published below. The policy stimulus in China could produce a growth revival in the second half of 2019, but there are no signs of an imminent bottom in China’s growth over the next several months. The lack of policy support for real estate is the key difference between the current stimulus program and previous ones. Crucially, the property market holds the key to consumer and business sentiment and hence, their willingness to spend. Continue to overweight Mexico within EM currency, fixed-income and equity portfolios. Colombia warrants a neutral weighting. A new trade: bet on yield curve flattening. Feature China has been undertaking both fiscal and monetary stimulus since last summer. A key question among investors is: At what point will the cumulative effects of these efforts become sufficient to revive the mainland’s business cycle and produce a rally in China-related plays akin to 2016-’17? This report helps investors dissect China’s stimulus, and reviews the indicators that will likely help identify the turning point in the mainland’s business cycle, as well as in China-exposed financial markets. Chart I-1 conveys the main message: Our credit and fiscal spending impulse is still falling, indicating that the slump in the Chinese industrial sector will persist for now with negative ramifications for EM corporate profits and other segments of the global economy that are leveraged to China. Looking forward, odds are reasonably high that the credit and fiscal spending impulse will bottom sometime in the first half of 2019. Yet, a bottom in China-plays in global financial markets is likely be several months away from now and potential downside could still be substantial. Monetary Stimulus On the monetary policy front, there has been multifaceted easing: Several cuts to banks’ reserve requirement ratios (RRRs) have been implemented; Lower interest rates for SME borrowers and a reduction in funding costs for the banks that originate these loans; The use of preferential liquidity provisions to encourage banks to purchase bonds issued by private companies. Monetary easing in of itself is not a sufficient condition to produce an economic revival. There are two variables standing between easing liquidity/lower borrowing costs, on the one hand, and the performance of the economy on the other: The first one is the money multiplier, which is calculated as a ratio of broad money supply (or banks assets) to excess reserves. It measures the willingness of banks to expand their balance sheets at a given level of excess reserves, assuming there is loan demand. Chart I-2 shows that China’s money multiplier has risen substantially since 2008 but has recently rolled over. A further drop in the money multiplier could offset the positive effect of monetary easing. Chart I-2China: Money Multiplier Is Falling In other words, the central bank is injecting more liquidity into the banking system and interbank rates are falling, but commercial banks may be unwilling or unable to originate more loans due to financial regulations, lack of loan demand or for other reasons. Notably, the growth rate of bank assets (including policy banks) remains lackluster, while non-bank (shadow) credit is decelerating (Chart I-3). Chart I-3China: Bank Credit And Non-Bank Credit The second variable is the willingness of companies and households to spend. This is captured by our proxies for marginal propensity to spend by companies and consumers. Chart I-4 denotes that both propensity measures are dropping, signifying a diminishing willingness to spend among these two sectors. Chart I-4China: Diminishing Propensity To Spend By Consumers And Companies If economic sentiment among businesses and households remains downbeat – which has been the case in China over the past six to nine months – their reduced expenditures could offset any positive impulse from increased credit origination. Economists think of nominal GDP (aggregate spending) as money supply times the velocity of money (Nominal GDP = Money Supply x Velocity of Money). New lending activity among banks increases money supply, while economic agents’ spending raises the velocity of money. If the velocity of money drops more than the rise in money supply, aggregate expenditure (nominal GDP growth) will decline. Chart I-5 illustrates that the velocity of money rose in 2017, supporting robust growth during this period, despite very lackluster money growth. The opposite phenomenon – a decline in the velocity of money offsetting faster money expansion – could be a risk to the positive view on Chinese growth in 2019. Chart I-5Velocity Of Money: Will It Resume Its Decline? Bottom Line: There is so far no clear evidence that the credit cycle has bottomed. Besides, a bottom in the credit impulse is not in and of itself sufficient to herald an economic recovery. Fiscal Stimulus Unlike in previous easing episodes, policymakers this time around have prioritized fiscal over monetary stimulus because of the already high leverage. In the past six months or so, the government has announced the following fiscal measures: A reduction in the personal income tax rate; Subtraction of certain household expenses from taxable personal income; A reduction in taxes and fees paid by small businesses; A potential VAT cut. These measures will certainly have a positive impact on small businesses and consumer spending. This is why we do not foresee a deepening slump in consumer spending. Nevertheless, the tax reductions and other policies benefiting small businesses and households are unlikely to boost industrial output and construction in China. The latter two are crucial for global investors because many countries are leveraged to China’s industrial and construction activity. For the industrial part of the economy, the most pertinent stimulus measure announced so far has been the issuance of local government special bonds. These bonds are used for infrastructure/public welfare projects. Chart I-6A shows the growth rates of aggregate fiscal spending and its components, which are expenditures by central and local governments as well as by government managed funds (GMFs). GMF spending – a form of quasi-government (off-balance sheet) spending – has surged in recent years and now accounts for 8.5% of GDP, which is more than twice larger than central government spending (Chart I-6B). Chart I-6AChina: Fiscal Spending Annual Growth... Chart I-6B…And As % Of Nominal GDP Although the 2019 budget has not yet been released – it will be announced in March during the National People's Congress – there have been some announcements that we can use to gauge the potential fiscal spending impulse in 2019. On the positive side, Beijing has recently authorized local governments to begin issuing bonds in early 2019 before the overall budget is released in March. Local governments are sanctioned to issue RMB 810 trillion of special bonds, which is 60% of their 2018 quotas. This contrasts with the previous years' practice, when local governments only started to issue bonds in April after obtaining directives from Beijing. The earlier-than-usual quota authorization will allow local governments to issue bonds from the beginning of the year. There is no timeline as to when these bonds will be issued, but it is safe to assume that their issuance will occur in the first half of 2019. This, in turn, should boost infrastructure investments throughout 2019. On the negative side, government managed funds (GMFs) derive 85% of their revenues from land sales. Land sales are tumbling due to previous credit tightening and scarce access to financing among property developers. Chart I-7 demonstrates that land sales lag the credit cycle by nine months. As developers are no longer acquiring land, GMF revenues and spending are set to shrink over the next 12 months. This will, to a certain degree, offset the augmented special bonds issuance. Chart I-7China: Credit Leads Land Sales And Quasi-Fiscal Spending We performed a simulation on what would be the aggregate fiscal impulse in 2019 using the following assumptions: Central and local government spending growth rates are held constant at 2018 levels. Local government special bond issuance is RMB 1.62 trillion. This is twice the recently authorized quota. Hence, our simulation assumes a 20% increase in local government special bond issuance in 2019 over 2018, respectively. GMF land revenues drop by 25% – a comparable drop in land sales occurred in 2015. Table I-1 reveals that using these assumptions, the fiscal spending impulse in 2019 will be 0.1% of GDP down from 4% in 2018 (Chart I-8, bottom panel).   