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Highlights Based on long-term moving averages and the advance/decline line, the dollar selloff is still only a severe correction. These factors need to be monitored closely as they stand on the edge. To rebound, the dollar will need U.S. inflation to pick up, which will lift the U.S. OIS curve. Signs are accumulating that U.S. inflation will trough toward the end of 2017. Buying the dollar versus the yen is a much safer bet than shorting the euro. The CAD has more upside, especially on its crosses. Feature The U.S. dollar continues to be tested by investors. As paradoxical as it may sound, it is still too early to sound the death knell for the dollar bull market. However, it is not time either to aggressively bet on a rebound. For that to happen, U.S. inflation must regain its footing in a more convincing fashion. Why Isn't The Bull Market Dead? There are many facets to this question, but let's begin with technical considerations. First, the dollar's advance / decline line has not broken down (Chart I-1). A breakdown in this measure would be one of the key technical signals that the dollar has begun a new cyclical downtrend. In the mid-1990s, the dollar did experience a period of correction. During that time frame, the A/D line was also unable to break down, later highlighting that what was initially perceived as the beginning a new bear market was ultimately a prolonged period of consolidation. Chart I-1Still Not A Cyclical Bear Market Second, the dollar's trend has been best approximated by the four-year moving average of monthly prices. Since the Smithsonian Agreement of 1971, during bear markets, the dollar tends to find its ceiling around this indicator, and during bull markets, it tends to put a floor around this moving average (Chart I-2). Today, the dollar has yet to end a month below this measure. Third, positioning in the dollar is now depressed, as investors have purged their stale USD longs (Chart I-3). When one looks at net long speculative positions in EUR/USD - the most convenient and liquid instrument to bet on the dollar - investors are clearly enamored with the euro, which by definition illustrates their dislike of the greenback. Chart I-2No Trend Break For Now Chart I-3Dollar Downside Is Limited Technical indicators argue that we have experienced a painful correction in the USD, but valuation considerations suggest it will be difficult for these technical indicators to deteriorate enough to begin flagging a cyclical bear market. Our long-term fair value model, which incorporates productivity differentials, highlights that the dollar never hit the nosebleed levels associated with bull market tops in 1985 or in 2001 (Chart I-4). The stability in the trade balance and the current account - both have been stable at around 3% of GDP and 2.5% of GDP, respectively - are at odds with the sharp deterioration in the balance of payments that has occurred when the dollar has been genuinely expensive. Our intermediate-term valuation models point to an even more unequivocal conclusion. Based on this metric, the DXY is at its cheapest level since 2009, a discount that historically has been associated with dollar bottoms, at least temporary ones (Chart I-5). This gives us comfort that the A/D line is unlikely to break down for now, or that the dollar will end September significantly below its crucial four-year moving average. However, if these things happen, the dollar could experience significant downside. Chart I-4The Dollar Never Reached Nosebleed Valuations Chart I-5Big Discount To IRP Economic forces too do not point to a sharp move in the DXY below 91 - one that could drive the dollar down into the low 80s. After a period of deep underperformance, the U.S.'s economic surprises relative to the G10 have begun to stabilize, as have inflation surprises. More saliently, the incredible strength in the U.S. ISM manufacturing index, especially when compared to other PMIs around the world, points to a rebound in the USD, or at the very least, stabilization (Chart I-6). Finally, the market has now all but priced out additional hikes from the U.S. interest rate curve. There are only 30 basis points of hikes priced in over the next 24 months. Moreover, the probability of the fed funds rate remaining between 1% and 1.25% only falls below 50% in September 2018 (Table I-1). This seems to be a sanguine scenario. Chart I-6Cyclical Support ##br## For USD Table I-1Investors See U.S. Rates At Current ##br##Levels Until Late 2018 Bottom Line: The dollar's technicals are not yet indicative of the end of the cyclical bull market. However, they do need to be monitored closely. Additionally, the dollar is trading at a large discount to interest rate parity relationships, and the Federal Reserve is not expected to execute its next hike until late 2018. While these factors may not point to an imminent rebound in the USD, they do suggest that the down-wave in the dollar is very long in the tooth. Chasing the dollar lower is dangerous. Too Early To Bet The House On A Renewed Upleg Chart I-7The Global Deflation Anchor This observation on the probability of a Fed move brings us to the vital question of what could lift the U.S. interest rate curve higher, and thus the dollar. This would be the outlook for inflation. As Fed Governor Lael Brainard clearly argued this week, the Fed is not meeting its inflation mandate, warranting a slower pace of rate increases as global deflationary forces remain very potent. The dovish path implied by interest rate markets shows that investors already agree with this assessment. There is no denying that inflation has been globally and structurally pulled down by various forces. While the "Amazon effect" has grabbed headlines, Mark McClellan argues in The Bank Credit Analyst this month that the effect of e-commerce on inflation is no greater than that of Walmart in the 1990s - and probably amounts to a meagre 0.1-0.2% depressive impact on inflation.1 Instead, we peg the capacity buildup in EM and China - which has lifted the global capital stock massively since the turn of the millennia - as the main source of global deflation (Chart I-7). Now that global credit growth is lower than it was before 2008, it has become clearer that the global supply side of the economy has expanded faster than underlying demand, resulting in downward pressure on prices. Nonetheless, while there is a lid on inflation, this does not imply that cyclical determinants of inflation have been fully neutered. They simply have become weaker. Inflation can still ebb and flow in response to the business cycle, but the upside is not as strong as it once was. This limits how high nominal interest rate can go, which is why it is hard to envision a terminal rate much above 3% - a very low reading by post-war standards. Here, we continue to see a turning point coming later this year for inflation, one that would pull core PCE closer to the 2% mark wanted by the Fed in 2018. In the background, our composite capacity utilization indicator is now firmly in "no slack" territory, an environment in which inflation tends to perk up and where interest rate exhibit upside (Chart I-8). This is not enough to warrant fears of inflation, but healthy growth in this context should be a red flag for deflationists. This is exactly the set of circumstances we envision for the next 12 months, even if hurricane Harvey and its potential successors create noise in upcoming data. The U.S. economy has benefited from a strong easing in financial conditions since February 2016. The recent fall in real rates, which has been the key driver of the 60 basis-points fall in Treasury yields since December 2016, is now demonstrably reflationary. Lumber prices are once again at the top of their trading range since 2013, and gold prices have regained vigor. In this optic, the ratio of metal to bond prices - adjusted for their very different volatilities - has been a reliable leading indicator of U.S. growth (Chart I-9). Today, it is pointing to an acceleration of GDP growth relative to potential, the very definition of declining slack. Chart I-8Tight U.S. Capacity Is Inflationary Chart I-9Relfation Will Boost U.S. Growth Above Trend The labor market continues to display signs of resilience as well. True, the last employment report was paltry, but August has been marked by seasonal weaknesses for the past seven years. Moreover, August weaknesses have tended to be minimized in the wake of the notorious revisions typical of the U.S. Department of Labor. However, the strength in the labor market components of the NFIB small businesses survey highlights the potential for more job gains going forward. Where this indicator really shines though, is in its capacity to forecast household total wages and salaries (Chart I-10). Today, this gauge highlights that the income of middle class households will accelerate over the next six months. This matters because if the middle class - a category of U.S. households that gather the vast majority of their income from wages - experiences strong income growth, this will create robust support for consumption. With consumption accounting for 70% of U.S. GDP, a boost to this component would go a long way in lifting aggregate growth. Stronger growth in a tight economy is inflationary, and monetary dynamics confirm this risk. The U.S. velocity of money has picked up meaningfully, and now suggests that inflation will gather steam later this year (Chart I-11). Chart I-10The Labor Market Is Still Strong Chart I-11Monetary Dynamics Point To More Inflation We therefore expect that when this turnaround in inflation emerges, investors will re-assess their expectations for the path of U.S. monetary policy, and the dollar will finally be able to resume its upward trek toward new highs. But until inflation turns the corner, the dollar will continue to struggle to rally durably. Bottom Line: The U.S. economy is still on a firming path. With the amount of slack in the economy vanishing and with the velocity of money accelerating, this will lead to a pick-up in inflation late this year. The end of Q4 is likely to prove the moment when the dollar will finally be able to begin firming up. Investment Implications Shorting the Yen Is Still The Safest Bet Shorting the yen remains the best way to play a dollar rebound for now. The yen has not benefited much from the recent bout of risk aversion prompted by the renewed flare-up of in tensions in the Korean peninsula. It remains weak on its crosses like EUR/JPY, CAD/JPY or even AUD/JPY. USD/JPY seems incapable of staying below 108.5, and may even be forming a consolidation pattern reminiscent of the one experienced in 2013 (Chart I-12). In late 2013, this pattern was resolved by U.S. bond yields moving higher. This time is likely to be similar. The recent weakness in Japanese wages remains a key hurdle that the Bank of Japan does not seem able to shake off. Wage growth hit it slowest pace since 2015 and real wages are worryingly weak (Chart I-13). This is not the picture of an economy with any hint of inflation, even if the labor market is tight. Illustrating this point, contrarily to the euro area, Japanese inflation expectations have not kept pace with the U.S. in recent months (Chart I-14). This argues that the BoJ faces the greatest burden of any central bank. With the BoJ now packed with doves, we expect that interest rates and bond yields in Japan will remain capped for the foreseeable future. As a result, if U.S. bond yields can rise in the face of a strong U.S. economy, JGB yields will not follow higher. This will flatter USD/JPY. Chart I-12Consolidation Pattern In USD/JPY Chart I-13Falling Labor Income In Japan Chart I-14Japanese CPI Swaps Are Outliers A More Complex Picture For The Euro As investors have become more comfortable with the economic and political prospects of the euro area, the euro has become increasingly over-owned, but most importantly, has completely deviated from interest rate parity relationship (Chart I-15). At first glance, this would indicate the euro is greatly vulnerable. This reality, along with very long positioning of speculators in EUR/USD, highlights that it will be difficult for the euro to stay above 1.20 in the coming months. However, for the euro to move below 1.15, U.S. inflation has to pick up. Thus, for the remainder of the year, the EUR/USD is likely to remain range bound between these two numbers. Two factors make the picture less clear for EUR/USD than for USD/JPY. First, the European Central Bank is intent on beginning to taper its asset purchases this year, a move that will be announced in October. At yesterday's press conference, ECB President Mario Draghi was unequivocal about this, despite the slight curtailments to the central bank's inflation forecasts. Moreover, the seeming lack of concern vis-à-vis this year's 6% increase in the trade-weighted euro was perceived by investors as a green light to keep betting on a stronger EUR/USD. Second, as we argued five months ago, exchange rate dynamics are more a function of assets' expected returns than just interest rate differentials.2 As Chart I-16 illustrates, when a portfolio of eurozone stocks, bonds and cash outperforms a similar U.S. one, this leads to a durable rally in EUR/USD. Today, the relative performance of this European portfolio is toward the bottom of its historical distribution, and may even be already turning the corner. If this move has durability, inflows into the euro area could push EUR/USD back into the 1.3 to 1.4 range. Chart I-15Euro Is Expensive ##br##To IRP Chart I-16Outperforming Euro Area Assets##br### Could Support EUR/USD The Loonie Will Keep Flying The Bank of Canada delivered another rate hike this week. The BoC continues to focus on closing the Canadian output gap and the strong economy, ignoring weak wages and inflation. The BoC was rather sanguine regarding the slowdown in real estate activity in Toronto, Canada's largest city, and seemed comfortable with the CAD's recent strength, arguing it was a reflection of Canada's strength and not yet an impediment to it. The CAD interpreted this announcement bullishly. We agree. In a Special Report written last July, we argued that the BoC was among the best-placed central banks to tighten policy among the G10.3 Additionally, the CAD is cheap, trading at a 7% discount to PPP. It is also still below its fair value, implied by interest rate differentials. As such, we continue to overweight the Canadian dollar, being long the loonie against the euro and the Aussie. It also has upside against the USD, but could prove vulnerable to a pick-up in U.S. inflation. Thus, we remain committed to buying the CAD on its crosses. Bottom Line: The euro may be expensive relative to interest rate differentials, but the anticipation around the ECB's tapering continues to represent a support under EUR/USD. As a result, this pair is likely to remain range-bound, roughly between 1.2 and 1.15. USD/JPY has more upside as Japanese inflation expectations and wages are sagging, suggesting the BoJ is nowhere near the ECB in terms of moving away from an ultra-accommodative stance. The CAD will continue to experience upside for the remainder of the year; stay long the loonie on its crosses. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report, "Did Amazon Kill The Phillips Curve?" dated August 3, 2017, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "The Fed And The Dollar: A Gordian Knot", dated April 14, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy And Global Alpha Sector Strategy Special Report, "Who Hikes Next?", dated June 30, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 The dollar had a particularly eventful week. With Fed officials Brainard and Kashkari unleashing their dovish remarks, the greenback suffered as investors pushed down 10-year yields. While Brainard highlighted her concern over the "recent low readings of inflation", Kashkari took it further and said that the hikes may be "doing real harm" to the economy. Adding to the Fed's concerns, Stanley Fischer, a long-serving Fed official and an ardent supporter of policy normalization, announced his resignation on Wednesday. Mario Draghi's hawkish press conference added further downward pressure on the dollar, with the DXY making a new low of 91.41. It is unlikely that the dollar will be able to meaningfully rally until inflation re-emerges, a year-end event. Report Links: 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 Fade North Korea, And Sell The Yen - August 11, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 The euro reacted very positively to the ECB monetary policy speech. Draghi highlighted the uncertainty associated with the strong currency, but noted that the ECB doesn't expect it to have a large impact on inflation, which helped the euro hit a high of EUR/USD 1.2018. He nonetheless highlighted that achieving the ECB's price mandate will require "patience" and "persistence" and he expects inflation to hit its target by 2020. Additionally, the ECB lowered its inflation forecasts, while increasing its 2017 growth forecasts. In terms of QE, Draghi clarified that details will be revealed in the next meeting held on October 26, but that interest rates will remain accommodative for an extended period of time. Although President Draghi laid out some concerns about the strong euro, it seems momentum is unlikely to falter unless markets become more positive on the dollar or the pound. We expect this to occur by the end of this year, when inflation picks up again in the U.S. Report Links: 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan has been negative: Industrial production yearly growth declines substantially from June's 5.5% number, coming in at 4.7%. This data point also underperformed expectations. Housing starts contracted by 2.3% on a YoY basis, also underperforming expectations. Meanwhile, labor cash earnings also contracted by 0.3% on a yearly basis, underperforming expectations. As we highlighted a few weeks ago, multiple indicators are signaling a slowdown in the Japanese economy. The recent batch of negative data seems to confirm this view, which means that the dovish bias of the BoJ will only be further reinforced. Consequently the yen will be the mirror image of U.S. bonds. Given that rate expectations have collapsed to the point that the market is only anticipating 30 basis points in hikes in the U.S. over the next 2 years, risks point upwards for USD/JPY. Report Links: 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 Fade North Korea, And Sell The Yen - August 11, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in U.K. has been mixed: Markit manufacturing PMI increased from August to July, coming in at 56.9. This data point also outperformed expectations. Meanwhile, both construction and Markit services PMI underperformed expectations coming in at 51.2 and 53.2, respectively. Finally, nationwide house price year-on-year growth also underperformed expectations, coming in at 2.1%. At the beginning of August, we warned of a repricing of rate expectations in the U.K. given that the pass through from the currency was set to dissipate, while the housing market and real disposable income were undergoing a major slowdown. So far, this view has proven correct, with the pound falling against the dollar and the euro. We expect that GBP/USD has further downside on a 12 month basis, as rate expectations in the U.S. have likely found a bottom. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Data out of Australia was not particularly strong: TD Securities Inflation dropped on an annual basis to 2.6% from 2.7%; Gross operating profits contracted at a 4.5% rate, below the expected 4% contraction; Current account balance came in at AUD -9.862 bn, below expectations, following a 59% decrease in the trade balance from the last quarter, and a 4% decrease in the net primary income; Most notably, GDP grew at the expected 1.8% annual rate, albeit faster than the previous growth rate of 1.7%. The RBA decided to leave rates unchanged, but with a slightly hawkish tone. While growth is generally in line with the Bank's forecasts, it was also highlighted that the appreciating exchange rate and low wages remain headwinds for inflation. A brighter housing market was noted as house price increases are slowing down, owing to macroprudential measures. While the Bank sees an improving labor market, we remain skeptical as the underemployment rate has not improved, which is limiting wage growth. Report Links: 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Surprisingly, in spite of the weakness of the U.S. dollar, the kiwi has been falling for the past month. This has been in part due to some weak data coming out of New Zealand: Building permits continued their decline, with a Month-on-Month decline in July of 0.7%. Both the ANZ Activity Outlook and the Business Confidence indicators declines in August relative to July. The New Zealand terms of trade Index underperformed expectations, coming in at 1.5%. Additionally July's number was revised down from 5.1% to 3.9%. The recent weakness in the NZD might be indicative of some weakness permeating from EM, given that the New Zealand economy is highly sensitive to the global economy. If an EM selloff materializes we expect significant downside for the NZD particularly against the yen. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Data has been quite strong out of the Canadian economy recently: The current account deficit was better than expected at CAD -16.32 bn, with the merchandise trade balance also improving; Manufacturing PMI came in at 51.7, beating the expected 51.3; GDP growth came in at an astonishing 4.5% annualized rate; Accordingly, the BoC raised the overnight rate to 1%. Markets were expecting hawkish remarks, but not a hike. The CAD rallied more than 1% against USD on the news, and outperformed all other G10 currencies. Current expectations for a December hike are at 68%, and we agree. The CAD will see further strength against all G10 currencies except USD by the end of the year. Report Links: 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland has been mixed: Gross Domestic Product yearly growth came in at 0.3%, underperforming expectations and deaccelerating from a month ago. Headline inflation came in line with expectations at 0.5%, it also increase from the previous month reading of 0.3%. Real retails sales underperformed expectations, contracting by 0.7% on a YoY basis. However the SVME PMI outperformed and increased from the July reading, coming in at 61.2. After reaching 1.15 in early August, EUR/CHF has stabilized around to 1.135. Overall the Swiss economy is still too weak for the SNB to change their stance on currency intervention. Core Inflation will have to pick up to at least 1% for the SNB to consider a change in stance and let go of the implied floor in EUR/CHF. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - April 28, 2017 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Recent data in Norway has been positive: Retails sales monthly growth came in at 0.4%, recovering from last month negative reading ad outperforming expectations. Manufacturing output growth also outperformed expectations, coming in at 1.5%. Finally registered unemployment came in at 2.7%, declining from last month reading and coming in line with expectations. USD/NOK has continued to go down as rate expectations for the U.S. have decreased and oil prices have increased thanks to the refining shut-downs in Texas due to hurricane Harvey. We expect this trend to reverse once rate expectations in the U.S. start to go up. However, we do expect more downside in EUR/NOK as this cross is much more sensitive to oil prices. Report Links: 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Swedish data was largely downbeat: Retail sales are growing at a 3.7% annual rate, in line with expectations; The Swedish trade balance went into a deficit in July of SEK -0.5 bn from a SEK 5.4 bn surplus in June; Consumer confidence decreased to 100.3 from 102.2 and below the expected 103; Manufacturing PMI also disappointed at 54.7, below the expected 60; Swedish IP is growing at a still high 5.3% annual pace, but less than the previous 8.9% rate; While this data was somewhat weak, Swedish inflation is at or above its target across all measures. The Riksbank left its repo rate unchanged at -0.5%. In its press release, the Bank highlighted high growth and inflation but stated that the rate will not be increased until the middle of 2018. It also increased inflation forecasts, with CPI and CPIF predicted at 2.9% and 2.1% by 2019. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Bloody Potomac - May 19, 2017 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Closed Trades
Highlights The ECB can talk down the euro, but not by much. The central bank has previously expressed comfort with EUR/USD at 1.15. The cyclical and structural direction of EUR/USD is higher... ...because the euro area versus U.S. long bond yield spread should ultimately compress to -40 bps from today's -130 bps. Remain neutral in Germany's DAX and underweight Sweden's OMX. Equity markets with a strong base currency and a large exposure to exporters will come under pressure. Overweight German consumer services equities versus German exporters and the DAX. Underweight U.K. consumer services equities versus the FTSE100. Feature When mariners know that a sea-change is coming, their concern is not whether it comes today, tomorrow or the day after tomorrow. The big issue is the sea-change itself - because it brings major implications for navigating the seas. In the same way, when currency markets know that a sea-change in monetary policy is coming, their concern is not whether the policy announcement comes on September 7, October 26 or December 141 - or indeed whether the sea-change will happen suddenly or gradually. At a sea-change, currency markets look much further ahead. Just as for mariners, the big issue is the sea-change itself. EUR/USD is now moving in lockstep with the expected differential between euro area and U.S. policy interest rates not next year, nor the year after next, but rather the differential five years out (Chart I-2). Chart I-1AA Strong Euro Is Good For ##br##German Consumer Services... Chart I-1B...A Weak Pound Is Bad For##br## U.K. Consumer Services Chart I-2EUR/USD Is Moving In Line With The Interest ##br##Rate Differential Expected In 2022 The ECB Can Talk Down The Euro, But Not By Much Chart I-3EUR/USD Might Find Support At 1.15 Therefore, if the ECB really wants to unwind the euro's sharp appreciation this year, the central bank must tell the market that the expectation for a sea-change is completely wrong. In other words, the ECB must indicate that it has no intention to dial back its emergency monetary accommodation. Such a volte-face is unlikely, for two reasons. First, the ECB likes to adjust market expectations incrementally rather than violently. The last policy meeting made the case "for proceeding gradually and prudently when approaching adjustments in the monetary policy stance and communication." Second, not to dial-back its emergency monetary accommodation flies in the face of a euro area economic expansion that is solid, broad, and among the strongest and best-established among major developed economies. "Postponing an adjustment for too long could give rise to a misalignment between the Governing Council's communication and its assessment of the state of the economy, which could (eventually) trigger more pronounced volatility in financial markets." Nevertheless, at the margin, dovish words from Draghi could pare back the euro. How much? Consider that at the last policy meeting EUR/USD stood at 1.15 and the ECB justified this level on the basis of the improved "relative fundamentals in the euro area vis-à-vis the rest of the world." (Chart I-3) Given that these relative fundamentals are still intact, 1.15 might provide a level of support in a technical retracement. Of course, EUR/USD also depends on the Federal Reserve and expectations for its policy rate five years out. EUR/USD would sink if the market became much more hawkish about where it sees the U.S. 'terminal' interest rate. However, for the terminal rate expectation to rise suddenly and sharply in the U.S. relative to the euro area would also fly in the face of the economic data on both sides of the Atlantic. Recently, there has been little difference in either economic growth or inflation rates. The 'Neutral' Real Interest Rates In The Euro Area And U.S. Are The Same More fundamentally, there is little difference in the so-called 'neutral' (or mid-cycle) real interest rates in the euro area and the U.S. Through the 19 years of the euro's life, the euro area versus U.S. long bond yield spread has averaged -40 bps2 (Chart I-4). Over this same period, the euro area versus U.S. annual inflation differential has also averaged -40 bps (Chart I-5). Ergo, the real interest rate differential has averaged zero. Meaning, the neutral real interest rates in the euro area and the U.S. have been exactly the same. Chart I-4Euro-U.S.: Average Interest ##br##Differential = -40bps Chart I-5Euro Area-U.S.: ##br##Inflation Differential = -40bps Bear in mind that the 19 year life of the euro captures multiple manias and crises, some centred in Europe, some in the U.S. Hence, 1999-2017 is a good representation of what the future holds, at least in relative terms if not in absolute terms. With little difference in the neutral real rates over the past two decades, is there any reason to expect a big difference in the future? Our starting assumption has to be no. Chart I-6If Composition Differences Were Removed, ##br##Euro Area And U.S. Inflation Would Be Near-Identical In fact, even the -40 bps annual inflation shortfall in the euro area is due to a compositional difference in the consumer price baskets. The euro area does not include owner occupied housing costs, whereas the U.S. does at a hefty weighting.3 If this compositional difference were removed, inflation would also be near-identical (Chart I-6). Still, each central bank must target inflation as it is defined in its respective jurisdiction, so let's assume the annual inflation differential continues to average -40 bps. In this case, the long bond yield spread should also ultimately compress to -40 bps from today's -130 bps. The biggest risk to this view is if the existential threat to the euro resurfaced. Looking at the political calendar, the German Federal Election on September 24 poses no such threat. Meanwhile, ahead of the Italian general election to be held no later than May 20 2018, even the non-establishment Five Star Movement and Northern League are toning down their anti-euro rhetoric. As my colleague Marko Papic, our Chief Geopolitical Strategist, puts it: "euro area politics are a red herring." On this basis, our central expectation is that the euro area versus U.S. yield spread has the scope to compress much further from its current -130 bps. This means that after a possible near-term retracement, we expect the cyclical and the structural rally in the euro to resume. German Consumers Are Winners, U.K. Consumers Are Losers When European currencies strengthen, the big winners are European consumers because they become richer in terms of the goods and services they can buy in international markets. This is significant because Europe imports its food and energy in large (and inelastic) volumes. Hence, their price decline in local currency terms significantly boosts the real spending power of consumers. And vice-versa (Chart I-7). As if to prove the point, German consumer services equities have rallied strongly this year (Chart I-8). And their outperformance has closely tracked euro strength (Chart of the Week, left panel). Across the English Channel, it is the mirror-image story. The pound has slumped. And the big losers are U.K. consumers, whose real spending power is evaporating as food and energy prices - in pound terms - rise. Again, to prove the point, U.K. consumer services equities have struggled to make any headway this year (Chart I-9). And their underperformance has closely tracked the trade-weighted pound's weakness (Chart of the Week, right panel). Chart I-7German Consumption Accelerating,##br## U.K. Consumption Decelerating Chart I-8German Consumer Services ##br##Have Rallied Chart I-9U.K. Consumer Services ##br##Have Struggled If the euro has more cyclical and structural upside - as we anticipate - then these equity performance trends have further to run. Chart I-10The Exporter Heavy DAX And##br## OMX Have Struggled Remain overweight German consumer services equities versus German exporters and the DAX. And remain underweight U.K. consumer services equities versus the FTSE100. At the same time, equity markets with a strong base currency and a large exposure to exporters will come under pressure. Mostly, this is because the translation of multi-currency international earnings into a strengthening base currency hurts index profits. For the time being, this influences our allocation to Germany's DAX - in which we have been neutral relative to the Eurostoxx600 - and Sweden's OMX - in which we have been underweight (Chart I-10). Next week, we will update our overall European country allocation. Given the large sector skews in European equity indexes, this country allocation is heavily dependent on the stance towards Healthcare and Banks. Hence, we await any incremental communication from the ECB. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 These are the dates of the ECB's three remaining monetary policy meetings in 2017. 2 Calculated from the over 10-year government bond yield: euro area average, weighted by sovereign issue size, less U.S. 3 The imputed cost of owner occupied housing (owners' equivalent rent of residences) comprises 25% of the U.S. consumer price basket but 0% of the euro area consumer price basket. Fractal Trading Model Basic materials equities are technically overbought. Initiate a short position relative to the broad market with a profit target / stop loss at 2.5%. In other trades, long Mediaset Espana / short IBEX35 hit its stop-loss. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-11 The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions 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 ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Even isolated North Korean attacks are unlikely to lead to a full-scale war; The USD sell-off will start to reverse once Trump makes Gary Cohn his official pick for Fed chairman; Europe is not a risk for investors ... even Italy is only a longer-term risk; France is reforming; stay long French industrials versus German. Feature Last week, in London, we were scheduled to give a talk on Sino-American tensions, East Asian geopolitical risks, and North Korea specifically. We submitted our topic of choice about a month ahead of the event, when tensions between Pyongyang and Washington were at their height. As tensions temporarily subsided following Supreme Leader Kim Jong-Un's decision to delay the planned missile launch towards Guam, several colleagues wondered if the topic was still a pertinent one. We stressed in our research that tensions would not dissipate and would continue to be market-relevant, if not critical for S&P 500.1 Unfortunately, we have been proven right. Forecasting geopolitics requires insight, multi-disciplinary methodology, and a treasure trove of empirical knowledge. But sometimes it also just comes down to using Google and looking at a calendar. For example, given the present context of heightened tensions, the annual U.S.-South Korean military exercises - Key Resolve, which occurs normally in the spring, and Ulchi-Freedom Guardian, which occurs in August - are obvious dates to monitor. They are provocations that North Korea has to respond to for both foreign and domestic audiences. Pyongyang has chosen to do so by firing an ICBM across Japan and testing a sixth nuclear device, allegedly a miniaturized hydrogen bomb. While both these actions qualitatively expand on previous acts (missile and nuclear tests), neither cross a threshold. We are still in the realm of "territorial threat display." President Trump and Supreme Leader Kim are angling their "swords," but have not dared to cross them yet. Nonetheless, our clients have pointed out that our "arch of diplomacy" approach leaves a lot to imagination. Therefore, the first insight from the road of this week is that we need to put our thinking cap on and imagine a scenario where tensions do blow over into open conflict. How do we imagine such a scenario occurring and why would it not devolve into full out war that forces the U.S. to attack the North Korean mainland? Is North Korea About To Become A Praying Mantis? We can imagine a scenario where North Korea commits an act that takes us beyond the nuanced thresholds set by recent history (Chart 1). For example, we have cited to clients that an attack against international shipping in the Yellow Sea or Sea of Japan by North Korean submarines would be an unprecedented act that the U.S. and Japan would likely retaliate against.2 We could see the U.S. following the script from 1988 Operation Praying Mantis in the Persian Gulf - the largest surface engagement by the U.S. Navy since the Second World War - when the U.S. sunk half of Iran's navy in retaliation for the mining of the guided missile frigate USS Samuel B. Roberts. In the case of North Korea, this would primarily mean taking out its approximately 20 Romeo-class submarines and an unknown number of domestically-produced - Yugoslav-designed - newly built submarines.3 Chart 1North Korean Provocations Rarely Affect Markets For Long Such an increase in tensions is not our baseline case, but we assign much higher probability to it than to an all-out war on the Korean Peninsula (which we still see as highly unlikely). How would the markets react to the sinking of North Korean submarines? How would Pyongyang react? The answer to the former (market's reaction) depends on the answer to the latter (what does Pyongyang do?). Our best guess is that Pyongyang would do nothing. In fact, we may never know that North Korean submarines were sunk. We would suspect that North Korean military strategists would chalk the subs as a loss and quietly move on to more missile tests. Leadership in Pyongyang is massively constrained by its quantifiable military inferiority. This part requires a bit of "order-of-battle" analysis, so bear with us for a few paragraphs. North Korea has around 6 million military personnel, about 25% of the total North Korean population, ready to fight. Which would be great if it were preparing to charge Verdun in WWI. Unfortunately for Pyongyang, it is arrayed against one of the most sophisticated defenses ever constructed by man. To burst through the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), its mammoth ground forces would have at their disposal about 2000 T-55s (designed in the 1950s) and an unknown number of T-72s (designed in the 1970s). The former are obsolete, but the latter are solid main battle tanks that could do damage ... that is, in a world where war was not airborne. The problem is that North Korea would lose air superiority within hours of any serious engagement leaving its tanks and ground troops vulnerable to death-from-above. Since North Korean troops would have to enter about 20 miles into South Korea to threaten Seoul with occupation, they would have to exit the range of most of their air defenses. Choosing to turn on the most powerful of their systems - such as the KN-06 with a 150km range - would leave them vulnerable to the U.S. AGM-88 HARM missiles that sniff out active radar antenna or transmitters. To protect its invading forces, North Korea would have at its disposal only about 20-30 Mig-29s. Countering two dozen jets would be South Korea's combined 177 F-15 and F-16s, plus American forces that would vary in size depending how many aircraft carriers were deployed in the vicinity and whether U.S. forces in Japan were deployed to counter the attack. Given that a single American aircraft carrier holds up to 48 fighter jets, North Koreans would likely quickly find themselves fighting a losing battle. Once the North Korean fighter jets were destroyed, the South Korean air force would turn the invasion into a massacre. The reality is that North Korea's ground forces are just for show. Its tanks and fighter jets will never see battle. North Korea really only has two gears: P & N. The first is for "Provocation" and the second is for "Nuclear Armageddon." This is why we highly doubt that we will see our Praying Mantis scenario play out, or lead to full-scale war if it does. North Korea is constrained by its technological inferiority. It does not have the ability to conduct war across a full spectrum of engagement. Neither did Iran in 1988, which is why it never retaliated for the loss of its navy, put all its revolutionary zeal and chest-thumping aside, and sued the U.S. at the International Court of Justice instead.4 The U.S. has a range of limited military engagements, particularly at sea, that could hurt Pyongyang's ability to project what little power it has. Given our constraint-based methodology, which requires one to have some understanding of military affairs, we have a fairly high conviction view that North Korea will continue to toe-the-line of the expected and thus accepted provocations along the lines of the history surveyed in Chart 1. Going beyond that list would threaten to expose the paucity of North Korea's military capabilities. Bottom Line: We are still in for a wild ride with North Korea. As we expected, regional safe haven assets continue to perform well. We will hold on to our safe haven basket of Swiss bonds and gold, up 2.6% since August 16. Nonetheless, we expect North Korea to steer clear of provoking a war. Gary Cohn Will Collapse The USD! (But What If He Already Did?) Several fast-money clients - both in the U.S. and Asia - have a theory for why the greenback continues to suffer: Gary Cohn. The theory goes that Cohn is an ultra-dove whose job as the next Fed Chair will be to stay "behind the curve" and drive down the USD. This would accomplish President Trump's lofty nominal GDP growth goals despite legislative hurdles to his fiscal policy. It would also keep risk assets well bid and help begin rebalancing the U.S. trade deficit. What do we know of Mr. Cohn's views on monetary policy? Not much: He defended the Trump administration goal of a 3% GDP growth target, suggesting that he has a far more optimistic view of U.S. growth than the current Fed projection;5 He believes that monetary policy is "globalized," intoning at a conference in Florida quickly after the election that the Fed policy of raising rates before the rest of the world is ready to do the same would be a mistake;6 In a January 2016 Bloomberg TV interview, he said that both the U.S. and Chinese currencies were overvalued and would both have to devalue.7 People who know and have worked with Gary Cohn (including one colleague at BCA!) speak highly of his pragmatism, work ethic, and focus. Most agree that he would likely be dove-ish, but there is not a single person we have spoken to who thinks that he will be Trump's puppet. As such, his disconnected statements largely say nothing about his potential style of leadership. His most ultra-dovish, USD-slaying comment comes from January 2016, with DXY 6.9% down since then (Chart 2). Mission Accomplished Mr. Cohn? The real reason for the USD slide, aside from a persistently disappointing inflation print, has been a realization by the market that President Trump's bark has no bite. On a slew of measures, President Trump's initial bravado has dissipated into flabby rhetoric. Chart 3 shows the initial surge in optimism regarding growth, tax reform, infrastructure spending, Mexico's comeuppance, and bi-partisanship (measured as support among independents). Each data point has not only fallen back to pre-election levels, but appears to have now been desensitized to any news that would have excited it in the past. For example, NAFTA negotiations are off to a poor start, President Trump continues to bash the trade deal, and yet the peso has rallied since Trump's inauguration! Chart 2Mission Accomplished, Mr. Cohn? Chart 3Trump's Bark Has No Bite? The Fed itself has lost faith in the president. The number of FOMC members who see upside risks to inflation and GDP growth, not unrelated to fiscal policy, has fallen after a brief surge after the election (Chart 4). Chart 4The Fed Also Doubts Trump What chances are there for the White House and Congress to re-write the fiscal narrative over the final quarter of 2017? As we wrote last week, Hurricane Harvey will ensure that a debt ceiling breach and government shutdown are avoided. However, Congress is likely to spend September making one last attempt at Obamacare repeal and replace, thus largely wasting the month before returning to tax reform in earnest in the new fiscal year. We expect some form of tax legislation to take shape by the end of December. Will it be comprehensive tax reform? Unlikely. It will now almost certainly be merely a tax-cutting exercise, with some revenue offsets attached to it. With the Republicans in Congress now leading the tax reform effort, it is unlikely that the budget deficit hole will be as wide as President Trump would have wanted. The problem is that both Trump's July tax reform proposal and the House GOP August plan come short of revenue-neutrality by around $3-3.5 trillion (over the decade-long period) (Table 1). Given that such a massive increase in the deficit would be unacceptable to fiscal hawks (or Democrats) in the House, we would expect tax rates to be cut by a much more modest degree. Table 1By How Much Will Republican Tax Cuts Widen The Deficit? Table 1 gives a detailed survey of the preferences (Tax Cuts) and constraints (Revenue Offsets). It is difficult to see how all the constraints are overcome through the legislative process. This will force Republicans to modify their preferences on the scale of tax cuts. We would expect that a corporate tax cut from 35% to around 27-28% could be possible, along with a minimal middle-class tax cut. Anything beyond that would be overly complicated. Therein lies the paradox for Chair Cohn. The only way that he can be "behind the curve" is if the curve gets "in front of him." But why would it if any coming tax legislation has very little stimulative effect on the economy? Currently, the expected change in the Fed Funds Rate over the next two years stands at a measly 40 bps (Chart 5). That is just barely two rate hikes until September 2019. How can Mr. Cohn get the expectations any lower at this point? Bottom Line: The appointment of Gary Cohn will be a classic "sell the (USD on the) rumor, buy (the USD) on the news." We expect his appointment in late November or early December, if President Trump goes by the lead time from the past two nominations (Chart 6). That may be the time to pare back USD shorts for those investors who have been bearish on the greenback. Chart 5Hard To Drive Expectations##BR##Lower For Rate Hikes Chart 6How Long Does It Take To##BR##Confirm The Fed Chair? Europe Is Not A Risk Chart 7Europe's Economy Zooming Along One clear insight from our five weeks on the road this summer is that Europe is no longer on anyone's radar. We had hardly any questions regarding the upcoming German or Italian elections. And while most investors were somewhat pessimistic regarding French structural reforms, none expressed any interest in betting against them either. The obvious reason is that Europe's economy has genuinely recovered (Chart 7). Consumer and business confidence are holding up while the manufacturing PMI and industrial production remain strong. That said, uniformity of view among clients across several geographies makes us nervous. On the future of the Euro Area, investors have swung wildly from morose to resigned that it is here to stay. Nonetheless, we generally agree with the consensus. Unlike at the beginning of this year, when we boldly claimed that European risks would turn out to be a "trophy red herring," we have no alpha to generate by disagreeing with the market.8 Here is why: German Election: We have a policy of not wasting our client's time by covering major geopolitical events that have no market-relevance. Germany is the world's fourth-largest economy and it will hold an election on September 24. However, we see no investment relevance in the election and therefore no reason to spend time covering it. Polls show that the center-left opposition Social Democratic Party (SPD) has arrested its decline and may force another Grand Coalition (Chart 8). The only moderately interesting question is whether Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democratic Union (CDU) will be able to get its favored coalition ally, the Free Democratic Party (FDP), into government instead. The FDP has turned towards soft Euroskepticism since 2009. Its parliamentarians voted against several bills dealing with the Euro Area crisis during their 2009-2013 coalition with the CDU. That said, Chancellor Merkel has turned much more forcefully pro-Europe since the dark days of Greek bailouts and bond market rioting. The Chancellor can read the polls: Germans support the common currency at 81%, compared to 66% average between 2009-2013 (Chart 9). We expect the FDP to play along with the Europhile conversion by the CDU. Chart 8Another Grand Coalition? Chart 9Merkel Knows Germans Support The Euro If there is any significance to the calm ahead of the German election, it is that the country is at "peak normal." Its policymakers have dealt with a massive migration crisis, geopolitical crises to the East, terrorist attacks, and severe political and economic stresses in its sphere of influence, all with a near-complete absence of internal drama. This looks like either "as good as it gets," or the start of a new Golden Age in Europe, with Berlin in the lead. It is probably neither, but given European asset prices, and gearing to the growing global economy, we would remain overweight Euro Area equities going forward. Italian Election: Polls remain too-close-to-call in the upcoming Italian election, with Euroskeptic parties continuing to poll well (Chart 10). However, we are not sure one can truly call these parties Euroskeptic anymore. Despite a high level of Euroskeptic sentiment in the country (Chart 11), its Euroskeptic parties have been scared off by the failures of peers in Austria, the Netherlands, and France. Chart 10Italy: Euroskeptic Parties Poll Well... Chart 11...Reflecting Broader Euroskepticism Luigi Di Maio, leader of the anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S) in the Italian Chamber of Deputies, and Matteo Salvini, head of the right-wing, populist Lega Nord, both reversed positions on the euro this month. Di Maio will be 5SM candidate for prime minister in the upcoming elections - which must be held by May and will likely take place in February or March. He reiterated a position, which 5SM hinted at in the past, that leaving the Euro Area would only be the "last resort" if Brussels refused to relax strict budget rules. Meanwhile, the firebrand, populist, Salvini hid behind Italy's constitution, claiming that a referendum on the euro would be illegal. In the short term, this means that the election in 2018 is no longer a risk. In the long term, it does not change the fact that Italy is ripe for a bout of Euroskeptic crisis at some later stage. Migration Crisis: Bad news for right-wing populists everywhere: the migration crisis is over and in quite a dramatic fashion. This is an empirical fact (Chart 12). Europe's enforcement efforts and collaboration with Libyan authorities (such as they are) have now forced even the humanitarian agencies to abandon the Mediterranean route. One of the largest such agencies - the Migrant Offshore Aid Station (MOAS) - recently announced that it was packing its mothership, the Phoenix, for Myanmar. The group is the fourth to stop patrols for migrants. Medecins sans Frontieres, Save the Children, and Germany's Sea Eye all cited hostile actions taken by Libyan authorities towards their vessels as the main reason to stop rescuing migrants in Libyan waters. Chart 12The 'Migration Crisis' Is Definitively Over To be clear, what is happening in the Mediterranean is a result of European enforcement efforts, not any sudden awakening of Libyan capacity or sovereignty. The European Union and Italy are training and funding the Libyan Coast Guard, which has started to intercept humanitarian vessels, threaten them with force (often right in front of the Italian Navy!), and force them to return migrants to Libya, where they are subjected to extremely cruel internment. Prior to this development, human smugglers would launch barely seaworthy "crafts" towards humanitarian ships waiting literally yards away in Libyan waters to "rescue" the "migrants" to Europe. As such, humanitarian agencies were aiding and abetting human smuggling, by making it a lucrative enterprise with no downside risk for the smugglers. We expect the step-up in enforcement in Libyan waters to severely impair the cost-benefit calculus of attempting a Mediterranean crossing for a would-be migrant. Instead of a welcoming NGO vessel many will find themselves in Libyan Internment camps. Word will spread fast and the migration crisis will abate further. We have now come full circle on the migration crisis, which we predicted back in September 2015 would end precisely in such an illiberal fashion.9 Europe has a vicious streak ... who knew? Structural Reforms In France: In February, we penned a bullish report on France, arguing with high conviction that Marine Le Pen would lose and that structural reforms would follow.10 What is the status of the latter forecast? Despite a decline in President Emmanuel Macron's popularity (Chart 13), he is expending his political capital early in his term. He understands our "J-curve of Structural Reform" (Diagram 1). Policymakers who understand how the reform J-curve works know that they have to spend their political capital while they have it, at the beginning of their term, in order to reap the benefits, if there are any, while they are still in power. Chart 13Macron's Popularity Slips Diagram 1The J-Curve Of Structural Reform How do Macron's reforms compare with previous efforts? Generally speaking, Macron's reforms (Table 2) compare favorably with both the 2012 Mariano Rajoy reforms in Spain and the 2003 Hartz reforms in Germany. The Hartz reforms were instrumental in expanding temporary work contracts and restructured generous unemployment benefits. Similarly, the Rajoy reforms in Spain clarified economic grounds for dismissal and created more flexible "entrepreneur contracts." Macron's reforms fit these efforts, especially the proposals to put in place "project contracts" - an open-ended contract lasting for the duration of a project - and to establish a floor and a ceiling for allowances in cases of unfair terminations, and make termination for economic reasons easier. Table 2French Labor Reforms: The Key Bits The two criticisms of the reform efforts we most often hear are that France has not had a crisis to spur reforms and that unions will launch vicious protests. The first criticism is dubious, given that France is itself emerging from the low-growth doldrums of the post-Great Financial Crisis. It is simply false to say that France has had no crisis. The French public is acutely aware that its real per-capita GDP growth has been closer to Greek levels than German ones over the last two decades (Chart 14) and that it has lost competitiveness in the global marketplace (Chart 15). One cannot have a conversation with a French friend, colleague, or client without wanting to order a strong drink!11 Chart 14France's Lost Millennium Chart 15France's Lost Competitiveness Besides, what monumental crisis was it that propelled Germany into reforms in the early 2000s? A vicious recession? A massive bank crisis? It was neither. Germany was simply weighed down for a decade by fiscal transfers to East Germany and sensing that its export-oriented industry was facing a massive challenge from the Asian move up the value chain. It was this acute sense of competitive pressure, of falling behind, that spurred Germany to reform. With France, the acute sense of falling behind Germany (Chart 16) is at the heart of today's effort. Chart 16German Competition Puts A Fire Under France The second criticism, that the unions will hold protests, misjudges the political capital arrayed behind Macron. Despite his sagging popularity, 85.9% of the seats in the National Assembly are of pro-reform orientation (Diagram 2). The second-largest party in the parliament is Les Republicains, an even more zealously pro-reform group. This is a unique situation in French history and will allow the government to ignore protests on the street. Diagram 2The Balance Of Power In France's National Assembly In fact, two of the largest unions in France - Force Ouvrière and CFDT - have both said they would not protest the labor reforms. This leaves only the more militant CGT to protest, along with the left-wing presidential candidate Jean-Luc Mélenchon. The reason investors will still fret about protests this month is because CGT retains a strong representation in heavy industry and infrastructure sectors like energy and railways. As such, their industrial action could grind the country to a halt. We suspect that a repeat of the 1995 general strike or the 2010 French pension reform unrest - both of which CGT spearheaded - will be the final nail in the coffin of "Old France." Unlike those previous reform efforts, President Macron's effort has been clearly signaled ahead of the election and thus retains considerable democratic legitimacy. As such, any repeat of the 1995 or especially 2010 unrest would delegitimize the unions and give President Macron even more political capital. Bottom Line: We agree with the now conventional view that all is well in Europe. Stability ahead of the German election reminds investors of what a healthy country is supposed to look like. Italian election risks have dissipated. And our French structural reforms call remains on track. This gives us an opportunity to do some house-cleaning regarding our calls. First, we are closing our long French 10-year bond / short Italian 10-year bond trade for a gain of only 1 bps. Second, we are closing our overweight Euro Area equities relative to U.S. equities call for a gain of 7.88%. Given our euro-bullishness, we never recommended that this call be currency hedged. We are now reinstating it with a currency hedge. We are also closing our long German 10-Year CPI Swap for a gain of 45.5 bps. We will stick with our long French industrial equities / short German industrials, which is currently up 9.25%. This is a way we have chosen to articulate our bullish view on the reforms, although clients with greater sophistication in European sectors could come up with a more direct way to articulate the view. Separately, we are also booking profits on our long China volatility trade (CBOE China ETF Volatility Index) for a gain of 16.82%. Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market?" dated August 16, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 A North Korean submarine sank the South Korean corvette Cheonan in 2010, but that was still within the norm of behavior for the two countries that are still effectively at war and have contested maritime borders. 3 Romeo-class submarines are nearly 70 years old. As much as we harken back to Yugoslav engineering with pride at BCA's Geopolitical Strategy, Belgrade was never much of a naval power. Nonetheless, diesel-powered submarines are quite proficient in staying undetected and could present a problem for the U.S. Navy. At least until they had to resurface or get back to base, where nuclear-powered U.S. Virginia-class attack-subs would lie in wait for them. 4 Tehran won the court case in 2003! And the ICJ forced the U.S. to compensate Iran for its lost ships or else face invasion by the United Nations army. (We are just kidding obviously. Iran did win, but it got nothing.) Please see Pieter H.F. Bekker, "The World Court Finds that U.S. Attacks on Iranian Oil Platforms in 1987-1988 Were Not Justifiable as Self-Defense, but the United States Did Not Violate the Applicable Treaty with Iran," American Society of International Law Volume 8, Issue 25, dated November 11, 2003, available at: asil.org. 5 Please see CNBC, "Tax reform is coming in September, Trump economic advisor Gary Cohn says," dated June 29, 2017, available at cnbc.com. 6 Please see Wall Street Journal, "How Donald Trump's New Top Economic Adviser Views the World," dated December 14, 2016, available at wjs.com. 7 Please see Business Insider, "Trump and his top economic adviser have had completely different views on China," dated January 3, 2017, available at businessinsider.com. 8 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Strategic Outlook, "Strategic Outlook 2017: We Are All Geopolitical Strategists Now," dated December 14, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "The Great Migration - Europe, Refugees, And Investment Implications," dated September 23, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 10 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "The French Revolution," dated February 3, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 11 Thankfully for France, the choice would still be French wine!
Feature Dear Client, In addition to this abbreviated Weekly Report, I am sending you a Special Report written by Mark McClellan, Managing Editor of the monthly Bank Credit Analyst. Mark makes a compelling case that the deflationary effects of the "Amazon economy" are overstated. I trust you will find his report very informative. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy Chart 1September Is Generally ##br##Not A Good Time Of Year For Stocks My colleagues and I convened a meeting earlier this week to discuss whether to abandon our long-standing cyclically bullish view towards risk assets. Several of them felt it was time to turn more cautious. I am sympathetic to their concerns: Valuations are stretched, volatility is low, and geopolitical risks (most notably North Korea) are on the rise. Profit growth is likely to decelerate later this year, as the easy comps stemming from the depressed level of earnings in the first half of 2016 vanish. Meanwhile, stocks are entering the volatile early autumn months, a period which has historically seen poor returns (Chart 1). Nevertheless, at times like these, it is useful to fall back on our time-tested indicators. Bear markets have almost always coincided with economic recessions, with the latter usually causing the former (Chart 2). None of our recession-timing signals are flashing red: To cite just a few examples, ISM manufacturing new orders are strong, initial unemployment claims are low, core capital goods orders are accelerating, and the yield curve is not in any immediate risk of inverting (Chart 3). Chart 2Recessions And Bear Markets Usually Overlap Chart 3No Warnings Of Recession Here U.S. financial conditions have eased sharply this year, which should support growth over the next few quarters (Chart 4). A recent IMF report highlighted that easier U.S. financial conditions tend to generate positive spillovers onto other countries.1 The fact that all 45 countries monitored by the OECD are on track to grow this year - the first time this has happened since 2007 - is a testament to the strong fundamentals underpinning the global economy. Chart 4Easing Financial Conditions Bode Well For Growth The Fed's Dot Problem In this light, the Fed's projection that the unemployment rate will end this year at 4.3% and only fall to 4.2% by end-2018 no longer looks credible. If U.S. GDP growth remains above trend, as we expect, the unemployment rate could fall below its 2000 low of 3.8% by next summer. That will be enough to prompt investors to price in a few more rate hikes. Considering that the market expects just 22 basis points in hikes through to end-2018, this is not a high bar to clear. A bit more fiscal stimulus would add to the pressure to tighten monetary policy. While any meaningful progress on tax reform will be difficult to achieve, the odds are good that Congress will agree to cut statutory corporate and personal tax rates, with the latter focusing mainly on middle-income earners. Failure to raise the debt ceiling or extend federal spending authority beyond the current budget window could scuttle the benefits from lower tax rates. Fortunately, the risks of such an outcome have receded. If there is a silver lining from Hurricane Harvey, it is that the disaster could at least temporarily overcome the political impasse in Washington. Congress will need to appropriate additional disaster relief funds over the coming weeks. Politicians who are seen as creating roadblocks to such funding will face the electorate's wrath. The odds of an infrastructure bill passing through Congress have also risen. All recoveries eventually run out of steam, but this one can last at least until the second half of 2019, which will make it the longest U.S. expansion on record. As we discussed several weeks ago, the next recession is likely to be triggered by the Fed scrambling to hike rates in response to rising inflation.2 This is not an immediate concern, given that it usually takes a while for an overheated economy to generate inflation - especially since the U.S. currently can satisfy rising domestic demand with higher imports. However, the risks of overheating will increase as unemployment falls further and excess capacity elsewhere in the world is absorbed. Draghi After Jackson Hole Chart 5A Stronger Euro