Market Returns
Despite the strong rally in stocks since mid-March and a looming second wave of the pandemic, we continue to recommend that investors overweight equities on a 12-month horizon. Needless to say, this view has raised some eyebrows. With that in mind, this week we present a Q&A from the perspective of a skeptical reader who does not fully share our enthusiasm. Q: You said last week that a second wave of the pandemic is now your base case, yet you’re still sticking with your positive 12-month equity view. Why? A: A second wave of the pandemic, along with uncertainty about how the coming fiscal cliff in the US will be resolved, could unnerve investors temporarily. Nevertheless, we expect global equities to rise by about 10% from current levels over the next 12 months, handily outperforming bonds. While low interest rates and copious amounts of cash on the sidelines will provide a supportive backdrop for stocks, the main impetus for higher equity prices will be a recovery in economic activity and corporate profits. Q: It is hard to see the economy recovering very much if there is a second wave. A: It is important to get the arrow of causation right. Part of the reason we expect a second wave is because we think policymakers will continue to relax lockdown measures even if, as has already occurred in a number of US states, the infection rate rises. Granted, a second wave will moderate the pace at which containment measures can be dismantled. It will also prompt people to engage in more social distancing. Thus, a second wave would make the economic recovery slower than it otherwise would have been. However, it is doubtful that growth will grind to a halt. The appetite for continued lockdowns has clearly waned. For better or for worse, most western nations will follow the “Swedish model” of trying to limit the spread of the virus without imposing draconian restrictions on society. Chart 1CBO Projects The Unemployment Rate Will Fall Very Slowly Q: Even if the Swedish model works, and I doubt it will, we are still in a very deep economic hole. The unemployment rate in many countries is the highest since the Great Depression. The Congressional Budget Office does not foresee the US unemployment rate falling below 5% until 2028. A return to positive growth seems like a very low bar for success. We may need many years of above-trend growth just to get back to the pre-pandemic level of GDP! A: The Congressional Budget Office is too pessimistic in assuming that the recovery will be as sluggish as the one following the Great Recession (Chart 1). That recovery was weighed down by the need to repair household balance sheets after the bursting of a debt-fueled housing bubble. The current downturn was caused by external forces – an exogenous shock in econospeak. Historically, recoveries following exogenous shocks have tended to be more rapid than recoveries following recessions that were instigated by endogenous problems. Q: That may be so, but Wall Street is already penciling in a very rapid recovery. Last I checked, analysts expect S&P 500 earnings next year to be close to where they were last year. A: One has to be careful when comparing earnings estimates with economic growth projections. Chart 2 shows a breakdown of S&P 500 EPS estimates by sector. Appendix A also shows the evolution of these estimates over time. While analysts expect overall earnings per share (EPS) to return to last year’s levels in 2021, this is mainly because of the resilient profit outlook in the technology and health care sectors (the two biggest sectors in the S&P 500 by market cap). Outside those two sectors, EPS in 2021 is expected to be down 8.6% from 2019 levels, or 11.2% in real terms. Chart 2Breakdown Of S&P 500 EPS Estimates By Sector If one looks at the cyclically-sensitive industrials sector, earnings are projected to fall by 16% between 2019 and 2021. Energy sector earnings are projected to decline by 65%. Earnings in the consumer discretionary sector are expected to decline by 8%, despite the fact that Amazon accounts for nearly half of the sector by market cap.1 This suggests that analysts are expecting more of a U-shaped economic recovery than a V-shaped one. Chart 3The Present Value Of Earnings: A Scenario Analysis Q: Fair enough, but I am ultimately more interested in what the market is pricing in than what analysts are expecting. It seems to me that stock prices have rebounded much more rapidly than one would have anticipated based on the evolution in earnings estimates. A: That is true, but it is important to keep in mind that the fair value of the stock market does not solely depend on the expected path of earnings. It also depends on the discount rate we use to deflate those earnings. For the sake of argument, let us suppose that S&P 500 earnings only manage to reach $144 per share next year (10% below current consensus) and take five years to return to their pre-pandemic trend. All things equal, such a decline in earnings would reduce the present value of stocks by 4.2% relative to what it was at the start of the year (Chart 3). However, all things are not equal. The US 30-year Treasury yield, adjusted for inflation, has declined by 59 basis points this year. If we use this real yield as a proxy for the discount rate, the fair value of the S&P has actually increased by 8.7% since January 1st, despite the decline in earnings. Q: I think you’re doing a bit of a bait and switch here. You’re assuming that earnings estimates return to trend by the middle of the decade, but that long-term bond yields remain broadly unchanged over this period. If the economy and corporate earnings recover, won’t bond yields just go back to where they were last year, if not higher? A: Not necessarily. Conceptually, there is not a one-to-one mapping between interest rates and the full-employment level of aggregate demand.2 For example, consider a case where an adverse economic shock hits the economy, making households and businesses more reluctant to spend. If that were all there was to the story, the stock market would go down. But there is more to the story than that. Suppose the central bank cuts interest rates in response to this shock, which boosts demand by enough to return the economy to full employment. Now we have a new equilibrium where the level of demand – and by extension, the level of corporate profits – is the same as before but interest rates are lower. The fair value of the stock market has gone up! Q: Hold on. Central banks came into this recession with little fire power left. I agree that their actions have helped the stock market, but they have not been enough to rehabilitate the economy. A: Good point. That is where the role of fiscal policy comes in. One of the unsung benefits of lower interest rates is that they have incentivised governments to borrow more at a time when the economy needs all the fiscal support it can get. As Chart 4 shows, the fiscal response during this year’s downturn has been significantly larger than during the Great Recession. Thus, it is more correct to say that the combination of lower interest rates and fiscal easing have conceivably increased the fair value of the stock market. Chart 4Fiscal Stimulus Is Greater Today Than It Was During The Great Recession Q: And yet despite all this fiscal and monetary support, GDP remains depressed. A: The point of the stimulus was not to raise output or employment. It was to keep households and businesses solvent during a time when their regular flow of income had dried up. Q: If households and businesses did not spend much of that money, where did it go? A: Much of it remains in the banking system. The US savings rate shot up to 33% in April. As Chart 5 illustrates, this was almost perfectly mirrored by the increase in bank deposits. Anyone who claims that savings have nothing to do with deposits should study this chart. Chart 5Lots Of Savings Slushing Around Chart 6Stocks That Are Popular With Retail Investors Are Outperforming Q: And now, I suppose, these deposits are flowing into the stock market? A: Correct. That is one reason why stocks popular with retail investors have outperformed the S&P 500 by 30% since mid-March (Chart 6). Q: Have these retail flows really been important enough to matter? A: They have probably been more important than widely portrayed. Many of the online brokerages touting zero-commission trades make their money by selling order flow to hedge funds. Thus, the trading of individuals is magnified by the trading of institutional investors. More liquid markets tend to generate higher prices. There is also another subtle multiplier effect worth considering. You mentioned that money was “flowing into the stock market.” Technically speaking, “flow” is not the best word to use. For the most part, if I decide to buy some shares, someone else has to sell me their shares. On a net basis, there is no inflow of cash into the stock market. Rather, what happens is that my buy order lifts the price of the shares by enough to entice someone to sell their shares. Thus, if retail investors bid up the price of stocks to the point that institutions are forced to sell, those institutions are now left with excess cash that they have to deploy elsewhere in the stock market. As the value of investors’ stock portfolios rises, the percentage of their net worth held in cash falls. This game of hot potato only ends when the percentage of cash held by investors shrinks to a level that is consistent with their preferences. Importantly, this means that changes in the amount of cash on the sidelines can have a “multiplier” effect on stock prices. For example, if cash holdings go up by a dollar, and people want to hold ten times as much stock as cash, then stock market capitalization has to go up by ten dollars. Q: How far along are we in this game of hot potato? A: Despite the rally in stocks since mid-March, cash held in money market funds and savings deposits is still 10% higher as a share of market capitalization than at the start of the year. This suggests that the firepower to fuel further increases in the stock market has not been fully spent. Chart 7Equity Risk Premium Is Still Quite High Q: Wouldn’t you think that after a pandemic people would be more risk-averse and hence inclined to hold more cash? A: That would be a logical assumption, but it is not clear whether it is empirically true. There is some evidence from the psychological literature that people who survive life-threatening events tend to become less risk averse rather than more risk averse after the event has passed.3 A pandemic seems to qualify as a life-threatening event. In any case, when considering the equity risk premium, we should not only think about the riskiness of stocks; we should also think about the riskiness of bonds. Bond yields are near record lows. To the extent that yields cannot fall much from current levels, this makes bonds a less attractive hedge against downside economic news than they once were. So perhaps the equity risk premium, which is still quite high, should actually be lower than it currently is (Chart 7). Q: It seems that much of your optimism is based on the assumption that policy will stay stimulative. On the monetary side, that seems like a safe assumption. However, as you yourself mentioned at the outset, there is a risk that stocks will be upended by a premature tightening in fiscal policy. A: This is indeed a risk. In the US, the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) will run out of funds over the coming month. The additional $600 per week in benefits that jobless workers are receiving will expire on July 31st, causing average unemployment payments to fall by about 60%. Direct payments to households have also ceased. Together, these three fiscal measures amount to about 5.5% of GDP. Furthermore, most states begin their fiscal year on July 1st. Despite receiving $275 billion in federal aid, they are still facing a roughly $250 billion (1.2% of GDP) financing shortfall in the coming fiscal year, which could force widespread layoffs. The good news is that both Republicans and Democrats want to avert this fiscal cliff. While negotiations over the next stimulus package could unnerve investors for a while, they will ultimately culminate in a deal. The Democrats want more spending, as does the White House. And if public opinion polls are to be believed, congressional Republicans will also cave in to voter demands for continued fiscal largess (Table 1). Table 1There Is Much Public Support For Fiscal Stimulus Q: It seems to me that the fiscal cliff is not the only political risk to worry about. Tensions with China are running high and there is domestic unrest in many cities around the world. Even if fiscal policy remains accommodative, President Trump will probably lose in November. This makes a repeal of his tax cuts more likely than not. A: It is true that betting markets now expect Joe Biden to become president (Chart 8). They also expect Democrats to regain control of the Senate. My personal view is that Trump has a better chance of being reelected than implied by betting markets. While the protests have hurt Trump’s favorability ratings in recent weeks, ongoing unrest could help him, given his claim of being the “law and order” president. It is worth recalling that after falling for more than 20 years, the nationwide homicide rate spiked by 23% between 2014 and 2016 following protests in cities such as St. Louis and Baltimore (Chart 9). This arguably helped Trump get elected, just like the Watts Riot in Los Angeles helped Ronald Reagan get elected as Governor of California in 1966. Chart 8Betting Markets Now Expect Joe Biden To Become President If Senator Biden were to prevail, then yes, Trump’s corporate tax cuts would be in jeopardy. A full repeal of the Trump tax cuts would reduce EPS of S&P 500 companies by about 12%. Chart 9Continued Unrest May Help Trump, As It Has In The Past However, it is possible that Democrats would choose to only partially reverse the corporate tax cuts, while also lifting taxes on higher-income households. One should also note that trade tensions with China would probably diminish under a Biden presidency, which would be a mitigating factor for equity investors. Chart 10Cyclical Sectors Should Outperform Defensives As Global Growth Recovers... And A Weaker Dollar Should Also Help Non-US Stocks Q: So to sum up, you are still bullish on stocks over a 12-month horizon, although you see some near-term risks stemming from the likelihood of a second wave of the pandemic and uncertainty about how and when the fiscal cliff problem in the US will be resolved. What are your favorite sectors, regions, and styles? A: Cyclical sectors should outperform defensives over the next 12 months as global growth recovers. Cyclicals are overrepresented outside the US, which should favor overseas markets. A weaker dollar should also help non-US stocks (Chart 10). The dollar generally trades as a countercyclical currency, implying that it will sell off as global growth recovers. Moreover, unlike last year, the greenback no longer enjoys the benefit of higher interest rates than those abroad. In terms of style, value should outperform growth. Growth stocks have done very well in a falling interest rate environment (Chart 11). However, interest rates cannot fall much further from current levels. Small caps should outperform large caps, both because small caps are more growth-sensitive and because they tend to be more popular among day traders. Google searches for “day trading” have spiked in the past few months (Chart 12). Chart 11Interest Rates Cannot Fall Much Lower From Current Levels, Which Will Allow Value To Outperform Growth Chart 12Day Trading Is Back In Vogue These Days Beyond the pure macro plays, the pandemic could lead to a number of unexpected changes that have yet to be fully discounted by markets. For example, we will likely see a surge in the demand for automobiles as people shun public transit. The pandemic could also accelerate the reshoring of manufacturing activity, particularly in the health care sector. Contract manufacturing companies with significant domestic operations will benefit. Additionally, more people will move to the suburbs to work from home and escape the virus and rising crime. This could boost the demand for new houses and lift suburban real estate prices. Since most suburbs are built on top of land previously zoned for agriculture, farmland prices could also rise. Appendix A Evolution Of S&P 500 EPS Estimates By Sector Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Amazon EPS is projected to rise by 54% between 2019 and 2021, from 11% of overall consumer discretionary earnings to 19%. 2 One can see this within the context of the IS-LM model that is taught to economics undergraduates. If the LM curve shifts outward while the IS curve shifts inward, one could end up with the situation where aggregate demand is the same as before, but the equilibrium interest rate is lower. 3 For example, Gennaro Bernile, Vineet Bhagwat, and P. Raghavendra Rau investigated the link between the intensity of early-life experiences on CEO’s attitudes towards risk. Their results suggest that CEOs who witnessed extreme levels of fatal natural disasters appear more cautious in approaching risk. In contrast, those that experience disasters without very negative consequences become desensitized to risk. For details, please see Gennaro Bernile, Vineet Bhagwat, and P. Raghavendra Rau, “What Doesn't Kill You Will Only Make You More Risk-Loving: Early-Life Disasters and CEO Behavior,“ The Journal of Finance, (72:1) February 2017. Global Investment Strategy View Matrix Current MacroQuant Model Scores
Highlights Falling volatility in oil-trading markets will remain suspect while the massive economic uncertainty plaguing global markets persists. Geopolitical risk also will remain high, as the US and China return to loggerheads and India and China move closer to war. Positive consumer and employment data in the US could presage a sharp recovery in demand generally; however, it is immediately countered with fears of a second COVID-19 wave, which now is the baseline scenario of our global investment strategists. Despite lower EM oil-demand growth this year – spurred by weaker GDP growth – deeper production cuts by OPEC 2.0 will keep oil markets on track to rebalance beginning in 3Q20. Massive fiscal and monetary stimulus will bridge global economic activity to a return to normal next year, provided the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic does not result in renewed lockdown measures. Our updated supply-demand balances keep our expectation for Brent prices at $40/bbl this year and put next year’s average price at $65/bbl, $3/bbl below last month’s forecast. We continue to expect WTI to trade $2-$4/bbl lower than Brent. Feature As the OPEC 2.0 Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee convenes today, members will be attempting to sort out the appropriate supply response to a highly uncertain oil-demand evolution over the balance of this year and next. Indeed, global economic policy uncertainty is scaling heights unimagined even in the depths of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) of 2007-09 or the European sovereign-debt crisis of 2010-12, which followed in the GFC’s wake (Chart of the Week). This uncertainty is driving the policy responses of central banks and governments around the world, as they attempt to bridge COVID-19-induced demand destruction and the return to normality they seek in re-opening their economies. The data informing policy are suspect, as are the responses of firms and households to the stimulus they provide. This reflects the near-complete uncertainty in re current economic conditions. This translates directly to estimates of fundamental supply and demand variables, particularly in oil, which has been hardest-hit among the major commodities (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekEconomic Uncertainty Plagues Oil Markets Chart 2Oil Hardest Hit Commodity In 2020 COVID-19 Pandemic Demand To Weaken More Than Expected In 2020 OPEC 2.0’s agreement earlier this month to extend its 9.7mm b/d production cuts into July likely were informed by weaker physical demand. Our updated oil-demand model – driven by World Bank estimates of DM and EM GDP growth – indicates global oil consumption will fall by close to 9mm b/d this year, or ~ 1mm b/d more than we estimated last month.1 For next year, we expect a stronger rebound – 8.5mm b/d vs. last month’s estimate of 8mm b/d – off a lower base this year. This change is driven by the Bank’s more pessimistic assessment of EM GDP growth for 2020 than the IMF growth estimates we used in last month’s forecast (Chart 3). DM demand will take a harder hit than EM, given the extent of the lockdowns in major systematically important economies. This will set up a stronger rebound in oil demand next year, which, among many things spawned by the COVID-19 pandemic, is rarely seen. Chart 3EM Oil Demand Growth Estimate Lowered OPEC 2.0’s agreement earlier this month to extend its 9.7mm b/d production cuts into July likely were informed by weaker physical demand – appearing as unintended inventory accumulation – reflecting slower GDP growth. Global Oil Supply Expansion Required In our updated balances, we expect OPEC 2.0 supply to contract 3.2mm b/d y/y in 2Q20, and to increase in 2H20 and 2021 to keep prices from overshooting in the event the global demand response to fiscal and monetary stimulus is underestimated. We expect US shales to contract 600k b/d this year to 9.3mm b/d of production, and to gradually rebound in 2021 (Chart 4).2 The contraction in US shales will lead non-OPEC 2.0 supply losses in our estimation (Table 1). Chart 4Cuts By OPEC 2.0, US Shales Will Remove 9.4mm b/d Table 1BCA Global Oil Supply - Demand Balances (MMb/d, Base Case Balances) The combination of reduced supply and higher demand growth beginning next month will produce a physical deficit in 2H20 and in 2021 (Chart 5). This will be apparent in falling storage levels (Chart 6) and in a further flattening and eventual backwardating of the Brent and WTI forward curves (Chart 7). Chart 5Physical Markets Will Tighten Chart 6... Causing Storage to Drain ... Chart 7... And Forward Curves To Flatten, Then Backwardate Chart 8Massive Stimulus Flooding Global Economy Upside Favored, But Uncertainty Dominates We reckon even a second wave of the pandemic – now our Global Investment Strategy’s base case – will not derail a recovery in commodity demand. We continue to maintain a bias toward the upside price risk prevailing over the downside – driven by our expectation the massive fiscal and monetary stimulus unleashed globally will serve as an effective bridge from the COVID-19 pandemic to normal economic activity (Chart 8). This is being picked up in BCA Research's Global Nowcast, which closely tracks current economic conditions in leading manufacturing economies (Chart 9). We reckon even a second wave of the pandemic – now our Global Investment Strategy’s base case – will not derail a recovery in commodity demand.3 But the balance could tip the other way, with downside risk dominating the upside. The unprecedented uncertainty now dominating markets makes falling price volatility in oil markets – as measured by the implied volatility of Brent crude oil options’ implied volatility – highly suspect (Chart 10). We continue to emphasize two-way price risk in commodities remains pronounced despite the decline in the implied volatility of traded crude-oil options.4 Chart 9Global Economic Activity Turning Higher Chart 10Falling Vol Does Not Mean Lower Uncertainty Investment Implications The dynamics laid out above continue to point to a tightening physical oil market this year and next and higher prices. However, that does not come without substantial two-way risk. Indeed, the evolution of supply-demand information alone can trigger sharp adjustments in prices, as data revisions – to be expected, given the uncertainty prevailing at present – upend earlier preliminary estimates. We are leaving our 2020 forecast for Brent at $40/bbl and expect 2021 prices to average $65/bbl, $3/bbl below last month’s forecast. We continue to expect WTI to trade $2-$4/bbl lower than Brent (Chart 11). We also expect forward curves to flatten and return to backwardation in Brent and WTI, as the underlying physical markets tighten and inventories draw. Chart 11Brent To Average /bbl In 2021 Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger Associate Editor Commodity & Energy Strategy HugoB@bcaresearch.com Fernando Crupi Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy FernandoC@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Overweight Brent prices are recovering from the dual supply and demand shocks delivered by the COVID-19 pandemic and the short-lived OPEC 2.0 internal market-share war. Brent price are now down 42% ytd vs. -72% two months ago. The contango in the Brent futures curve continues to narrow as voluntary and involuntary production cuts take effect and lockdown measures are relaxed in major economies. Continued production losses and demand recovery will force inventories lower, flattening the oil forward curves and ultimately backwardating them. Base Metals: Neutral As of Tuesday’s close, the LMEX index was up 17% since bottoming in March, 2ppt lower than the level reached last week. Positive data out of China – fueled by stimulative fiscal and monetary policies – indicates demand for industrial metals will grow: Year-on-year industrial production, infrastructure spending, and steel production grew by 4.4%, 10.9%, and 4.2%, respectively, in May (Chart 12). Moreover, y/y floor space started and sold moved up to positive territory. As government support continues to reach the economy, these sectors will encourage base metal consumption, providing further upside to the LME index. Still, fresh outbreaks of COVID-19 cases in Beijing – and associated lockdown measures – illustrate the fragility of the recovery over the short-term. Precious Metals: Neutral Gold prices remain range-bound at ~ $1,700/oz, mimicking movements in US real rates. Going forward, both the Fed and market participants expect US interest rates will remain pinned near zero through the end of 2022 (Chart 13). Our US Investment strategists expect the Fed will err to the side of providing too much accommodation as it navigates the uncertain consequences of the current economic shock. A gradual rebound in inflation next year could push real rates deeper in negative territories, which will be supportive for gold. Ags/Softs: Underweight July soybean prices are up more than 3% since the beginning of the month. Strong export prospects going forward contributed to the strength in prices this past week. On June 4th the USDA reported new sales of soybeans of 1.21 MM MT, a huge week-on-week jump, which brought outstanding sales for the next marketing season to 4.1 MM MT. China was responsible for close to half of these sales and private exporters have since reported a little over an additional 1 million MT of exports to China. Chart 12Chinese Infrastructure Investment Rising Chart 13US Rates Expected To Remain Near Zero Until End 2022 Footnotes 1 Please see p. 3 of the World Bank’s June 2020 Global Economic Prospects. 2 We proxy US shales using the sum of crude production from the top 5 tight oil basins (i.e. Anadarko, Bakken, Eagle Ford, Niobrara, and Permian). Recent news reports suggest as much as 500k b/d of previously shut-in production will be back on line by the end of the month as a consequence of higher prices. This is slightly above our estimates shown in Chart 4. Please see US shale companies to boost oil output by 500,000 bpd by month-end published June 17, 2020, by reuters.com. 3 Please see A Second Wave Is Now The Base Case (But Stocks Will Eventually Shrug It Off) published by BCA Research’s Global Investment Strategy June 12, 2020. It is available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 4 For a discussion of how options markets price risk – i.e., known economic and political factors with outcomes that can be assigned probabilities – please see Ryan, Bob and Tancred Lidderdale (2009), Energy Price Volatility and Forecast Uncertainty, published by the US EIA October 2009. Risk can be thought of a “known unknowns” that can be measured across time and assigned a probability (conditional or otherwise), while uncertainty literally consists of unknown unknowns that cannot be measured. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Trade Recommendation Performance In 2020 Q1 Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2020 Summary of Closed Trades
Highlights When retail investors invest aggressively and central banks buy assets en masse, economic fundamentals take the back seat and momentum becomes king. Global risk assets are at a fork in the road: either they will relapse meaningfully as they have run well ahead of fundamentals or a budding mania will push global share prices to fresh new highs. A budding mania is the basis behind our strategy of chasing momentum from this point on. Investors should adjust their strategy based on momentum in global stocks and the broad trade-weighted US dollar in the coming weeks. We are upgrading Chinese stocks from neutral to overweight and downgrading the Korean bourse from overweight to neutral within an EM equity portfolio. Feature Chart I-1Make It Or Break It Moment For US Dollar Global share prices have reached a point where they are no longer oversold. In turn, the trade-weighted US dollar has worked out its overbought conditions and is sitting on major defensive lines (Chart I-1). If the dollar relapses below its technical resistances, it will enter a bear market. Consistently, EM risk assets will enter a bull market. The trajectory of EM risk assets and currencies in the coming months will ultimately depend on what happens to the ongoing global FOMO (fear-of-missing-out) rally. We refer to it as a FOMO rally because both the DM and EM equity rallies have been taking place despite deteriorating corporate profit expectations, as we documented in our June 4 report. Why The FOMO Rally May Still Have Legs There are a number of reasons why this FOMO-driven rally could persist: Chart I-2Helicopter Money In The US First, the Federal Reserve is explicitly targeting higher asset prices, and to achieve this goal it is deploying its “nuclear” arsenal – printing money and monetizing public debt, lending to the private sector as well as buying corporate bonds. US broad money growth is at an all-time high (Chart I-2). Consequently, the risk of a full-blown equity bubble formation in the US cannot be ruled out. If this occurs, all EM risk assets will rally along with the S&P 500. US policymakers are throwing everything into the system to keep financial asset prices inflated. It seems that after any day that the S&P 500 sells off, the Fed or the US administration comes up with some sort of new measure to support the economy and asset prices. Historically, investors have placed a lot of weight on the Fed’s actions. Aggressive measures by the Fed have recently led investors to purchase stocks and corporate bonds, irrespective of the condition of the underlying economy. As a result, share prices worldwide have decoupled from corporate profit expectations (Chart I-3A and I-3B). If US policymakers succeed in lifting US share prices further, every investor will likely chase the rally and the US equity market will become a full-scale bubble. Chart I-3AGlobal Stocks Are Pricing In A Lot Of Good News Chart I-3BSurging EM Share Prices Amid Plunging Forward EPS Chart I-4Retail Investors Have Driven Up Trading Volumes At some point, the bubble will start cracking even if corporate earnings find their way back to a recovery path. When equities make up a large share of investors’ assets, any trigger could lead to marginal sellers outnumbering marginal buyers. As we discuss below, there are plenty of risks that could result in a trigger. Both retail and institutional investors are very averse to losses, and when the market begins to slide, investors will sell their shares simultaneously. The market will plunge. The Fed will be forced to buy stocks to avert the negative impact of falling share prices on the economy. In a nutshell, US equities and corporate bonds have become extremely dependent on the Fed. This might be good news in the short and medium term. Nevertheless, it is negative for the US in the long run. Second, when retail investors rush into the market and actively trade, fundamentals take the back seat. This is what has been occurring since March. Retail investors appear to be especially attracted to crushed or near-bankrupt US stocks as well as popular tech stocks. This is illustrated by the surge in turnover volumes on the Nasdaq as well as in Southwest Airline, Norwegian Cruise Lines and Chesapeake Energy stocks (Chart I-4). Yet the impact of their actions is not limited to these stocks. Stocks are fungible. When retail investors purchase shares of near-bankrupt companies at elevated prices (at higher than fundamentals warrant), institutional investors sell those stocks and move capital to other companies. In aggregate, the stock market index rises. The ongoing retail investor mania is not solely a US phenomenon. It has become prevalent in many other countries. There are anecdotes that Japanese retail investors have been actively trading Jasdaq stocks, while Korean, Taiwanese and Filipino retail investors have been buying local shares en masse.1 The top panel of Chart I-5 illustrates that Korean individual investors have been accumulating stocks while foreigners have been selling out. In Taiwan, the share of individual investors in equity trading has been rising at the expense of domestic institutional investors (Chart I-5, bottom panel). Retail investors do not do much fundamental analysis, and it should not come as a surprise that share prices have decoupled from their fundamentals (profits) and have gained despite lingering massive risks. Retail investors appear to be especially attracted to crushed or near-bankrupt US stocks as well as popular tech stocks. Third, the mania phase – the last and most speculative stage – in bubble formation typically lasts between nine and 18 months. This is based on the duration of the mania phase in the Nikkei (1989), the NASDAQ (1999-2000), oil (2008) and Chinese A shares (2014-‘15) (Chart I-6). The retail investor-driven equity mania began in March and is now three months old. If the duration of previous manias is any guide, the current rally could last another six months at least. Chart I-5Strong Retail Buying Is Also Evident In Korea And Taiwan Chart I-6How Long Mania Phase Lasted During Previous Bubbles? Chart I-7China A-Share Bubble: A Divergence Between Stocks And EPS The current equity mania resembles the one in China’s A-share market in 2014-‘15 in two aspects: (1) it is driven by retail investors and (2) it is occurring amid very underwhelming corporate profits. Chart I-7 demonstrates that Chinese A-share prices skyrocketed in H1 2015, despite a deteriorating corporate profit picture. It lasted for a while and ended with a bust without any policy tightening taking place. Finally, retail investors are not quick to give up when they lose money. Having acquired a taste for capital gains over the past few months, retail investors will likely become even more aggressive and will keep buying the dips. In such a scenario, institutional and professional investors may be forced to capitulate and chase risk assets higher. We are at a fork in the road: either retail investors will begin reducing their equity holdings soon, or institutional and professional investors will capitulate and start buying en masse. In the first scenario, stocks will tumble as retail investors rapidly head for the exits. The latter scenario on the other hand will push share prices considerably higher. This is the basis behind our strategy of chasing momentum from this point on. Bottom Line: All financial market manias eventually crash. However, if the market breaks out, the rally could endure for several months. Not chasing the rally will be very painful for portfolio managers. This is why even though we believe the current global equity rally has been a FOMO-driven mania, we recommend to play it if EM share prices break above, and the broad-trade weighted dollar relapses below, current levels. Plenty Of (Disregarded) Risks Chart I-8Number Of New Inflections Is Rising In Large EM Countries Even though global risk assets have been rallying, the global investment landscape remains poor, with plenty of risks. In particular: Geopolitical tensions are bound to rise between the US and China. Taiwan and its semiconductor sector are at the epicenter of the US-China technological and geopolitical standoffs. Timing any escalation is tricky, but Taiwanese stocks are not pricing in these risks. Further, odds are high that North Korea will test a strategic weapon, which will undermine the credibility of President Trump’s foreign policy. This is negative for the KOSPI and the Korean won. An escalation in US-China tensions encompassing technology, Hong Kong, Taiwan and the Koreas is negative for equity markets in China, South Korea and Taiwan alike. Together they account for about 60% of the EM MSCI equity benchmark market cap. Moreover, the China-India skirmish is a risk for Indian stocks. The number of new Covid-19 infections is rising in the majority of EM countries excluding China, Korea and Taiwan as demonstrated in Chart I-8. It will be hard to ameliorate consumer and business confidence and thereby boost spending in these countries amid a worsening trend in the global pandemic. Indeed, a second wave of the coronavirus now hitting Beijing is evidence that even the very efficient Chinese system is not able to prevent pockets of renewed infection outbreaks. This risk still looms large over many advanced and developing nations after the first wave subsides. The post-lockdown natural snapback in economic activity is creating a mirage of a V-shaped recovery. Like any mirage, it can last and drive markets for a while. However, it will eventually fade. When that happens, misalignments in financial markets will be ironed out rather abruptly. A snapback in economic activity around the world is natural following the unwinding of strict lockdowns. Nevertheless, the level of business activity remains very low. Going forward, persistent social distancing, the threat of a second wave and an initial substantial income drawdown will cap the speed of recovery in household and business spending around the world. In our February 20 report titled EM: Growing Risk Of A Breakdown, we contended that the most likely trajectory for Chinese growth is the one demonstrated in Chart I-9. It assumed the plunge in business activity would be succeeded by a rather sharp snap-back due to pent-up demand. However, this snapback would likely be followed by weaker growth in the following months. This is also our roadmap for the business cycles of many DM and EM economies. Even though on May 28 we upgraded our economic outlook for Chinese growth from negative to mildly positive, near-term risks for China-related plays remain. Consistent with the trajectory described above, the Chinese economy has been coming back to life, aided in large part by significant credit and fiscal stimulus (Chart I-10, top and middle panel). Traditional infrastructure investment has accelerated strongly (Chart I-10, bottom panel). Chart I-9Our Roadmap For China’s Business Cycle Chart I-10China: Money/Credit And Infrastructure Are Accelerating Consequently, mainland demand for commodities has been very robust and raw materials prices have rallied. However, it remains to be seen if the recent strength in commodities purchases can be maintained going forward. A couple of our indicators and market price signals are also suggesting that caution is warranted in the near term with respect to China-related plays. First, our indicators for marginal propensity to spend among households and enterprises continue to deteriorate, even when May data points are included (Chart I-11). These indicators have been good pointers for consumer discretionary spending and business investment/demand for industrial metals, as illustrated in Chart I-11. Chart I-11Marginal Propensity To Spend Is Falling For Consumers And Enterprises Chart I-12Copper: Shanghai/London Premium And Prices Second, the copper price premium in Shanghai over London has been a good coincident indicator for copper prices and has recently been flagging short-term risks to copper prices (Chart I-12). A rising Shanghai/London copper premium implies more robust demand in China, while a declining premium signals weaker copper demand in the mainland. Finally, share prices of property developers, industrials and materials in the onshore market have failed to advance much (Chart I-13). This fact does not corroborate that there is a strong recovery occurring in China’s broad capital spending outside infrastructure. Chart I-13Chinese Stocks Do Not Corroborate A Strong Recovery A similar message stems from the investable universe of Chinese stocks. We are using the sector indexes from the onshore market because they are less hyped by the global FOMO rally, and the number of companies included in these onshore sector indexes is larger than in the investable indexes. Bank share prices have done even worse (Chart I-13, bottom panel). Overall, near-term risks to China-plays remain and we are looking for a better entry point in the weeks and months ahead. The trend-setting US equity market is expensive, as we corroborated in our report on EM and US equity valuations a month ago. The forward P/E ratio stands at 22, using analysts’ 12-month forward EPS expectations that we believe are still optimistic. Global financial market correlations are presently high, and domestic conditions in EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan are rather grim. If the S&P 500 relapses for whatever reason, there is little chance EM risk assets will avoid selling off. Bottom Line: Risks are abundant and fundamentals (profits, valuations, geopolitical risks, the ongoing pandemic) do not justify higher share prices. However, if a FOMO-driven rush into stocks persists, financial markets will continue ignoring fundamentals. Investment Strategy: Momentum Is Now King When retail investors invest aggressively and central banks buy assets en masse, it is not the time for fundamental analysis. Indeed, momentum becomes king. Investors should adjust their strategy based on momentum in global stocks and the broad trade-weighted US dollar in the coming weeks. Our composite momentum indicator for global share prices has risen to zero from extremely oversold levels (Chart I-14). Chart I-14Global Share Prices Are At A Critical Juncture If global and EM share prices break meaningfully above their 200-day moving averages and the US dollar breaks materially below its 200-day moving average (see Chart I-1 on page 1), our advice will be for investors to chase the rally. Even if DM and EM share prices break out, the odds are that EM stocks will continue underperforming DM ones. Hence, we continue to underweight EM in a global equity portfolio. The basis is that North Asian equity markets (China, Korea and Taiwan) are at risk of a heightened geopolitical confrontation between the US and China, as per our discussion above. Meanwhile, the remainder of EM is struggling with the pandemic. Hence, EM will continue to underperform, even if global share prices rise a lot. The current equity mania resembles the one in China’s A-share market in 2014-‘15 in two aspects: (1) it is driven by retail investors and (2) it is occurring amid very underwhelming corporate profits. That said, if global stocks and commodities prices break out and the greenback breaks down, we will close our remaining short positions in EM currencies and upgrade our stance on EM fixed-income markets from neutral to bullish. We have been receiving rates in Mexico, Colombia, Russia, India, China, Korea, Pakistan, Ukraine and Egypt, but have been reluctant to take on currency risk. Also, we upgraded our stance on EM credit markets to neutral on June 4. We will likely upgrade EM local currency bonds and EM credit markets further to “buy” if the above-mentioned breakouts transpire. Upgrade Chinese, Downgrade Korean Stocks Chart I-15DRAM And Korean Tech Stocks We are moving China from neutral to overweight and downgrading Korea from overweight to neutral relative to the EM equity benchmark. Regarding Korean equities, the risks are as follows: First, rising threats of North Korea testing a strategic weapon is negative for South Korea’s equities and currency. Second, DRAM prices and volumes are dropping. Chart I-15 shows that the DRAM revenue proxy is falling, a bad omen for Korean tech stocks that derive a lot of operating profits from DRAM sales. Finally, the Korean bourse is heavy in old-economy stocks, which will experience a slow recovery in their profits from very low levels amid the enduring global trade downturn. The reasons to upgrade Chinese investable stocks relative to the EM equity benchmark include: As we discussed above, the medium-term growth outlook for China is mildly positive due to the credit and fiscal stimulus Beijing has unleashed. The outlook for domestic demand is worse in many other developing economies. The credit and money bubble in China will inflate further and will pose a major challenge in the years ahead. That said, another round of major credit/money expansion will likely stabilize the system in the medium term. If the FOMO-driven mania continues, FAANG stocks will likely outperform, which will spread to similar stocks around the world. The Chinese investable index includes Alibaba, Tencent and other new economy stocks that will likely outperform the EM benchmark. If global markets correct and EM currencies drop, the Chinese RMB will appreciate relative to most EM exchange rates. This will help China’s equity performance relative to other EM bourses. Finally, if US-China tensions escalate and EM markets sell off, Chinese authorities will support share prices by deploying the national team and other government proxies to buy Chinese stocks. This will help the broad universe of Chinese stocks to outperform the EM benchmark. Chart I-16Long Chinese Investable / Short Korean Equities Bottom Line: We are upgrading Chinese stocks from neutral to overweight and downgrading the Korean bourse from overweight to neutral within an EM equity portfolio. Market-neutral investors should consider the following trade: long Chinese / short Korean equities (Chart I-16). Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see the following articles: Coronavirus spawns new generation of Japanese stock pickers Stuck at Home, More Filipinos Try Luck at Stock Investing Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
Dear client, It was my pleasure to join Dhaval Joshi, BCA’s Chief European Investment Strategist, this past Friday June 12, 2020 on a webcast he hosted titled: “Sectors To Own, And Sectors To Avoid In The Post-Covid World”. You can access the replay of the lively webcast here, where Dhaval and I debate how investors should be positioned in different time horizons. I hope you will find it both insightful and informative. Kind Regards, Anastasios Highlights Portfolio Strategy While we cannot time the exact equity market top, our sense is that we are more than fairly valued at the current juncture and the equity market has entered a speculative phase; thus the risk/reward tradeoff is poor in the near-term. We are compelled to put the S&P home improvement retailers index (HIR) on our downgrade watch list and institute a stop at the 10% return mark in order to reflect softness in our HIR macro model, a hook down in existing home sales and a high profit growth bar that sell-side analysts have set for the coming year. Recent Changes Our rolling 10% stop got hit last Tuesday and we monetized 32% gains since the reinstatement of the long S&P oil & gas exploration & production / short global gold miners pair trade.1 Feature Equities briefly erased all losses for the year early last week, but the Fed’s June meeting lacked any additional easing measures and served as a catalyst for a much needed breather – the fifth 5.3-7.3% pullback since the March 23 bottom – as the week drew to a close. While extremely easy monetary and fiscal policies remain the key macro drivers for the SPX, any hiccups in passing a new fiscal spending bill once the money runs out on July 31, carry enough risk to short circuit the equity market’s momentum and result in a shakeout phase. Importantly, given the recent speculative overshoot in equities, the cyclical return potential has diminished, and that is cause for concern. The ongoing COVID-19 catalyzed recession that the NBER last week confirmed commenced in February, the “second wave” risk, a flare up in the US/Sino trade war and more recently, civil unrest have dominated the news flow. However in all this chaos, the November election has slowly moved into the background, especially the SPX return implications during the 4th year of a Presidency. Chart 1 shows the profile of the S&P 500 during Presidential Election calendar years, going back to the 1950s. The solid green line shows the historical mean, and shaded areas denote the 10th and 90th percentiles of SPX performance. If history rhymes, the average profile of these 17 iterations suggests that more cyclical gains are in store for the S&P 500. Chart 1Do Not Ignore… Nevertheless, before getting carried away, a word of caution is in order. As we highlighted last week, a Biden win represents a risk to the SPX’s euphoric rise from the March lows, and could serve as a catalyst for a much needed pullback (Chart 2).2 Thus, according to our analysis if the 90th percentile proves accurate, then the SPX could trace this lower bound and fall 640 points or 20% (Chart 1). This is a key tail risk to our cyclically sanguine equity market view. Chart 2…(Geo)Political Risks Turning over to the reopening of the economy, while the SPX has now discounted a near fully functioning economy for the rest of the year and beyond (bottom panel, Chart 3), fixed income investors are not in total agreement. In fact, the missing ingredient in giving the green light for equities is a selloff in the bond market, which financials/banks are currently sniffing out on the back of the reopening of the economy. Until fixed income investors get on the same page as equity investors, the SPX will remain on shaky ground (top panel, Chart 3). We first turned positive on the cyclical prospects of the equity market in mid-March3 and cemented our conviction in our March 23 report presenting 20 reasons to buy stocks.4 Since then, the SPX has rocketed higher by 1000 points and overshot our 3,000 SPX target that we recently derived from three methods.5 While we cannot time the exact top and equities may have a bit more upside, our sense is that today, stocks are more than fairly valued and they have entered a speculative phase (Chart 4). Thus the risk/reward tradeoff in the near-term has shifted to the downside. Once these (geo)political risks get appropriately repriced via a higher risk premium, then the broad equity market will resume its cyclical upside march. Chart 3Bond Market Is Not Buying Stock Market’s Euphoria Chart 4Lots Of Good News Is Priced In This week we update one consumer discretionary subgroup and put it on our downgrade watch list. Put Home Improvement Retailers On Downgrade Alert We are putting the S&P home improvement retailers index (HIR) on downgrade alert and setting a stop at the 10% return mark in order to protect handsome gains for our portfolio since the mid-April overweight inception. HIR have catapulted to all-time highs both in absolute terms and relative to the broad market. Granted, this has been an earnings-led propulsion (top panel, Chart 5), however, we are uneasy that HD is a top ten holding in the S&P growth index (middle panel, Chart 5).6 Importantly, the first print in the real GDP release for Q1/2020 in late-April made for grim reading, with one notable exception: real residential investment. Business capex took it to the chin, but housing related outlays spiked over 20% on a quarter-over-quarter annualized basis, and signal that DIY same-store retail sales will likely prove resilient this summer (bottom panel, Chart 6). Chart 5An Earnings-Led Advance… Chart 6…Buttressed By Resilient Residential Investment… As a reminder, these Big Box retailers are highly levered to the ebbs and flows of residential investment and the latest GDP print should sustain the recent bid under S&P HIR prices (top & middle panels, Chart 6). Tack on the roughly $75/tbf jump in lumber prices since the early-April trough (not shown), and profits benefit from a dual lift: rising volumes and firming selling prices. The DIY avalanche is real and not likely to dissipate any time soon as a consequence of the coronavirus-induced working from home pervasiveness. Yet, HIR has run too far too fast and is due for a consolidation phase. One yellow flag is the recent fall in existing home sales, despite the all-time lows in mortgage rates brought back by the Fed’s ZIRP. The middle panel of Chart 7 shows that if the home sales decline continues in the summer months, then HIR sales will face stiff headwinds as remodeling activity suffers a setback. In addition, in previous recessions the inventory of homes for sale has surged, but at the current juncture only a small jump in inventories is visible (inventories shown inverted, top panel, Chart 7). Were that trend to gain steam, it could put downward pressure to high-flying HIR equities. Chart 7…But Soft Home Sales Are An Issue… Chart 8…And The Tick Down In Our HIR Model Is A Yellow Flag The industry’s net earnings revision ratio has climbed to multi-year highs and warns that analyst optimism is excessive, which is contrarily negative (bottom panel, Chart 7). Our macro driven HIR model does an excellent job in encapsulating all the moving parts and its recent tick down is worrisome (Chart 8). Nevertheless, given that this has been a profit-led advance, HIR have a large valuation cushion. The relative forward P/E is trading near a market multiple and below the historical mean (bottom panel, Chart 5). Netting it all out, we are compelled to put the S&P HIR index on our downgrade watch list and institute a stop at the 10% return mark in order to reflect softness in our HIR macro model, a hook down in existing home sales and a high profit growth bar that sell-side analysts have set for the coming year (middle panel, Chart 5). Bottom Line: While we remain overweight the S&P HIR index it is now on downgrade alert. We also set a stop at the 10% return mark in order to protect profits for our portfolio. Stay tuned. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HOMI – HD, LOW. Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Insight Report, “Pocketing Gains In Oil/Gold Pair Trade” dated June 10, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Don’t Turn A Blind Eye To Geopolitical Risks” dated June 8, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Inflection Point” dated March 16, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “The Darkest Hour Is Just Before The Dawn” dated March 23, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “New SPX Target” dated April 20, 2020, and “Gauging Fair Value” dated April 27, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 6 https://us.spindices.com/indices/equity/sp-500-growth#data-constituents Current Recommendations Current Trades Strategic (10-Year) Trade Recommendations Size And Style Views June 3, 2019 Stay neutral cyclicals over defensives (downgrade alert) January 22, 2018 Favor value over growth April 28, 2020 Stay neutral large over small caps June 11, 2018 Long the BCA Millennial basket The ticker symbols are: (AAPL, AMZN, UBER, HD, LEN, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, TSLA, V).
Highlights US dry gas production – the gas traded on futures exchanges and consumed by firms and households – is expected to fall ~ 2.5% this year to 89.7 bcf/d. Consumption will be down ~ 4% to 74.3 bcf/d. High carryout stocks from a warmer-than-normal winter mean US natgas storage will be at a record 4 TCF by November. This is close to demonstrated peak capacity of 4.3 TCF. We expect US benchmark Henry Hub futures prices to average $2.00/MMBtu in 2H20, assuming a normal winter (Chart of the Week). This is slightly lower than current futures’ levels. A deeper round of demand destruction from a second wave of COVID-19 remains a risk to commodities generally. Our base case assumes accommodative policy globally will spur a recovery in gas demand next year. This will push benchmark US prices into the $2.25-$2.50/MMBtu range, which also is below the level futures currently are trading. Weather-related risk is peaking right now. The early start to the hurricane season will keep demand for storage gas elevated into October. Local-distribution companies will be planning for normal winter temperatures, which would be colder than last year. Feature Our modeling, shown in the Chart of the Week, leads us to expect natgas futures to average $1.92/MMBtu and $2.22/MMBtu this year and next, respectively. US natgas prices will recover slowly in 2H20 and pick up steam in 2021 as demand recovers and LNG export growth resumes. However, we do not expect prices to rally to the extent futures currently are pricing in, nor as much as the US EIA expects. The NYMEX benchmark natgas futures, which call for delivery of pipeline quality dry gas at Henry Hub, LA, were on track to average close to $2.00/MMBtu this year and $2.64/MMBtu next year earlier this week.1 The EIA, for its part, is forecasting $2.04/MMBtu and $3.08/MMBtu for 2020 and 2021, respectively. Our modeling, shown in the Chart of the Week, leads us to expect natgas futures to average $1.92/MMBtu and $2.22/MMBtu this year and next, respectively. Our natgas price models use the EIA’s fundamental inputs – supply, demand and working gas storage levels – and temperature and financial variables to explain and forecast prices, including 10-year average heating-degree days, and US Treasury rates. Chart of the WeekUS Natgas Prices Recover Slowly On the supply side, the rate of growth in US natgas production started rolling over in 4Q19, well before COVID-19 was even an issue for the market. A warmer-than-normal winter last year weakened prices sufficiently to cause natgas production in the US shales to roll over from a high of 86 billion cubic feet per day (bcf/d) in 4Q19, to 84 bcf/d in the first five months of 2020. Shales account for ~ 90% of total US gas production. In and of itself, this is a relatively small impact, reflecting more the unintended inventory accumulation following last winter. Shale-Gas Production Rolls Over The decade-long shale-gas production surge led by the Marcellus formation in the US Appalachian Mountain region and, more recently, the Permian basin in Texas, which together account for ~ 60% of US gas production, ended – for the time being – in 4Q19 (Chart 2). Total natgas production in the Lower 48 states rose 11% in 2019 to 95.6 bcf/d, and is expected to fall ~ 2% this year to 93.7 bcf/d. Chart 2Shale-Gas Production Rolled Over Following A Warm 2019-20 Winter Natgas production is sensitive to the level of US short-term rates. The financial variables in our model indicate natgas production is sensitive to the level of US short-term rates, which the Fed has been maintaining at low levels since the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) to battle disinflation. Natgas is a derived demand – it is used to heat buildings and generate electricity, e.g. – so anything that lifts demand will benefit supply (Chart 3). In our modeling, we find natgas production is an explanatory variable for natgas consumption, but not vice versa, suggesting that the supply side is aggressively pricing to meet demand, and increase market share at the expense of coal-fired generation (Chart 4). Chart 3US Natgas Production, Consumption Are Sensitive to US Treasurys Chart 4Low Rates Accelerate Coal's Market Share Loss To Natgas Shale-gas production also is being weakened in the US by the collapse in oil prices, particularly in the Permian basin, where associated natural gas output has been surging (Chart 5).2 Close to 500 Bcf of natural gas was flared in the Bakken and Permian plays.3 This means the collapse in crude-oil prices on net is lowering CO2 emissions associated with flaring in Texas and North Dakota.4 Chart 5Associated Gas Production Falls As Crude Oil Prices Weaken Chart 6Warm Winter Destroys Natgas Demand Gas Consumption Growth Slows The US EIA expects working gas in storage to reach 4 TCF, a record, by the start of the heating season in November. Gas consumption was hammered by a much warmer-than-average winter last year (Chart 6). This left the level of working gas in storage at ~ 2 TCF by the end of March 2020, when the heating season ended (Chart 7). Natgas working storage has continued to increase every month since, and now stands just below 3 TCF, according to the EIA’s latest estimate. The US EIA expects working gas in storage to reach 4 TCF, a record, by the start of the heating season in November. The latest estimate of demonstrated peak storage capacity is 4.26 TCF, which raises the possibility a warm winter this year could lead to a full-storage event.5 Should this happen, markets would begin pricing the probability – not the possibility – of negative natural gas prices in more than just local markets lacking pipeline takeaway capacity or sufficient storage to accommodate local supply and demand imbalances. Chart 7US Working Gas In Storage Continues To Build Toward 4 TCF Negative natgas prices would further exacerbate the risk of more sharp curtailments in oil and gas capex – in addition to the $400 billion projected by the International Energy Agency (IEA) last month, which would cut shale-oil and -gas capex by 50%.6 This could set up a huge rally in hydrocarbons generally, oil and gas in particular, should it occur. Beware Disorderly Gas Markets As US natgas working storage fills going into the winter heating season, markets will once again be watching to see if the CFTC and CME are capable of maintaining orderly terminations of trading under physical-market stress, which a full-storage event certainly qualifies as. At the end of April, we noted the disorderly termination of trading in WTI futures delivering in May to Cushing, OK, was among the proximate causes of futures falling to -$40.32/bbl – that’s $40.32/bbl below $0.00/bbl – prior to the contract going off the board. Partly, we contend, this was the result of a failure of the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the CME Group, which operates WTI crude oil and Henry Hub natgas futures markets, to ensure only bona fide hedgers with the capacity to make or take delivery of the physical commodity being traded via futures contracts were left in the market as these contracts went to delivery. As US natgas working storage fills going into the winter heating season, markets will once again be watching to see if the CFTC and CME are capable of maintaining orderly terminations of trading under physical-market stress, which a full-storage event certainly qualifies as. Another failure to ensure an orderly termination of trading would add another impediment to sourcing capital for oil and gas producers – many producers chose to or are forced to hedge – which would exacerbate a tightening of supply in the medium term (2 to 3 years hence). Bottom Line: We expect natgas futures delivering to Henry Hub, LA, to average $1.92/MMBtu and $2.22/MMBtu this year and next, respectively, based on our proprietary models using fundamental and financial explanatory variables. Upside risks to the forecast are a stronger-than-expected demand recovery, which sees residential, commercial, industrial and electric-generation demand reviving sharply. A global pick-up that increased demand for LNG also would rally US gas prices sharply. To the downside, another round of demand destruction from a second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic would press prices lower. As US working gas in storage increases, the risks of a full-storage event rises. This will force market participants to price in a higher probability of negative prices, which also would have a deleterious impact on capex and, thus, future supplies. Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger Associate Editor Commodity & Energy Strategy HugoB@bcaresearch.com Fernando Crupi Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy FernandoC@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Overweight US shale E&P companies are bringing back some of their shut-in production as WTI prices remain above $35/bbl. According to Rystad Energy, more than 300k b/d of previously shut-in production is already coming back online as of June. Nonetheless, rig count remains at its lowest level since 2009 and prices are not high enough to incentivize additional drilling. Our estimates suggest the return of shut-in production will pale compared to the drop in production from natural decline rates over the coming months. Base Metals: Neutral In its June Global Economic Prospects, the World Bank revised its emerging market and developing economies real GDP growth estimates for 2020 to -2.5%, a 6.6pp downward revision from its January 2020 projections. On the other hand, China’s credit numbers continue to move up, reaching 30% of nominal GDP in May (Chart 8). Going forward, the recovery in base metals hinges on the speed at which the stimulus reaches the real economy. On average, it takes somewhere between 4 to 9 months for metals to react to surges in China’s TSF. Precious Metals: Neutral Gold prices traded between $1,675/oz and $1,760/oz since April. Our fair-value model suggests prices could trade slightly below this range (Chart 9). However, risks of renewed US-China tensions are rising rapidly, which could keep gold well-bid. BCA Research’s China Investment strategists believe these risks will reach new height over the summer as pressure on Trump’s election campaign intensifies.7 Mounting geopolitical risks could hurt risk assets and benefit gold as a hedge against equity volatility. Ags/Softs: Underweight July Ethanol futures have shown substantial strength in the past two months, but the outlook remains gloomy. With over 30% of US fuel ethanol plants being idled during the pandemic, as prices and margins increase, an increase in supply is likely. Gasoline demand might have less room to grow as most individuals keep working from home. Supporting this is EIA’s STEO outlook which sees the ethanol market oversupplied in 2020, with consumption expected to average 800k b/d in 2020 and production to average 880k b/d. Chart 8Chinese Credit Growth To Rise Chart 9Gold Slightly Above Fair Value Footnotes 1 Pipeline-quality dry natural gas has had all impurities (metals, sulfur compounds, etc.) and non-methane liquids removed so that its heat content is ~ 1,010 BTUs per cubic foot. The NYMEX futures taken to delivery at Henry Hub, LA, require physical gas to meet the specifications “set forth in the FERC-approved tariff of Sabine Pipe Line Company.” 2 TThe correlation between US natgas and oil prices declined substantially since 2009. Our model, based on WTI prices and 10-year US treasury yields only, suggests Henry Hub prices’ elasticity to changes in oil prices dropped by more than 50% post-GFC. On the other hand, US yields are now much closely related to natural gas prices. The disconnection between Henry Hub and WTI prices is largely a result of the large increase in shale gas and associated gas production. Strong oil prices –which are determined globally – incentivized higher output by US E&Ps. This led to a surge in the volume of associated gas in an already saturated domestic gas market. 3 Please see Lingering Oil-Demand Weakness Will Fade, which we published November 21, 2019, and discusses flaring in the Permian and Bakken basins. 4 Please see "U.S. oil fields flared and vented more natural gas again in 2019: data" published by reuters.com February 3, 2020. 5 Please see Underground Natural Gas Working Storage Capacity published by the EIA May 29, 2020, for additional detail. 6 Please see The Covid-19 crisis is causing the biggest fall in global energy investment in history, published by the IEA May 27, 2020. The Agency notes, “… after the Covid-19 crisis brought large swathes of the world economy to a standstill in a matter of months, global investment is now expected to plummet by 20%, or almost $400 billion, compared with last year.” Oil and gas investment is projected to fall more than 30%. 7 Please see BCA Research's China Investment Strategy Report entitled Watch Out For A Second Wave (Of US-China Frictions) published June 10, 2010, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Trade Recommendation Performance In 2020 Q1 Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed In 2020 Summary of Closed Trades
Highlights Risks assets have entered a FOMO-driven mania phase that could last for a few more weeks. Markets are ignoring the particularities of this recession and are treating the post-lockdown activity snapback as a V-shaped recovery. A weaker than expected global recovery and rising geopolitical tensions between the US and China are the two primary risks that will weigh on EM risk assets after this mania phase runs out of steam. We are upgrading EM sovereign and corporate credit from underweight to neutral within a global credit portfolio. Within EM, local rates will perform well in both risk-on and risk-off phases. Feature The recovery in global risk assets has entered a fear-of-missing-out, or FOMO, mania phase. Like any mania, this one could last longer and go further than any fundamental analysis could presume. Investors who are long or cannot afford to stay on the sidelines should play this rally with tight stop points. Investors with longer time horizon should wait for a pullback in EM equities and currencies to buy. Within EM, local rates offer the best risk-reward profile. A recovery in global trade and mainland industrial sectors is necessary for EM equities and currencies to rally on a sustainable basis. The global equity rally has taken place amid a shrinking forward EPS. The top panel of Chart I-1 demonstrates that even the ever-bullish bottom-up analysts have been cutting their expectations of the level of corporate 12-month forward earnings per-share. As a result, the global forward P/E ratio has spiked to a 18-year high (Chart I-1, bottom panel). Chart I-1An Unprecedented Divergence: Surging Stocks Prices Amid Plunging Forward EPS Levels Chart I-2EM Forward EPS Level Has Been Falling Chart I-2 illustrates that the same phenomenon is true for EM equities. Their forward EPS has been contracting and their forward P/E has jumped to a decade high. Any overdrive in asset prices without supporting fundamentals can last for a while but typically ends with a crash. This FOMO-driven mania is unlikely to be any different. It is fair to say that during the March carnage, many investors operated on a “sell now, think later” principle. Since the rally began, they have switched to a “buy now, ask questions later” attitude. As this rally persists, global stocks and credit will become overbought and expensive. At that point, any negative shock could produce a sharp pullback that would likely devolve into another nasty selloff as investors shift back to a “sell now, think later” mentality. The Narratives Driving The Rally The narratives supporting this mania are simple and seem to be both accepted and embraced by a growing number of investors. We agree with some and disagree with others: Economies around the world are opening, which will ensure that an economic recovery will follow. Our interpretation: Surely as confinement policies are eased, activity will improve. However, in our opinion, this should not come as a surprise to investors. This is especially pertinent for the trend-setting US stock market. With US equity valuations not particularly cheap, the market was never pricing in extended lockdowns. Hence, it appears strange to us that markets have so exuberantly cheered the reopening of the economy. Looking forward, the key to the medium-term (six-month) equity outlook is the shape of the recovery following the initial partial normalization. The latter presently looks V-shaped because as stores and businesses reopen economic activity is bound to improve. Yet the odds are that following this initial normalization, the shape of the recovery is most likely to be U-shaped. For what it’s worth, manufacturing PMIs in export-oriented economies like Korea, Japan and Taiwan made new lows in May (Chart I-3). We are not suggesting these indicators will not improve in the months ahead; they surely will. Nevertheless, a marginal rise in diffusion indexes like PMIs from extraordinary depressed levels do not signify a profit recovery. This recession differs from previous ones as the level of business activity has dropped below breakeven points for more businesses than it did in other recessions. When a company operates below its breakeven level, a marginal rise in sales may not be sufficient to improve its debt-servicing capacity, hiring and capital spending intentions. However, it seems markets are ignoring the particularities of this recession and are treating the post-lockdown activity snapback as a V-shaped recovery. This is why we feel risk assets are in a FOMO-driven mania phase, where fundamentals do not matter. Authorities around the world are stimulating, with the US pumping enormous amounts of fiscal and credit stimulus into the economy (Chart I-4, top panel). Chart I-3Asian Manufacturing PMIs Made New Lows In May Chart I-4An Unparalleled Global Money Boom Chart I-5China Is Ramping Up Stimulus China has finally embarked on aggressive stimulus. The National People’s Congress has set the monetary policy objective for 2020 as follows: Substantially accelerate the growth of broad money supply and total social financing (Chart I-4, bottom panel). Our interpretation: Indeed, government stimulus worldwide is massive. Yet, it is hard to know if it will be sufficient to produce a V-shaped recovery. The rise in money supply at the moment is being offset by the drop in the velocity of money. As a result, nominal GDP levels are extremely low. That said, last week we upgraded our growth outlook for China because of the above-mentioned aggressive policy stimulus. It is possible that China’s credit and fiscal impulse will reach about 15% of GDP before year-end (Chart I-5). What presently deters us from recommending outright long positions in China-related plays is the escalating US-China confrontation and the risk of a relapse in global stocks. Central banks around the world both in DM and EM are monetizing debt and injecting immense liquidity into the system. Our interpretation: Correct, but equally relevant is investors’ animal spirits. The latter will determine whether and when these liquidity injections leak into risk assets. For now, it seems that once again central banks’ actions have been successful in lifting asset prices, despite poor fundamentals. Equity valuations are cheap, especially outside the US. This is especially true given the low risk-free rate. Our interpretation: We agree that EM equities are cheap, something we have been highlighting since mid-March (Chart I-6). Yet valuations are not a good timing tool, as they can stay depressed so long as profits are not worsening. Meanwhile, US equities are expensive (Chart I-7). Critically, we argued in a recent report that equity multiples depend not only on the risk-free rate but also on the equity risk premium (ERP). Chart I-6EM Equities Are Cheap Chart I-7US Stocks Are Expensive Given the immense ambiguities investors are facing with respect to both the business cycle and economic, political and geopolitical trends, the ERP should be at the upper end of its historical range. Hence, the discount factor – the sum of the risk-free rate and the ERP – should be reasonably high. In this context, US equity valuations are rather expensive, despite the very low risk-free rate. In short, the expensive US stock market has until very recently been the locomotive of this rally. If US share prices had not rallied hard in the past two months, EM and other international bourses would not have caught a