Chart I-8China: Credit And Fiscal Spending Impulse The next step is to combine this with our credit impulse forecast. We assume the 2019 year-end growth rate of credit to companies and households will be 9% in our pessimistic scenario, 10% in our baseline scenario and 11% in our optimistic scenario, compared with the December 2018 recorded rate of 10%. This entails no deleveraging at all. Under these assumptions, our forecasts for aggregate credit and fiscal impulses are 0.2% of GDP (pessimistic), 2.3% (baseline) and 4.4% (optimistic) (Table I-1). Presently, the credit and fiscal impulse is close to zero (Chart I-8). Bottom Line: China’s credit and fiscal spending impulse will bottom in the first half of 2019 (Chart I-8). However, this does not mean that EM/China plays have already bottomed and investors should chase the latest rebound in China-plays worldwide. We discuss the historical correlation between the credit and fiscal impulse and China-related financial markets below. What Is Different From Previous Stimulus Programs? The lack of stimulus targeting the real estate sector is the key difference between the current stimulus programs and those implemented in the past 10 years. The central government has so far abstained from stimulating the property market due to already existing speculative excesses there. This is very different from the policy easing that took place in 2008-‘09, 2012 and 2015-’16, when the authorities boosted property markets along with other sectors of the economy. Chart I-9 reveals that the 2015-‘17 residential property market revival and following boom was facilitated by the Pledged Supplementary Lending (PSL) program conducted by the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) – which was de-facto the outright monetarization of real estate by the central bank.1 The authorities have so far been reluctant to use this PSL program again, and the odds are that housing sales and new construction will continue to decline (Chart I-10). Chart I-9Residential Property Market Is Deteriorating Chart I-10China: Construction Volumes Are Shrinking Importantly, the property market holds the key to consumer and business sentiment and, hence, their willingness to spend. The latter is crucial to the growth outlook. Overall, a deepening slump in real estate demand and prices could dent consumer and small business confidence as well as their spending. Meanwhile, shrinking construction volumes will dampen industrial sectors (Chart I-10). Investment Implications: A Replay Of 2016-‘17? How does the credit and fiscal impulse relate to financial markets globally that are leveraged to the Chinese economy? The top two panels of Chart I-11 show our money impulse as well as credit and fiscal spending impulse (CFI), while the bottom two panels contain EM share prices and industrial metals prices. There are a few observations to be made: Chart I-11China: Money And Credit/Fiscal Impulses, EM Stocks And Metals Prices First, the CFI has not yet bottomed – i.e., it has not confirmed the upturn in the money impulse. Second, as illustrated in this Chart, the bottoms in the money impulse as well as the CFI in July 2015 preceded the bottom in EM and commodities by six months, and their peaks led the top in financial markets - in January 2018 - by about 15 months. Besides, in 2012-‘13, the rise in both the money impulse and CFI did not do much to help EM stocks or industrial commodities prices. Third, the credit and fiscal impulse leads the global manufacturing PMI by several months as illustrated in Chart I-1 on page 1, as well as mainland’s capital goods imports (Chart I-12). Chart I-12China's Impact On Industrial Goods And Commodities On the whole, investors should consider buying China-related plays only after both the money impulse and the CFI bottom together which has not yet occurred. Besides, even if these indicators rise in tandem, the bottom in China-related financial market plays could be a few months later because these impulses have historically led markets. This is why we believe a final down leg in EM and China-related plays still lies ahead. Typically, the last/capitulation phase in bear markets is considerable and being early can be very painful. Bottom Line: We continue to recommend underweighting/playing EM and China-related risk assets on the short side. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com Lin Xiang, Research Analyst linx@bcaresearch.com Mexico: Reiterating Our Overweight Stance Mexican financial markets have rebounded, outperforming their EM counterparts since mid-December. This outperformance has further upside because the AMLO administration is proving to be less populist and more pragmatic, especially relative to investors’ expectations. We are reiterating our recommendations to overweight Mexican markets, especially the currency, local fixed-income and sovereign credit, within respective EM portfolios due to the following considerations: The 2019 budget is a prime example of sensible rather than populist policies by the AMLO administration. The budget targets a primary surplus of 1% of GDP versus 0.8% of GDP in 2018 (Chart II-1). Notably, the 2019 budget envisages an absolute decline in nominal expenditures in 29 out of 56 categories. Chart II-1Fiscal Tightening In 2019 Such a restrained budget follows the conservative fiscal policy of the previous administration. In brief, the nation’s fiscal policy and public debt profile remain sound. Public spending will be increased mostly in the areas that are critical to boosting productivity. These include infrastructure spending, vocational training, promoting “financial deepening” and competition, eliminating graft and improving security. These efforts are critical to boosting business confidence, investment and ultimately productivity. On the revenue side, the budget has become much less reliant on oil revenues than before. The share of oil revenues in total government revenues historically hovered around 30%, but in 2018 it declined to 18%. The 2019 budget assumes an average oil price of $55 per barrel, a conservative projection. Investors have also been somewhat alarmed by the 16% hike in minimum wages, but this should be put into historical context. Chart II-2 illustrates that the minimum wage in real terms (deflated by consumer price inflation) dropped by 70% since its peak in 1976, before rising in the recent years. Chart II-2Historical Perspective On Minimum Wage Importantly, Mexico’s competitiveness problem does not stem from high wages but from a lack of productivity gains. Productivity has been stagnant, and wages in real terms have not risen in many years. Hence, the true test for the nation is to raise productivity, not curb wages. Remarkably, the Mexican peso is very cheap, as measured by the real effective exchange rate based on unit labor costs (Chart II-3). Hence, the minimum wage hike can be viewed as payback after decades of dramatic declines in the minimum wage in real terms. Chart II-3The Mexican Peso Is Cheap The central bank has overdone it with hiking interest rates: interest rates are currently among the highest of the mainstream EM economies, both in nominal and real terms (Chart II-4). Hence, local rates offer great value relative to other EMs (Chart II-4, bottom panel). Chart II-4High Real And Nominal Interest Rates Tight fiscal and monetary policies will curb domestic demand and promote disinflation. Money and credit growth remain very sluggish (Chart II-5). This is negative for consumer and business spending, but positive for investors in local currency bonds. Chart II-5Monetary Growth Is Weak The basis is that a retrenchment in domestic demand and thereby imports will help stabilize the trade balance amid low oil prices. Hence, this is on the margin a positive for the peso as well as for local currency bonds relative to their EM counterparts. Finally, Mexico will benefit from its ties to the U.S. economy, unlike many other EMs that are more exposed to China. Investment Recommendation We continue to recommend overweighting the peso and local currency bonds within an EM fixed-income portfolio. Currency traders should maintain our long MXN / short ZAR trade (Chart II-6, top two panels). Chart