Is Deflationary Textbook economic theory states that a shift in consumption towards imported goods requires a real appreciation of the currency. The dollar, of course, has done exactly the opposite of that, depreciating by 6.6% in trade-weighted terms since the start of the year. The euro, in particular, has gained significant ground against the greenback, rising above $1.20 at one point this week. Mario Draghi's failure to express concerns about the resurgent euro during his Jackson Hole address was construed by many market participants as a green light for further currency strength. We are skeptical of this "saying nothing means you are saying something" interpretation. Draghi wanted to acknowledge (and partly take credit for) the recovery across the euro area, but he is cognizant of the problems posed by a stronger euro. The ECB's June forecast showed inflation rising to only 1.6% in 2019. In the period since those forecasts were compiled, the trade-weighted euro has appreciated by 3.9%, bringing the year-to-date gain to 6.2% (Chart 5). ECB staff calculations, which Draghi has approvingly quoted, show that a 10% appreciation in the euro would reduce inflation by 0.2 percentage points in the first year and 0.6-to-0.8 points in the subsequent two years.3 Better-than-expected growth since the June forecasts will offset some of the deflationary impact from the stronger euro, but probably not by much, given that the Phillips curve is quite flat at high-to-moderate levels of spare capacity. With labor market slack across the euro area still 3.2 percentage points higher today than in 2008 (and 6.7 points higher outside of Germany), it will be a while before stronger growth generates markedly higher inflation. We expect the ECB to reduce its 2018/2019 inflation forecast by 0.1-to-0.2 percentage points next week. It would be awkward for the central bank to play up the prospect of monetary policy normalization while it is simultaneously trimming its inflation projections. This suggests that the ECB's communications could turn more dovish, thereby limiting further upside for the euro. EUR/USD is currently trading near the top of the $1.10-to-$1.20 range that we foresee lasting for the next 10 months. Thus, our expectation is that the euro will weaken over the next few months, ending the year near $1.15, and potentially moving back towards its 2017 lows in the second half of next year, as an overheated U.S. economy forces the Fed to pick up the pace of rate hikes. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see "Getting The Policy Mix Right," IMF Global Financial Stability Report, (Chapter 3), (April 2017). 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "From Slow Burn Recovery to Retro-Recession?" dated August 18, 2017. 3 Please see European Central Bank, "March 2017 ECB Staff Macroeconomic Projections For The Euro Area." APPENDIX 1 Tactical Global Asset Allocation Monthly Update To complement our analysis, we use a variety of time-tested models to assess the global investment outlook. At present, these models favor global equities over bonds over a three-month horizon (Appendix Table 1). Appendix Table 1BCA's Tactical Global Asset Allocation Recommendations* Our business cycle equity indicators remain in bullish territory, as reflected in strong global growth and rising corporate earnings. Our monetary and financial indicators are also generally supportive. In contrast, our sentiment readings are sending mixed signals. On the one hand, implied equity volatility remains low and institutional exposure to stocks is quite high. On the other hand, surveys of retail investors show a healthy skepticism towards the bull market, which is a positive contrarian indicator. As has been the case for some time, our valuation measures are signaling that stocks are expensive, but these are typically useful only over horizons beyond one or two years. As we flagged last month, stocks tend to do poorly in August and September, which may hurt returns over the next few weeks. The stronger euro will negatively impact earnings in the euro area. This has caused our models to suggest a slight downgrade to European equities. However, we are inclined to fade this signal, given our expectation that the euro will give up some of its recent gains. Japanese stocks continue to score well on our metrics, buoyed by strengthening corporate profits and attractive valuations. Emerging market equities are fairly valued, although China still appears cheap. The rally in U.S. Treasurys has caused the gap between the 10-year yield and our model's fair value estimate to widen to around 50 basis points, the highest since last September. European and Japanese bonds also look somewhat overvalued, although the latter will continue to receive support from the BoJ's yield curve targeting operations. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Feature Shrugging Off The Political Noise All the political noise of August (White House resignations, Charlottesville, North Korean missile launches, the looming U.S. debt ceiling) could do no more than trigger a minor market wobble: at the worst point, global equities were off only 2% from their all-time high. The reason is that global cyclical growth remains strong, earnings are accelerating, and central banks have no immediate need to turn hawkish. In such an environment, risk assets should continue to outperform over the next 12 months. The political risks will not disappear (and will no doubt produce further hair-raising moments), but they are unlikely to have a decisive impact on markets. BCA's geopolitical strategists think eventually there will be a diplomatic solution to the North Korean situation - albeit only after a significant further rise in tension forces the two sides to the negotiating table.1 It is hard to imagine the debt ceiling not being raised, since Republicans control both houses of Congress and the White House, and they would be blamed for any disruption caused by a failure to raise it. Recent personnel changes in the White House have left - for now - a more pragmatic "Goldman Sachs clique" in charge. We believe there is still a reasonable likelihood of tax cuts, not least since the Republicans are on track to lose a lot of seats in next year's mid-term elections unless they can boost the administration's popularity (Chart 1). Recent growth data has been decent. U.S. Q2 GDP growth was revised up to 3% QoQ annualized, and the regional Fed NowCasts point to 1.9-3.4% growth in Q3. If anything, growth momentum in the euro area (2.4% in Q2) and Japan (4%) is even better. Corporate earnings growth continues to accelerate too, with S&P 500 EPS growth in the second quarter coming in at 10% YoY, compared to a forecast of just 6% before the results season started. BCA's models suggest that, in all regions, earnings growth is likely to continue to accelerate for a couple more quarters (Chart 2). Chart 1Republicans Need A Popularity Boost Chart 2Earnings Continue To Accelerate The outlook for the dollar remains the key to asset allocation. The market currently assumes that the dollar will weaken further, as U.S. inflation stays low and the Fed, therefore, stays on hold. Futures markets currently price only a 38% probability of a Fed hike in December, and only 25 BP of hikes over the next 12 months. If markets are right, this scenario would be positive for emerging market equities and commodity currencies, and would mean that long-term rates would be likely to stay low, around current levels. But we think that assumption is wrong. Diffusion indexes for core inflation have begun to pick up (Chart 3). The tight labor market should start to push up wages, dollar deprecation is already coming through in the form of rising import prices, and some transitory factors (pre-election drugs price rises, for example) will fall out of the data soon. The Fed is clearly nervous that it has fallen behind the curve, especially since financial conditions have recently eased significantly (Chart 4). A moderate stabilization of inflation by December would be enough to push the Fed to hike again - and to reiterate its plan to raise rates three times next year. Chart 3Inflation To Pick Up? Chart 4Financial Condition: Easy In The U.S., Tight In Europe Meanwhile, long-term interest rates in developed economies look too low given growth prospects (Chart 5). As inflation picks up, the Fed talks more hawkishly, and the dollar begins to appreciate again, rates are likely to move up in the U.S. and in the euro zone. Our view, then, is that the Fed will tighten faster than the market expects, long-term rates will rise and the dollar will appreciate. Equities might wobble initially as they price in the tighter monetary policy but, as long as growth continues to be strong, should outperform bonds on a 12-month basis. Our scenario would be positive for euro zone and Japanese equities, but somewhat negative for EM equities. Equities: We prefer DM equities over EM. Emerging equities have been boosted over the past 12 months by the weaker dollar and Chinese reflation. With the dollar likely to appreciate (for the reasons argued above), and a slowdown in Chinese money supply growth pointing to slower growth in that economy (Chart 6), we think EM equities will struggle over coming quarters. Meanwhile, there is little sign that domestic growth momentum is improving in emerging economies (Chart 7). Within DM, our underlying preference is for euro zone and Japanese equities. Our quants model now points to an underweight for the U.S. We haven't implemented this yet because 1) of our view that the USD will strengthen, and 2) we prefer not to make too frequent changes to recommendations. We will review this in our next Quarterly. Chart 5Rates Lag Behind Global Growth Chart 6Slowing Chinese Money Growth Is A Risk For EM Chart 7EM Domestic Growth Anemic Text below Fixed Income: BCA's model of fair value for the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield (the model incorporates the Global Manufacturing PMI and USD bullish sentiment) points to 2.6%, almost 50 BP above the current level (Chart 8). We therefore expect G7 government bonds to produce a negative return over the next 12 months, as inflation expectations rise and monetary policy continues to "normalize". We still find some attraction in spread product, especially in the U.S. (Chart 9). While spreads are quite low compared to history, U.S. high-yield spreads remain 119 BP above historic lows, while euro area ones are only 65 BP above. Chart 8U.S. Rate Fair Value Is Around 2.6% Chart 9Credit Spreads Not At Record Lows Currencies: The euro has likely overshot. Long speculative positions are close to record levels (Chart 10) and the currency has returned to its Purchasing Power Parity level against the USD (Chart 11). An announcement of a "dovish" tapering of asset purchases by ECB President Draghi in September could persuade the market that the ECB will continue to be much more cautious about tightening than the Fed. The yen is also likely to weaken against the US dollar as global rates rise, since the BoJ will not change its yield curve control policy despite the better recent growth numbers, given how far inflation is still from its target. Chart 10There Are A Lot Of Euro Bulls Chart 11Euro Is No Longer Undervalued Commodities: Our forecast that a drawdown in crude inventories will push the WTI price back up is slowing coming about. U.S. crude inventories have fallen by 25.3 million barrels since the start of the year. The after-effects of Hurricane Harvey might affect the data for a while but, as long as global demand holds up, the crude oil price should rise further, with WTI moving over $55 a barrel by year-end. Metals prices have moved largely sideways year to date, and future movements depend mostly on the outlook for Chinese growth, which may begin to slow. In particular, the recent run-up in copper prices (which have risen by 20% since early June) seems unsustainable. The bullish sentiment was mostly due to short-term supply/demand imbalances caused by labor disruptions at some major mines. However, Chinese copper demand, especially for construction, is likely to weaken over coming months.2 Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report "Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market," dated 16 August 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report "Copper's Getting Out Ahead Of Fundamentals, Correction Likely," dated 24 August 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com Recommended Asset Allocation
Highlights The ECB defines a euro overshoot as EUR/USD in the high 1.20s. Until then, remain cyclically long both EUR/USD and the associated SEK/USD. EUR/USD is a function of expected terminal interest rates in the euro area and U.S. Whether the Fed hikes in December or whether the ECB hikes next year is largely irrelevant. Global investors should be long the euro, but underweight the Euro Stoxx 50. European equity investors should prefer the broader based 300-constituent Euro Stoxx over the 50-constituent Euro Stoxx 50.1 And prefer the FTSE100 over the Euro Stoxx 50. Feature Arguably the biggest macro trade of 2017 has been to own the euro. Year to date, the big winner is EUR/USD, which is up 15%, but even EUR/GBP is up an impressive 9%. An additional merit is that the euro has behaved like a haven currency. When risk assets have sold off sharply, EUR/USD has tended to strengthen.2 The Euro Is Stronger, But It Is Not Strong Although the euro is stronger, the ECB's own indicators for euro area competitiveness3 suggest that the euro is not yet strong. The euro needs to appreciate by at least another 5%4 to cancel the euro area's over-competitiveness versus its top 19 trading partners (Chart of the Week). Translated to EUR/USD this implies a fair value in the 1.25-1.30 range. Chart of the WeekThe Euro Is Stronger, But It Is Not Yet Strong To be clear, the ECB's competitiveness analysis assumes that the euro started its life in 1999 close to fair value. This assumption seems reasonable. In 1999, the euro area's constituent economies were broadly in internal balance with each other and had much in common. Hard as it is to believe today, in 1999 Germany and Italy scored identically on total debt as a share of GDP (Chart I-2) as well as on exports as a share of GDP (Chart I-3). Chart I-2At The Euro"s Birth, Germany And##br## Italy Had The Same Debt To GDP... Chart I-3...And Exports##br## To GDP Perhaps more significantly, euro area trade was in external balance, and the bloc's real competitiveness versus its major trading partners was exactly in line with its long-term average. But after its birth, the euro became extremely undervalued in the dot com bubble, then extremely overvalued in the global credit boom, and most recently, extremely undervalued again - as a direct result of the ECB's extreme monetary easing. Seen in this bigger picture, the euro's recent rally is just a recovery from this most recent undervaluation, an argument that the ECB itself made at its last monetary policy meeting: "Regarding exchange rates, the appreciation of the euro to date could be seen as reflecting changes in relative fundamentals in the euro area vis-à-vis the rest of the world." At the same time: "Concerns were expressed about the risk of the exchange rate overshooting in the future." What would constitute such an overshooting? Based on the ECB's own analysis, we can deduce that it would occur if EUR/USD broke into the high 1.20s (Chart I-4). This is the level at which we would consider removing our cyclical overweight. Until then, remain cyclically long both EUR/USD and the associated SEK/USD. Chart I-4The Euro Needs To Rally Another 5% To Cancel The Euro Area"s Over-Competitiveness Explaining The Stronger Euro The explanation for the euro's impressive rally starts with central banks' strong commitment to 'data-dependency'. Over short periods, economic data can be noisy or "transient" giving central banks an excuse to look through the data. But over periods of 6 months and longer, the noise cancels out. So unless central banks break their commitment to data-dependency - which would mark a big shift in transparency and communication - the markets know that central bank policy must ultimately follow the hard data on GDP growth, inflation, and job creation. This necessarily means that the evolution of relative interest rate expectations and bond yields must also ultimately follow relative economic performance. Which they have done