bid. The Fed’s public debt monetization is a structural, not near-term negative for the greenback. The US dollar is expensive and will depreciate a lot due to unrestrained fiscal and monetary stimulus in the US. Our interpretation: The US dollar is one standard deviation expensive (Chart I-8) and EM currencies have become cheap (Chart I-9). Chart I-8US Dollar Valuations Are Elevated Chart I-9EM Currencies Are Cheap Chart I-10EM Currencies And Stocks Correlate With Industrial Metals We do not disagree with the view that the US dollar is vulnerable in the long term due to the Federal Reserve’s aggressive debt monetization and that the Fed will eventually fall behind the inflation curve. Yet inflation is not imminent, and the Fed’s public debt monetization is a structural, not near-term negative for the greenback. As such, these potholes for the US dollar may not be pertinent in the next several months. Critically, Chart I-10 illustrates that EM currencies move with industrial metals prices, and EM stocks correlate with global materials stocks. The common driver of all of these markets is global growth in general and China’s industrial sectors in particular. In short, a recovery in global trade and mainland industrial sectors is necessary for EM equities and currencies to rally on a sustainable basis. Investors are underinvested in global equities in general and cyclical plays in particular. Our interpretation: Indeed, we showed last week that institutional equity investors had been skeptical of this rally. What has driven or supercharged this equity rally since late March has been unsophisticated retail investors. They have been opening up broker accounts worldwide and aggressively trading since March lockdowns. We cited a few pieces of anecdotal evidence confirming this phenomenon in last week’s report. However, it seems that institutional investors in recent weeks have capitulated by raising their risk exposure in general and their exposure to cyclical plays in particular. This explains the recent surge in cyclical equities and currencies. Bottom Line: The narratives driving this rally are only partially correct. Markets are ignoring the particularities of this recession and are treating the post-lockdown activity snapback as a V-shaped recovery. A weaker than expected global recovery and rising geopolitical tensions between the US and China are the two primary risks that will weigh on EM risk assets after this FOMO-driven mania phase runs out of steam. Nuances To Beware Of There are several nuances about the market’s internals and characteristics that we would like to draw investors’ attention to: There is mixed evidence as to whether China’s economy in general and its industrial sectors in particular have entered a sustainable recovery. First, examining the Taiwanese manufacturing PMI data could help in assessing the growth outlook for both the mainland economy and for global trade. The basis is that Taiwan has done extremely well by avoiding COVID-19 outbreaks and lockdowns. Therefore, there are no domestic reasons for weak output growth. In addition, its manufacturing sector is very export-oriented, with about 40% of exports destined for mainland China. PMI export orders for Taiwan's aggregate manufacturing and its three key sectors plunged to new lows in May (Chart I-11). This includes both the electronic optical (semiconductor) and basic materials sectors. The latter correlates well with global materials stocks. There has so far not been a bullish signal from this indicator (Chart I-11, second panel). Second, China’s domestic A-share market in general and its cyclical sectors in particular have not yet broken out (Chart I-12). Given China was the first nation to exit from lockdowns, its share prices should be the first to signal a sustainable economic recovery. Yet onshore share prices have been rather subdued. China’s economy will eventually stage a recovery later this year. Our point is that global cyclicals might have run ahead of themselves by pricing in a recovery too early. Chart I-11Taiwanese Manufacturing PMIs In May: New Lows Across All Industries Chart I-12Chinese Onshore Share Prices Are Not Flagging An Imminent Recovery Equity market and sector leadership changes occur during selloffs or at the inception of rallies. Chart I-13 illustrates EM relative stock prices versus DM along with the global equity index. Over the past 25 years, there have been several major leadership changes between EM and DM. And all of them occurred during selloffs in global share prices. Chart I-13EM Versus DM Equity Leadership Rotations Took Place During Selloffs Similarly, the relative performance of global growth versus value stocks experiences trend reversals during global bear markets (Chart I-14). Chart I-14Global Growth Versus Value Leadership Rotations Occurred During Bear Markets Chart I-15EM Could Outperform DM For A Few Weeks Leadership of US equities and global growth stocks did not change during the March crash nor during the following two-month rally from the bottom. Only in the past week or so have US equities and global growth stocks begun to lag EM bourses and global value, respectively (Chart I-15). In brief, the latest leadership rotation from US to EM did not occur during the selloff or at inception of the rally – i.e., it does not fit the typical profile of sustainable leadership reversal. As such, it may not be enduring. The internals of this rally are consistent with the fact that it might already be at a late stage. During rallies, laggards are the last to catch a bid. Contrarily, during selloffs, outperformers are the last to be liquidated. For example, US growth stocks were the last ones to be liquidated in both the 2015-early-2016 and 2018 selloffs. When the decade-long leaders – US growth stocks – were finally stamped out, it marked the bottom of those selloffs. We are upgrading EM sovereign and corporate credit from underweight to neutral within a global credit portfolio. The Fed’s purchases of US bonds will likely continue pushing investors into EM credit markets. Using an analogous framework for this rally, the latest extraordinary spike in the laggards such as EM, Europe and both value and cyclical stocks could be a sign of bear capitulation, and could signify the final phase of this equity rally. Bottom Line: There are several nuances to the current equity market rally, but investors seem reluctant to consider them amid a FOMO-driven mania. Investment Considerations The FOMO-driven rally could last for several more weeks. Afterwards it will be followed by a major setback. Investors who are long or cannot afford to stay on the sidelines should play this rally with tight stop points. Investors with longer time horizon should wait for a pullback in EM equities and currencies to buy. Chart I-16EM Local Rates Offer Value We are making the following adjustments and changes to our strategy and trade recommendations: In regard to our EM versus DM asset allocation strategy, we are making one change: we are upgrading EM sovereign and corporate credit from underweight to neutral within a global credit portfolio. The Fed’s purchases of US bonds will likely continue pushing investors into EM credit markets. Consistently, we are closing two positions: (1) our short EM corporate and sovereign credit / long US investment-grade corporate bond trade; and (2) our long Asian investment-grade /short high-yield corporate bond trade. Within the EM credit space, we continue to favor sovereigns versus corporates – a strategy recommended on April 23. We are still reluctant to strategically upgrade EM stocks versus DM ones even though odds of EM outperforming DM stocks are high in the coming weeks. In light of the potential FOMO-driven rally, to protect profits we are closing the following two currency positions: Take profits on short BRL/long USD trade. It was initiated on November 29, 2019 and has produced a 19% gain. Book profits on short SGD/long JPY position. This recommendation has generated a 2.3% gain since its initiation on June 8, 2018. We are still maintaining shorts in the following EM currencies: CLP, ZAR, TRY, IDR, PHP and KRW. They could continue rallying in the near term but will relapse afterwards. We are also structurally short low beta currencies: the RMB and the Saudi riyal. Within EM, local rates offer the best risk-reward profile: they will perform well in both risk-on and risk-off phases. Real bond yields remain somewhat elevated in many EMs, as shown in Chart I-16. We continue to receive long-term rates in Mexico, Colombia, Russia, Ukraine, India, Pakistan, Malaysia, China and Korea, as well as 2-year rates in South Africa. Their central banks will reduce policy rates much further. In addition, several of these local bond markets will benefit from ongoing quantitative easing by their central banks. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
Dear Client, In lieu of our regular report next week, we will be sending you a Special Report on China from Matt Gertken, BCA Research’s Chief Geopolitical Strategist. Matt will discuss whether China’s President Xi Jinping is losing his political mandate. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights The pandemic is likely to have a more severe impact on Main Street than Wall Street, which helps explain why stocks have rallied off their lows even as bond yields have remained depressed. Equity investors are hoping that central banks will keep rates lower for longer, while fiscal easing will revive demand. The end result could be lower bond yields within the context of a full employment economy – a win-win for stocks. In the near term, these hopes could be dashed, given bleak economic data, falling earnings estimates, and rising worries about a second wave of the pandemic. Longer term, an elevated equity risk premium and the likelihood that the pandemic will not have a significantly negative effect on the supply side of the economy argue for overweighting stocks over bonds. Negative real rates will continue to support gold prices. A weaker dollar later this year will also help. Divergent Signals Chart 1Conflicting Signals Global equities have rallied 24% off their March lows. The S&P 500 is down only 12% year-to-date and is trading close to where it was last August. In contrast, bond yields have barely risen since March. The US 10-year note currently yields 0.63%, down from 1.92% at the start of the year. The yield on the 30-year bond stands at a mere 1.3%. While crude oil and industrial metal prices have generally tracked bond yields, gold prices have rallied alongside equities (Chart 1). It would be easy to throw up one’s hands and exclaim that markets are behaving schizophrenically. Yet, we think it is possible to reconcile these seemingly divergent price patterns in a way that sheds light on where the major asset classes are likely to go in the months ahead. Two important points should be kept in mind: Bonds and industrial commodities tend to reflect the outlook for the real economy (i.e., Main Street) whereas stocks reflect the outlook for corporate earnings (i.e., Wall Street). The two often move together but can occasionally diverge in important ways. Stock prices and bond yields will tend to move in tandem when deflationary pressures are intensifying; however, the two often move in opposite directions when monetary policy is becoming more accommodative. The former prevailed in early March whereas the latter has been the dominant force since central banks have opened up the monetary spigots. The Real Economy Is Suffering The current economic downturn will go down as the deepest since the Great Depression. The IMF expects global GDP to contract by 3% this year, compared with a flat reading in 2009. GDP in advanced economies is projected to fall by 6%, twice as bad as in 2009 (Chart 2). Chart 2Severe Damage To The Global Economy This Year Unemployment rates are also likely to reach the highest levels since the 1930s. The US unemployment rate spiked to 14.7% in April. Even that understates the true increase in joblessness. The labor force has shrunk by 8 million workers since February. If everyone who had left the labor force had been considered unemployed, the unemployment rate would have jumped to nearly 19% (Chart 3). Unemployment among less-skilled workers rose more than among the skilled. Joblessness also increased more among women than men (Chart 4). Chart 3Increase In Joblessness Is Understated Chart 4Unemployment Has Risen More For Less Skilled Workers And Women The one silver lining is that unlike in past recessions, temporary layoffs have accounted for the vast majority of job losses (Chart 5). This suggests that the links between firms and workers have yet to be severed. As businesses reopen, the hope is that most of these workers will be able to return to their jobs, fueling a rebound in spending. Chart 5Temporary Layoffs Account For Most Of The Recent Increase In Unemployment Risks Of A Second Wave Will that hope be realized? As we discussed last week, the virus that causes COVID-19 is highly contagious – probably twice as contagious as the one that caused the Spanish flu.1 While some social distancing measures will persist even if governments relax lockdown orders, the risk is high that we will see a second wave of infections. Even if a second wave ensues, we do not expect stocks to take out their March lows. In many places, the second wave could come on top of a first wave that has barely abated. This is precisely what happened during the Spanish flu pandemic (Chart 6). Stock prices and credit spreads have closely tracked the number of Google queries about the coronavirus (Chart 7). If the number of new infections begins to trend higher, concern about the pandemic will deepen. This makes us somewhat wary about the near-term direction of risk assets. Chart 6The Lesson From The Spanish Flu: The Second Wave Could Be Worse Than The First Chart 7Joined At The Hip March Was The Bottom In Equities Nevertheless, even if a second wave ensues, we do not expect stocks to take out their March lows. This is partly because the cone of uncertainty around the virus has narrowed. We now know that the fatality rate from the virus is around 1%-to-1.5%, which makes COVID-19 ten times more deadly than the common flu, but still less lethal than SARS or MERS, let alone some avian flu strains which have mortality rates upwards of 50%. A few treatments for the virus are on the horizon. Gilead’s remdesivir appears to be effective in treating COVID-19. Blood plasma injections also look promising. A vaccine developed by researchers at the University of Oxford has been shown to be safe on humans and effective against COVID-19 on rhesus monkeys. Production of the vaccine has already begun, and if it works well on humans, the Oxford scientists expect it to be widely available by September.2 The Stock Market Is Not The Economy Then there is the issue of Main Street versus Wall Street. US equities account for over half of global stock market capitalization. Tech and health care are the two largest sectors in the S&P 500. The former has benefited from the shift towards digital commerce in the wake of the pandemic, while the latter is a highly defensive sector that has gained from the flurry of interest in new treatments for the disease (Chart 8). Chart 8AUS Equity Sectors: Winners And Losers From The Pandemic (I) Chart 8BUS Equity Sectors: Winners And Losers From The Pandemic (II) Even within individual sectors, the impact on Wall Street has been more muted than on Main Street. For example, spending on consumer discretionary goods and services has plummeted across the real economy over the past few months. Yet, this has not hurt equity investors as much as one might have expected. Amazon accounts for 55% of the retail sector’s market capitalization. Home Depot is in second place by market cap. Home Depot’s stock is trading near an all-time high, buoyed by increased spending on home improvement projects by people stuck at home. McDonald's, which is benefiting from the shift to take-out ordering, is the largest stock in the consumer services sector (followed by Starbucks). Contrary to the claim that the stock market is blissfully ignorant of the mounting economic damage, those sectors that one would expect to suffer from a pandemic-induced downturn have, in fact, suffered. Airline stocks, which account for less than 2% of the industrials sector, have plunged. The same is true for cruise ship stocks. Bank stocks have also been beaten down, reflecting fears of heightened loan losses. Likewise, lower oil prices have undercut the stocks of energy exploration and production companies (Chart 9). At the regional level, non-US stocks, with their heavy weighting in deep cyclicals and financials, have underperformed their US peers. Small caps have also lagged their large cap brethren, while value stocks have trailed growth stocks (Chart 10). Chart 9Sectors Expected To Suffer From A Pandemic-Induced Downturn Have, In Fact, Suffered Chart 10Non-US Stocks, Small Caps, And Value Stocks Have Underperformed Tech stocks are overrepresented in growth indices, which helps explain why growth has outperformed value. Tech companies also tend to carry little debt while sporting large cash holdings. Companies with strong balance sheets have greatly outperformed companies with weak ones since the start of the year (Chart 11). Chart 11Firms With Strong Balance Sheets Have Excelled Relative To Weak Ones Chart 12Real Rates Have Come Down This Year In addition, growth companies have disproportionately benefited from the dramatic decline in real interest rates (Chart 12). A drop in the discount rate raises the present value of a stream of cash flows more the further out in time those cash flows are expected to be realized. What Low Bond Yields Are Telling Us Doesn’t the decline in real long-term interest rates signal that future economic growth will be considerably weaker? If so, doesn’t this nullify the benefit to growth companies in particular, and the stock market in general, from a lower discount rate? Not necessarily! While lockdowns have led to a temporary drop in aggregate supply, they have not severely undermined the long-term productive capacity of the economy. Unlike during a war, no factories have been destroyed. And while heightened unemployment could lead to some atrophying of skills, the human capital base has remained largely intact. Chart 13 shows that output-per-worker eventually returned to its long-term trend following the Great Depression. Chart 13No Clear Evidence That The Great Depression Lowered Long-Term Trend Growth What the pandemic has done is made some forms of capital obsolete. We probably will not need as many cruise ships or airplanes as we once thought. But these items are not a huge part of the capital stock. And while some brick and mortar stores will disappear, this was part of a long-term shift toward a digital economy – a shift that has been raising productivity levels, rather than lowering them. Demand Is The Bigger Issue So why have long-term real interest rates fallen so much? The answer has more to do with demand than supply. Investors are betting that the pandemic will force central banks to keep interest rates at ultra-low levels for a very long period of time. All things equal, such an extended period of low rates might be necessary if the pandemic causes households to increase precautionary savings and prompts businesses to cut back on investment spending for an extended period of time. All things are not equal, however. As discussed in greater detail in Box 1, if real interest rates fall by enough, aggregate demand could still return to levels consistent with full employment since lower interest rates would discourage savings while encouraging capital expenditures. What if interest rates cannot fall by enough because of the zero-lower bound? In that case, fiscal policy would have to pick up the slack. Either taxes would need to be cut so that the private sector becomes more eager to spend, or the government would need to undertake more spending directly on goods and services. When interest rates are close to zero, worries about debt sustainability diminish since debt can be rolled over at little cost. In the end, the economy could end up in a new post-pandemic equilibrium where real interest rates are lower and fiscal deficits are larger. Applying Theory To Practice Framed in this light, we can make sense of what has happened over the past few months. The drop in long-term bond yields in February and early March was driven by falling inflationary expectations and rising financial stress. Yields then briefly jumped in mid-March as panicky investors dumped bonds in a mad scramble to raise cash. Not surprisingly, stocks suffered during this period. The Federal Reserve reacted to this turmoil by cutting rates to zero. It also initiated large-scale asset purchases, which injected much needed cash into the markets. In addition, the Fed dusted off the alphabet soup of programs created during the financial crisis, while launching a few new ones in an effort to increase the availability of credit and reduce funding costs. Other central banks also eased aggressively. As Chart 14 illustrates with a set of simple examples, even a modest decline in long-term interest rates has the power to significantly raise the present value of future cash flows. To compliment the easing in monetary policy, governments loosened fiscal policy (Chart 15). The point of the stimulus was not to raise GDP. After all, governments wanted most non-essential workers to remain at home. What fiscal easing did do was allow many struggling households and businesses to meet their financial obligations, while hopefully having enough income left over to generate some pent-up demand for when businesses did reopen their doors. Chart 14What Happens To Earnings During A Recessionary Shock? Chart 15Will It Be Enough? Ultimately, equity investors are hoping for an outcome where fiscal policy is eased by enough to eventually restore full employment while interest rates stay low well beyond that point in order to induce the private sector to keep spending: A win-win combination for stocks. Chart 16Gold Prices Move In The Opposite Direction To Real Rates The discussion above can also explain the divergent moves in commodity prices. Most industrial metals are consumed not long after they are produced. This makes industrial metal prices highly sensitive to the state of the global business cycle. In contrast, almost all of the gold that has ever been unearthed is still around. This makes gold an anticipatory asset whose price reflects expectations about future demand. Since owning gold does not generate any income, the opportunity cost of holding gold is simply the interest rate (Chart 16). When real interest rates rise, as they did briefly in early March when deflationary fears intensified, gold prices tend to fall. When real interest rates decline, as they did after central banks slashed rates and restarted large-scale QE programs, gold prices tend to rise. Investment Conclusions The current environment bears a passing resemblance to the one that prevailed in late 2008. Following the stock market crash in the wake of Lehman’s bankruptcy, the S&P 500 rallied by 24% between November 20, 2008 and January 6, 2009 to reach a level of 935. Had you bought stocks on that day in January, you still would have made good money over a 12-month horizon. However, you would have lost money over a 3-month horizon since the S&P 500 ultimately dropped to as low as 667 on March 6. During that painful first quarter of 2009, the economic surprise index remained firmly below zero, while earnings estimates continued to drift lower, just like today (Chart 17). As noted above, we do not expect stocks to take out their March 2020 lows, but a temporary sell-off would not surprise us, especially against a backdrop where a second wave of the pandemic looks increasingly likely. Chart 17Is Today A Replay Of Late 2008/Early 2009? Chart 18Favor Equities Over Bonds Over A 12-Month Horizon Despite our near-term concerns, we continue to think that stocks will outperform bonds over a 12-month horizon. The equity risk premium remains elevated, particularly outside the US (Chart 18). While non-US stocks do not have as much exposure to tech and health care, they do benefit from very cheap valuations. European banks are trading at washed out levels (Chart 19). The cyclically-adjusted PE ratio for EM stocks is near record lows (Chart 20). Investors should consider increasing exposure to non-US equities if global growth begins to reaccelerate this summer. Chart 19European Banks Are Trading At Washed Out Levels Chart 20EM Stocks Are Very Cheap Given our view that central banks want real rates to stay low and will refrain from tightening monetary policy even if inflation eventually begins to rise, investors should maintain above-average exposure to gold. A weaker US dollar later this year will also help bullion. Box 1The Role Of Monetary And Fiscal Policy Following Savings Shocks Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Risks To The U,” dated May 7, 2020. 2 Charlie D’Agata, “Oxford scientists say a vaccine may be widely available by September,” cbsnews (April 30, 2020). Global Investment Strategy View Matrix Current MacroQuant Model Scores
In the month of April, the performance of markets strongly bore the imprint of central banks' actions. The Fed was the most aggressive central bank in the world, thus assets directly exposed to the Fed’s programs experienced the largest abnormal returns. For…