II-6Remain Overweight Mexican Currency And Fixed-Income Credit market investors should continue to overweight Mexican sovereign credit within an EM credit portfolio (Chart II-6, bottom panel). Finally, we are also reiterating our long Mexico position within an EM equity portfolio. While domestic demand growth and corporate profits will continue to disappoint, the declining risk premium on Mexican assets due to a re-assessment among investors of AMLO’s policies warrants a mild overweight in large caps and a sizable overweight in small caps relative to their EM peers. Colombia: Headed Into Another Downtrend The Colombian economy is set to undergo another phase of growth retrenchment: The government is planning to reduce the overall fiscal deficit from 4.5% to 2.4% of GDP by the end of 2019 (Chart III-1). Oil-related revenues make up under 10% of total government revenues, and they are shrinking as both oil production and prices have plunged. Chart III-1Fiscal Policy Will Tighten In 2019 As a result, the government should undertake major fiscal cutbacks and hike taxes to achieve the overall budget deficit target of 2.4%. Such substantial fiscal tightening will hurt domestic demand. Regarding the exchange rate, the central bank is pursuing a “hands-off” approach, which is likely to continue. Therefore, the currency is set to depreciate due to the large current account deficit and lack of sufficient foreign funding. Notably, the current account deficit excluding oil is -7% of GDP (Chart III-2, top panel), and the plunge in oil prices and weak domestic demand will cause FDI inflows to drop meaningfully (Chart III-2, bottom panel). Together, this points to further currency depreciation. Chart III-2BoP Dynamics Are Deteriorating Meanwhile, the central bank is not in a position to ease policy to offset the impact of fiscal tightening, as a weaker exchange rate historically leads to higher inflation (Chart III-3, top panel). In fact, given core inflation is at the upper end of the central bank’s target range (Chart III-3, bottom panel), a considerable currency depreciation could lead to rate hikes. Raising rates amid weakening growth is a recipe for considerable yield curve flattening. Chart III-3Weaker Currency = Higher Inflation Lending rates remain well above nominal GDP growth, and the banking system is still restructuring following years of a credit boom. Credit growth will remain weak, reinforcing weakness in domestic demand stemming from substantial fiscal tightening. Finally, consumer and business confidence seem to be faltering due to the negative attention surrounding Colombian President Iván Duque Márquez’s policies. The negative terms-of-trade shocks and the imminent fiscal tightening will reinforce worsening sentiment among economic agents. Profound cyclical headwinds to growth indicate that the economy is set to return to a growth recession – a very low but slightly positive growth rate. With respect to investment strategy, we recommend the following: First, we are downgrading this bourse from overweight to neutral within an EM equity portfolio. While overweighting Latin American stocks as a whole within an EM equity portfolio, we believe that Brazilian, Chilean and Mexican share prices offer a better risk-reward profile than Colombian ones (Chart III-4). Chart III-4Colombia Is Unlikely To Outperform LATAM Second, as to sovereign credit investors, we are reiterating an overweight stance because fiscal tightening and monetary policy orthodoxy as well as low government debt levels will help Colombian sovereign credit to outperform. Third, two opposing cross-currents will shape the domestic bond market. On the one hand, weak growth is positive for bonds. On the other hand, currency depreciation is negative. Net-net, investors in local currency government bonds should be slightly overweight or neutral this market within an EM local bond portfolio. For fixed-income investors, we recommend a new trade: position for yield curve flattening (Chart III-5). This is a bet on a considerable growth slowdown amid looming fiscal austerity. Chart III-5Colombia: Bet On Yield Curve Flattening Andrija Vesic, Research Analyst andrijav@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1      Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report "China Real Estate: A Never-Bursting Bubble?" dated April 6, 2018, available on ems.bcaresearch.com   Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights Buy the pound as soon as the U.K. parliament coalesces a majority around an action plan to counter a no-deal Brexit. For equity investors the best play is a FTSE Small Company Index ETF and/or U.K. REITS. Beaten-down banks, industrials and materials can continue their recent countertrend outperformances. This necessarily means that the cyclical-heavy Eurostoxx50 can continue its recent countertrend outperformance versus the S&P500. Go overweight industrials versus utilities as a tactical trade. Feature Chart of the WeekWere It Not For Brexit, U.K. Interest Rates Would be 1 Percent Higher Please join me for a webcast today at 10.00 AM EST (3.00 PM GMT, 4.00 PM CET, 11.00 PM HKT) when I will be elaborating on some of the ideas in this report as well as other major investment themes. For those of you who cannot participate live, the webcast will also be available as a playback. Were it not for the psychodrama called Brexit, the pound would be trading at $1.50 rather than at $1.28. We can say this with utmost confidence because ‘cable’ is very closely tracking the difference in 2-year interest rates in the U.K. versus the U.S. Absent the Brexit shenanigans, U.K. interest rates would be around 1 percent closer to those in the U.S., implying that pound/dollar would be around 15 percent higher ( Chart I-2 and Chart I-3 ). Chart I-2Absent The Brexit Discount On U.K. Interest Rates... Chart I-3...The Pound Would Be At $1.50 Explaining Brexit’s Impact On U.K. Interest Rates And The Pound The difference in U.K. versus U.S. interest rates usually tracks the difference in their inflation rates, in effect equalizing real interest rates in the two economies. But the Brexit referendum in 2016 forced the Bank of England into an ‘emergency monetary policy’ mode, whereby interest rates were left depressed relative to the inflation fundamentals, and U.K. real interest rates collapsed. Applying the BoE’s pre-Brexit reaction function to the current inflation dynamics, U.K. interest rates – and therefore the pound – would be in a completely different ballpark. After all, U.K. and U.S. core inflation rates and unemployment rates are virtually identical ( Chart of the Week  ). It follows that the pound’s trajectory will be higher in any negotiated Brexit – or indeed ‘no Brexit’ – which avoids a complete and overnight no-deal divorce. The simple reason is that a transition period lasting several years that continues to give the U.K. access to the EU single market will allow the BoE to revert to its pre-Brexit monetary policy reaction function. But any workable alternative to a no-deal Brexit must satisfy two conditions: the way forward must be acceptable to the EU27; and it must command a majority in the U.K. parliament. From the perspective of investors, what this way forward turns out to be – Common Market 2.0, permanent customs union, second referendum, or general election – does not really matter. What matters is that a parliamentary majority exists for a course of action that avoids no-deal. The investment strategy is to buy the pound as soon as the U.K. parliament coalesces a majority around an action plan to counter a no-deal Brexit . In this event, do not buy the FTSE100. Whenever the pound strengthens, the weaker translation of the FTSE100 companies’ dollar-denominated earnings tends to weigh down this large-cap index. A better play is the FTSE250 mid-cap index ( Chart I-4 ), but for equity investors t he best play is a FTSE Small Company Index ETF and/or U.K. REITS ( Chart I-5 ). Chart I-4A Negotiated Brexit Would Favour The FTSE250... Chart I-5...And U.K. Small Companies Europeans Are Celebrating Lower Oil Europeans will be celebrating the near halving of the crude oil price from its $86 high just three months ago. The simple reason is that Europeans are net importers of energy, and the amount of energy they consume tends to be price inelastic. After all, Europeans have to do the school run and stay warm in winter, irrespective of the oil price. Hence, when energy prices soar as they did for most of 2018, it squeezes European real spending. Conversely, when energy prices plunge as they have more recently, it boosts real spending ( Chart I-6 ). A second transmission mechanism is via credit creation: higher inflation, through its implication for tighter monetary policy, lifts bond yields and depresses credit impulses; lower inflation does the opposite, it depresses bond yields and lifts credit impulses. The upshot is that higher oil weighed on European growth in 2018 while lower oil should boost growth in early 2019. Chart I-6Inflation Is Likely To Plunge, Boosting Real Incomes Compelling proof comes from the oscillations in the euro area economy. For several years, these growth oscillations have perfectly and inversely tracked oscillations in the oil price ( Chart I-7 ). The economic implication is that the recent collapse in energy prices should engineer some sort of growth rebound in the euro area. The investment implication is that such a growth rebound will support the classically cyclical equity sectors – banks, industrials and materials – because of their very high operational leverage to economic growth. Chart I-7Euro Area Growth Oscillations Inversely Track Oil Price Oscillations Profit is a small number created from the difference between two large numbers: sales minus the cost of generating those sales. But the dominant cost – the wage bill – tends to be quite sticky. Hence, if a company’s sales are highly sensitive to the economy, the power of operational leverage means that a small change in GDP can have a dramatically large proportional impact on profit. This is a simple principle, but it turns out to be an excellent explanation for the Eurostoxx50 earnings per share (eps) cycle. Because the index is dominated by the classically economic-sensitive sectors, Eurostoxx50 eps growth has a very high operational leverage to changes in euro area GDP growth, potentially as high as 50 times over short periods such as six months ( Chart I-8 ). In contrast the less cyclical S&P500 has an operational leverage to economic growth of less than 10 ( Chart I-9 ). Chart I-8Eurostoxx50 Profits Growth Is Highly Geared To Economic Growth Chart I-9S&P500 Profits Growth Is Less Geared To Economic Growth On the expectation that euro area growth will rebound modestly in early 2019, the beaten-down banks, industrials and materials can continue their recent countertrend outperformances. And this necessarily means that the cyclical-heavy Eurostoxx50 can continue its recent countertrend outperformance versus the S&P500. Explaining The ‘Unexplainable’ Moves In Markets During the recent Christmas holiday period, financial markets experienced sharp moves with no explainable catalyst. Such reversals leave many strategists and analysts scratching their heads in bewilderment, wondering: what was the catalyst for that reversal? The answer is there was no fundamental catalyst; the market reversed because liquidity dried up . But to explain why liquidity dried up and markets ‘unexplainably’ reversed, we first need to understand what creates market liquidity in the first place. Market liquidity is the ability to convert cash into an investment quickly and in volume without affecting its price. But for an investor to convert a large amount of cash into an investment without affecting its price, another investor must be willing to do the exact opposite – convert a large amount of the investment into cash at the given price. Therefore, market liquidity comes from a disagreement about the attractiveness of an investment at that given price. Investors disagree about the attractiveness of an investment at a given price because investors with different time horizons interpret the same facts and information very differently. Hence, a market remains stable when it possesses investors with many different time horizons. The reason is that when a day-trader experiences a ‘six-sigma’ price move, an investor with a longer investment horizon, for example 65 days, will step in and stabilize the market. The longer-term investor will do so because, within his investment horizon, the day-trader’s six-sigma price move is not unusual. As long as another investor has a longer trading horizon than the investor experiencing an extreme event, the market will stabilize itself. Therefore, the market’s liquidity and stability are maximized when its participants possess a variation of investment horizons, say, both the 1 day horizon and the 65 day horizon. The corollary is that the market’s liquidity and stability disappear when its participants no longer possesses this healthy variation in horizons. In technical terms, this occurs when the market’s 65-day fractal dimension collapses to its lower bound. Without a shadow of a doubt, this is what happened to the S&P500 on Christmas Eve and triggered a 5 percent market rebound on Boxing Day ( Chart I-10 ). And this is now what is happening to the relative performance of industrials versus utilities, which is also in the process of a similar liquidity-triggered rebound ( Chart I-11 ). Chart I-10A Liquidity Shortage Triggered A Sharp Rebound In The S&P500   Chart I-11Expect A Liquidity-Triggered Rebound In Industrials Versus Utilities   Fractal Trading System* This week we note that the strong rally in the Indian rupee versus the Pakistan rupee has reached a point where an imminent liquidity shortage could trigger a countertrend move. Go short the Indian rupee versus the Pakistan rupee with a profit target of 3 percent, and a symmetrical stop-loss. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment’s fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-12 The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com   Dhaval Joshi , Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System Recommendations Asset Allocation Equity Regional and Country Allocation Equity Sector Allocation Bond and Interest Rate Allocation Currency and Other Allocation Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations  
The dollar is historically a momentum currency, implying that as much as strength begets further strength, weakness begets additional weakness. As a result, the fall in the DXY from 97.5 in December to 96 raises a red flag. This red flag is even more…
The Manufacturing ISM may have been weak in December, but the U.S. continues to generate a healthy level of job growth, and wages continue to accelerate. Down the road, this will be inflationary. Despite the recent deterioration in the ISM and higher…
Highlights All of our recent investment recommendations have performed very strongly but have further to go: 1.   Own a combination of European banks plus U.S. T-bonds. 2.   Overweight EM versus DM. 3.   Overweight European versus U.S. equities. 4.   Overweight Italian assets versus European assets. 5.   Overweight the JPY. Feature Chart of the WeekBank Outperformance Corroborates A Growth Rebound 2019 will be the investment mirror-image of 2018. Last year started with growth fading and inflation on the cusp of picking up, both in Europe and around the world. This year has started with the European and global economies in the mirror-image configuration: growth likely to rebound, albeit modestly, and inflation set to fade (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Why 2019 Is The Mirror-Image Of 2018 However, as 2019 unfolds, the configuration will reverse, requiring a flip from a pro-cyclical to a pro-defensive investment tilt later in the year. This contrasts with 2018 which started pro-defensive and ended pro-cyclical. In this regard, the economic and investment shape of 2019 will be the mirror-image of 2018. Growth To Rebound, Inflation To Fade A tell-tale sign of a growth rebound is the recent outperformance of banks. Around the world, yield curves have flattened – or even inverted – meaning that banks’ net interest margins have compressed. This compression of bank profit margins is normally bad news for bank equities. Yet banks have been outperforming, not just in Europe but globally (Chart I-3). If margins are compressing, the plausible explanation for outperformance would be an improved outlook for asset growth, reflecting both a reduction in bad debt provisioning and a pick-up in bank credit growth. Chart I-3Banks Have Been Outperforming Since October Independently and reassuringly, our proprietary credit impulse analysis supports this thesis (Chart of the Week). Six-month credit impulses have been rebounding not only in Europe, but also in the United States and very impressively in China (Chart I-4).   