perfectly (Chart I-5). The next part of the explanation is the so-called fixed income portfolio channel (Chart I-6). The key point is that international fixed income investors make their allocations based on both bond valuations and currency valuations. Chart I-5Bond Yield Spreads Follow Relative##br## Economic Performance Chart I-6Fixed Income Flows Are The Most Volatile##br## Part Of Currency Demand When the expected interest rate in the euro area rises relative to that in the U.S., the euro bond becomes de facto relatively cheaper. As an example, let's say 1% cheaper. In this case, the international fixed income investor will shift into the euro bond until the flow makes EUR/USD symmetrically 1% more expensive. At this point, the fixed income portfolio flow will stop, and an equilibrium will reestablish at the new higher level for EUR/USD. This is because the international investor now has 1% more upside from the cheaper bond, but 1% less upside from the more expensive currency - and the two cancel out. Finally, at major turning points in monetary policy such as now, the expected interest rate that matters is the so-called terminal rate. At such major turning points, the issue for the largest fixed income portfolio flows is not the exact timing of rate hikes. Whether the Fed hikes in December or whether the ECB hikes next year is largely irrelevant. The big issue is: at what level of rates will the respective tightening cycles ultimately end many years from now? Chart I-7 and Chart I-8 illustrate that EUR/USD has recently been tracking the expected policy rate differential not in 2018 or 2019, but in 2022! Chart I-7EUR/USD Is Not Tracking Policy ##br##Rate Differentials In 2019... Chart I-8...But Rather Policy Rate ##br##Differntials In 2022 Based on the latest PMIs which capture current economic sentiment, and on 6-month credit impulses which lead activity, euro area hard data will continue to perform at least in line with those in other major economies. In which case, relative expectations for the terminal policy interest rate will continue to converge, long-dated bond yield spreads will continue to compress, and the euro has further cyclical upside. Losers And Winners From The Stronger Euro A stronger euro creates both losers and winners. A stronger euro hurts the competitiveness of firms selling euro priced products in international markets. Therefore, firms exporting discretionary goods and services which are price elastic could suffer a drop in sales. Against this, a stronger euro makes everyone in the euro area richer in terms of the goods and services they can buy from outside the euro area. This is particularly significant for non-discretionary items - food and energy - of which Europe is a large importer. Given that the volumes of these purchases tend to be inelastic, their price decline in euro terms significantly boosts the real spending power of euro area consumers. Chart I-9The Stronger Euro Weighs##br## On The Eurostoxx 50 (As an aside, the exact opposite applies in the U.K. The post Brexit vote slump in the pound - and the associated rise in prices - has depressed U.K. consumers' real spending power. And likely explains why the U.K. economy is now slowing.) A stronger euro also reflects a steeper yield curve, and its associated boost to bank profit margins, solvency, and credit creation. The important point is that the stronger euro's aggregate impact on an economy depends on how the losers and winners net out. For example, many people will worry that the stronger euro has made Italy 5% under-competitive versus its major trading partners. However, the drag on Italy's price-sensitive exporters could be less significant than the boost to real consumer spending and bank credit creation - netting out as a positive for Italy. Equity investors should note that most exporters in the Euro Stoxx 50 tend to be multinationals whose sales and costs are currency diversified and/or hedged. So a stronger euro should not hurt operationally. But it does hurt in the translation of multi-currency profits back into euros - the base currency of the Euro Stoxx 50. This drags down (local currency) index performance. Hence, global investors should be cyclically long the euro, but underweight the Euro Stoxx 50. European equity investors should prefer the broader based 300-constituent Euro Stoxx5 over the 50-constituent Euro Stoxx 50 (Chart I-9); and prefer the FTSE100 over the Euro Stoxx 50. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Not to be confused with the Stoxx Europe 600 2 Global equities assets have suffered 11 sharply down days this year - defined as the MSCI World index (in local currency terms) down more than -0.5%. And on 9 of those 11 days, EUR/USD has rallied 3 Available at https://www.ecb.europa.eu/stats 4 The ECB calculates three Harmonised Competitiveness Indicators for the euro area versus its top 19 trading partners based on unit labour costs, GDP deflators, and consumer price indices. Updated to August 29 2017, the three indicators suggest that the trade-weighted euro is still undervalued by 5%, 11% and 6% respectively. 5 Not to be confused with the Stoxx Europe 600 Fractal Trading Model* This week we are initiating a short nickel / long silver commodity pair trade with a profit target / stop loss at 8%. In other trades, short MSCI Turkey / long Eurostoxx600 hit its 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-10 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 Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions 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##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Mario Draghi will signal the ECB's intention to further taper asset purchases during his Jackson Hole address later today, while cautioning that rate hikes remain a way away. The spread between long-term U.S. and euro area bond yields is not especially wide considering that trend growth is higher in the U.S. and fiscal policy will add 4% of GDP more to U.S. aggregate demand over the next few years than it will in the euro area. The upswing in Japanese growth is unlikely to prompt the BoJ to abandon its yield- curve targeting regime. Japanese stocks are cheap and corporate profits are rebounding smartly. Stay overweight Japanese equities in currency-hedged terms for the next 12 months. As one looks further ahead to the next decade, Japanese inflation will likely break out as labor shortages intensify. This will be part of a broad-based increase in global inflation. Stay long Japanese inflation protection and go short 20-year JGBs relative to their 5-year counterparts. Feature Mario Draghi: Action Jackson, The Sequel? Mario Draghi made shockwaves the last time he spoke at Jackson Hole on August 22, 2014. Draghi used that occasion to lay out the case for additional monetary easing. This paved the way for the ECB's own QE program. From that fateful speech to March 2015, EUR/USD fell from 1.33 to 1.05. Three years later, investors are anxious to hear what Draghi has to say, but this time around the expectation is that he will discuss plans for winding down QE. We agree that Draghi will signal the ECB's intent to further taper asset purchases. Growth is currently strong and the risk of a euro area breakup has all but disappeared. Nevertheless, although he may not publicly admit it, Draghi is cognizant of the fact that euro area financial conditions have tightened on the back of a strong euro, while U.S. financial conditions have continued to ease (Chart 1). Mario Draghi also knows that both inflation and wage growth remain depressed across the euro area, and that labor market slack outside Germany is still 6.7 percentage points higher than in 2008 (Chart 2). In addition, Draghi is undoubtedly aware of the likelihood that the neutral rate of interest is extremely low in the euro area, implying that the ECB would be constrained in raising rates even if the region were close to full employment.1 The spread between the 30-year U.S. Treasury yield and the 30-year GDP-weighted euro area bond yield - a reasonable proxy for the market's estimate of the difference in neutral rates between the two regions - currently stands at 86 basis points in nominal terms and 56 basis points in real terms. This is not especially wide considering that trend growth is higher in the U.S. and fiscal policy will add 4% of GDP more to U.S. aggregate demand over the next few years than it will in the euro area (Chart 3).2 Chart 1Diverging Financial Conditions Favor U.S. Over The Euro Area Chart 2Draghi Is Paying Attention Chart 3The State Of Fiscal Policy In The G4 We expect EUR/USD to pare back its gains, dropping to $1.05 by the end of 2018. However, most of the dollar's rebound is likely to occur next year, when it becomes apparent that the U.S. unemployment rate will fall well below the Fed's 2018 projection of 4.2%. This will force the Fed to step up the pace of rate hikes. For the time being, we see EUR/USD fluctuating within a broad range of $1.10-to-$1.20. BoJ: Time To Remove The Sake Bowl? Could the Bank of Japan follow in the Fed's and ECB's footsteps by signaling the desire to slowly withdraw monetary accommodation? On the surface, there are certainly some reasons to think so. Japanese growth has picked up recently, with real GDP rising at a blistering annualized pace of 4% in the second quarter (Chart 4). The acceleration in growth was driven entirely by stronger domestic demand. Consumer spending increased by 3.7%, while private nonresidential investment jumped by 9.9%. Inflation appears to be bottoming. The national core CPI index, which excludes fresh food prices but includes energy costs, rose for the seventh straight month in June to 0.4% on a year-over-year basis. Corporate goods inflation has reached 2.6%, up from a low of -4.6% in May 2016. Corporate service inflation moved to 0.8% this spring, the highest rate since 1993 (Chart 5). Nominal wage growth has also accelerated. Our Wage Trend Indicator, which uses statistical techniques applied to three separate data series to extract the underlying trend in Japanese wages, is now close to its 2007 highs (Chart 6). Chart 4GDP Growth Has Perked Up In Japan Chart 5Corporate Pricing Power Has Improved Chart 6Japanese Wages Are In An Uptrend The recovery in Japanese wage growth has occurred alongside a tightening of the labor market. The latest Economy Watchers Survey featured a litany of companies complaining of worsening labor shortages (Table 1). This is confirmed by the job openings-to-applicants ratio, which has surged to the highest level since 1974 (Chart 7). Table 1Japan: Evidence Of Shortages Of Workers, Part I Chart 7Japan: Evidence Of Shortages Of Workers, Part II Easy Does It, Kuroda-san Despite the good news on the economy, it is highly unlikely that the Bank of Japan will abandon its ultra-accommodative stance any time soon. There are a number of reasons for this: While inflation is rising, it is coming off a very low base, and is nowhere near the BoJ's 2% target. A deflationary mindset also remains firmly entrenched, as highlighted by both survey data and market expectations (Chart 8). Much of the recent pickup in inflation is attributable to higher energy prices and the lagged effects of a weaker yen. Excluding energy prices, core inflation has barely risen. The increase in corporate goods prices has also closely tracked the price of imports. Considering that the trade-weighted yen has appreciated of late, it is reasonable to assume that import price inflation will dissipate. This spring's annual shunto wage negotiations yielded smaller wage hikes among large companies than in 2016. This suggests that further near-term gains in wages will be hard to come by. Fiscal policy may turn less accommodative. The government passed a supplementary budget last summer (worth 1.5% of GDP according to the IMF). The effects of this package are being felt now. Public fixed investment surged by 21.9% in Q2. Under current law, however, fiscal policy is set to turn contractionary again over the next few years. Leading economic indicators are pointing to a modest slowdown in growth over the coming months (Chart 9). Chart 8Deflationary Mindset Has Been Hard To Shake Off Chart 9LEIs Pointing To Modest Slowdown The BoJ is not the same central bank that it was five years ago. The last two hawkish dissenters, Takehiro Sato and Takehide Kiuchi, both stepped down in July when their terms expired. They were replaced by Goshi Kataoka and Hitoshi Suzuki, neither of whom are expected to oppose Governor Haruhiko Kuroda's dovish approach. As such, it is highly likely that the BoJ will continue to anchor the 10-year yield at close to zero for at least the next 12 months. If bond yields elsewhere rise over this period - as we expect will be the case - the yen will weaken. Good News For Japanese Stocks... For Now A weaker yen is, of course, good news for Japanese stocks. Japanese equities are currently trading at a 16% discount to the MSCI World index based on forward earnings (Chart 10). Moreover, unlike in the past, both earnings and dividend growth have been strong, averaging 19% and 9%, respectively, over the last five years (Chart 11). Corporate governance reform - a key element of Abenomics - can take some credit for this. The share of companies with at least two independent directors rose from 18% in 2013 to 78% in 2016. The number of companies with performance-linked pay increased from 640 to 941, while the number that publish disclosure policies jumped from 679 to 1055. Analysts have been slow to factor in these positive developments. Chart 12 shows that Japan leads all other major stock markets in positive earnings surprises in the second quarter. We remain overweight Japanese equities in currency-hedged terms. Chart 10Good Value In Japanese Stocks Chart 11Solid Earnings And Dividend Growth Chart 12Japan And Positive Earnings Revisions: Follow The Leader . The Longer-Term Outlook: Japan (Eventually) Escapes Deflation As we discussed last week, it is likely that the U.S. will fall into recession in 2019 or 2020, dragging the rest of the world down with it.3 As a risk-off currency, the yen will strengthen, potentially reigniting deflationary forces. This will make it impossible for the BoJ to abandon its yield-curve targeting regime. Does that mean that Japan is condemned to a never-ending cycle of reflation/deflation? Not necessarily. As one looks at a longer-term horizon of 5-to-10 years, it is likely that Japan will finally escape deflation. This is because many of the structural forces that have sustained deflation will have either receded or reversed course by then. The simultaneous bursting of Japan's real estate and stock market bubbles in the early 1990s ushered in a prolonged period of falling property prices and corporate deleveraging. This suppressed both household consumption and business investment, leading to a persistent shortfall in aggregate demand. The latest data suggests that property prices are bottoming and corporate balance sheets have finally improved to the point where further aggressive cost-cutting is no longer necessary (Chart 13). Demographic trends are also likely to fuel higher inflation over the long haul. The deceleration in population growth in the early 1990s reduced the need for everything from new homes to new cars, shopping malls, and factories. This weighed on business capex and consumer durable spending, thereby exacerbating the deflationary forces that were already in place. In addition, a surge in the share of the population in their peak saving years - ages 30 to 50 - led to an increase in desired savings throughout the economy. More savings means less spending, so this also contributed to deflation. Looking out, population growth will remain anemic. However, two important developments will occur. First, the biggest cohort of Japanese baby boomers - those born in 1947-52 - will hit 70, the age at which most Japanese workers retire. Second, the secular rise in female labor force participation will plateau. Chart 14 shows that a larger percentage of Japanese women between the ages of 25 and 54 are employed than in the U.S., a massive shift from 20 years ago. Both these changes will exacerbate labor shortages, while further reducing national savings. Chart 13Deflationary Headwinds Are Abating Chart 14Female Employment In Japan Has Surpassed The U.S. Concluding Thoughts Contrary to popular belief, the Phillips curve remains intact, even in Japan (Chart 15). The market is not at all prepared for the prospect of higher Japanese inflation, as evidenced by the fact that CPI swaps are pricing in inflation of only 0.5% over the next two decades. As inflation picks up in the 2020s, nominal GDP will rise (even if real GDP growth remains anemic due to a shrinking labor force). The Bank of Japan will keep nominal rates low during the first half of the 2020s, ensuring that real rates sink further into negative territory. This will be the way by which Japan reduces its debt burden. Older savers may not like it, but the alternative of pension and health care cuts will be seen as even worse. We are currently long Japanese inflation protection through the CPI swaps market. As of today, we are adding a new long-term trade recommendation: Go short 20-year JGBs relative to their 5-year counterparts. The potential upside from this trade easily compensates for the negative carry of 66 bps. An upswing in Japanese inflation in the 2020s is very much in line with our secular view that global inflation will trend higher over the long haul, as articulated in a recent report.4 This will have a profound impact on fixed-income markets. While Japan's demographic transition has been and will continue to be more extreme than elsewhere, population aging is something that will affect all major economies. Chart 15Japan's Phillips Curve Is Alive And Well Chart 16Demographic Shifts: From Highly Deflationary To Highly Inflationary Chart 16 shows the IMF's estimate of how projected changes in the age structure of the population will affect inflation over the next few decades. The Fund's calculations suggest that demographic shifts will go from being very deflationary to very inflationary in every major economy. This will translate into significantly higher long-term nominal bond yields. Peter Berezin, Global Chief Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Future Of The Neutral Rate," dated August 4, 2017. 2 We calculate this number by taking the difference between the structural primary budget balance in the euro area (roughly 1.5% of GDP) and the U.S. (roughly -2.5% of GDP). The claim that this will translate into 4% more in aggregate demand in the U.S. implicitly assumes a fiscal multiplier of one. A larger multiplier would generate an even bigger gap in demand. 3 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "From Slow Burn Recovery To Retro-Recession?" dated August 18, 2017. 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "A Secular Bottom In Inflation," dated July 28, 2017. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Special Report Feature Dear client, This week we are publishing a brief Special Report highlighting ten charts that have captured our attention, charts we would like to emphasize before the summer lull ends. We will not be sending a report next week, but we will be resuming our regular publishing schedule on September 8, 2017. Warm regards, Mathieu Savary With both the Manufacturing Council and the Strategy and Policy Forum disbanded, markets have lost faith in the capacity of the Trump administration to pass on any meaningful tax reforms or tax cuts. However, as Chart 1 shows, the imperative for Republicans in Congress to do so before the 2018 mid-term election is in fact growing by the minute: The unpopularity of Donald Trump is becoming a major handicap for the GOP in Congress and the post-Charlottesville debacle is only making matters worse. Legislative action needs to materialize to compensate for this hurdle. The tax cuts or reforms ultimately passed are not likely to be what the administration envisage and are likely to be emanating from Congress itself and not the White House. This situation should also give Republicans an incentive to avoid an unpopular government shutdown around the debt ceiling negotiations, but we expect uncertainty around this question to remain elevated as rhetoric flairs up, which could potentially put our long USD/JPY position at risk. Chart 1If Tax Cuts Don't Pass, Republicans Are Heading For A Huge Defeat In 2018 While automation has received a lot of press, one of the key factors that keeps weighing on inflation on a structural basis is the continuation of a 30-year process: The entry of China and other key emerging markets into the global economy, which has massively expanded global aggregate supply relative to aggregate demand. Through the 1980s and 1990s, this expansion in supply mostly reflected the addition of billions of potential workers to the global labor force. However, as Chart 2 illustrates, since the turn of the millennium, the supply-side expansion has mostly taken the form of a massive increase in the EM and Chinese capital stock, which has lifted the global capital stock. As a result, this has created excess capacity for the world as a whole, which is keeping a lid on prices. As long as China keeps a very high savings rate, global demand is likely to remain inadequate relative to global supply, structurally limiting the upside to global inflation. Chart 2Global Excess Capacity While the structural anchor on inflation remains, this does not mean that cycles in prices are dead. In fact, from a cyclical perspective, U.S. core inflation is likely to bottom and slowly inch higher in the second half of 2017. Inflation remains a lagging indicator of the business cycle. Supported by very easy financial conditions, growth has regained some vigor while the U.S. is now at full employment. Additionally, as Chart 3 illustrates, the U.S. velocity of money has once again picked up, a reliable leading indicator of core inflation over the past 20 years. This supports our thesis that this year's downleg in the dollar is long in the tooth: A stabilization and uptick in inflation could force markets to push up the number of interest rates hikes anticipated from the Federal Reserve. Chart 3Cyclical Inflation Dynamics In 2015, the Chinese economy was losing speed at an accelerating pace. Beijing began to panic and pulled out all the stops to put a floor under growth: Fiscal spending increased at an incredible 25% annual pace by the end of 2015 and credit growth was encouraged. While the fiscal stimulus is long past, the Chinese credit impulse has continued to support economic activity, investment, construction, and imports. However, the People's Bank of China has begun engineering a tightening in monetary conditions and is slowly but surely putting the brakes on the expansion of off-balance sheet instruments in the Chinese financial system. As a result, the amount of financing raised by smaller Chinese financial institutions is decelerating. Historically, without this source of liquidity, total debt growth has tended to slow, adversely impacting the credit impulse (Chart 4). This is likely to weigh on investment and construction, thus negatively affecting the dollar-bloc currencies. Chart 4Key Risk To Chinese Credit Growth The euro has rallied violently this year. Some of this strength has been a reflection of the euro's nature as the anti-dollar. As investors began doubting the capacity of the Fed to stick to its plan of hiking interest rates to 2.9% by the end of 2019, and as political paralysis took over the U.S., the greenback suffered, lifting the euro in the process. In sharp contrast, the European economy and inflation picked up and political risk in continental Europe receded, adding fuel to the fire. Today, buying the euro has become the epitome of the "consensus trade," with investors massively long the common currency. However, while a pickup in U.S. inflation will be required to expect a full reversal of this trade, a correction in the euro is a growing risk: The EUR/USD's fractal dimension - a measure of groupthink - has hit 1.25, a level that in the past has warned of a potential countertrend move (Chart 5). Chart 5Correction In The Euro Betting on the yen remains the FX analogue to betting on bonds. JGB yields display a low beta to global government bond yields; thus, when global rates go up, interest rate differentials move against the yen. The opposite is true when global yields fall. The downside to the yen when global rates rise has now been supercharged by the yield cap implemented by the Bank of Japan, as JGB yields are now prohibited from rising when global bond yields rise. BCA's view is that U.S. bond yields should rise over the next 12 months, which will should prompt a period of pronounced weakness in the JPY. But what if a rise in bond yields causes an EM selloff - wouldn't this help the yen? As Chart 6 illustrates, the correlation between USD/JPY and bond yields is, in fact, stronger than that with stocks. In other words, the pain in EM has to become acute enough to cause bond yields to fall before the yen can rally. This means there is a window of opportunity to short the yen when bond yields rise even if EM assets depreciate. Chart 6The Yen Is A Play On Bonds Dollar-bloc currencies (CAD, AUD and NZD) tend to be prime beneficiaries of expanding global liquidity. This is because in an environment where global liquidity expands, the U.S. dollar weakens and commodity prices strengthen. Moreover, when global liquidity is plentiful, risk-taking and carry trades are emboldened, creating inflows of funds and liquidity into EM nations, which in turn, boosts their economic prospects. This also pushes up the expected returns of assets in the dollar-bloc countries, and thus incentivizes global investors to purchase the AUD, the CAD, and the NZD. This means that historically, the performance of dollar-bloc currencies has been tightly linked to the expansions in global central bank reserves - a good measure of global liquidity growth. This time around, dollar-bloc currencies have massively outperformed the growth in global reserves, leaving them vulnerable to any slowdown in global liquidity (Chart 7). Chart 7Dollar-Bloc Currencies Have Overshot Global Liquidity While commodity currencies are all likely to face headwinds over the course of the next 12 months, all dollar-bloc currencies are not created equal. The AUD looks much more vulnerable than the CAD. First, the AUD is trading at a 10.7% premium vis-à-vis its long-term fair value, while the CAD is only slightly expensive. Second, Canadian terms of trade are governed by dynamics in energy prices, its main commodity export, while Australian export prices are a function of base metal prices. BCA's Commodity And Energy Strategy service is currently more positive on energy prices than it is on industrial metals. The energy market is undergoing an important curtailment of supply that will lead to further drawdowns in oil inventories. Meanwhile, the supplies of metal are not as well controlled as those of energy, and China's desire to slow real estate speculation should weigh on construction activity in the Middle Kingdom. Finally, as Chart 8 illustrates, AUD/CAD rarely diverges from AUD/USD, but right now, AUD/CAD is trading at a large premium to AUD/USD. This means shorting AUD/CAD could be a nice way to benefit from a weakening in dollar-bloc currencies while limiting the direct exposure to aggregate commodity-price dynamics. Chart 8AUD/CAD Is A Short The Swedish economy has been strong and the output gap now stands at 1.26% of GDP. Yet, despite this positive backdrop, the Riksbank is keeping in place one of the easiest monetary policies in the world, with nominal policy rates standing at -0.5% and real rates at a stunning -2.6%. It is no wonder that the SEK trades at a 6.4% discount to its PPP fair value against the euro. Now, two developments warrant selling EUR/SEK. First, Stefan Ingves, the extremely dovish president of the Swedish central, is leaving the institution at the end of this year. While his replacement has yet to be announced, it will be difficult to find someone more dovish than him to take the helm of the oldest central bank in the world. Second, not only has Sweden inflation picked up violently, the Riksbank's resource utilization indicator continues to shoot up, pointing to a further acceleration in inflation (Chart 9). As a result, we expect the Swedish central bank to be the next one to join the Fed and the Bank of Canada in tightening policy, which will give additional support for the Swedish krona, especially against the euro. Chart 9The Riksbank Will Hike Soon EUR/NOK has rarely traded above current levels over the course of the last decade. It has only done so when Brent prices have fallen below US$40/bbl (Chart 10). BCA's base case is that oil is more likely to finish the year between US$50 and US$60 than it is to trade below US$40. With EUR/NOK trading 13% over its PPP fair value, and with Norway still sporting a current account surplus of 6% of GDP, even if the Norwegian economy continues to exhibit rather low inflation readings, there is a greater likelihood that EUR/NOK depreciates from current levels than appreciates. We thus recommend investors short this cross over the remainder of 2017. Chart 10If Brent Doesn't Fall Below , EUR/NOK Is A Short Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights China's tightened control on capital account transactions has played a key role in slowing down capital outflows, particularly outward FDIs. Meanwhile, investors' panic over the RMB has also abated substantially, likely due to a combination of greater policy transparency and improved growth conditions. The PBoC's capital account control measures will not be permanent. Cross-border capital flows are by nature volatile and highly pro-cyclical, while China's capital account control measures are imposed as a counter-cyclical mechanism. The stabilization in China's official reserves is accompanied by a notable setback in the RMB's internationalization process. The internationalization of the RMB will resume, but it is impossible to challenge the role of the dollar as the world's dominant reserve currency in the foreseeable future. Feature Chart 1The Decline In Chinese Official Reserves##br## Has Halted Amid recent soft growth numbers, an important positive development is that official foreign reserves in China have been increasing for six consecutive months, which is being perceived as a sign of the country's re-gained macro stability (Chart 1). A closer look at China's foreign reserves and balance-of-payment statistics suggests capital outflows have slowed considerably. Confidence in the RMB appears to have improved, but expectations of further RMB depreciation have not completely reversed. This means capital outflows may still accelerate, especially if the dollar bull market resumes.1 The RMB internationalization process has also suffered a notable setback in recent quarters due to investors' weakened confidence in the currency. The RMB will continue to gain broader adoption beyond China's borders over time, but the process will be gradual and hesitant, and it will not challenge the mighty dominance of the U.S. dollar anytime soon. Capital Flows: What Has Changed? Chinese official reserves have stabilized around US$3 trillion since early this year, bottoming from a prolonged decline from a peak of over US$4 trillion in mid-2014. The broad dollar weakness in recent months has boosted the value of Chinese official holdings of non-dollar assets, which has helped stabilize the level of overall reserves. Nonetheless, the country's balance-of-payment data shows major changes in the patterns of cross-border capital flows, yielding some important information. Chart 2Inward Portfolio Investment Has "Normalized" In terms of capital inflows, the messages are mixed (Chart 2). On one hand, portfolio inflows have rebounded sharply since the second quarter of 2016 after a deep decline in the previous three consecutive quarters. Foreign investors aggressively pulled out of Chinese markets, particularly bonds, between the third quarter of 2015 and the first quarter of 2016, spooked by the People's Bank of China's surprise moves to devalue the RMB in August 2015 and in January 2016. It appears that foreign investors have become more comfortable with the RMB's "new normal" in recent quarters. Foreign purchases of Chinese onshore bonds have largely returned to normal, but stock purchases have remained subdued compared with previous years. The dramatic boom-bust in the Chinese domestic stock market in 2015 also dampened foreign investors' appetite towards this volatile asset class. It remains to be seen whether the newly established "bond connect" program and the MSCI's recent decision to include A shares in its indexes will be able attract more foreign portfolio investors. On the other hand, foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows have continued to decline. Inbound FDI dropped to a mere US$21 billion in the last quarter, near the levels at the height of the global financial crisis (Chart 3). FDIs are largely strategic decisions and are less influenced by near-term exchange rate fluctuations. Therefore, the sharp decline in FDI is a worrying sign that foreign investors' confidence in the Chinese business environment has weakened significantly, which is consistent with numerous surveys that show a gradual drop in China's ranking in global company's investment plans (Chart 4). For the Chinese authorities, how to improve the country's business environment and re-gain investors' confidence should be taken much more seriously. Chart 3FDI Has Fallen Sharply Chart 4China Is Losing Lure Among Global Firms On capital outflows, all channels have slowed of late, which is the key reason behind the stabilizing official reserves. Outbound FDI has fallen sharply since the fourth quarter of 2016 (Chart 5). Corporate China's overseas investments averaged almost US$60 billion for six consecutive quarters between the third quarter of 2015 and the fourth quarter of 2016, and has dropped to less than US$20 billion in the past two quarters. Repayment of overseas liabilities by the corporate sector, another major reason for capital outflows in previous years, has also slowed substantially (middle panel, Chart 5). Corporate China's deleveraging of dollar debt quickened sharply in 2015, as the RMB began to fall against the dollar. It has eased considerably of late, either due to re-gained stability of the exchange rate or as the deleveraging process has become advanced. The balance-of-payment statistics shows that total outstanding foreign loans and trade credit currently stand at US$620 billion, down from a peak of over US$1 trillion in the second quarter of 2014. Rampant "hot money" outflows in previous quarters have reversed recently (bottom panel, Chart 5). In fact, inbound "currency and deposits," which we label as "hot money," as it is most liquid and historically has been highly volatile, have reached a new record high. Taken together, the Chinese regulators' tightened rein on capital account transactions have clearly played a key role in slowing down capital outflows, particularly outward FDIs. Meanwhile, investors' panic over the RMB has also abated substantially, likely due to a combination of greater policy transparency and improved growth conditions. In essence, cross-border capital flows are by nature volatile and highly pro-cyclical, while China's capital account control measures are imposed as a counter-cyclical mechanism to regulate capital flows. In this vein, the PBoC's capital account control measures will not be permanent - they will be eased as capital outflows ease. It is important to note that China still runs a current account surplus, which means the country, public and private sectors combined, is still accumulating net foreign assets. Chart 6 shows that China's official reserves have declined substantially from their 2014 peak, but the country's total foreign assets have continued to climb - an indication that the private sector has been taking a greater share in the country's total foreign claims. For years, the PBoC's key challenge was to persuade the private sector to hold more assets in foreign currencies, and the trend has suddenly changed in recent years. It is wrong, however, to assume that the change is permanent. Chart 5Capital Outflows Have Eased Significantly Chart 6Private Sector Is Taking A Greater Share ##br##Of China's Foreign Claims The RMB Internationalization Scorecard Chart 7Setback In The RMB Internationalization Process The stabilization in China's official reserves is accompanied by a notable setback in the RMB's internationalization process. Measured by two key functions of money, the role of the RMB as an international currency has declined. As a medium of exchange, the RMB's role in cross-border settlement has dropped sharply (top panel, Chart 7). Currently the RMB accounts for about 15% of China's foreign trade settlement, down from over 30% at the peak of early 2016. The RMB's share as an international payments currency dropped to 1.98% in July, down from 2.45% in January 2016, according to SWIFT. The share of the RMB as a trade settlement currency has also stabilized in recent months, as the RMB exchange rate has stabilized. As a store of value, the RMB's role has likely also dropped, particularly among private investors, as evidenced by the sharp decline in RMB deposits in Hong Kong (bottom panel, Chart 7). Among official reserve managers, however, the role of the RMB may have begun to increase. The European Central Bank converted the equivalent of €500 million of its foreign reserves into RMBs in the first half of 2017. Since March 2017, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has begun to include holdings of RMB in its currency composition of official foreign exchange reserves (COFER). The IMF identified US$88.5 billion of RMB-denominated official foreign reserve assets held by reserve managers in the first quarter of 2017, about 1% of total allocated reserve holdings (Table 1). From a big-picture perspective, the internationalization of the RMB will continue, even though the process will be hesitant and halting, with temporary setbacks. China is the largest trade partner of a growing number of countries with tightly-linked supply chains. This generates natural demand for RMB settlement in bilateral trade. In fact, the correlation between the RMB and the currencies of some of China's Asian neighbors has increased significantly in recent years, which is effectively creating a "RMB currency bloc" (Chart 8). Meanwhile, the Chinese government's ongoing "one-belt one-road" initiative involves financing for infrastructure in some less-developed countries, which will further boost demand for the RMB in these regions. All of this will inevitably broaden the reach of the RMB beyond China's borders. Table 1Composition Of Global Reserve Assets Chart 8The RMB Currency Bloc Nonetheless, it is impossible for the RMB to challenge the role of the dollar as the world's dominant reserve currency in the foreseeable future. The dollar's dominant status is not only supported by America's strong and open economy, but also by its deep, liquid and highly efficient financial markets, which are simply impossible for China to replicate anytime soon. The dramatic volatility in China's financial markets, regulators' shaky handling of the stock market boom-bust and the RMB's volatility in recent years are all indicative of a primitive financial infrastructure. China's legal and administrative frameworks will likely take even longer to converge to western standards. In short, the role of the RMB as an international currency will likely remain marginal for a long time. Yan Wang, Senior Vice President China Investment Strategy yanw@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "China: What Could Go Wrong?" dated August 3, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights Your portfolio cash weighting should be at least in the middle of its range, until the observed volatility of risk assets rises meaningfully from its record low. Cyclically add long SEK/USD to long EUR/USD. Within a European equity portfolio, this implies going cyclically underweight Sweden's OMX, given its high exposure to exporters. Go underweight Swedish real estate equities; overweight Spanish real estate equities. Within a global equity portfolio, overweight euro area banks versus U.S. banks. Feature Great expectations for Mario Draghi's appearance at the Jackson Hole Symposium have been dampened, and understandably so. After the last monetary policy meeting, Draghi emphasised that ECB discussions about policy direction would take place in the autumn. It would undermine this decision making process if Draghi's Jackson Hole speech front ran the ECB discussions. Nonetheless, twitchy markets will inevitably read the tone of Draghi's observations on the global and euro area economies. Chart of the WeekSwedish House Prices Are Up 50% In Just Four Years...Thanks To Negative Interest Rates But the more market-relevant presentation might come five hours earlier on Friday at 3pm London time, when Janet Yellen gives a keynote speech on the market's latest meme - financial stability. Three months ago in Madrid, Draghi delivered a keynote speech1 on the very same topic - The interaction between monetary policy and financial stability - available here https://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/key/date/2017/html/ecb.sp170524_1.en.html and well worth reading as a prelude to Yellen's presentation. Draghi explained that ultra-accommodative monetary policy endangers financial stability through three potential channels: Distorting investor behaviour. Generating credit-fuelled bubbles, especially in real estate. Squeezing bank profitability. Do any of these three channels give ground for concern today? Yes. Distorting Investor Behaviour In our view, central banks' distortive impact on investor behaviour is the single biggest source of financial instability today. Yet Draghi devoted only a cursory mention of this danger, noting that investors "could be prone to engage in search-for-yield behaviour and take on excessive risks." The difficulty is that the psychological and behavioural finance biases creating the current distortions lie outside central bankers' natural area of expertise. Nevertheless, we hope that Yellen develops this topic much further at Jackson Hole. Specifically, the behavioural finance distortion known as Mental Accounting Bias describes the irrational distinction between the part of an investment's return that comes from its income, and the part that comes from its capital growth. Rationally, people should not care about this distinction because the money that comes from income and the money that comes from capital growth is perfectly fungible.2 But in practice, many people want a minimum investment income - because they wish to match their known spending outlays with their known income. While they could meet their spending needs by crystalizing capital growth, many people create psychologically separate 'mental accounts': spending from investment income and saving from capital growth. This is especially true for retirees whose main or only income might come from accumulated assets. Traditionally, this psychological mental accounting bias would be unnoticeable because investors could easily match their spending needs with the safe income generated by cash and government bonds. But in recent years, central banks' extended experiments with zero and negative interest rates and QE have forced the 'income mental account' to chase the higher but much more risky income streams from high-yield bonds and equities (Chart I-2 and Chart I-3). To the point where these risk assets no longer offer a sufficient risk premium. Chart I-2A Positive Yield On Equities Can Produce##br## A Negative 5-Year Return... Chart I-3...And Even A Negative##br## 10-Year Return The search-for-yield pushed up the prices of these risk assets. Now add to the mix the phenomenon known as negative skew.3 Risk asset advances tend to be gradual and gentle, and the longer and more established the advance becomes, the lower the observed volatility goes. Some investors then mistakenly interpret lower observed volatility as justification for a lower risk premium, which warrants a further price advance. And so on, in a self-reinforcing feedback. Today, this has left us with a bizarre and unprecedented situation in which the observed volatility of the Eurostoxx50 equity index is a fraction of the observed volatility of the long-dated German bund! (Chart I-4) Chart I-4Unprecedented: The Observed Volatility Of The Eurostoxx50 ##br## Is Now Lower Than That On The German Bund! But given the strong inverse relationship between observed volatility and price, record low observed volatility categorically does not mean that prospective risk of a drawdown is low. Quite the reverse, the lower the observed volatility, the higher the prospective risk. And vice-versa. Investment bottom line: Your portfolio cash weighting should always be inversely proportional to the observed volatility of risk assets. Today, with observed volatility still near a record low, your cash weighting should be at least in the middle of its range. Generating Credit-Fuelled Bubbles... In Sweden Turning to the second channel of financial instability, the ECB sees no evidence of credit-fuelled bubbles. Banks are extending credit, but at a fraction of the rate seen prior to 2007 (Chart I-5). And although house prices are rising, the ECB claims that its ultra-accommodative monetary policy has not created imbalances in real estate markets in the euro area. Taken at face value, this claim might be true. Chart I-5Euro Area Banks Are Extending Credit... But At A Modest Rate But look across the Baltic Sea. Chart I-6Swedish House Prices Accelerated##br## After ZIRP And NIRP Sweden's Riksbank has had to shadow the ECB's ultra-loose policy, to prevent a sharp appreciation of the Swedish krona versus the euro. The trouble is that negative interest rates have been wholly inappropriate for an economy that has recently been growing at 4.5%. One worrying consequence is that Swedish house prices have gone up by 50% in just four years (Chart of the Week), with the bulk of the boom happening after ZIRP and NIRP (Chart I-6). Also, bear in mind that the Swedish real estate market did not suffer a meaningful setback in either 2008 or 2011, meaning the recent boom is not a corrective rebound - like say, in Spain and Ireland. So the ECB's ultra-loose policy may indeed have generated a credit-fuelled bubble... albeit in Sweden! Fortunately, as the ECB ends its ultra-accommodation, it will also liberate the Riksbank to end its incongruous and dangerous NIRP policy. Investment bottom line: Cyclically add long SEK/USD to long EUR/USD. For European equity investors, this implies going cyclically underweight Sweden's OMX, given its high exposure to exporters. Also, go underweight Swedish real estate equities which are now approaching peak price-to-book multiples (Chart I-7). Prefer to overweight Spanish real estate equities which offer much more attractive valuations (Chart I-8). Chart I-7Swedish Real Estate Equities ##br##Are Close To Peak Valuation Chart I-8Spanish Real Estate Equities ##br##Offer Better Value Squeezing Bank Profitability For the third channel of financial instability, the ECB concedes that ultra-loose monetary policy compresses banks' net interest margins and thus exerts pressure on their profitability. "Since banks carry out maturity transformation by borrowing short and lending long-term, both the slope of the yield curve and its level matter for profitability." In turn, lower retained profits means lower accumulation of capital, making banks more fragile. The evidence strongly supports this logic. Since the start of the ECB's asset-purchase program, euro area bank valuations - a good proxy for profitability - have formed a perfect mirror-image of the expected intensity of QE (Chart I-9). Chart I-9Bank Valuations Have Been A Mirror-Image Of QE It follows that as the ECB dials back accommodation, the valuations of euro area banks will continue to recover - at the very least, in relative terms versus banks elsewhere in the world. Investment bottom line: Global equity investors should stay overweight euro area banks versus U.S. banks. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 At the First Conference on Financial Stability, May 24 207. 2 Assuming the tax treatment of income and capital growth is equal. 3 Please see the European Investment Strategy Weekly Report titled 'Negative Skew: A Ticking Time-Bomb' dated July 27, 2017 available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model* We are monitoring the Italian stock Tenaris which is approaching a point of being technically oversold. We are also monitoring a commodity pair-trade, short nickel / long silver which is also approaching a potential entry point in the coming days. But we have not yet opened either trade. 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-10 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 Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions 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 ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations