Emerging Markets
Yesterday, BCA Research's Emerging Markets Strategy service concluded that EM outperformance is not imminent. According to the chart above, EM equities relative to their US counterparts are as cheap as they were at their previous major bottom in 2001. …
BCA Research's US Bond Strategy service recommends that US bond investors should avoid USD-denominated EM sovereign debt and focus instead on US corporate credit-rated Ba and higher. Of the EM countries with large USD bond markets, Mexican debt looks most…
BCA Research’s China Investment and Geopolitical strategists strongly expect that Chinese authorities will continue to add large amounts of stimulus in the Chinese economy. While the rhetorical focus on employment is a crucial clue, the behavior of credit…
Highlights Treasuries: Despite surging issuance, long-dated Treasury yields will move only slightly higher this year, driven by a modest recovery in global demand. There is also a risk that a second wave of COVID infections will send yields to new lows. We recommend keeping portfolio duration close to benchmark while hedging the risk of higher yields by entering duration-neutral curve steepeners. Negative Rates: The Fed will not cut rates into negative territory any time soon. Investors who are able to do so should go short fed funds futures contracts that are priced for negative rates. EM Sovereigns: US bond investors should avoid USD-denominated EM sovereign debt and focus instead on US corporate credit rated Ba and higher. Of the EM countries with large USD bond markets, Mexican debt looks most attractive on a risk/reward basis. Don’t Expect A Taper Tantrum The big announcement in bond markets last week was the Treasury department detailing its plans for note and bond issuance in the second and third quarters. Of course, with the CARES act injecting $2.8 trillion into the economy, investors were already prepared for a big step up in issuance.1 But the numbers are striking nonetheless, particularly at the long-end of the curve. Overall note and bond issuance will reach $910 billion in Q3, roughly equal to the 2010 peak as a percent of GDP (Chart 1). Issuance beyond the 10-year point of the curve (i.e. the 30-year bond and new 20-year bond) will far exceed its financial crisis highpoint (bottom panel). Many bond investors are understandably worried that surging issuance will put significant upward pressure on yields in the coming months. Long-maturity Treasury yields jumped after the Treasury’s announcement on Wednesday before reversing all of that bounce the following day. But despite the mild market reaction, many bond investors are understandably worried that surging issuance will put significant upward pressure on yields in the coming months, especially with the Fed paring its pace of Treasury purchases (Chart 2). Chart 1Gross Treasury Issuance Chart 2Fed Buying Fewer Treasuries Our base case outlook is that Treasury yields will be marginally higher by the end of the year, and the yield curve will be steeper.2 However, we do not foresee a Taper Tantrum-style bond market rout. Treasury supply will continue to expand in the months ahead. But on the flipside, the Fed’s forward rate guidance will remain very dovish. If investors believe that short-dated interest rates will stay pinned near zero for a long time, fear of significant losses will remain low and Treasury demand will keep pace with supply, even at the long-end of the curve. Chart 3No Taper Tantrum In 2020 Yes, the Fed has scaled back its pace of Treasury purchases during the past few weeks, removing a significant source of demand from the market. However, it has also given no indication that it intends to lighten up on monetary stimulus broadly speaking. Based on the Fed’s dovish posture, we can be sure that if surging issuance leads to undesirably high term premiums at the long-end of the Treasury curve, the Fed will quickly ramp purchases back up to squash them. In general, our view is that all dramatic bond sell-offs are caused by the market suddenly pricing in a much more hawkish Fed reaction function. This can be driven by surprisingly strong economic growth and inflation, or by investors collectively changing their assessments of how the Fed will react. In this regard, the 2013 Taper Tantrum is an interesting case study. The Treasury curve bear-steepened dramatically in 2013 after Fed Chair Ben Bernanke laid out the Fed’s plan for winding down asset purchases. But this is not a simple story of bond yields rising because the market reacted to less demand in the form of Fed purchases. Rather, yields rose so much because Bernanke signaled to investors that the overall stance of monetary policy was much less accommodative than they had previously thought. Notice that gold fell sharply during this period (Chart 3), not because of less direct demand for Treasuries but because a more hawkish Fed meant less long-run inflation risk. The dynamic is illustrated very clearly by the CRB Raw Industrials / Gold ratio (Chart 3, bottom panel). The ratio is highly correlated with long-dated Treasury yields, meaning that for yields to shoot higher we need to see either a surge in global demand (i.e. CRB commodity prices) or a hawkish shift in the Fed’s reaction function (i.e. a drop in the gold price). If, as we expect, global demand improves only modestly this year and the Fed remains steadfastly dovish, upside in both the CRB/Gold ratio and long-maturity Treasury yields will be limited. Bottom Line: Despite surging issuance, long-dated Treasury yields will move only slightly higher this year, driven by a modest recovery in global demand. There is also a risk that a second wave of COVID infections will send yields to new lows. We recommend keeping portfolio duration close to benchmark while hedging the risk of higher yields by entering duration-neutral curve steepeners. Don’t Bet On Negative Rates Table 1Fed Funds Futures The massive amount of new issuance was not the only exciting development in fixed income markets last week. Short-dated yields also started to price-in the possibility of negative interest rates in the US! Table 1 shows the price of different fed funds futures contracts (as of Monday morning) and what funds rate those prices imply for each contract’s maturity month. We also show the return you would earn by taking an unlevered short position in each contract and holding to maturity, assuming that the actual fed funds rate remains unchanged. We assume that the fed funds rate will stay at its current level (0.05%) because the Fed has made it very clear that a negative policy rate is not an option that will be considered. As evidence, we present some excerpts from recent Fed communications. Fed Chair Jerome Powell from his March 15 press conference:3 So, as I’ve noted on several occasions, really, the Committee – as you know, we did a year-plus-long study of our tools and strategies and communications. And we, really, at the end of that, and also when we started out, we view forward guidance and asset purchases – asset purchases and also different variations and combinations of those tools as the basic elements of our toolkit once the federal funds rate reaches the effective lower bound – so, really, forward guidance, asset purchases, and combinations of those. You know, we looked at negative policy rates during the Global Financial Crisis, we monitored their use in other jurisdictions, we continue to do so, but we do not see negative policy rates as likely to be an appropriate policy response here in the United States. The Fed staff’s assessment of negative interest rates from the October 2019 FOMC minutes:4 The briefing also discussed negative interest rates, a policy option implemented by several foreign central banks. The staff noted that although the evidence so far suggested that this tool had provided accommodation in jurisdictions where it had been employed, there were also indications of possible adverse side effects. Moreover, differences between the US financial system and the financial systems of those jurisdictions suggested that the foreign experience may not provide a useful guide in assessing whether negative interest rates would be effective in the United States. FOMC participants’ assessment of negative interest rates from the October 2019 minutes:5 All participants judged that negative interest rates currently did not appear to be an attractive monetary policy tool in the United States. Participants commented that there was limited scope to bring the policy rate into negative territory, that the evidence on the beneficial effects of negative interest rates abroad was mixed, and that it was unclear what effects negative interest rates might have on the willingness of financial intermediaries to lend and on the spending plans of households and businesses. Participants noted that negative interest rates would entail risks of introducing significant complexity or distortions to the financial system. In particular, some participants cautioned that the financial system in the United States is considerably different from those in countries that implemented negative interest rate policies, and that negative rates could have more significant adverse effects on market functioning and financial stability here than abroad. Notwithstanding these considerations, participants did not rule out the possibility that circumstances could arise in which it might be appropriate to reassess the potential role of negative interest rates as a policy tool. It is always possible that the Fed’s view of negative interest rates will change in the future. However, this won’t happen any time soon. The Fed still has other zero-lower-bound policy options it can deploy before it gets desperate enough to re-consider negative rates. The Fed still has other zero-lower-bound policy options it can deploy before it gets desperate enough to re-consider negative rates. For example, one logical next step would be to bring back the Evans Rule. That is, specify economic targets (related to unemployment and inflation) that must be met before the Fed will consider lifting rates. If that sort of forward guidance is deemed insufficient, the Fed could adopt a plan recently advocated by Governor Lael Brainard and start to cap short-maturity bond yields.6 If it wants more stimulus after that it could gradually move further out the curve, capping bond yields for longer and longer maturities. According to the FOMC minutes, this sort of Yield Curve Control policy had more support among participants at the October 2019 FOMC meeting than did negative interest rates:7 A few participants saw benefits to capping longer-term interest rates that more directly influence household and business spending. In addition, capping longer-maturity interest rates using balance sheet tools, if judged as credible by market participants, might require a smaller amount of asset purchases to provide a similar amount of accommodation as a quantity-based program purchasing longer-maturity securities. However, many participants raised concerns about capping long-term rates. Some of those participants noted that uncertainty regarding the neutral federal funds rate and regarding the effects of rate ceiling policies on future interest rates and inflation made it difficult to determine the appropriate level of the rate ceiling or when that ceiling should be removed; that maintaining a rate ceiling could result in an elevated level of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet or significant volatility in its size or maturity composition; or that managing longer-term interest rates might be seen as interacting with the federal debt management process. By contrast, a majority of participants saw greater benefits in using balance sheet tools to cap shorter-term interest rates and reinforce forward guidance about the near-term path of the policy rate. Bottom Line: The Fed will not cut rates into negative territory any time soon. Investors who are able to do so should go short fed funds futures contracts that are priced for negative rates. For example, a short position in the June 2021 fed funds futures contract will earn an unlevered 6.5 bps if the fed funds rate remains unchanged and the position is held to maturity. No Buying Opportunity Yet In EM Sovereigns When assessing the outlook for the US dollar denominated sovereign debt of emerging markets we consider two main factors: Valuation, relative to both US Treasuries and US corporate credit. The outlook for EM currencies versus the dollar. Ideally, we want to move into EM sovereign debt when spreads look attractive relative to the domestic investment alternatives and when EM currencies are on the cusp of rallying versus the dollar. Valuation At first blush, value looks like it has improved considerably for EM sovereigns. The average spread on the Bloomberg Barclays EM Sovereign index is 167 bps wider than it was at the beginning of the year and the spread differential with the duration-matched Ba-rated US corporate bond index is elevated compared to the recent past (Chart 4). However, widening has been driven by a select few distressed countries (e.g. Ecuador, Argentina and Lebanon). When we strip those out and look only at the investment grade EM sovereign index (Chart 4, panels 3 & 4), the average spread looks relatively tight compared to a duration-matched position in Baa-rated US corporate credit. Chart 4Only A Few EMs Look Cheap Because country-specific trends often exert undue influence on the overall index, we find it helpful to look at value on a country-by-country basis. Chart 5A shows the average option-adjusted spread for major countries included in the Bloomberg Barclays EM Sovereign index. This chart makes no adjustments for credit rating or duration, and as such we see the lower-rated nations (Turkey, South Africa, Brazil) offering the widest spreads. Chart 5B shows each country’s spread relative to a duration and credit rating matched position in US corporate credit. Viewed this way, the most attractive opportunities lie in Mexico, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Colombia, Qatar and South Africa. Chart 5AUSD-Denominated EM Sovereign Debt By Country: Spread Versus Treasuries Chart 5BUSD-Denominated EM Sovereign Debt By Country: Spread Versus US Credit Currency Outlook Chart 6EM Currencies Are Linked To Global Growth Currency is important for EM sovereign spreads because a stronger local currency literally makes US dollars cheaper for the EM nation to acquire. This, in turn, makes its USD-denominated debt easier to service, leading to tighter spreads. Chart 6 shows that EM Sovereign excess returns versus US Treasuries closely track EM currency performance. We also observe a strong link between EM currencies and high-frequency global growth indicators like the CRB Raw Industrials commodity price index (Chart 6, bottom panel). Based on this, we would only expect EM currencies to strengthen when global demand starts to pick up. Further, as our Emerging Market strategists wrote in a recent report, EM central banks are behaving differently during this recession than they have in past downturns.8 In the past, EMs would often run relatively tight monetary policies in order to fend off currency depreciation in the hopes of preventing capital outflows. This time, EM central banks are cutting rates aggressively, allowing their currencies to depreciate but supporting domestic demand. This is bearish for EM currencies and sovereign spreads in the near-term, but will probably lead to stronger economic recovery down the road. At the country level, we assess how vulnerable each country’s currency is to further depreciation by looking at its ratio of exports to foreign debt obligations.9 This ratio is a measure of US dollars coming in over a 12-month period relative to 12-month US dollar debt obligations. It has a relatively tight correlation with the dollar-denominated sovereign spread (Chart 7A). Low-rated countries, like Turkey and South Africa, have relatively low export coverage of foreign debt obligations, while Russia and South Korea have relatively strong debt coverage. Combining Valuation & Currency Outlook Chart 7B shows the same measure of currency vulnerability on the horizontal axis, but shows EM spreads relative to duration and credit rating matched US corporate credit on the vertical axis. Here, we see that Russia offers poor valuation, but a relatively safe currency. Meanwhile, Colombia offers an attractive spread but has a poor currency outlook. In this chart, Mexico stands out as the most attractive on a risk/reward basis. Chart 7AEM Sovereign Spread Versus Currency Vulnerability Chart 7BEM Sovereign Spread Over US Credit Versus Currency Vulnerability You will notice that the three Middle Eastern countries that stood out as having attractive spreads in Chart 5B are not shown in Charts 7A and 7B. This is because some data are unavailable, and also because those countries operate with currency pegs. Despite attractive spreads in those countries, we would not advise long-run positions in the USD-denominated sovereign debt of Saudi Arabia, Qatar or UAE. As our EM strategists wrote in a recent Special Report, if oil prices remain structurally low in the coming years (~$40 range), pressure will grow for Saudi Arabia to break its currency peg and allow some depreciation.10 The same holds true for Qatar and UAE. A bet on those countries’ sovereign spreads today amounts to a bet on higher oil prices. Despite attractive spreads, we would not advise long-run positions in the USD-denominated sovereign debt of Saudi Arabia, Qatar or UAE. Bottom Line: US bond investors should avoid USD-denominated EM sovereign debt and focus instead on US corporate credit rated Ba and higher. Of the EM countries with large USD bond markets, Mexican debt looks most attractive on a risk/reward basis. Appendix: Buy What The Fed Is Buying The Fed rolled out a number of aggressive lending facilities on March 23. These facilities focused on different specific sectors of the US bond market. The fact that the Fed has decided to support some parts of the market and not others has caused some traditional bond market correlations to break down. It has also led us to adopt a strategy of “Buy What The Fed Is Buying”. That is, we favor those sectors that offer attractive spreads and that benefit from Fed support. Right now, that means we are overweight corporate bonds rated Ba and higher, Aaa-rated Agency and non-agency CMBS, Aaa-rated consumer ABS and municipal bonds. We are underweight residential mortgage-backed securities and corporate bonds rated B and lower. The below Table tracks the performance of these different bond sectors since the Fed’s March 23 announcement. We will use this Table to monitor bond market correlations and evaluate our strategy's success. Table 2Performance Since March 23 Announcement Of Emergency Fed Facilities Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 For more details on the size and potential efficacy of the CARES act please see Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, “The Global COVID-19 Fiscal Response: Is It Enough?”, dated April 30, 2020, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see US Bond Strategy Portfolio Allocation Summary, “The Policy-Driven Bond Market”, dated May 5, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 https://www.federalreserve.gov/mediacenter/files/FOMCpresconf20200315.pdf 4 https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomcminutes20191030.pdf 5 https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomcminutes20191030.pdf 6 https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/brainard20191126a.htm 7 https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomcminutes20191030.pdf 8 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, “EM Domestic Bonds And Currencies”, dated April 23, 2020, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 9 For more information on this ratio please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report, “EM: Foreign Currency Debt Strains”, dated April 22, 2020, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 10 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report, “Saudi Riyal Devaluation: Not Imminent But Necessary”, dated May 7, 2020, available at ems.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
China’s new total social financing flows slowed to CNY3.09 trillion in April, down from CNY5.15trillion in March. Despite the slowdown, credit flows beat expectations of CNY 2.78 trillion. As a result, the 12-month Chinese credit flows are accelerating…
Highlights Ever since the Federal Reserve’s liquidity injections, the dollar has been trading in a bifurcated manner. Historically, this has been a rare event. The main bifurcation has been between developed market and commodity/emerging market currencies. Stability in the USD/CNY exchange rate is a key indicator to watch. Movements in this cross will indicate where the balance of forces are shifting. Feature Chart I-1A Tale Of Two Dollars The Federal Reserve’s dollar liquidity injections have been massive, but two dollars continue to fight a tug of war. The first is the DXY index, which has largely surrendered to the flood of liquidity offered through the Fed’s swap lines and temporary FIMA repo facility. In fact, cross-currency basis swaps in both Japan and the euro area, a measure of offshore dollar funding stress, have eased. As a result, volatility in the DXY index has been crushed, keeping it largely below the psychological 100 level. However, on the other side of the liquidity battle front have been emerging market and commodity currencies, some of which continue to make fresh lows. Remarkably, these have included currencies such as the Brazilian real that also have swap agreements with the US. In short, a rare divergence has opened up between two dollars (Chart I-1). Historically, whenever this has occurred, either the DXY index was on the verge of making new highs, or procyclical currencies were very close to a bottom. In our April 3rd report, we suggested three reasons as to why the dollar could remain well bid in the near term.1 In this report, we explore these reasons further and offer one variable to watch as the key arbiter between the two – the USD/CNY exchange rate. A Tale Of Two Dollars The bifurcated dollar performance has been underpinned by three factors. The 14 developed and emerging market currencies that have swap lines with the Fed2 all bottomed around March 19, when the funding announcement was made. These include currencies of countries that were initially excluded from a prior swap agreement such as Australia, Norway and New Zealand. The exception to this rule has been the Brazilian real. By extension, some currencies currently excluded from the swap agreement such as the Turkish lira and South African rand remain in freefall. The temporary repo facility for foreign and international monetary authorities (FIMA), which allows FIMA account holders to temporarily exchange their Treasury securities held with the Fed for US dollars, has instilled confidence. As such, this has assuaged selling pressure on currencies with ample dollar foreign exchange reserves. However, some currencies with low reserves such as the South African rand or Turkish lira continue to face downside risks. A huge portion of offshore dollar funding has been financed by non-bank entities. Not only does a rising dollar lift the debt burden of borrowers, but it also raises solvency risk for these concerns. Notably, non-banks have limited access to central bank swap lines. Of the US$12 trillion in dollar-denominated foreign debt outstanding, 32% is from emerging markets, a share that has increased massively since the financial crisis (Chart I-2). This might explain why currencies like the Brazilian real, exposed to significant foreign-currency corporate debt obligations, continue to see selling pressure, despite the Fed facilities in place (Chart I-3). Chart I-2Rising EM Dollar Debt Chart I-3Some EM Have High External Debt In short, with the Fed and many other developed-market central banks engaged in active purchases of corporate paper, a line in the sand has been drawn between currencies where the lenders of last resort have stepped in, and others where their central banks are still unwilling to take credit risk. Put another way, certain currency markets are starting to price USD solvency risk, resulting from the broad shutdown in their economies and the rise in the greenback. Unfortunately, there is nothing the Fed can do about this. Dollar liquidity shortages tend to be vicious because they trigger negative feedback loops. As offshore dollar rates among non-banks begin to rise, this lifts the cost of capital for borrowing entities, with debt repayment replacing capital spending. This is where China can step in. The People’s Bank of China has massive foreign exchange reserves, worth about US$3.1 trillion. This means it can provide swap agreements that will almost cover the totality of EM foreign dollar debt. The important distinction from foreign exchange reserves is that swap agreements entail no exchange of currency. As such, it is about confidence. With low external debt and massive FX reserves, the PBoC can instill this confidence in countries that have low and/or falling foreign exchange reserves. Certain currency markets are starting to price USD solvency risk, resulting from the broad shutdown in their economies and the rise in the greenback. There has been a precedent to this. Since the global financial crisis, as the PBoC has been engaging in powerful monetary stimulus, the number of bilateral swap lines offered to foreign central banks has also ballooned. Bloomberg no longer publishes swap data for the PBoC, but a recent article suggests that as recent as 2018, the Chinese central bank had bilateral local currency swap agreements with central banks or monetary authorities in 38 countries and regions, with a total amount of around 3.7 trillion yuan (Chart I-4).3 Remarkably, this excluded the US Fed. This means that the USD/CNY exchange rate will become a key arbiter of the divergence between the two dollars. If Asian and Latin American currencies can stabilize versus the RMB and the USD/CNY exchange rate can remain stable, then an informal accord has been established. So far, the RMB appears the arbiter between these two dollars (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Chinese Swaps To The Rescue? Chart I-5USD/CNY As A Dollar Arbiter We understand that geopolitical tensions between the US and China are escalating, and so the probability of such an event – if global growth rebounds earnestly – is low. However, should global growth remain weak, a fall in the RMB will highlight the PBoC is actively using its currency as a weapon. This will suggest all bets are off. Bottom Line: Developed market commodity currencies have a correlation of almost parity with EM FX (Chart I-6). An explicit swap agreement between China and emerging market countries could be the key to assuage dollar funding pressures within emerging markets. This will ease the selling pressure on developed-market commodity currencies. Chart I-6The Risk To Commodity Currencies Market Signals And Signposts Ever since Richard Nixon severed the gold-dollar link in the early ‘70s, there have been three major episodes when some currencies bucked the broad dollar trend. Historically, this has been driven by two major factors (Table I-1):4 Table I-1Summary Of Currency Divergence Episodes De-synchronized global growth A localized debt/economic crisis The first episode occurred in the early 1990s. As the world was exiting a recession in part triggered by tight US monetary policies, lower US interest rates allowed the dollar to fall along with rising global growth. Only the yen, on the back of an economy entering into a debt deflation spiral (where positive real rates begot more currency appreciation), was able to buck this trend. Developed market commodity currencies have a correlation of almost parity with EM FX. The late 1990s saw the capitulation of Asian currencies. As a safe haven, the US dollar started to benefit from repatriation flows. Asean and commodity currencies were under intense selling pressure from pegged exchange rates and a long period of low interest rates that had generated massive imbalances. Remarkably, the euro was the area of shelter.. The world in 2005-2006 was entering a full-blown mania. Procyclical currencies were benefitting from Chinese industrialization and the creation of the euro. Meanwhile, Japan continued to sag under a mountain of debt. This pushed market participants to increasingly use the yen as a funding currency for carry trades, allowing it to depreciate versus the US dollar. Enter 2020. The world today is in a synchronized slowdown, but varying degrees of policy measures suggest we could continue to see a lack of synchronicity in dollar trading over the near term: The euro area appears poised to recover faster than the US in the near term (Chart I-7). If this proves correct, any knee-jerk selloffs in the euro should be bought. This is directly linked to the speed at which European economies reopen, relative to the US. By extension, Asian currencies should do better than those in Latin America. Conclusion: the dollar could fall against the euro, but rise against some emerging market currencies. The easiest way to express this view is to buy the cheapest European currencies, such as the Norwegian krone and Swedish krona. We are long both. The yen, typically used as a funding currency, will be hostage to a sudden stop in funding flows. This is because there is no interest rate advantage anymore between Japanese and US paper, once accounting for hedging costs (Chart I-8). This suggests carry trades in developed markets, using the Japanese yen, are stuck in the barn for now. Meanwhile, as a safe haven currency, the yen will still benefit from a rise in FX volatility. Short USD/JPY hedges make sense. Chart I-7Euro Area Versus##br## US Growth Chart I-8The Yen Is No Longer An Attractive Funding Currency Commodity and emerging market FX will be the outlier against the US dollar for now. These continue to face downward pressure in the near term. In terms of commodities, the sudden stop in demand has been met with an overwhelmingly slow response to curtail supply. Eventually, higher demand will benefit these currencies, but the supply story dominates for now in crude oil and industrial commodities. That said, this week’s rise in Chinese commodity imports was encouraging. Stay tuned. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled “Capitulation?,” dated April 3, 2020, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 2 These include the Bank Of Canada, Bank Of Japan, Bank Of England, European Central Bank, the Swiss National Bank, the Reserve Bank of Australia, the Banco Central do Brasil, the Danmarks Nationalbank (Denmark), the Bank of Korea, the Banco de Mexico, the Norges Bank, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand, the Monetary Authority of Singapore, and the Sveriges Riksbank. 3 Please see The History Of Commerce, China. 4 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, titled “Can There Be More Than One US Dollar”, dated June 08, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the US have been negative: The Markit manufacturing PMI fell to 36.1 in April; the services PMI also slipped to 26.7. ISM manufacturing PMI dropped to 41.5 and non-manufacturing PMI declined to 41.8. The trade deficit widened from $39.8 billion to $44.4 billion in March. Unit labor costs increased by 4.8% quarterly in Q1, while nonfarm productivity fell by 2.5%. Initial jobless claims continued to grow by 3169K last week. The DXY index surged by 1.5% this week. The Senior Loan Officer Survey released this week reported an increasing net percentage of domestic banks tightening standards for most loan types in Q1, including C&I, auto and mortgage loans. On Tuesday, the Fed’s Raphael Bostic said that there are great uncertainties around “V-shape” recovery. Report Links: Capitulation? - April 3, 2020 The Dollar Funding Crisis - March 19, 2020 Are Competitive Devaluations Next? - March 6, 2020 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Recent data in the euro area have been negative: The Markit manufacturing PMI fell further from 33.6 to 33.4 in April, while the services PMI stayed low at 12. Sentix investor confidence remained low at -41.8 in May. Retail sales contracted by 9.2% year-on-year in March, compared to a 3% increase the previous month. The euro declined by 0.8% against the US dollar this week. The German court has criticized the ECB bond-buying programme, warning that the ECB’s purchases could be illegal under German law unless the ECB can prove otherwise. Continuing conflicts among Eurozone members and imbalances between countries could add more pressure on the ECB. In addition, the European Commission forecasts the euro zone economy to contract by a record 7.7% this year. Report Links: On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 On Money Velocity, EUR/USD And Silver - October 11, 2019 Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data from Japan have been negative: The manufacturing PMI fell from 43.7 to 41.9 in April. Vehicle sales kept contracting by 25.5% year-on-year in April, following a decline of 10.2% in March. Monetary base increased by 2.3% year-on-year in April, down from a 2.8% increase the previous month. The Japanese yen appreciated by 0.4% against the US dollar this week, despite broad US dollar strength. Since the beginning of the Fed swap lines operation this year, the BoJ has the highest liquidity swaps with the Fed, amounting to US$220 billion as of April 30, helping to ease dollar funding pressure in Japan. Report Links: The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar - February 28, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the UK have been mostly negative: The Markit manufacturing PMI fell further to 32.6 from 32.9 in April, while services PMI remained low at 13.4. Nationwide housing prices increased by 3.7% year-on-year in April, up from 3% the previous month. Money supply (M4) surged by 7.4% year-on-year in March. The British pound plunged by 2.7% against the US dollar this week. The Bank of England held interest rates unchanged on Thursday morning, while warning that the coronavirus crisis will push the UK economy into its deepest recession in 300 years. The Bank is now forecasting the output to slip by 3% in Q1, followed by a 2.5% plunge in Q2. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 2019 United Kingdom: Cyclical Slowdown Or Structural Malaise? - Sept. 20, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Recent data in Australia have been mixed: Building permits plunged by 4% month-on-month in March, down from 19.4% the previous month. Exports surged by 15.1% month-on-month while imports fell by 3.6% in March. The trade surplus expanded by A$6.8 billion to A$10.6 billion. The Australian dollar fell by 1.5% against the US dollar this week. On Tuesday, the RBA kept its interest rate unchanged at 0.25%. More importantly, the Bank has scaled back the size and frequency of bond purchases, which so far totalled A$50 billion, while stating that they are prepared to scale-up the purchases again should conditions worsen. In addition, the RBA forecasts the output to fall by roughly 10% in the first half of 2020 and by 6% over the year, followed by a rebound of 6% next year. Report Links: On AUD And CNY - January 17, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Contrarian View On The Australian Dollar - May 24, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Recent data in New Zealand have been mixed: Building permits fell by 21.3% month-on-month in March, down from 5.7% increase in February. The unemployment rate ticked up from 4% to 4.2% in Q1, lower than the expected 4.4%. Employment increased by 0.7% quarter-on-quarter. The participation rate increased by 30 bps to 70.4%. In addition, wage rates increased by 2.5% annually. The New Zealand dollar dropped by 1.8% against the US dollar this week. While many may call the Q1 Labour Market Statistics a positive surprise, Statistics New Zealand has indicated that the March data from household labour force survey was interrupted due to the lockdown in March. In a typical quarter, around 25% of the interviews for this survey are carried out face-to-face. We expect the Q2 Labour Survey to show more clearly how the COVID-19 lockdown has changed New Zealand’s labour market. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Place A Limit Sell On DXY At 100 - November 15, 2019 USD/CNY And Market Turbulence - August 9, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Recent data in Canada have been negative: The Markit manufacturing PMI plunged from 46.1 to 33 in April. Both exports and imports fell notably in March: exports narrowed by C$2.3 billion to C$46.3 billion. Imports decreased by C$1.8 billion to C$47.7 billion. The trade deficit widened from C$0.9 billion to C$1.4 billion. Bloomberg Nanos confidence ticked up from 37.1 to 37.7 for the week ended May 1. The Canadian dollar fell by 0.9% against the US dollar this week. The decline in exports was led by auto manufacturing, aircraft, and energy products. Moreover, a depreciating Canadian dollar has largely impacted the trade values in March. When expressed in US dollar terms, export fall by 9.2% month-on-month and imports by 8.1%, which compares favourably with 4.7% decrease in exports and 3.5% decline in imports in Canadian dollars. Report Links: More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 The Loonie: Upside Versus The Dollar, But Downside At The Crosses Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland have been mostly negative: The manufacturing PMI fell from 43.7 to 40.7 in April, above the expectations of 34.6. Consumer climate plunged from -9.4 to -39.3 in Q2. Headline consumer prices fell by -1.1% year-on-year in April, down from -0.5% in March, also below the expectations of -0.8%. The unemployment rate increased from 2.8% to 3.3% on a seasonally adjusted basis in April. The Swiss franc fell by 1% against the US dollar this week. With consumer prices decreasing for a third consecutive month, the SNB has stepped up the currency intervention. Total sight deposits have increased by nearly 77 billion CHF this year, compared to only 13.2 billion CHF in 2019 and 2.3 billion CHF in 2018. Report Links: On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 Portfolio Tweaks Before The Chinese New Year - January 24, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 There has been no significant data release from Norway this week. The Norwegian krone appreciated by 0.6% against the US dollar this week. On Thursday morning, the Norges Bank delivered a surprise rate cut by 25 bps to a record low of 0 due to the severity of the coronavirus and huge decline in oil prices. However, they also implied that further cuts into negative territory are unlikely. In addition, Governor Øystein Olsen said that they expect the output to drop by roughly 5% this year, a decline of a magnitude that has not been seen since World War II. Report Links: A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 On Oil, Growth And The Dollar - January 10, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Recent data in Sweden have been negative: Manufacturing PMI fell from 42.6 to 36.7 in April. Industrial production fell by 0.1% year-on-year in March. Manufacturing new orders contracted by 2% year-on-year in March, down from 5.7% increase in February. The Swedish krona has been more or less flat against the US dollar this week. Like the ECB, the Riksbank might have some legal issues regarding its bond purchases program. The current Riksbank Act does not allow the bank to make outright purchases of corporate bonds or other private securities on the primary or secondary markets. So far, the Riksbank has purchased 5.6 billion SEK of corporate commercial papers to support the economy under the COVID-19. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
China’s April trade numbers were surprising. Despite a global pandemic that has arrested economic activity among China’s trading partners, annual export growth hit 3.5% in USD terms. Meanwhile, imports denominated in USD terms contracted at a 14.2% annual…
Highlights Our baseline view foresees a U-shaped recovery, as economies slowly relax lockdown measures. There are significant risks to this forecast, however. On the upside, a vaccine or effective treatment could hasten the reopening of economies and recovery in spending. On the downside, containment measures could end up being eased too quickly, leading to a surge in new cases. A persistent spell of high unemployment could also permanently damage economies, especially if fiscal and monetary stimulus is withdrawn too quickly. In addition, geopolitical risks loom large, with the US election likely to be fought on who sounds tougher on China. Earnings estimates have yet to fall as much as we think they will, making global equities vulnerable to a near-term correction. Nevertheless, the spread between earnings yields and bond yields is wide enough to justify a modest overweight to stocks on a 12-month horizon. Is It Safe To Come Down? We published a report two weeks ago entitled Still Stuck In The Tree where we likened the current situation to one where an angry bear has chased a hiker up a tree.1 Having reached a high enough branch to escape immediate danger, the hiker breathes a sigh of relief. As time goes by, however, the hiker starts to get nervous. Rather than disappearing back into the forest, the bear remains at the base of the tree licking its chops. Meanwhile, the hiker is cold, hungry, and late for work. Like the hiker, the investment community breathed a collective sigh of relief when the number of cases in Italy and Spain, the first two major European economies to be hit by the coronavirus, began to trend lower. In New York City, which quickly emerged as the epicentre of the crisis in the United States, more COVID patients have been discharged from hospitals than admitted for the past three weeks (Chart 1). Chart 1Discharges From New York Hospitals Have Exceeded Admissions For The Past Three Weeks Deepest Recession Since The 1930s Yet, this progress has come at a very heavy economic cost. The IMF expects the global economy to shrink by 3% this year (Chart 2). In 2009, global GDP barely contracted. Chart 2Severe Damage To The Global Economy This Year The sudden stop in economic activity has led to a surge in unemployment. According to the Bloomberg consensus estimate, the US unemployment rate rose to 16% in April. The true unemployment rate is probably higher since to be considered unemployed one has to be looking for work, which is difficult if not impossible in the presence of widespread lockdowns. Regardless, even the official unemployment rate is the worst since the Great Depression (Chart 3). Chart 3Unemployment Rate Seen Jumping To Levels Not Reached Since The Great Depression Unshackling The Economy A key difference from the 1930s is that today’s recession has been self-induced. Policymakers want workers to stay home as much as possible. The hope is that once businesses reopen, most of these workers will return to their jobs. How long will that take? Our baseline scenario envisions a slow but steady reopening of the global economy starting later this month, which should engender a U-shaped economic recovery. Since mid-March, much of the world has been trying to compensate for lost time by taking measures that would not have been necessary if policymakers had acted sooner. As Box 1 explains, some loosening of lockdown measures could be achieved without triggering a second wave of cases once the infection rate has been brought down to a sufficiently low level. To the extent that economic activity tends to move in tandem with the number of interactions that people have, a relaxation of social distancing measures should produce a modest rebound in growth. New technologies and a better understanding of how the virus is transmitted should also allow some of the more economically burdensome measures to be lifted. As we have discussed before, mass testing can go a long way towards reducing the spread of the disease (Chart 4).2 Right now, high-quality tests are in short supply, but that should change over the coming months. Chart 4Mass Testing Will Help Increased mask production should also help. Early in the pandemic, officials in western nations promulgated the view that masks do not work. At best, this was a noble lie designed to ensure that anxious consumers did not deprive frontline workers of necessary safety equipment. At worst, it needlessly led many people astray. As East Asia’s experience shows, mask wearing saves lives. A recent paper estimated that the virus could be vanquished if 80% of people wore masks that were at least 60% effective, a very low bar that even cloth masks would pass (Chart 5).3 Chart 5Masks On! Recent research has also cast doubt on the merits of closing schools. The China/WHO joint commission could not find a single instance during contact tracing where a child transmitted the virus to an adult. A study by the UK Royal College of Paediatrics provides further support to the claim that children are unlikely to be important vectors of transmission. The evidence includes a case study of a nine year-old boy who contracted the virus in the French Alps but fortunately failed to transmit it to any of the more than 170 people he had contact with in three separate schools.4 Along the same lines, there is evidence that the odds of adults catching the virus indoors is at least one order of magnitude higher than outdoors.5 This calls into question the strategy of states such as California of clearing out prisons of dangerous felons in order to make room for beachgoers.6 Upside Risks To The U: Medical Breakthroughs While a U-shaped economic recovery remains our base case, we see both significant upside and downside risks to this outcome. The best hope for an upside surprise is that a vaccine or effective treatment becomes available soon. There are already eight human vaccine trials underway, with another 100 in the planning stages. In the race to develop a vaccine, Oxford is arguably in the lead. Scientists at the university’s Jenner Institute have developed a genetically modified virus that is harmless to people, but which still prompts the immune system to produce antibodies that may be able to fight off COVID. The vaccine has already worked well on rhesus monkeys. If it proves effective on humans, researchers hope to have several million doses available by September. On the treatment side, Gilead’s remdesivir gained FDA approval for emergency use after early results showed that it helps hasten the recovery of coronavirus patients. Hydroxychloroquine, which President Trump has touted on numerous occasions, is the subject of dozens of clinical trials internationally. While evidence that hydroxychloroquine can treat the virus post-infection is thin, there is some data to suggest that it can work well as a prophylactic.7 Research is also being conducted on nearly 200 other treatments, including an improbable contender: famotidine, the compound found in the heartburn remedy Pepcid.8 Downside Risk: Too Open, Too Soon Chart 6The Lesson From The Spanish Flu: The Second Wave Could Be Worse Than The First As noted above, once the number of new cases drops to sufficiently low levels, some relaxation of containment measures can be achieved without reigniting the pandemic. That said, there is a clear danger that measures will end up being relaxed too aggressively and too soon. This is precisely what happened during the Spanish Flu (Chart 6). It has become customary to talk about the risk of a second wave of infections; however, the reality is that we have not even concluded the first wave. While the number of cases in New York has been falling, it has been rising in many other US states. As a result, the total number of new coronavirus cases nationwide has remained steady for the past five weeks (Chart 7). It is the same story globally: Falling caseloads in western Europe and East Asia have been offset by rising cases in countries such as Russia, India, and Brazil (Chart 8). Chart 7The Spread Of COVID-19 Has Not Been Contained Everywhere (I) Chart 8The Spread Of Covid-19 Has Not Been Contained Everywhere (II) Chart 9Widespread Social Distancing Has Dampened The Spread Of All Flus And Colds At the heart of the problem is that COVID-19 remains a highly contagious disease. Most studies assign a Reproduction Number, R, of 3-to-4 to the virus. As a point of comparison, the Spanish flu is estimated to have had an R of 1.8. An R of 3.5 would require about 70% of the population to acquire herd immunity to keep the virus at bay.9 As discussed in Box 2, the “true” level of herd immunity may be substantially greater than that. At this point, if you come down with a cough and fever, you should assume you have COVID. As Chart 9 shows, social distancing measures have brought the number of viral respiratory illnesses down to almost zero in the United States. Up to 30% of common cold cases stem from the coronavirus family. Just like it would be foolhardy to assume that the common cold has been banished from the face of the earth, it would be unwise to assume that COVID will not return if containment measures are quickly lifted. Downside Risk: Permanent Economic Damage Chart 10No Spike In Bankruptcies For Now There are a lot of asymmetries in economics: It is easier to lose a job than to find one; starting a new business is also more difficult than going bankrupt. The good news so far is that bankruptcies have been limited and most unemployed workers have not been permanently laid off (Chart 10 and Chart 11). Thus, for the most part, the links that bind firms to workers have not been severed. Chart 11Temporary Layoffs Account For Most Of The Recent Increase In Unemployment Unfortunately, there is a risk that the economy will suffer permanent damage if unemployment remains high and economic activity stays depressed. For some sectors, such as airlines, long-term damage is nearly assured. It took a decade for real household spending on airlines to return to pre 9/11 levels (Chart 12). It could take even longer for the physiological scars of the pandemic to fade. While businesses outside the travel and hospitality sectors will see a quicker rebound, they could still experience subdued demand for as long as social distancing measures persist. Chart 129/11 Was A Big Shock For US Air Travel There is not much that fiscal policy can do to reverse the immediate hit to GDP from the pandemic. If people cannot work, they cannot produce. What fiscal stimulus can do is push enough money into the hands of households and firms to enable them to meet their financial obligations, while hopefully creating some pent-up demand that can be unleashed when businesses reopen. For now and for the foreseeable future, there is no need to tighten fiscal policy. The private sector in the major economies is generating plenty of savings with which governments can finance budget deficits. Indeed, standard economic theory suggests that if governments tried to “save more” by reducing budget deficits, total national savings would actually decline.10 Nevertheless, just as fiscal policy was prematurely tightened in many countries following the Great Recession, there is a risk that austerity measures will be reintroduced too quickly again. Likewise, calls to tighten monetary policy could grow louder. Just this week, Germany’s constitutional court ruled that the EU Court of Justice had overstepped its powers by failing to require the ECB to conduct an assessment of the “proportionality” of its controversial asset purchase policy. The German high court ordered the Bundesbank to suspend QE in three months unless the ECB Governing Council provides “documentation” showing it meets the criteria of proportionality. Among other things, the ruling could undermine the ECB’s newly launched €750 billion Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme (PEPP). Downside Risk: Geopolitical Tensions Had the virus originated anywhere else but China, President Trump could have made a political case for further deescalating the Sino-US trade war in an effort to shore up the US economy and stock market. Not only did that not happen, but the likelihood of a new clash between China and the US has gone up dramatically. Antipathy towards China is rising (Chart 13). As our geopolitical team has stressed, the US election is likely to be fought on who can sound tougher on China. With the economy on the ropes, Trump will try to paint Joe Biden as too passive and conflicted to stand up to China. Indeed, running as a “war president” may be Trump’s only chance of getting re-elected. Chart 13US Nationalism Is On The Rise Amid Broad-Based Anti-China Sentiment At the domestic political level, the pandemic has exacerbated already glaringly wide inequalities. While well-paid white-collar workers have been able to work from the comfort of their own homes, poorer blue-collar workers have either been furloughed or asked to continue working in a dangerous environment (in nursing homes or meat-packing plants, for example). It is not clear what the blowback from all this will be, but it is unlikely to be benign. Investment Implications Global equities and credit spreads have tracked the frequency of Google search queries for “coronavirus” remarkably well (Chart 14). As coronavirus queries rose, stocks plunged; as the number of queries subsided, stocks rallied. If there is a second wave of infections, anxiety about the virus is likely to grow again, leading to another sell-off in risk assets. Chart 14Joined At The Hip Chart 15Negative Earnings Revisions Will Weigh On Stocks In The Near Term Earnings estimates have come down, but are still above where we think they ought to be. This makes global equities vulnerable to a correction (Chart 15). Meanwhile, retail investors have been active buyers, eagerly gobblingup stocks such as American Airlines and Norwegian Cruise Lines that have fallen on hard times recently (Chart 16). They have also been active buyers of the USO oil ETF, which is down 80% year-to-date. When retail investors are trying to catch a falling knife, that is usually an indication that stocks have yet to reach a bottom. As such, we recommend that investors maintain a somewhat cautious stance on the near-term direction of stocks. Chart 16Retail Investors Keen To Buy The Dip Chart 17Favor Equities Over Bonds Over A 12-Month Horizon Chart 18USD Is A Countercyclical Currency Looking further out, the spread between earnings yields and bond yields is wide enough to justify a modest overweight to stocks on a 12-month horizon (Chart 17). If global growth does end up rebounding, cyclicals should outperform defensives. As a countercyclical currency, the dollar will probably weaken (Chart 18). A weaker greenback, in turn, will boost commodity prices (Chart 19). Historically, stronger global growth and a softer dollar have translated into outperformance of non-US stocks relative to their US peers (Chart 20). Thus, investors should prepare to add international equity exposure to their portfolios later this year. Chart 19Commodity Prices Usually Rise When The Dollar Weakens Chart 20Non-US Equities Tend To Outperform Their US Peers When Global Growth Is Improving And The Dollar Is Weakening Box 1The Dynamics Of R Box 2Why Herd Immunity Is Not Enough Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Still Stuck In The Tree,” dated April 16, 2020. 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Testing Times,” dated April 9, 2020. 3 Philip Anfinrud, Valentyn Stadnytskyi, et al., “Visualizing Speech-Generated Oral Fluid Droplets with Laser Light Scattering,” nejm.org (April 15, 2020); Jeremy Howard, Austin Huang, Li Zhiyuan, Zeynep Tufekci, Vladmir Zdimal, Helene-mari van der Westhuizen, et al., “Face Masks Against COVID-19: An Evidence Review,” Preprints.org, (April 12, 2020); and Liang Tian, Xuefei Li, Fei Qi, Qian-Yuan Tang, Viola Tang, Jiang Liu, Zhiyuan Li, Xingye Cheng, Xuanxuan Li, Yingchen Shi, Haiguang Liu, and Lei-Han Tang, “Calibrated Intervention and Containment of the COVID-19 Pandemic,” arxiv.org (April 2, 2020). 4 “COVID-19 – Research Evidence Summaries,” Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health; and Alison Boast, Alasdair Munro, and Henry Goldstein, “An evidence summary of Paediatric COVID-19 literature,” Don’t Forget The Bubbles (2020). 5 Hiroshi Nishiura, Hitoshi Oshitani, Tetsuro Kobayashi, Tomoya Saito, Tomimasa Sunagawa, Tamano Matsui, Takaji Wakita, MHLW COVID-19 Response Team, and Motoi Suzuki, “Closed environments facilitate secondary transmission of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19),” medRxiv (April 16, 2020). 6 “Coronavirus: Arrests as California beachgoers defy lockdown,” Skynews (April 26, 2020); and “High-risk sex offender rearrested days after controversial release from OC Jail,” abc7.com (May 1, 2020). 7 Sun Hee Lee, Hyunjin Son, and Kyong Ran Peck, “Can post-exposure prophylaxis for COVID-19 be considered as an outbreak response strategy in long-term care hospitals?” International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents (April 25, 2020). 8 Brendan Borrell, “New York clinical trial quietly tests heartburn remedy against coronavirus,” Science (April 26, 2020). 9 In the simplest models, the herd immunity threshold is reached when P = 1-1/Ro, where P is the proportion of the population which has acquired immunity and Ro is the basic reproductive number. Assuming an Ro of 3.5, heard immunity will be achieved once more than 71.4% of the population has been infected (1-1/3.5). For further discussion on this, please refer to Global Investment Strategy, “Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V,” dated March 27, 2020. 10 It is easiest to understand this point by considering a closed economy where savings, by definition, equals investment. Savings is the sum of private and public savings. Suppose the economy is depressed and the government increases public savings by either raising taxes or cutting spending. Since this action will further depress the economy, private investment will fall even more. But, since investment must equal total savings, private savings must decline more than proportionately with any increase in public savings. This happens because tighter fiscal policy leads to lower GDP. It is difficult to save if one does not have a job. To the extent that lower GDP reduces employment, it also tends to reduce private-sector savings. Global Investment Strategy View Matrix Current MacroQuant Model Scores