Chart I-46-Month Credit Impulses Have Rebounded Everywhere At the same time, inflation is set to disappoint as the recent near-halving of the crude oil price feeds into both headline and core consumer price indexes. With central banks now promising even greater “dependence on the incoming data”, this unfolding dynamic will force them to temper any hawkish intentions and rhetoric, limiting the extent of upside in bond yields. In this configuration, the combination of European banks plus U.S. T-bonds which we first recommended in November is still appropriate (Chart I-5). The position is up 3 percent in little more than a month and has further to go.1 Chart I-5Own A Combination Of Banks And Bonds Europe’s largest economy, Germany, should benefit from another support to growth. Last year, the auto sector – a major engine of the German economy – spluttered as it absorbed the new WLTP emissions testing standard. Through the middle of 2018 German motor vehicle exports suffered a €20 billion hit which shaved 0.6 percent from Germany’s €3.4 trillion economy (Chart I-6). Now, if auto exports stabilize, this drag will disappear. And if auto exports recover to the pre-WLTP level after this one-off and temporary shock, Germany will receive a 0.6% mirror-image boost to growth.2 Chart I-6German Auto Exports Suffered A WLTP Hit Regional Allocation Is Always And Everywhere About Sectors The European equity earnings cycle is tightly connected with global growth oscillations (Chart I-7). The simple reason is that the European equity market is over-exposed to classically growth-sensitive sectors such as banks and industrials. Chart I-7The European EPS Cycle Is Tightly Connected With Global Growth Oscillations The emerging market earnings cycle is also connected with global growth oscillations (Chart I-8) because emerging markets have a very high exposure to banks. But the much less understood reason is that emerging markets have a near-zero exposure to healthcare (Table I-1). In sharp contrast, the U.S. equity earnings cycle has almost no connection with global growth oscillations (Chart I-9) because the U.S. equity market is over-exposed to technology and healthcare, neither of which are classically cyclical sectors. Chart I-8The EM EPS Cycle Is Also Connected With Global Growth Oscillations... Chart I-9...But The U.S. EPS Cycle Is Not Connected With Global Growth Oscillations Hence the allocation to emerging market (EM) versus developed market (DM) equities, and to Europe versus the U.S. reduce to simple equity sector calls. A quick glance at Chart I-10 and Chart I-11 will reveal two fundamental and inescapable truths: Chart I-10EM Outperforms DM When Global Banks Outperform Healthcare Chart I-11European Equities Outperform U.S. Equities When Global Banks Outperform Technology EM outperforms DM when global banks outperform global healthcare. European equities outperform U.S. equities when global banks outperform global technology. But is this just about so-called ‘beta’? No, banks can outperform in a rising market by going up more or, as recently, in a falling market by going down less. So this is always and everywhere about head-to-head sector relative performances. My colleague Arthur Budaghyan, our chief emerging market strategist, remains steadfastly pessimistic on the structural outlook for EM versus DM. We agree with Arthur, albeit we arrive at the structural conclusion from a completely different perspective. To reiterate, for EM to outperform DM global banks must outperform global healthcare. However, over an extended period this will prove to be an extremely tall order. As detailed in European Banks: The Case For And Against, blockchain is a long-term extinction threat to banks’ business models and profitability. Whereas healthcare is still a major growth sector as people focus more spending on improving the quality and quantity of their lifespans.3  Nevertheless, from a purely tactical perspective, the growth up-oscillation phase that started in October can continue for a little while longer allowing the recent countertrend moves to persist – especially as the recent decline in bond yields could further spur credit growth in the near term. So for the moment stay overweight: EM versus DM. European equities versus U.S. equities. Italian assets versus European assets. Bargain Basement Currencies Another of my colleagues Doug Peta, our chief U.S. strategist, has coined a lovely metaphor: “you cannot get hurt falling out of a basement window”. The metaphor beautifully captures the asymmetry when you are near the floor or ‘zero-bound’. Doug uses it to explain that small contributors to an economy have a limited capacity to damage economic growth because they cannot fall very far. We think the metaphor applies equally to interest rates when they are at or near their lower bound, which is to say, in the basement. This begs the obvious question: if interest rates are in the basement, then what is it that cannot get hurt much? The answer is: the exchange rate. The payoff profile for exchange rates just tracks expected long-term interest rate differentials. This means that when the expected interest rate is in or near the basement, the currency possesses a highly attractive payoff profile called positive skew. In essence, for any central bank already at the realistic limit of ultra-loose policy – such as the BoJ and ECB – policy rate expectations are effectively in the basement. They cannot go significantly lower. In contrast, policy rate expectations for the Federal Reserve are somewhere between the seventh and twelfth storey of the building (Chart I-12). From which you can get seriously hurt if you fall out of the window! Chart I-12You Cannot Get Hurt Falling Out Of A Basement Window The upshot is that currency investors should always own at least one currency whose interest rate is in the basement against one whose interest rate is high up in the building, susceptible to fall out at some point, and get seriously hurt. The near term complication is the risk, albeit low, of a no-deal Brexit which would hurt European economies and currencies to a greater or lesser extent. Until the Brexit fog shows some signs of clearing, we would prefer the currency whose interest rate is in the basement to be a non-European currency. So for the moment, our favourite major currency remains the JPY. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System* We are pleased to report that the 50:50 combination of Litecoin and Ethereum has surged by 42 percent in just two weeks! Also, long EUR/NZD achieved its 2.5 percent profit target and is now closed. This week’s trade is in line with the recommendation in the main body of this report to become pro-cyclical. Go long global industrials versus global utilities with a profit target of 3 percent and a symmetrical stop-loss. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment’s fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-13 The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions.   *  For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The European banks position is relative to the broader equity market, and the recommended combination is 25 cents in the banks and 75 cents in the bonds. 2 German auto net exports and GDP are quoted at annualized rates. The Worldwide Harmonized Light Vehicle test Procedure (WLTP) is a new standard for auto emissions that took effect on September 1, 2018. 3 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “European Banks: The Case For And Against”, November 8, 2018 available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Fractal Trading System Recommendations Asset Allocation Equity Regional and Country Allocation Equity Sector Allocation Bond and Interest Rate Allocation Currency and Other Allocation Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Dear Client, This Wednesday January 9th 2019, we are publishing a joint report co-written with BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy team. There will be no report on Friday. Best Regards, Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Highlights So What? U.S. President Donald Trump is not solely focusing on stock prices, but he does not want an entrenched bear market to develop under his watch. Why? Entrenched bear markets often herald recessions. A recession would seriously endanger Trump’s re-election chances. The Federal Reserve will not alter its course to please Trump, but it will pause in order to safeguard the economy. While at first the dollar will weaken in response to a Fed pause, economic fundamentals argue that the greenback will enjoy a last hurrah before a true bear market can begin. Feature Despite U.S. President Donald Trump’s legendary concern for the stock market, the S&P 500 is nonetheless down 6.7% since his G-20 truce with Chinese President Xi Jinping. We mark that date as notable on Chart I-1 – not because we think it caused the markets to plunge, but because many investors thought it would buoy equities into a Santa Claus rally. Further, many investors predicted that the G-20 truce would come about specifically because Trump wanted stocks to do well. Chart I-1Santa Did Not Show Up After The Buenos Aires Meeting There are so many methodological problems with this train of thought that it could be the main thrust of a PhD dissertation. But, for starters, the assertion that Trump is obsessed with stocks embeds causality into a dependent variable. In simple terms, it posits that the stock market’s performance is an end in of itself for President Trump, and thus he will do whatever it takes to prolong the bull market. Here’s a hint for the collective investment community: If something sounds too good to be true, it is almost definitely not true. The idea that the President of the United States, no matter how unorthodox… …Exclusively cares about the stock market… … And has the extraordinary power… ... and mental acumen… …to keep the stock market perpetually rising, is indeed too good to be true. First, President Trump has clearly shown that he does not exclusively care about the stock market, by shutting down the government midway through a bear market. Now, it is not clear to us how a federal government shutdown directly impacts the earnings of U.S. companies, but it is clear that it does not instill confidence among investors that Trump and the incoming Democrat-held House will be able to play nice together, or at least nice enough, to avert a potentially recession-inducing 2020 stimulus cliff (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Can Trump And The Democrats Play Nice Enough To Dodge The Cliff? BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy noted the danger of the government shutdown by calling it “the one true midterm-related risk.” The reasoning was that, “A lame duck Congress, or worse a Democratic Congress, will give President Trump all the reason he needs to grind things to a halt over his wall, with a view to 2020.” Further to this point, Trump has not exactly been a boon to the stock market since passing his signature legislation – the tax reform bill – at the end of 2017. Throughout 2018, he has focused his policy on a trade war with China, and we would also argue with a view towards the 2020 election. Now admittedly, the stock market completely and utterly ignored all bad news on the trade front (Chart I-3) – ironically, until a truce was called! – but the fact remains that President Trump did not listen to the almost-certain advice from his “globalist” advisors that a trade war could, at some point, hurt the S&P 500. Chart I-3The Market's Schizophrenic Relationship With The Trade War Second, the President of the United States of America is not a medieval king. He is not even the president of China nor even the prime minister of Canada (both policymakers with far more power inside their own political systems than the American president).1 The president is massively constrained in terms of economic policy by the Congress, a branch of government he only nominally has influence over. Further, his regulatory policy can be impeded by the bureaucracy and the courts. In addition, steering an economy as massive and multifaceted as that of the U.S. is not a one-man job. It is not a “job” at all. The best a president can do is set the conditions in place – through regulation, tax policy, and rhetoric – which stokes animal spirits in a positive direction. For much of 2017 and early 2018, President Trump did this. But the stock market, and the economy by extension, always wants more. More pro-business regulation and more reassuring rhetoric. President Trump generally gets an A on the former, but an F on the latter. Not only is the trade war a concern to investors, but so are a slew of other confidence-deflating comments by the president on FAANG regulation, the government shutdown, the White House staffing, the Fed’s independence, and foreign policy writ large. As for the question of mental acumen, President Trump may be a “stable genius,” but no single policymaker is able to influence equities. As an aside, we are shocked by how much the investment community has changed in the past eight years. When we began taking politics seriously in our investment strategy, back in 2011, it took a lot of convincing that systemic political analysis had a role to play with respect to one’s asset allocation. Now, investors are willing to bet their shirt on the actions of one politician. It is as if the investment community is trying to overcorrect for decades of ignoring politics as a valuable input in one single presidential term. So, what does this mean for U.S. equities from here on out? We agree with our clients that the one thing President Trump wanted to avoid was a bear market. We staunchly disagreed that equities could not correct significantly under his watch, and we shorted the S&P 500 outright in September, but we begrudgingly agreed that President Trump, as with all other presidents before him, would rather not deal with a bear market. Those tend to foreshadow a recession, and recessions tend to end re-election bids (Chart I-4). For much of 2019, we expect that President Trump will focus on ensuring that a recession does not occur ahead of his 2020 election bid. This is likely to become a defining motivating factor in all policy, whether domestic, foreign or trade. Can he be successful? It is not up to the U.S. President to determine when a recession hits, but the point is that he is likely to put his re-election bid above all other considerations. As such, we would expect that: The government shutdown will be resolved in January. A compromise will emerge to end the shutdown that falls short of president Trump’s demands. Ultimately, Trump needs Democrats to play ball with the White House and the Republican Senate in order to avert the stimulus cliff in 2020. Trade negotiations may produce a truce. There is a combined, subjective, probability of 70-75% that the ongoing trade negotiations produce either an outright deal (45-50%) or an extension of the talks with no further tariffs (25%). Trump is likely to back off from further trade antagonism, at least until the run-up to the 2020 election. There will be a parallel process where a China-U.S. tech war continues. Attacks on the Fed will cease. At least until the 2020 election, or until the recession actually hits. But with the Fed itself already signalling that it won’t be dogmatic, the reasons to go after the central bank will recede. Bottom Line: President Trump does not care about stock prices any more than other presidents have in the past. What matters to him is to avoid a protracted bear market in equity prices, as it would severely raise the probability of an upcoming recession, endangering his chances of re-election. This means the government shutdown will likely end this month, that the trade negotiations have a solid chance of producing a protracted truce, and that attacks on the Fed will ebb. Can The Dollar Rally Further? Is a U.S. president focused on avoiding a recession in order to get re-elected a good thing or a bad thing for the dollar? While stronger U.S. growth is inherently a positive for the dollar, the current juncture muddies the waters. To begin with, the risk of a correction in the U.S. dollar has risen considerably in recent weeks. The dollar is historically a momentum currency, implying that as much as strength begets further strength, weakness begets additional weakness.2 As a result, the fall in the DXY from 97.5 in December to 96 raises a red flag. This red flag is even more worrisome when looking at the dollar’s technical picture (Chart I-5). The 13-month rate-of-change has been forming a bearish divergence with prices, and both sentiment and net speculative positioning are holding at lofty levels. Not only does this confirm that on a tactical basis, the dollar is losing momentum, but it also highlights that if momentum deteriorates further, a large pool of potential sellers exist. Chart I-5Tactical Risks For The Greenback Policy too constitutes a risk. President Trump could relent on his attacks on the Fed, but as we mentioned, the Fed seems to also be relenting on its own hard-nosed approach to monetary policy. Last Friday, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell highlighted that policy was not on autopilot, and that monetary policy is ultimately data dependent. In fact, the Federal Open Market Committee is not antagonistic to a pause in its hiking campaign, nor to tweaking its balance-sheet policy if economic and financial conditions deteriorate further. The Fed moving away from hiking once every quarter should provide ammunition to sellers of the greenback. However, the interest rate market already has very muted expectations for the Fed, anticipating 6 basis points and 17 basis points of cuts over the next 12 and 24 months, respectively (Chart I-6). Thus, to be a durable headwind to the dollar, the Fed needs to be more dovish than what is already priced in. We doubt this will be the case: Chart I-6Scope For A Hawkish Fed Surprise In 2019 The ISM may have been weak, but the U.S. continues to generate a healthy level of job growth, and wages continue to accelerate (Chart I-7). Down the road, this will be inflationary. Consumption, or 68% of GDP, remains healthy. Real retail sales excluding motor vehicle and part dealers are still growing at a 4.3% pace. Robust job and wage growth will continue to support the ultimate driver of household spending: disposable income. Moreover, the household savings rate stands at 6% of disposable income, debt-servicing costs at 9.9%, and overall household debt has fallen to 100%, a level not seen since the turn of the century. The financial health of households insulates them against the negative impact of the tightening in financial conditions recorded this past fall.  Despite the recent deterioration in the ISM and the rise in credit costs, commercial and industrial loan growth continues to accelerate, with both the annual and the quarterly-annualized growth rates of this series rising the most in more than two years (Chart I-8). Chart I-7U.S. Wages Are Still Accelerating Chart I-8Positive Developments On The U.S. Credit Front Based on this combination, we would anticipate the Fed pausing in its hiking campaign for one to two quarters. This would nonetheless represent a more hawkish outcome than the one expected by the market, and thus would not be a dollar-bearish configuration. In our view, the biggest domestic risk for the Fed remains the housing market, which for most of this cycle has been the principal vehicle through which monetary policy has been transmitted to the economy. Housing has indubitably slowed, but the recent pick-up in the purchases component of the Mortgage Bankers Association index gives hope that this sector is making a trough as we write. What about tighter financial conditions: could they also threaten the dollar? After all, the tightening in FCI in the second half of 2018 is acting as a break on growth, diminishing the need for Fed hikes. If stocks and high-yield bonds sell off further, the Fed will likely hike less than we anticipate. However, a Fed pause and the more attractive valuations created by the recent selloff suggest that FCI should not deteriorate much more. Indeed, the 64-basis-point contraction in high-yield spreads since January 3rd shows that financial conditions have begun to ease. Our Global Investment Strategy team thinks that stocks are a buy, a view also consistent with an easing in U.S. FCI.3 As a result, we do not believe that U.S. financial conditions will force the Fed to cut rates, and thus will not create a handicap for the dollar. Finally, the most important factor for the dollar remains global growth. The dollar historically performs best when both global growth and inflation are decelerating (Chart I-9). Because the U.S. economy has a low exposure to both manufacturing and exports, it is a low-beta economy, relatively insulated from the global industrial cycle. Hence, when global growth decelerates, the U.S. suffers less than the rest. As a result, the U.S. syphons funds from the rest of the world, lifting the dollar in the process. Currently, the outlook for global growth remains poor. At the epicenter of it all lies China. Chinese manufacturing PMIs have fallen below 50. There are plenty of reasons to worry that the slowdown will not end here. Chinese consumers too are feeling the pinch, despite having been the recipient of much governmental support, including tax cuts (Chart I-10). Moreover, the fall in the combined fiscal and credit impulse also suggests that Chinese imports could suffer more in the coming months, creating a greater drag on the trading nations of the world (Chart I-11). Finally, China’s rising marginal propensity to save confirms these insights, pointing to slowing Chinese industrial activity and imports as well as deteriorating global export growth and industrial activity (Chart I-12).4 Chart I-10The Chinese Consumer Is Also Hungover   Chart I-11Chinese Credit Trends Point To Weaker Imports...   Chart I-12...And China's Rising Marginal Propensity To Save Corroborates This Risk Ultimately, these developments suggest that China needs to ease policy a lot more before growth can be revived. The reserve-requirement-ratio cuts announced last week are not enough to do the trick and may in fact only alleviate the traditional liquidity crunch associated with the Chinese New Year celebration – nothing more. Instead, we expect Chinese interest rates to continue to lag behind U.S. rates, a development historically associated with a strong dollar (Chart I-13). A tangible symptom that China’s reflation is positively affecting the global growth outlook will be when Chinese rates rise relative to U.S. ones. This is what is needed for the dollar to peak this cycle. We are not there yet. Continued weakness in the global PMI and German factory orders only gives more weight to this view. Chart I-13Rising U.S.-China Spreads Point To A Stronger Dollar Practically, we think a move in DXY to 94 or EUR/USD to 1.17 is likely in the coming weeks. However, the combined realization that the U.S. economy will not go into recession – and that therefore the Fed will not pause for the whole of 2019 – and that global growth has yet to bottom, means at those levels the dollar will be a buy. The yen is likely to suffer most in this context. If the markets begin pricing in a stronger U.S. economy than what is currently anticipated, U.S. 10-year yields will rise and the U.S. yield curve will steepen, hurting the JPY in the process. EUR/JPY is an attractive buy right now (Chart I-14). Chart I-14EUR/JPY Set To Rebound Bottom Line: As the market begins digesting the reality of a Fed pause, the dollar could experience some short-term vulnerability, pushing DXY toward 94 and EUR/USD toward 1.17. However, we would anticipate the dollar’s weakness to end at those levels. Interest rate markets are already pricing in Fed rate cuts, something we believe is not warranted. Moreover, financial conditions are set to ease, which will give comfort to the Fed that it can resume hiking. Finally, Chinese growth has more downside, which normally leads to a dollar-bullish environment.   Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com   Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com ​​ Footnotes 1 The comparison may not entirely be apt since not even the President of China was able to avert the stock market collapse in China in 2015. 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, titled “Riding The Wave: Momentum Strategies in Foreign Exchange Markets”, dated December 8, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, titled “Market Alert: The Correction Cometh, The Correction Came: Upgrade Global Equities To Overweight”, dated December 19, 2018, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled “Fade The Green Shoots”, dated December 14, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com
Highlights Our leading indicator for China’s old economy continues to point to slower growth over the coming months, which is consistent with the bearish message from China’s housing market and forward-looking export indicators. We would caution investors against interpreting the recent relative outperformance of Chinese stocks as a basis to become cyclically bullish, as it has largely reflected a “catchup” selloff in global stocks. We remain tactically overweight, in recognition of the fact that investors may bid up Chinese stocks on positive signs that a trade deal may be in sight. Onshore corporate bond spreads remain wide relative to pre-2017 levels, suggesting that it is too early to expect easier liquidity conditions to significantly improve domestic economic conditions. Feature Tables 1 and 2 on pages 2 and 3 highlight key developments in China’s economy and its financial markets over the past month. On the growth front, the primary trend for China’s old economy remains down, although measures of freight remain supported by trade front-running activity (which will wane over the coming months). Our Li Keqiang leading indicator continues to suggest that economic activity will slow from current levels, a conclusion that is reinforced by recent developments in the housing market and December’s PMI release. Table 1The Trend In Domestic Demand, And The Outlook For Trade, Remains Negative   Table 2Financial Market Performance Summary From an investment strategy perspective, we remain tactically overweight Chinese investable stocks versus the global benchmark in recognition of the fact that investors may bid up Chinese stocks on positive signs that a trade deal may be in sight. However, China’s recent outperformance has been passive in nature (i.e. reflecting declining global stocks), suggesting that Chinese stocks have simply been the winner of an “ugly contest” over the past few months. This is hardly a basis to be cyclically long, and we continue to recommend that investors remain neutral for now. In reference to Tables 1 and 2, we provide several detailed observations concerning developments in China’s macro and financial market data below: Bloomberg’s measure of the Li Keqiang index (LKI) fell in November for the third month in a row, although our Alternative LKI has risen due to a pickup in freight transport turnover. We showed in our December 5 Weekly Report that trade front-running has clearly boosted economic activity since Q1 of 2018,1 implying that freight volume growth is set to decelerate in the months ahead. Our Li Keqiang leading indicator ticked lower in December, after having risen non-trivially in the third quarter of 2018 (Chart 1). The December decline was caused by a pullback in the monetary conditions components of the indicator, which in turn was caused by the recent rise in CNY-USD. This echoes a point that we have made in previous reports, that the improvement in our leading indicator last year was not broad-based and that it does not yet herald a positive turning point for China’s old economy. Chart 1The Q3 Rise In Our Leading Indicator Was Not Broad-Based The October housing market slowdown that we highlighted in our November 21 Weekly Report continued into December,2 with floor space started and sold decelerating further (Chart 2). The latter, which typically leads the former, has returned to negative territory which, in conjunction with weaker Pledged Supplementary Lending from the PBOC, does not bode well for housing over the coming few months. House price appreciation remains strong outside of tier 1 cities, but a peak in our price diffusion indexes signals slower price gains are likely over the coming months. Chart 2China's Housing Market Activity Continues To Weaken On the trade front, nominal Chinese US$ import and export growth is now trending lower, confirming the negative signal provided by China’s manufacturing PMIs over the past few months. Notably, the new export orders components of both the official and Caixin PMIs declined in December, despite the tariff ceasefire that emerged during the G20 meeting at the end of November, suggesting that export growth is set to slow further in the first quarter of 2019. In relative US$ terms, Chinese investable stocks rose nearly 10% versus the global benchmark from mid-October until the end of 2018. However, as Chart 3 shows, this outperformance was entirely passive in nature, as Chinese stocks have not been trending higher in absolute terms. Chart 3Recent Equity Outperformance Has Been Passive, Not Active We remain tactically overweight Chinese investable stocks; the Chinese market remains deeply oversold in absolute terms, and signs of a potential trade deal over the coming few weeks may significantly improve global investor sentiment towards the country’s bourse. However, we would caution investors against interpreting the recent relative outperformance as a basis to become cyclically bullish, as it has largely reflected a “catchup” selloff in global stocks. The underperformance of Chinese health care stocks over the past two months has been stunning, with investable health care having fallen nearly 30% in relative terms since mid-November (Chart 4). However, this decline appears to have been caused by a sector-specific event (a massive profit margin squeeze due to a new government generic drug procurement program), and does not seem to imply anything about the outlook for Chinese consumers. Chart 4A Stunning, Idiosyncratic, Collapse In Health Care Stocks Despite the recent collapse in the health care sector, Chinese consumer discretionary (CD) stocks remain the largest losers within the investable universe, having declined over 40% in US$ terms over the past 12 months. The next twelve months may look quite different for CD, especially if China’s efforts to stimulate consumer spending succeed. The recent changes to the global industrial classification system (GICS) mean that Alibaba (China’s largest e-commerce retailer) is now included in the sector with a significant weight, overwhelming the heavy influence that auto producers used to wield. Auto stocks have struggled in the past due to China’s pollution controls, weak auto sales, and pledges to open up the auto sector (which would be negative for the market share of domestic firms). We will be watching over the coming several months for a pickup in retail goods spending combined with a technical breakout in relative performance as a sign to overweight Chinese consumer discretionary stocks relative to the investable index. Chinese interbank rates have fallen substantially over the past month (Chart 5), in response to additional efforts by the PBOC to boost liquidity in the financial system. Whether the additional liquidity (and lower borrowing rates) will feed into materially stronger credit growth remains to be seen, as we have presented evidence in past reports showing that China’s monetary policy transmission mechanism is impaired.2 Chart 5More Liquidity Has Lowered Interbank Rates Chinese onshore corporate bond spreads have creeped modestly higher since early-November, although by a small magnitude. While we remain optimistic that onshore defaults over the coming year will be less intense than many investors believe, onshore corporate bond spreads have been one of the more successful leading indicators of economic growth in China over the past two years, and remain wide by historical standards. This suggests that it is too early to expect easier liquidity conditions to significantly improve domestic economic conditions. While it is too early to call a durable bottom, the gap between CNY-USD and its 200-day moving average is steadily closing (Chart 6). The recent (modest) uptrend has been caused by two factors: 1) cautious optimism about the possibility of a durable trade deal with the U.S., and 2) retreating U.S. interest rate expectations. We would expect further weakness if the trade ceasefire collapses and President Trump moves forward with the previously-announced tariffs, but also a sizeable rally if a deal is negotiated. Chart 6A Tentative, But Noteworthy Improvement   Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1      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. 2      Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report “Trade Is Not China's Only Problem”, dated November 21, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations