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Highlights Global corporate bond markets have seen both ups and downs so far in 2018. Credit spreads in the developed markets and emerging markets, both for investment grade (IG) and lower quality credit tiers, tightened in January. This was followed by a sharp widening of spreads in the two months after the "VIX spike" in early February. Spreads have begun narrowing again in April, but remain above levels that began the year in all major countries with one notable exception - U.S. high-yield. Feature The volatility in corporate credit is a reflection of the growing list of investor worries, coming at a time when yields and spreads still remain near historically low levels in almost all markets. Topping that list is the fear that low unemployment and rising inflation rates will force the major central banks to maintain a more hawkish (or, at least, less dovish) policy bias in the medium term, even with the global economy losing some upside momentum so far this year after a robust 2017. Add in other concerns over U.S. trade policy (i.e. tariffs), U.S. fiscal policy (i.e. wider deficits, more U.S. Treasury issuance) and even signs of potential stresses in global funding markets (i.e. wider LIBOR-OIS spreads), and it is no surprise that more uncertain investors have become less comfortable with the risks stemming from credit exposure. This can be seen in the volatility of mutual fund and ETF flows into riskier bond categories like U.S. high-yield (HY), which saw a whopping -$19.8bn in outflows in Q1/2018, but has already seen +$3.8bn in inflows in April - possibly in response to the surprisingly strong results seen in Q1 U.S. corporate earnings reports.1 Against this backdrop of more uncertainty in credit markets, we are presenting our latest update of the BCA Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) Chartbook. The CHMs are composite indicators of balance sheet and income statement ratios (using both top-down and bottom-up data) that are designed to assess the financial well-being of the overall non-financial corporate sectors in the major developed economies. A brief overview of the methodology is presented in Appendix 1 on page 16. In this CHM Chartbook, we introduce new country coverage to our CHM universe, adding a bottom-up measure for Japan and both top-down and bottom-up CHMs for Canada. After these new additions, we now have CHMs covering 92% of the Barclays Bloomberg Global Corporate Bond Index universe, based on country market capitalization weightings. The broad conclusion from the latest readings on our CHMs is that global credit quality has enjoyed a cyclical improvement in response to the coordinated growth seen in 2017, but with important geographical differences (Chart 1): Chart 1Global Corporates: Now Supported##BR##By Growth, Not Central Banks Credit quality in the U.S. has improved on the back of the solid performance of U.S. profits over the past year, but high leverage and low interest coverage suggest corporates are highly vulnerable to any slowing in economic growth Underlying credit quality in euro area corporates remains supported by low interest rates and the easy money policies of the European Central Bank (ECB), but the CHMs are trending in the wrong direction due to poor profitability metrics - most notably, a very depressed return on capital - and rising leverage among core European issuers U.K. corporate health continues to benefit from a very robust short-term liquidity position, although sluggish profitability and weak interest coverage suggest potential medium-term problems beneath the surface Japanese corporates are in good shape, enjoying strong interest coverage and low leverage, although absolute levels of profitability remain much lower than the other countries in our CHM universe Canadian corporate health has enjoyed some modest cyclical improvement, but low absolute levels on profitability and interest coverage, combined with high leverage, point to underlying risks. Looking ahead, the tailwinds that have supported corporate health and the performance of global corporate debt in the past couple of years - a coordinated cyclical upturn driving solid earnings growth, with low inflation allowing monetary policies to stay accommodative - are becoming headwinds. Inflation expectations are moving higher in most countries, fueled by low unemployment rates and rising oil prices. This is most evident in the U.S., where the additional boost to growth from fiscal stimulus will keep the Fed on its rate hiking path over the next year. A mild inflation upturn is also visible in the euro area and Japan, where the ECB and Bank of Japan (BoJ) are already contributing to a less favorable liquidity backdrop for corporates by reducing the pace of their asset purchases. That trend is projected to continue over the next year, to the detriment of credit market returns that have been boosted by those unusual monetary policies (see the bottom panel of Chart 1). At some point within the 6-12 months, more hawkish central banks will act to slow global economic growth, triggering a more fundamental underperformance of corporates versus government bonds. For now, the backdrop remains supportive, but the clock is ticking as the end of this credit cycle draws closer. U.S. Corporate Health Monitors: A Cyclical Improvement, But Underlying Problems Persist Our top-down CHM for the U.S. has been flashing "deteriorating health" for fourteen consecutive quarters dating back to the middle of 2014 (Chart 2). Yet there has been a modest cyclical improvement seen in many of the individual CHM ratios over the past couple of years - most importantly, return on capital and profit margins - helping push the top-down level to close to the zero line. It is important to note that, due to delays in the reporting of the data used in the top-down U.S. CHM, the latest reading is only from the 4th quarter of 2017.2 A move into "improving health" territory in the 1st quarter of 2018 would require additional increases in cyclical profitability measures. This will be difficult to achieve with U.S. economic growth cooling off a bit in the first three months of 2018 (although the enactment of the Trump corporate tax cuts will likely help support the after-tax measure of margins used in the top-down CHM as 2018 progresses). From a longer-term perspective, the fact that the top-down CHM return on capital metric is well off the post-crisis peak is a disturbing development, given that non-financial corporate profit margins have been stable over the same period. This suggests a more fundamental problem with weak U.S. productivity growth and lower internal rates of return on marginal investments for companies, which is a longer-term concern for U.S. corporate health when the economic growth backdrop becomes less friendly. The bottom-up versions of the U.S. CHMs for IG corporates (Chart 3) and HY companies (Chart 4) have also both improved, with the HY indicator sitting right at the zero line. This confirms that the signal from our top-down CHM is being reflected in both higher-rated and lower quality companies. Yet the longer-term problems of high leverage and low returns on capital are not going away. In particular, HY interest and debt coverage remains near multi-decade lows. Chart 2Top-Down U.S. CHM:##BR##A Cyclical Pause Of A Structural Deterioration Chart 3Bottom-Up U.S. Investment Grade CHM:##BR##A Bit Better, But Still Deteriorating What is rather worrying is the fact that IG interest coverage has fallen in recent years, despite high profit margins and historically low corporate borrowing rates. This indicates that the stock of debt has now expanded to a point where the interest expense required to service that debt is eating up a greater share of corporate earnings, even at a time when profit growth is still quite strong. This will raise downgrade risk if corporate borrowing rates were to increase significantly or the U.S. experiences a major economic downturn. Interest costs would rise while earnings deteriorate, which would push interest coverage to historic lows, as was discussed in a recent report from our flagship Bank Credit Analyst service.3 For now, we are still recommending playing the growth phase of the business cycle by staying overweight U.S. corporate debt within global fixed income portfolios (Chart 5). The time to scale back positions will come after U.S. inflation expectations rise to levels consistent with the Fed's inflation target (i.e. when both the 5-year/5-year forward U.S. TIPS breakeven and the outright 10-year TIPS breakevens reach 2.4-2.5%). This will give the Fed confidence to follow through on its rate hike projections, pushing the funds rate to restrictive levels. In turn, that will dampen future corporate profit expectations and raise risk premiums on U.S. corporate bonds. With those breakevens now sitting at the highest point in four years (2.19%), that tipping point for credit markets is drawing nearer. Chart 4Bottom-Up U.S. High-Yield CHM:##BR##A Strong Cyclical Improvement Chart 5The Beginning Of The End Of##BR##The U.S. Credit Cycle Euro Corporate Health Monitors: Getting Better Thanks To The Economy & The ECB Our top-down Euro Area CHM remains in "improving health" territory, as it has for the entire period since the 2008 crisis. The trend in the indicator has been steadily worsening since 2015, however, and the top-down CHM now sits just below the zero line (Chart 6). The steady deterioration of the top-down CHM is due to declines in profit margins, return on capital and debt coverage. This is offsetting the high and rising levels of short-term liquidity and interest coverage, which are being supported by the easy money policies of the ECB (negative short-term interest rates, liquidity programs designed to prompt low-cost bank lending, and asset purchase programs that include buying of corporate bonds). Compared to the top-down CHMs we have constructed for other countries, there is an even longer lag on data availability from euro area government statisticians. Our top-down euro area CHM is only available to the 3rd quarter of 2017 and, therefore, does not reflect the strong performance of the euro area economy at the end of last year. Our bottom-up versions of the euro area CHMs for IG (Chart 7) and HY (Chart 8), which are based on individual earnings data that is more timely, both show that corporate health continued to improve at the end of 2017. Return on capital for euro area IG issuers (both domestic issuers and foreign issuers in the European bond market) is between 8-10%, similar to the level in the bottom-up U.S. IG CHM but higher than the equivalent measures in our U.K., Japan and Canada CHMs. Both interest coverage and liquidity ratios for euro area IG are also close to U.S. IG levels. The euro area HY CHM is also showing improvement though declining leverage, although these results should be interpreted with caution as the sample size is relatively small. Chart 6Top-Down Euro Area CHM:##BR##Health Improving At A Diminishing Rate Chart 7Bottom-Up Euro Area##BR##Investment Grade CHMs: Steady Improvement Within the Euro Area, our bottom-up CHMs show that the gap has closed between issuers from the core countries versus those in the periphery, but all still remain in the "improving health" zone. (Chart 9). Return on capital, interest coverage and debt coverage are higher in the core, while liquidity is better in the periphery despite more highly levered balance sheets. Chart 8Bottom-Up Euro Area High-Yield CHMs:##BR##Steady Improvement As Leverage Declines Chart 9Bottom-Up Euro Area IG CHMs:##BR##Core Vs. Periphery While all of our euro area CHMs are indicating healthier balance sheets, that fact is already discounted in the low yields and tight spreads for both IG and HY issuers (Chart 10). Euro area corporates are also benefitting from the supportive bid of the ECB, which buys credit as part of its asset purchase program. We expect the ECB to fully taper its government bond purchases by the end of 2018, while continuing to reinvest the proceeds of maturing debt in 2019 and beyond. It is less clear what the ECB will do with its corporate bond buying program, and there has been some speculation that the ECB could leave its corporate program untouched while tapering the government purchases. That would be a scenario that could be keep euro area credit spreads tight, although the momentum in the euro area economy will likely be the more important driver of credit valuations. If the soft patch in growth seen in the first few months of 2018 continues in the coming months, euro area credit spreads would likely widen, although by less than if the ECB was not buying corporates. We have preferred to own U.S. corporates over Euro Area equivalents for much of the past year. The gap between our top-down CHMs for the U.S. and Europe has proven to be an excellent directional indicator for the relative performance of U.S. credit vs. Europe (Chart 11). That CHM gap continues to favor U.S. credit, although that has not yet flowed through into any meaningful outperformance of U.S. IG and HY corporates. Chart 10European Credit:##BR##Spreads & Yields Have Bottomed Out Chart 11Relative Top-Down CHMs##BR##Still Favor The U.S. Over Europe U.K. Corporate Health Monitor: Still No Major Causes For Concern The top-down U.K. CHM remains firmly in the "improving health" zone, led by cyclical improvements in profit margins and interest coverage, combined with very strong short-term liquidity (Chart 12). Return on capital remains near 20-year lows around 6%, however, mirroring levels seen in this ratio in the CHMs for other countries. Profit margins remain at 20%, near the middle of the historical range. U.K. credit has benefitted from highly stimulative monetary policy settings by the Bank of England (BoE) - especially after the 2016 Brexit shock when the central bank not only lowered policy rates, but announced bond buying programs for both Gilts and U.K. corporates. The BoE has begun to take back some of that monetary easing by raising rates 50bps since last November. However, we remain skeptical that the central bank will be able to deliver much additional tightening over the rest of 2018 given sluggish growth, falling realized inflation and lingering Brexit uncertainties weighing on business confidence. An environment of mushy domestic growth and a stand-pat central bank would typically be good for risk assets like corporate credit. Yet both yields and spreads have been drifting higher in recent months, mirroring the trends seen in other global corporate bond markets (Chart 13). It is difficult to paint a scenario of renewed outperformance of U.K. credit versus Gilts without a fresh catalyst like accelerating growth or monetary easing. Yet the combination of accommodative monetary policy with a solid credit backdrop leads us to maintain a neutral recommendation on U.K. corporate debt. Chart 12U.K. Top-Down CHM:##BR##Steady Improvement Chart 13U.K. Credit: Yields & Spreads##BR##Are Drifting Higher Japan Corporate Health Monitor: A Small, But Very Healthy, Market We introduced our Japan CHM in a recent Weekly Report.4 We only have a bottom-up version of the indicator at the moment, as there is not the same consistency of top-down data sources as are available in other countries. Furthermore, the Japanese corporate bond market is small, as companies have historically chosen to borrow money (when needed) through bank loans and not bond issuance. This means that we have a much more limited amount of data available with which to build a Japan CHM, which covers only 43 companies and only goes back to 2006. The Japan CHM has been in "improving health" territory for the past decade, driven by very healthy liquidity levels and rising return on capital and interest coverage (Chart 14). While the trend in the latter two ratios differs from what is shown in all CHMs for other countries, it is noteworthy that Japan's return on capital has risen to a "high" level (6%) that is similar to the current historically low levels in the U.S. and Europe. The comparison is even less flattering when looking at profit margins, which have been steadily improving over the past five years but are only around 6% - less than half the levels seen in the bottom-up IG CHMs for the U.S. and Europe. Turning to the corporate spread, it has slightly widened in 2018, but by a far smaller amount than seen in other corporate bond markets (Chart 15). We have shown that Japanese corporate spreads are highly correlated to the level of the yen. The direct effect is obvious, as a stronger yen will hurt the competitiveness and profitability of the exporter-heavy Japanese non-financial corporate sector. Yet a strong yen is also a reflection of the market's belief in the next move by the BoJ with regards to Japanese monetary policy. On the front, we continue to expect the BoJ to maintain a very dovish policy stance, with no change in the central bank's interest rate targets (both for short-term interest rates and the 10yr JGB yield). The bigger issue will be if the current softness in the Japanese economic data turns into a broader trend, which would damage corporate profits and likely result in some widening of Japanese credit spreads.  Chart 14Japan Bottom-Up CHM:##BR##Very Healthy Chart 15Japanese Corporates##BR##Will Continue To Outperform JGBs Canada Corporate Health Monitor: In Good Shape On A Cyclical Basis In this CHM Chartbook, we are introducing new CHMs for Canada. Like Japan, this is another relatively small market. Canadian corporates represent a slightly larger share of the Bloomberg Barclays Global Investment Grade Corporate Bond Index (5%) than Japan (3%). The average credit rating of the Canadian corporate bond index is A2/A3, which is higher quality than that of the U.S. IG index with but with similar credit spreads over their respective government bonds. However, due to the lack of liquidity and market accessibility, Canadian corporates are considered a niche market that has not gained much attention from global investors. We created both a top-down and bottom-up version of the Canada CHM. For the bottom-up CHM, we gathered data on 85 companies from both the Bloomberg Canadian dollar-denominated IG and HY indices. We combined IG and HY bonds into one set of data given the small sample sizes of each category, which also allows us to compare it to the top-down Canadian CHM that does not distinguish by credit quality. Both Canadian CHMs are firmly in the "improving health" territory (Chart 16). Unsurprisingly, these CHMs have shown a reasonably strong correlation to oil prices, which are a key driver of the Canadian economy through the energy sector. This can be seen in the deterioration in the CHMs after global oil prices collapsed in 2014/15, and the subsequent improvement as oil prices have recovered over the past couple of years. Going through the individual CHM components, leverage has been steadily rising and currently sits around 100%. While Canada's problems with high household debt levels are well known, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) noted in its March 2018 Quarterly Review that high Canadian corporate leverage could also pose a future problem for the Canadian economy.5 Among the other CHM ratios, return on capital and profit margin have fallen for nearly a decade, although there has been some moderate improvement of late thanks to higher oil prices. Debt coverage and interest coverage are also showing some very moderate recovery due to low interest rates - a trend also observed in other countries where central banks have maintained easy monetary policy. Canadian corporate bond valuations are not cheap at the moment, with the index spread around decade-lows of 100bps (Chart 17). BCA's commodity strategists expect global oil prices to continue climbing over the next year, which should support Canadian corporate valuations versus government bonds given past correlations. We also expect the Bank of Canada to continue to slowly raise interest rates over the next year, as well, mimicking moves we also anticipate from the U.S. Federal Reserve. Given the cyclical signs of improving corporate health from our Canadian CHMs, and our bearish views on Canadian government bonds, we are upgrading our recommended allocation on Canadian corporates to overweight while downgrading governments. This is strictly a carry trade, however, as we do not anticipate spreads narrowing much from current levels. Chart 16Canada CHMs:##BR##Cyclical Improvements, Structural Problems Chart 17Canadian Corporates:##BR##No Cyclical Case For Spread Widening Yet Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Appendix 1: An Overview Of The BCA Corporate Health Monitors The BCA Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) is a composite indicator designed to assess the underlying financial strength of the corporate sector for a country. The Monitor is an average of six financial ratios inspired by those used by credit rating agencies to evaluate individual companies. However, we calculate our ratios using top-down (national accounts) data for profits, interest expense, debt levels, etc. The idea is to treat the entire corporate sector as if it were one big company, and then look at the credit metrics that would be used to assign a credit rating to it. Importantly, only data for the non-financial corporate sector is used in the CHM, as the measures that would be used to measure the underlying health of banks and other financial firms are different than those for the typical company. The six ratios used in the CHM are shown in Table 1 below. To construct the CHM, the individual ratios are standardized, added together, and then shown as a deviation from the medium-term trend. That last part is important, as it introduces more cyclicality into the CHM and allows it to better capture major turning points in corporate well-being. Largely because of this construction, the CHM has a very good track record at heralding trend changes in corporate credit spreads (both for Investment Grade and High-Yield) over many cycles. Top-down CHMs are now available for the U.S., euro area, the U.K. and Canada. The CHM methodology was extended in 2016 to look at corporate health by industry and by credit quality.6 The financial data of a broad set of individual U.S. and euro area companies was used to construct individual "bottom-up" CHMs using the same procedure as the more familiar top-down CHM. Some of the ratios differ from those used in the top-down CHM (see Table 1), largely due to definitional differences in data presented in national income accounts versus those from actual individual company financial statements. The bottom-up CHMs analyze the health of individual sectors, and can be aggregated up into broad CHMs for Investment Grade and High-Yield groupings to compare with credit spreads. In 2018, we introduced bottom-up CHMs for Japan and Canada. With the country expansion of our CHM universe, we now have coverage for 92% of the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Corporate Bond Index (Appendix Chart 1). Table 1Definitions Of Ratios##BR##That Go Into The CHMs Appendix Chart 1We Now Have CHM Coverage For 92% Of##BR##The Developed Market Corporate Bond Universe 1 http://lipperalpha.financial.thomsonreuters.com/2018/04/high-yield-bond-funds-attract-investor-attention/ 2 The majority of data used in the top-down U.S. CHM comes from the Federal Reserve's quarterly Financial Accounts Of The United States Z1 release (formerly known as the Flow of Funds), which is typically published in the third month following the end of a quarter. Thus, those data inputs for Q1/2018 will not be available until June. 3 Please see Section II of the March 2018 edition of The Bank Credit Analyst, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Sticking With The Plan", dated March 13th 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 5 https://www.bis.org/publ/qtrpdf/r_qt1803.htm 6 Please see Section II of The Bank Credit Analyst, "U.S. Corporate Health Gets A Failing Grade", dated February 2016, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. Appendix 2: U.S. Bottom-Up CHMs For Selected Sectors The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Trade wars have captured investors' imaginations, but slowing global growth is a more immediate risk for both asset prices and exchange rates. As reflationary forces ebb, slow global growth will help the dollar stage a rally. EUR/USD and GBP/USD could decline over the next two quarters. We are selling EUR/CHF. The AUD has more downside. It is too early to close short AUD/NZD or AUD/JPY. Short EUR/CAD with a first target at 1.44. Feature The growing trade skirmish between China and the U.S. has been blamed for much of the movements in risk assets this year. We do not deny that this has been a very important factor determining the price action of all assets globally; after all, market participants are trying to price in the probability that global supply chains as we currently know them will be forever impaired. If this were to happen, global growth and profits would suffer considerably. This warrants a risk premium, one that is currently being estimated by the market.1 As we have written in recent weeks, this will be a stop-and-go pattern, and behind-the-scene negotiations between China and the U.S. will remain intense until June, when the U.S. tariffs are in fact implemented. However, trade wars are not the only force impacting asset returns today. Global asset prices are also slowly adjusting to a world where reflation is ebbing and where growth may be dipping from its heightened state. This week, we examine the role of liquidity and how it is affecting growth,2 and the implications for various currency pairs. From Reflation To Less Growth Through most of 2016 and 2017, risk assets, EM plays, commodity prices and growth greatly benefited from a wave of global reflation implemented by monetary and fiscal authorities around the world in the wake of a market meltdown that culminated in January 2016. A great victim of this reflationary effort was the U.S. dollar. Once global growth and inflation perked up, the dollar sold off. The U.S. economy is not as levered to global growth as the rest of the world is, thus investors were attracted by greater shift in expected returns outside the U.S. than in the U.S. But how is this reflation story faring today? Global monetary policy is not as supportive as it once was as central banks are not adding to global base money as forcefully as before. For example, the Federal Reserve has begun the rundown of its balance sheet, and the real fed funds rate is closing in on the Laubach-Williams estimate of the neutral rate; the European Central Bank has begun tapering it asset purchases, the European shadow policy rate has increased by 400 basis points; and the Bank of Japan has not hit its JGB target of JPY80 trillion of purchases since mid-2016. Even the Swiss National Bank has not seen any increase in its sight deposits since mid-2017. We like to use excess money growth to measure the impact of these changes in base money growth. Excess money supply growth is measured as the difference between broad money supply growth and money demand as approximated by loan growth. As base money and deposits become scarcer in the banking system relative to the pool of existing loans, the liquidity position of commercial banks deteriorates. This deprives them of the necessary fuel to generate further loan growth down the road. Chart I-1 not only shows that excess money in the U.S., euro area and Japan has been decelerating sharply in recent months, but also that this decline points toward slowing global industrial activity, widening junk spreads and decline EM stock prices. Beyond quantity-based measures of liquidity, price-based measures are sending a similar signal. The widening in the LIBOR-OIS spread has now been well documented. It is true that technical factors such as the issuance of T-bills by the Treasury and the progressive move away from LIBOR as a key benchmark for the pricing of loans partly explain this phenomenon. However, this development is now spreading outside the U.S., with Australia in particular experiencing some especially sharp widening in the spread between deposit rates and the OIS. In fact, the LIBOR-OIS spread for the G-10 as a whole is now at its widest since 2012 (Chart I-2). This also portends a situation where liquidity is becoming scarcer than it once was. Chart I-1Deteriorating Liquidity Conditions Chart I-2Price Of Liquidity Is Increasing Growth is responding to these dynamics, and the softening in PMIs around the world was in full display this week. Interestingly, two bellwethers of global growth are showing especially clear signs of a slowing.3 In Korea, exports have greatly decelerated, industrial production is contracting and PMIs are well below 50 (Chart I-3). Taiwan is also showing some signs of weakness, as exports and export orders are both slowing sharply (Chart I-4). Chart I-3Korea: A Key Global Bellweather Is Slowing Chart I-4Taiwan Echoes Korea's Message This message is also being relayed by the Japanese economy. Japan's exports to Asia have been slowing sharply as well. As Chart I-5 illustrates, weak Japanese shipments to Asia correlate closely with a weak AUD/JPY, weak EM stock prices and widening junk spreads, suggesting that these specific shipments capture systematic developments behind global growth. Key growth-sensitive currencies are flashing a similar signal. As the top panel of Chart I-6 shows, NZD/JPY has historically rolled over and declined ahead of recessions, growth slowdowns or EM crashes. It has clearly weakened for eight months now. Meanwhile, the bottom panel of Chart I-6 shows the Swedish krona versus the euro. This cross is also a good leading indicator of global growth, and it is clearly pointing south. Chart I-5Japanese Exports Point To A Malaise Chart I-6NZD/JPY And EUR/SEK: Confirming The Risks Finally, one of our favorite gauges to measure the impact of reflation has substantially weakened: the combination of global growth and inflation surprises. This indicator clearly shows that after a massive upsurge in reflationary forces over the past two years, reflation is now waning (Chart I-7). Chart I-7Economic Surprises Are Declining If reflation is about pushing growth and prices upward, removing stimulus could have the opposite impact. While it is clear that global growth is slowing, what about inflation? We do not think that global inflation is set to slow significantly: global growth is unlikely to move back below trend, and the U.S. is experiencing increasingly potent domestic inflationary pressures supercharged by fiscal profligacy. That being said, the uptrend in global inflation is nonetheless set to flatten for now as our Global Inflation Diffusion Index based on consumer and producer prices across 27 economies has begun to fall, which normally points to lower global headline and core consumer prices (Chart I-8). Bottom Line: The market's attention has been captured by the dramatic flare-up in trade tensions between the U.S. and China, but a more imminent risk has been garnering less press: the decline of reflation. China sent the first salvo on this front; DM central banks have also slowly been either tightening outright or not expanding monetary aggregates as aggressively as before. As a result, global liquidity is tightening and global growth is slowing. Global inflation is also set to decelerate as well, suggesting the decline in economic activity will not be a real phenomenon only, but a nominal one as well. Key Currency Market Implications One of the key implications of lower global growth and ebbing inflationary pressures is likely to be a stronger dollar. As Chart I-9 illustrates, when our Global Inflation Diffusion Index declines and global inflationary pressures ebb, the dollar tends to strengthen. This makes sense: the dollar does best when global growth weakens, inflation slows and commodity prices soften. This time around, the case for a few quarters of dollar strength may be even better defined. U.S. inflation is unlikely to decelerate as much as non-U.S. inflation as U.S. capacity utilization is tighter, the U.S. labor market is at full employment and America is receiving an extraordinarily large amount of fiscal stimulus at this late stage of the business cycle. Chart I-8No Acceleration For Now In Global Inflation Chart I-9Ebbing Inflationary Pressures Will Help The Dollar Technical considerations suggest the dollar is well placed to take advantage of these dynamics. On a short-term basis, both our intermediate-term oscillator and 13-week rate-of-change measures have formed positive divergences with the DXY itself (Chart I-10). While the pattern does not look as bullish as the one registered in 2014, it evokes deep similarities with the 2011 formation. On a longer-term basis, the dollar is massively oversold, as measured by the 52-week rate of change measure. It is true that it managed to stay at similarly oversold levels for nearly a year in 2003, but back then the dollar was much more expensive than today: the U.S. current account deficit was 4.4% of GDP versus 2.4% today and the basic balance of payments deficit was at 3% of GDP versus 2% today (Chart I-11). It is reasonable that with these stronger fundamentals, the dollar will not need to hit as oversold levels as back then before staging a significant rebound. Chart I-10Positive Divergences For The Greenback Chart I-11Dollar Technicals And Valuations: 2003 Vs. Today With global growth slowing, especially in Asia, it is easy to paint a picture where the dollar only strengthens against EM and commodity currencies - the currencies most exposed to both global growth and this specific geographic area. However, while we do see downside in USD/JPY, we expect the greenback to rally against the euro toward EUR/USD 1.15. Our model for EUR/USD shows that the euro is trading 10% above its fair value determined by real rate differentials, the relative slope of yield curves and the price of copper relative to lumber (Chart I-12). In fact, since Europe is more levered to global economic activity than the U.S., these drivers are likely to deteriorate a bit further for the remainder of 2018. Chart I-12EUR/USD Is Vulnerable GBP/USD also looks set to experience a period of weakness against the greenback. Historically, GBP/USD and EUR/USD have been correlated. This is a simple reflection of the fact that the U.K. has a deeper economic relationship with the euro area than the U.S., and thus benefits from the same economic impulses as the eurozone. Chart I-13GBP/USD: ##br##Extremely Overbought Some pound-specific factors will also play against GBP/USD. As we argued last week, the British domestic economy is rather weak; this week's construction PMI confirmed this assessment.4 Additionally, the British basic balance of payments is in deficit anew. This is not only a reflection of the U.K.'s current account deficit of 4% of GDP, it also reflects the fact that FDI into the U.K. has been melting in response to uncertainty surrounding Brexit. This means the U.K. is dependent upon global liquidity to finance this large deficit. An environment where global growth is set to decelerate and where global liquidity is tightening will make it more expensive to finance this large hole. The fastest means to increase expected returns on British assets to attract foreigners' funds is to depreciate the pound today. Finally, the GBP's annual momentum has hit levels consistent with a reversal in cable (Chart I-13). Staying in Europe, another pair is currently interesting and devoid of taking on any USD risk: EUR/CHF. While we think EUR/CHF has more upside over the remainder of the economic cycle,5 this is unlikely to be the case in the second and third quarters of 2018. The Swiss franc tends to outperform the euro when reflationary forces retreat, when global growth slows and when FX volatility increases - all views we espouse for the coming quarters. Moreover, Switzerland's current account and basic balance-of-payment surpluses are 6.5% of GDP and 11.5% of GDP greater than that of the euro area, providing further attraction in a growth soft spot. Finally, EUR/CHF is massively overbought right now, pointing to heightened vulnerability to the economic risks highlighted above (Chart I-14). We are opening a short EUR/CHF trade this week. In the same vein, we remain bearish EUR/JPY. Finally, in previous reports, we highlighted the AUD as being the currency most at risk from any downshift in global growth.6 Despite its recent weakness, we think the AUD is likely to remain very vulnerable. We have been short AUD/NZD since last October, and we do believe this pair will retest 1.04 before forming a base. Australia is experiencing even less inflationary pressures than New Zealand, and is more exposed to slower global industrial production than its neighbor. Technically, AUD/NZD still has some downside. As Chart I-15 illustrates, the 13-week rate of change measure for AUD/NZD has not yet hit the kind of depressed levels associated with complete capitulation. In fact, the recent breakdown in momentum points toward such capitulation as being imminent. AUD/JPY too is not yet oversold enough to be a buy, especially in the context of slowing global growth. Thus, we continue to recommend investors stay short this pair. Chart I-14Technical Indicators Confirm ##br##The Fundamental Vulnerability Of EUR/CHF Chart I-15AUD/NZD Has A Little Bit More Downside Bottom Line: Ebbing reflationary forces suggest the trade-weighted dollar is likely to rally over the coming months. We do see upside for the USD against EM and commodity currencies, but against European currencies as well. Only the yen is anticipated to buck this trend. Within the commodity-currency complex, we foresee that the AUD will suffer the most, and the CAD the least. Within the European currency complex, we are selling EUR/CHF. We are not selling EUR/USD as we are already long the DXY. A Cyclical Opportunity To Sell EUR/CAD This trade is an attractive means to bet on global growth slowing, especially relative to the U.S. As we have argued, U.S. financial conditions have eased relative to the rest of the world, the U.S. is enjoying large injections of fiscal stimulus and it is less exposed to declining global growth. As a result, we anticipate the outperformance of the U.S. ISM to continue relative to global PMIs. Historically, this is an environment where EUR/CAD tends to depreciate (Chart I-16). This is because while 75% of Canadian exports go to the U.S., only 13% of euro area exports end up there. Thus, Canada is much more exposed to the U.S. business cycle than Europe, who is exposed to the rest of the world's. Domestic factor also argues in favor of shorting EUR/CAD. Canadian core inflation is in an uptrend, and at 2% is at the Bank of Canada's target. European core inflation meanwhile only stands at 1%. Moreover, Canada's unemployment's rate is already 0.5% below equilibrium, while the euro area's is 0.4% above such equilibrium (Chart I-17). Thus, European wages and service sector inflation is likely to continue to lag behind Canada's. As a result, we continue to expect the BoC to keep hiking in line with the Fed, or another three times this year. The same cannot be said for the ECB. Chart I-16EUR/CAD: A Play Global Vs. U.S. Growth Chart I-17No Slack In Canada, Plenty In Europe Making the trade even more attractive, EUR/CAD is currently trading at a premium on many metrics. First, our augmented interest rate parity models show that the EUR/CAD trades anywhere between 10-15% above fair value (Chart I-18).7 Relative productivity trends have been a reliable long-term indicator of the path for EUR/CAD. On this metric as well, EUR/CAD is trading at a significant 9% premium (Chart I-19). Finally, EUR/CAD has tended to trend in an inverse relationship with oil prices. Today, it is well above levels implied by various oil prices (Chart I-20). Chart I-18EUR/CAD Trades At A Premium To Rate Differentials... Chart I-19...At A Premium To Relative Productivity... In our view, a key factor explains these discounts: Fears regarding the future of the North American Free Trade Agreement. An abandonment of NAFTA would hurt Canadian growth and prompt the BoC to be much more dovish than we anticipate. However, while there will be some small tweaks to NAFTA, the probability of a major overhaul that deeply affects the North American supply chain has declined, as Canada and Mexico are being exempted from steel and aluminum tariffs and as the White House has softened its stance on the U.S. content of Canadian auto exports back to the U.S. Our Geopolitical team assesses that the probability of a major NAFTA overhaul has declined from 50% to less than 20%, especially as Trump now has bigger fish to fry with China. As a result of these improvements in negotiations, EUR/CAD is potentially set to decline toward 1.44 over the rest of 2018, especially as our oil strategists continue to expect Brent prices to average US$74/bbl this year. Meanwhile, the ratio of copper prices to oil prices, which has been a decent early directional indicator for this cross, suggests the timing is ripe to bet against euro/CAD (Chart I-21), especially as slowing global growth will further weigh on copper relative to oil. Chart I-20...And A Premium To Oil Chart I-21Where Copper-To-Oil Goes, So Does EUR/CAD Bottom Line: An attractive means to bet on slowing global growth while benefiting from the impact of the U.S.'s fiscal stimulus is to short EUR/CAD. Not only is this cross a play on the differential between international and U.S. growth, it is also currently trading at a large premium on various metrics. Dissipating risks that NAFTA will be abrogated in a major way are providing an attractive cyclical entry point to short EUR/CAD, with an initial target of 1.44. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Haaris Aziz, Research Analyst haarisa@bcaresearch.com 1 For more analysis on trade wars and the current China/U.S. spat, please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Are Tariffs Good or Bad For The Dollar?" dated March 9, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com as well as the Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Trump's Demands On China", dated April 4, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 We have already gone over the role of China at length to explain the global growth slowdown. For detailed discussions on the topic, Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "The Return Of Macro Volatility", dated March 16, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 3 For more indicators pointing toward slower global growth, Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Canaries In the Coal Mine Alert: EM/JPY Carry Trades", dated December 1, 2017 and "Canaries In the Coal Mine Alert 2: More On EM Carry Trades And Global Growth", dated December 15, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Do not Get Flat-Footed By Politics", dated March 30, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "The SNB Doesn't Want Switzerland To Become Japan", dated March 23, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "From Davos To Sydney, With a Pit Stop in Frankfurt", dated January 26, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 7 EUR/CAD trades 15% above a fair value model, that does not encapsulate the trend in the cross. If the recent cross is taken into account through a model that incorporates mean-reversion, EUR/CAD trades at a more modest 10% above its fair value. Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.S. has been mixed: ISM Manufacturing came in slightly weaker than expected at 59.3; However, ISM Prices Paid was a very strong number, 78.1, up from the previous 74.2; Services PMI and Non-Manufacturing ISM also disappointed expectations; The trade balance in February fell to US$ -57.6 bn; Initial jobless claims, however, came in much higher than expected at 242,000. The dollar is now up more than 2% from its February lows. This has been driven by slowing global growth, particularly in Korean and Taiwanese trade data. The greenback should fare well in this environment. Report Links: Do Not Get Flat-Footed By Politics - March 30, 2018 Are Tariffs Good Or Bad For The Dollar? - March 9, 2018 The Dollar Deserves Some Real Appreciation - March 2, 2018 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 European data was mixed: German retail sales disappointed, growing at a 0.7% monthly pace and a 1.3% annual pace; German Manufacturing PMI came in slightly lower than expected at 58.2; European unemployment dropped to 8.5% as expected; Headline inflation improved to 1.4% also as expected, but core inflation came in weaker than expected at 1%. The euro is set to experience a period of correction as inflation in the Eurozone remains weak and global growth is slowing, as Asian economic data increasingly shows. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 The Euro's Tricky Spot - February 2, 2018 From Davos To Sydney, With a Pit Stop In Frankfurt - January 26, 2018 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan has been mixed: Housing starts yearly growth outperformed despite coming in at -2.6%. The Nikkei manufacturing PMI surprised on the strong side, coming in at 53.1 However, the Markit Services PMI underperformed expectations coming in at 50.9. USD/JPY has been relatively flat this week. Overall, we expect that the yen will continue to strengthen, given that the market will continue to be rattled by the increasing a weakening in global growth. This risk off environment should benefit the yen. However, given the slowdown in Japanese economic data, the BoJ will eventually have to intervene to make sure that the rise in the yen does not derail the economic recovery and particularly, its inflation objective. Report Links: The Yen's Mighty Rise Continues... For Now - February 16, 2018 Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC! - January 12, 2018 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. has been mixed: Markit Manufacturing PMI outperformed expectations, coming in at 55.1. It also increased slightly from last month's reading. However PMI construction underperformed expectations substantially, coming in at 47. This is the lowest level in more than 2 years. GBP/USD has been relatively flat this week. Overall the latest construction PMI number confirms our analysis: the uncertainty caused by Brexit is weighing heavily on Britain's housing market. This weakness in the housing sector, coupled with a strong pound, will likely limit how high British interest rates can go. Therefore GBP/USD has downside on a tactical basis. Report Links: Do Not Get Flat-Footed By Politics - March 30, 2018 Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 The Euro's Tricky Spot - February 2, 2018 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Australian data was weak: The RBA's Commodity Index in SDR terms contracted by 2.1% annually, much more than the expected 0.1% contraction; Building permits contracted on a monthly basis at a rate of 6.2%, while also contracting at a 3.1% pace in annual terms; However, retail sales did pick up in monthly terms at a rate of 0.6%. At the monetary policy meeting on Tuesday, Governor Philip Lowe referenced the increase in short-term funding costs that have spilled over from the U.S. into foreign markets owing to higher volatility, particularly in Australia. An escalation of a trade war will also prove to be very damaging for the Australian economy, which is a large export-based and commodity-dependent nation. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 From Davos To Sydney, With a Pit Stop In Frankfurt - January 26, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 NZD/USD has been flat this week. Overall we expect this cross to weaken going forward, given that New Zealand is one of the most open economies in the G10, and thus, it stands to risks the most from both an increasing risk of trade wars and slowing global growth. Moreover, there are also some negative aspects of New Zealand on a more structural basis, as the neutral rate is set to be lowered. This is because the populist government is looking to lower immigration while also implementing a dual mandate for the central bank. All of these factors will cause the kiwi to suffer on a long term basis. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Data out of Canada was mixed: Manufacturing PMI came in line with expectations of 55.7; Exports and Imports for February came in at CAD 45.94 bn and CAD 48.63 bn, respectively, sinking the trade balance to CAD -2.69 bn. The CAD received a fillip on Tuesday as President Trump hopes to conclude preliminary negotiations for NAFTA by the end of next week. While the outcome for these negotiations remains uncertain, the Canadian economy is still in great shape, with a tight labor market, high wage growth and a closing output gap. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC! - January 12, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland has been mixed: Headline inflation outperformed expectations, coming in at 0.8%. Real retail sales yearly growth outperformed expectations, coming in at -0.2%. However, the SVME PMI underperformed expectations, coming in at 60.3. EUR/CHF has been relatively flat this week. Overall, we expect EUR/CHF to have further upside on a long-term basis. The Swiss economy is still weak and inflationary pressures are tepid. This means that any further appreciation by the franc will weigh heavily on the SNB's goals. While for now EUR/CHF could suffer as global growth declines, the SNB will fight this trend in order for them to achieve their inflation target. Thus, any rally in the CHF will prove temporary. Report Links: The SNB Doesn't Want Switzerland To Become Japan - March 23, 2018 Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 USD/NOK has been relatively flat this week. Overall, the krone should outperform most other commodity currencies given that oil should perform better than the rest of the commodity complex in the current environment. While all commodities would be affected by a possible slowdown in global growth and Chinese industrial production, oil will probably hold up the best given that advanced economies consume a greater proportion of oil than they do of other commodities, making oil less sensitive to gyrations in global industrial activity than metals. Moreover, the supply backdrop for oil remains more favorable than that of other commodities thanks to OPEC and Russia's production restrains. All of these developments should help the NOK outperform currencies like the NZD and the AUD. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC! - January 12, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Swedish data was disappointing: Manufacturing PM came in at 55.9, below last month's 59.9; New Orders increased annually only by 1.3% compared to 8.7% in January; Industrial production contracted in monthly terms by 0.5%, and grew annually by 5.7%, but it was still a deceleration relative to the previous 7.7% reading. The SEK has been weakening because of three factors: the talk of trade wars, the slowdown in the global manufacturing sector, and Sweden's housing bubble. While these risks are very real, Sweden's favorable macro backdrop of a cheap currency, a high basic balance of payments surplus and an economy operating above capacity mean that inflation will pick up meaningfully. This will prompt the SEK to rally once global growth can find its floor. Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Canaries In The Coal Mine Alert 2: More On EM Carry Trades And Global Growth - December 15, 2017 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights In this Weekly Report, we present our semi-annual chartbook of the BCA Central Bank Monitors. When the chartbook was last published in September 2017, the main message was that less accommodative monetary policy was required in the developed economies. This was largely driven by solid global growth and diminishing economic slack visible in measures like falling unemployment rates and rising capacity utilization. Since then, there have been multiple rate hikes in the U.S., single rate increases in Canada and the U.K., and a slowing of the pace of central bank asset purchases in the euro area and Japan. No other central banks have made any moves, however, with inflation still struggling to return to policymaker targets in most countries. A new element that central banks are dealing with is the increased financial market volatility seen in 2018. Yet the BCA Central Bank Monitors continue to point to a need for tighter monetary policy in all countries (Chart of the Week). This means policymakers are unlikely to "come to the rescue" of less stable financial markets through more dovish (and bond bullish) policy without evidence that slower global growth was leading to an easing of cyclical inflation pressures. Chart of the WeekGreater Divergences Between Our Central Bank Monitors Now Versus 2016/17 Feature An Overview Of The BCA Central Bank Monitors Chart 2The Cyclical Backdrop Remains Bond Bearish The BCA Central Bank Monitors are composite indicators designed to measure the cyclical growth and inflation pressures that can influence future monetary policy decisions. The economic data series used to construct the Monitors are not the same for every country, but the list of indicators generally measure the same things (i.e. manufacturing cycles, domestic demand strength, commodity prices, labor market conditions, exchange rates, etc). The data series are standardized and combined to form the Monitors. Readings above the zero line for each Monitor indicate pressures for central banks to raise interest rates, and vice versa. Through the nexus between growth, inflation, and market expectations of future interest rate changes, the Monitors do exhibit broad correlations to government bond yields in the Developed Markets (Chart 2). Currently, the Monitors are above the zero line for all countries for which we have built the indicator. This implies that the conditions are not yet present to expect a period of declining global bond yields driven by more dovish central banks. Yet differences in the trajectories of the Monitors have opened up. The BoE, RBA and RBNZ Monitors have fallen well off their peaks, while the Fed, ECB, BoC and even the BoJ Monitors are all still at or close to recent highs. In each BCA Central Bank Monitor Chartbook, we include a new chart for each country that we have not shown previously. In this edition, we show the Monitors plotted against our 12-Month Discounters, which measure the expected change in interest rates over the following year taken from OIS curves. Fed Monitor: Market Turbulence Not Yet Enough To Change Fed Plans Our Fed Monitor remains in the "tight money required" zone, signalling that cyclical pressures are still pointing toward additional Fed rate hikes (Chart 3A). FOMC officials are now expressing strong conviction that the Fed's growth and inflation forecasts for 2018 will be realized, and even upgraded those projections last month. That increased confidence comes amid signs that core inflation is finally moving higher after last year's surprising slump (Chart 3B). Chart 3AU.S.: Fed Monitor Chart 3BNo Spare Capacity In The U.S. The growth and inflation subcomponents of the Fed Monitor have both accelerated since our last Central Bank Monitor Chartbook was published last September. In particular, the inflation subcomponent is on the cusp of breaching the zero line for the first time since 2011 (Chart 3C). The Fed Monitor (unlike the other Central Bank Monitors) includes a Financial Conditions component that is rolling over from very elevated (i.e. supportive) levels. Chart 3CSteady Pressure On The Fed To Tighten, But More From Growth Than Inflation The sharp sell-off in U.S. equity markets seen since early February is a development that would typically give the Fed pause on the need to tighten monetary policy further. Yet there are no real signs - yet - that any slowing of U.S. growth is in the cards for the next few quarters. Leading indicators are still climbing, employment growth has been accelerating in recent months, and both consumer and business confidence remain around multi-year highs. The Fed is likely to deliver on its projection of an additional 50bps of rate hikes in 2018, which is already discounted in money markets (Chart 3D). Additional increases beyond that in 2019 are still likely to occur, barring any signs that the current financial market volatility is altering the current rising trends in growth and inflation. Chart 3DThe Fed Will Continue To Hike In 2018 & 2019 BoE Monitor: Diminishing Pressures To Hike The Bank of England (BoE) Monitor is drifting lower, but remains in the "tighter money required" zone as it has since late 2015 (Chart 4A). Despite that persistent signal, the BoE has raised the base rate only once over that period - in November of last year. On the surface, inflation pressures remain strong. The U.K. unemployment rate is well below NAIRU with an output gap that is now estimated to be closed (Chart 4B). Yet realized inflation has peaked, largely because the British pound is now up 9% off the post-Brexit 2016 lows. Rapid declines in pipeline price pressures (PPI, imported goods price inflation) point to additional slowing of CPI inflation in the next several months. Chart 4AU.K.: BoE Monitor Chart 4BTight Capacity In The U.K. Meanwhile, the economic picture looks mixed. Leading economic indicators have rolled over, as have cyclical measures like the manufacturing PMI and industrial production. Yet at the same time, recent readings on both consumer and business confidence have shown modest improvement. Looking at the breakdown of our BoE Monitor, both the growth and inflation sub-components of the indicator are now falling (Chart 4C). Given the decelerating path of leading economic indicators, and with the currency-fueled rise in U.K. inflation now starting to reverse, we think the BoE will be hard pressed to deliver more than the 41bps of rate hikes over the next year currently discounted in U.K. money markets (Chart 4D). Chart 4CGrowth & Inflation Components Of The BoE Monitor Are Slowing Chart 4DThe BoE Will Not Deliver More Hikes In 2018 Than Currently Discounted We continue to recommend an overweight stance on Gilts, which continue to trade as a "defensive" lower-beta alternative to U.S. Treasuries and core European debt, within dedicated global government bond portfolios. ECB Monitor: Tapering? Yes. Rate Hikes? No. Our European Central Bank (ECB) Monitor has been grinding higher over the past couple of years and broke sustainably above zero in July 2017 (Chart 5A). The broad-based cyclical economic upturn in the euro area has continued to absorb spare capacity, with the unemployment rate for the entire region now down to 8.6%, right at the OECD's NAIRU estimate (Chart 5B). Chart 5AEuro Area: ECB Monitor Chart 5BEuro Area Economy Now At Full Capacity Despite strong growth, headline (1.1%) and core (1.0%) inflation remain well below the ECB's target of "just below" 2%. This lack of upward momentum flies in the face of the inflation subcomponent of our ECB Monitor, which has been steadily moving higher for the past three years (Chart 5C). Chart 5CRising Pressure On ECB To Tighten Monetary Conditions The ECB remains on track to deliver some of the monetary tightening that our ECB Monitor is calling for later this year, but it will not be through interest rate hikes (Chart 5D). ECB officials have made it clear that a tapering of asset purchases will take place when the current program ends this September. However, it will take more evidence that inflation will sustainably return to the ECB's target before rate hikes will commence. Chart 5DECB Will Deal With Tightening Pressures First By Tapering Asset Purchases The recent softening of cyclical euro area economic data like manufacturing PMIs, combined with underwhelming inflation prints, justifies the ECB's cautiousness on rates. Although leading economic indicators are still pointing to another year of above-trend growth in 2018. The likelihood of a taper later this year leads us to recommend a moderate underweight stance on core European government bonds, but with a neutral stance on Peripheral European debt which benefits from an expanding economy. BoJ Monitor: Still Far Too Soon To Expect Any Policy Changes The Bank of Japan (BoJ) Monitor has inched into the "tighter money required" zone for the first time since 2007 (Chart 6A), thanks largely to a robust economy. Yet while growth has been enjoying strong momentum, inflation remains stuck below the BoJ's 2% target - even with record low unemployment and a positive output gap (Chart 6B). Chart 6AJapan: BoJ Monitor Chart 6BJapanese Inflation Still Too Low Japanese businesses remain reluctant to boost wages despite robust profitability and a tight labor market. This makes it difficult for the BoJ to hit the 2% inflation target even using extreme policy tools like negative interest rates and asset purchases. Yet even these policies are approaching limits. Liquidity in the Japanese government bond (JGB) market is severely impaired with the BoJ now owning nearly one-half of all outstanding JGBs. This is the main reason why the BoJ shifted from targeting a 0% yield on the 10-year JGB back in September 2016, aiming to target the price of bonds purchased instead of the quantity. With both the inflation and growth components of our BoJ Monitor are now above the zero line (Chart 6C), a case could be made for the BoJ to consider raising its yield target on the 10-year JGB. In our view, any shift in the BoJ yield curve target will only happen if the yen is much weaker (the 115-120 range), core inflation and wage growth both hit at least 1.5%, and global bond yields hit new cyclical highs (i.e. the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield approaching 3.5%). Chart 6CGrowth & Inflation Pressures Have Picked Up In Japan We continue to recommend an overweight stance on Japan, as the BoJ remains a long way from signaling to the markets that interest rate expectations must begin to rise (Chart 6D). Chart 6DThe BoJ Will Not Signal Any Change In Policy In 2018 BoC Monitor: Still Following The Fed The Bank of Canada (BoC) Monitor has stayed above the zero line since the beginning of 2017 (Chart 7A). The BoC has hiked rates three times since last summer, with Canada's robust growth justifying the tightening of monetary policy. Real GDP expanded by 3% in 2017, enough to push Canada's output gap into positive territory and drive the unemployment rate (5.8%) to below NAIRU (6.5%). As a result, both headline and core inflation are now back to the midpoint of the BoC's 1-3% target range (Chart 7B). Chart 7ACanada: BoC Monitor Chart 7BNo Spare Capacity In The Canadian Economy Growth has cooled a bit recently, though, most notably in consumer spending and housing data. In addition, the inflation component of the BoC Monitor has slowed and is diverging from the rising growth component (Chart 7C). These developments may be a sign that previous BoC hikes are starting to have an impact, although overall GDP growth remains well above trend and leading economic indicators are not slowing. Chart 7CA Divergence In The Growth & Inflation Components Of The BoC Monitor Looking ahead, the Trump administration's rising protectionist rhetoric is a potential threat to both Canada's economy and the value of the Canadian dollar. However, Canada was exempted from the recent tariffs imposed on U.S. steel and aluminum imports, suggesting that Trump may only seek a renegotiation, rather than a tearing up, of NAFTA. We continue to recommend an underweight stance on Canadian government bonds. Only 51bps of rate hikes are discounted over the rest of 2018 (Chart 7D), a pace that can be surpassed if the BoC follows its typical behavior of following the policy lead of the U.S. Fed, which is still expected to deliver 2-3 more rate hikes this year. Chart 7DThe BoC Will Continue Its Hiking Cycle This Year RBA Monitor: Lagging Behind While our Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) Monitor remains in "tighter policy required" territory, it has pulled back considerably over the past four months and is now near the zero line (Chart 8A). This move suggests that there is no imminent need to adjust monetary policy, given tepid inflation pressures. Despite the recent surge in employment growth, labor markets still have plenty of slack. Part time employment as a percentage of total employment and the underemployment rate are both near all-time highs. Wage growth is weak and a substantial recovery is unlikely given that real GDP growth slowed in Q4 and the output gap is still wide (Chart 8B). Chart 8AAustralia: RBA Monitor Chart 8BAustralian Inflation Remains Subdued Looking ahead, consumption is at risk. Real wage growth has been nonexistent, so households have supported their spending by reducing savings. However, the rate of increase for house prices has slowed and prices in Sydney actually declined in Q4. If overall house prices were to decline going forward, then the lack of a wealth effect boost would force already massively-indebted consumers to reverse the savings downtrend and cut spending. Both headline and underlying inflation remain below the RBA's target range of 2-3%, with policymakers expecting underlying inflation to reach 2% only in June of 2019 with just a gradual improvement in labor markets. The inflation component of our RBA Monitor has already declined significantly on the back of collapsing iron ore prices, softening survey-based inflation measures and cooling house prices (Chart 8C). Chart 8CThe Inflation Component Of The RBA Monitor Has Plunged As such, we maintain our overweight position on Australian government debt, as the RBA will not even deliver the one 25bp rate hike in 2018 currently discounted by markets (Chart 8D). Chart 8DThe RBA Will Not Deliver The Discounted Rate Hikes In 2018 RBNZ Monitor: No Inflation, No Rate Hikes Our Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) Monitor, which was the most elevated of all our Central Bank Monitors in last September's update, has plunged sharply since then (Chart 9A). Inflation remains stubbornly below the midpoint of the RBNZ's 1-3% target range, even with a tight labor market and no spare capacity in the New Zealand economy (Chart 9B). Chart 9ANew Zealand: RBNZ Monitor Chart 9BNZ At Full Employment, But Inflation Peaking Both the growth and inflation sub-components have fallen sharply, with the inflation measure now down below the zero line (Chart 9C). A firmer New Zealand dollar, the flipside of the weaker U.S. dollar, has played a large role in dampening traded goods price inflation. Chart 9CStrong NZ Inflation Pressures, But Growth May Be Peaking The February RBNZ Monetary Policy Report expressed an optimistic view on growth supported by elevated terms of trade, population growth, fiscal stimulus and low interest rates. Headline CPI inflation, however, is not projected to rise back to 2% level until 2020. Unsurprisingly, the RBNZ is signaling no change in policy rates until then, even with the central bank projecting the New Zealand dollar to weaken in the next couple of years. We have been recommending long positions in New Zealand government debt versus other developed market debt since last May. New Zealand bonds have outperformed strongly over that period, as markets have priced in no change in rates from RBNZ (Chart 9D) unlike other countries where rate hikes were repriced and, in some cases, delivered. With the RBNZ on hold for at least this year and likely much of 2019, we our staying long New Zealand government bonds. Chart 9DRBNZ Will Stay On Hold In 2018 Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Patrick Trinh, Associate Editor Patrick@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Fixed Income Asset Allocation: Global growth indicators remain solid, while inflation pressures continue to build. Central banks will remain focused on those factors, and not news-driven market volatility spikes, until the trends change. The cyclical environment still favors a below-benchmark duration stance for bond investors, favoring credit over government debt, but with lower risk-adjusted return expectations. U.K. Gilts: Bank of England hawkishness is increasing, but policymakers will be hard pressed to tighten more than is currently priced. Stay overweight Gilts in hedged global government bond portfolios. Position for a steeper Gilt curve by going long the 5yr in a 2yr/5yr/10yr butterfly trade. Feature Chart of the WeekStill A Bond-Bearish Backdrop Higher financial market volatility remains the most important investment theme for 2018, as investors continue to be fed a steady diet of worrisome headlines. Threats of a U.S. - China trade war, widening LIBOR-OIS spreads in the U.S., the ascent of trade and foreign policy hawks in the White House, troubles at Facebook hitting the market-leading technology stocks - all are just the latest reasons for investors to become more cautious on taking risk. Yet the ability of markets to shrug off, or succumb to, growing uncertainty will be related to two things - the momentum of global economic growth and the future direction of global monetary policy. On the former, the latest data releases have shown some moderation in the strong coordinated global growth upturn witnessed over the past year. Our aggregate measures such as the global PMI and global ZEW indices have dipped lower in the first few months of 2018. These indicators remain at levels suggesting growth is still in decent shape, even with some worsening in expectations (Chart of the Week). On the latter, the BCA Central Bank Monitors are still showing a growing need to tighten monetary policy further in the major developed economies. This continues to put upward pressure on government bond yields through rising inflation expectations and a higher expected path of short-term interest rates. Until there is evidence of a more meaningful downturn in global growth, bond yields will keep on drifting higher. We continue to recommend a below-benchmark overall portfolio duration stance for fixed income investors, favoring spread product over government bonds, while running below-average portfolio risk (i.e. tracking error) given more elevated levels of market volatility. The "TINA Trade" Is Now The "TISNA Trade" - There Is STILL No Alternative Central bankers remain on a path to normalize the extraordinary monetary accommodation of the past several years, led by their steadfast belief in the Phillips Curve at a time of low unemployment in most countries. Against this backdrop, government bond yields cannot fall enough to limit the damage from rapid equity market selloffs without much softer growth or inflation data that would alter the expected trajectory of policy rates. This implies a higher structural level of market volatility now relative to previous years, as we discussed in a recent Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report.1 Yet despite the signs of greater nervousness among investors, there is still a strong level of positive sentiment towards equities and bearish sentiment towards bonds according to the Market Vane indices (Chart 2). The latest edition of the widely-followed Bank of America Merrill Lynch Investor Survey also revealed a disconnect between the opinions of investors (worries over protectionism, trade wars, higher inflation and softer global growth) and actual positions (large equity overweight's favoring cyclical growth stocks).2 Investors seem to be "nervously complacent", staying long risk assets (equities, credit) and underweight safe havens (government bonds) but with a growing list of concerns. For now, this appears to be the most appropriate allocation, for the following reasons: Global growth is still generally strong. Our global manufacturing PMI remains close to the cyclical highs, although there was some pullback seen in the "flash estimates" for March in the euro area, Japan and the U.K. (Chart 3). The breadth of the current cyclical global upturn remains strong, with all eighteen countries in the composite index having a PMI in the "growth zone" above 50 (top panel). Chart 2Pro-Risk Sentiment,##BR##Despite More Volatile Markets Chart 3Global Growth##BR##Still Looks Good The OECD global leading economic indicator continues to accelerate, while the Citigroup global inflation surprise index is also picking up (Chart 4). These are pointing to continued upward pressure on global bond yields through higher real yields and faster inflation expectations, respectively. The global cyclical backdrop is boosting inflation. 75% of OECD countries are operating beyond full employment while capacity utilization rates in the developed economies are approaching 80% - the highest level since mid-2008 (Chart 5, top panel). Global oil prices should continue to grind higher, with BCA's commodity strategists now expecting the benchmark Brent oil price hitting $80/bbl in one year's time (middle panel). Also, global export price inflation is showing no signs of slowing, suggesting that global headline inflation should continue moving higher (bottom panel). Chart 4Upward Pressure On##BR##Real Yields AND Inflation Chart 5A More Inflationary##BR##Global Backdrop Central bankers are still biased towards becoming less accommodative. This was seen last week with the U.S. Federal Reserve hiking the fed funds rate and raising its growth and interest rate projections (Chart 6), while the Bank of England (BoE) gave a strong indication that an interest rate increase was coming in May. This comes as the European Central Bank continues to signal a tapering of its asset purchase program later this year. The latter point is critical for markets, as tighter global monetary policy has diminished the ability for investors to ignore sources of potential uncertainty. Take the current concern over trade tensions between the U.S. and China, for example. A Google Trends search of the phrase "China Trade War" shows, unsurprisingly, a huge recent spike in interest in that topic (Chart 7, top panel). There was also a big increase in such online searches around the time of Donald Trump's election victory in November 2016 and his inauguration in January 2017. At that time, however, global monetary policy was still accommodative, with the real fed funds rate well below the neutral "r-star" estimate (middle panel) and central bank balance sheets in the major developed economies expanding at a 20% annual rate (bottom panel). Chart 6The Fed Will Keep On Hiking Chart 7Expect More Vol Spikes While CBs Tighten The easy monetary settings helped keep market volatility low despite the shock of Trump's election win and what it meant for the implementation of his more aggressive campaign promises, like raising tariffs on U.S. imports from China. Fast forward to today and the real fed funds rate is now at neutral and central banks are buying bonds at a much slower pace. This means that markets will have a tougher time ignoring greater uncertainty, as was witnessed in last week's equity market selloff following President Trump's announcement of $60 billion in Chinese import tariffs. Going forward, without the soothing balm of very low interest rates and plentiful central bank liquidity expansion, volatility spikes like the ones seen in early February and last week will become more frequent. The implication is that volatility-adjusted returns on risk assets will be lower, even if the global growth backdrop remains reasonably supportive. A pro-risk investment bias, but playing with fewer chips on the table, is still appropriate over at least the next six months. Bottom Line: Global growth indicators remain at elevated levels, while inflation pressures continue to build. Central banks will remain focused on those factors, and not news-driven market volatility spikes, until the trends change. The cyclical environment still favors a below-benchmark duration stance for bond investors, favoring credit over government debt, but with lower risk-adjusted return expectations. U.K. Update: Sticking With Our Overweight Call On Gilts Chart 8Mixed Messages On U.K. Growth The BoE kept interest rates unchanged at last week's policy meeting, but sent clear signals that a rate hike would be very likely in May. Two members of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), Michael Saunders and Ian McCafferty, actually voted a rate hike last week, which was a surprise. The BoE's increasing hawkishness continues a process that began in autumn of 2017, when policymakers began shifting their language in advance of a November rate hike - the first BoE rate increase since May 2007. The central bank had been worried more about the risks to the U.K. growth outlook since the July 2016 Brexit vote, while ignoring the currency-driven overshoot of its inflation target. Now, the BoE seems a bit more comfortable with the U.K. growth outlook, even amid the ongoing Brexit uncertainty, as was noted in the official policy statement from last week's MPC meeting: Developments regarding the United Kingdom's withdrawal from the European Union - and in particular the reaction of households, businesses and asset prices to them - remain the most significant influence on, and source of uncertainty about, the economic outlook. In such exceptional circumstances, the MPC's remit specifies that the Committee must balance any significant trade-off between the speed at which it intends to return inflation sustainably to the target and the support that monetary policy provides to jobs and activity. The steady absorption of slack has reduced the degree to which it is appropriate for the MPC to accommodate an extended period of inflation above the target. We find it a bit of a surprise that the BoE would seek to switch to inflation-fighting mode now, for two reasons: U.K. growth momentum may be slowing. The flash estimate for the March manufacturing PMI fell to an 8-month low, while the leading economic indicators (LEIs) from both the OECD and Conference Board have clearly rolled over (Chart 8). The BoE did highlight the recent pickup in wage inflation, with year-over-year growth in average weekly earnings now up to 2.8% in nominal terms. This has pushed real wage growth back into positive territory (3rd panel), which appears to be feeding through into a slight pickup in consumer confidence (bottom panel). Although the modest increase in February retail sales suggests that a consumer spending revival may be slower to arrive than the BoE is hoping for. U.K. inflation momentum is slowing. The surge in U.K. inflation following the decline in the British Pound after the 2016 Brexit vote is in the process of unwinding. The trade-weighted currency is up 9% from the 2016 low, which has sliced imported goods price inflation from 10% to 2% over the same period (Chart 9). Headline CPI inflation, which rose from near 0% to 3.1% in November 2017, now sits at 2.7%. The upturn in core CPI inflation has also stabilized. While both CPI inflation measures remain above the 2% BoE target, the momentum has clearly peaked and pipeline price pressures continue to decelerate. Investors have listened to the signals sent by the BoE, pricing in 45bps of hikes over the next year and pushing the 2-year Gilt yield to 0.9% - the highest level since May 2011 (Chart 10). At the same time, market-based inflation expectations have dipped a bit and the U.K. data surprise index has fallen back to the zero line (bottom panel). Chart 9U.K. Inflation Has Peaked Chart 10A Rapid BoE Repricing At The Wrong Time? Conflicting signals can also be seen in the slope of the Gilt curve. The nominal 2-year/10-year Gilt curve now sits at 55bps, just above the 2016 post-Brexit lows. The real Gilt curve (the nominal curve minus the 2-year/10-year U.K. CPI swap curve) is sitting at the flattest levels last seen since 2015/16 (Chart 11, top panel) when the BoE base rate was above zero in real terms (2nd and 3rd panels). Now, the real base is deeply negative around -2%, suggesting that the Gilt curve may already be discounting higher real BoE policy rates. At the same time, the U.K. inflation expectations curve is steepening, with 2-year CPI swaps falling faster than 10-year CPI swaps, as was the case during that 2015/16 episode (bottom panel). U.K. money markets are now pricing in an increase in the base rate to 1% over the next year. Given the slowing trends in the U.K. LEIs, the manufacturing PMI and realized inflation rates, we remain doubtful that the BoE will be able to deliver more hikes than are currently discounted. We continue to view U.K. Gilts as a "defensive" overweight within dedicated global government bond portfolios, especially given our recommendation to also stay defensive on overall duration exposure. The primary trend in the performance of U.K. Gilts relative to the Barclays Global Treasury Index, on a currency-hedged basis, is broadly correlated (inversely) to the ratio of the U.K. OECD LEI to the overall OECD LEI (Chart 12, top panel). Thus, we feel comfortable sticking with our call to expect U.K. Gilt outperformance in the next 6-12 months as long as the U.K. LEI continues to underperform - especially with the yield betas of Gilts to U.S. Treasuries and euro area government bonds now well below 1 (middle panel). Chart 11The Gilt Curve##BR##Looks Too Flat Chart 12Stay O/W Gilts & Add Go Long##BR##The Belly On A 2/5/10 Butterfly Given the recent flattening of the Gilt curve, which appears a bit extreme, we are adding a new trade to our Tactical Overlay this week: going long the belly (5-year) of a 2-year/5-year/10-year (2/5/10) Gilt butterfly. The current level of that 2/5/10 butterfly is 9bps, and we are targeting a move down to the -10bp to -15bp range. This trade is mildly negative carry, with -0.75bps of flattening per month already discounted in the forwards over the next year (bottom panel), but we anticipate the 2/5/10 butterfly to compress at a faster rate than the forwards in the coming months. Bottom Line: BoE hawkishness is increasing, but policymakers will be hard pressed to tighten more than is currently priced. Stay overweight Gilts in hedged global government bond portfolios. Position for a steeper Gilt curve by going long the 5yr point in a 2yr/5yr/10yr butterfly trade. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Policymakers Are Now Selling Put Options On Volatility, Not Asset Prices", dated March 6th 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2 https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-03-20/cracks-in-bull-case-emerge-yet-stubborn-investors-not-moving Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights The global economic mini-cycle is set to weaken while the euro is set to grind higher. Upgrade Telecoms to overweight. Also overweight Healthcare and Airlines. Underweight Banks, Basic Materials and Energy. Overweight France, Ireland, U.K., Switzerland and Denmark. Underweight Italy, Spain, Sweden and Norway. The Eurostoxx50 will struggle to outperform the S&P500. Feature We are strong believers in Investment Reductionism, a philosophy synthesized from the Pareto Principle and Occam's Razor.1 Investment reductionism offers a liberating thesis - the incessant barrage of investment research, newsfeeds and ten thousand word commentaries is largely superfluous to the investment process. What seems like a complexity of investment choice usually reduces to getting a few over-arching decisions right. Chart of the WeekIn Quadrant 4, Overweight Domestic Defensives And Underweight International Cyclicals For equity sector and country allocation, two over-arching decisions dominate: Whether the global economic mini-cycle is set to strengthen or weaken (Chart I-2). Whether the domestic currency is set to strengthen or weaken. Chart I-2The Empirical Evidence For Credit And Economic Mini-Cycles Is Irrefutable The four permutations of these two decisions create the four quadrants of cyclical investing (Chart of the Week). Right now, European investors find themselves in quadrant four: the global economic mini-cycle is set to weaken while the euro is set to grind higher. This favours an overweight stance to defensives, especially domestic-focused defensives. Therefore today, we are upgrading Telecoms to overweight. We also recommend an underweight stance to the most cyclical sectors, especially international-focused cyclicals such as Basic Materials and Energy. Country allocation then just drops out of this sector allocation. The Global Economic Mini-Cycle Is Set To Weaken We can predict the changes of the seasons and the tides of the sea with utmost precision. How? Not because we have an ingenious leading indicator for the seasons and tides, but because we recognise that these phenomena follow perfectly regular cycles. Regular cycles create predictability. Significantly, global bank credit flows also exhibit remarkably regular cycles with half-cycle lengths averaging around eight months. Recognizing these mini-cycles is immensely powerful because, just as for the seasons and the tides, it creates predictability. Furthermore, if most investors are unaware of these cycles, the next turn will not be discounted in today's price - providing a compelling investment opportunity for those who do recognise the predictability. The empirical evidence for credit mini-cycles is irrefutable. The theoretical foundation is also rock solid, based on an economic model called the Cobweb Theory.2 This states that in any market where supply lags demand, both the quantity supplied and the price must oscillate. Given that credit supply clearly lags credit demand, the quantity of credit supplied and its price (the bond yield) must experience mini-cycles (Chart I-3). And as the quantity of credit supplied is a marginal driver of economic activity, economic activity will also experience the same regular oscillations. Today, the global 6-month credit impulse is turning from mini-upswing to mini-downswing, with all three subcomponents - the euro area, the U.S. and China - now in decline (Chart I-4). This is exactly in line with prediction. Mini half-cycles average eight months, and the latest mini-upswing started eight months ago. Chart I-3The Global Economic Mini-Cycle##br## Is Set To Weaken Chart I-4All Three Subcomponents Of The Global 6-Month ##br##Credit Impulse Are Now Declining More importantly, as we enter a mini-downswing, we can also predict that global growth is likely to experience at least a modest deceleration through the coming two to three quarters. The Euro Is Set To Grind Higher, Except Versus The Yen Chart I-5Lost In Translation Nowadays, mainstream stock markets tend to be eclectic collections of multinational companies which happen to be quoted on bourses in Frankfurt, Paris, New York, and so on. For example, BASF is not really a German chemical company, it is a global chemical company headquartered in Germany. For operational hedging, multinational companies like BASF will intentionally diversify their sales and profits across multiple major currencies, say euros and dollars. But of course, the primary stock market quotation will be in the currency of its home bourse, euros. Therefore, when the euro strengthens, the company's multi-currency profits, translated back into a stronger euro, will necessarily weaken (Chart I-5). Clearly, more domestic-focused companies like telecoms will not experience such a strong currency-translation headwind. We expect the main euro crosses to continue strengthening over the next 8 months, with the exception being the cross versus the Japanese yen. Our central thesis is that the payoff profile for a foreign exchange rate just tracks the bond yield spread. This means that when a central bank has already taken bond yields close to their lower bound, its currency possesses a highly attractive asymmetry called positive skew. In essence, as the ECB is at the realistic limit of ultra-loose policy, long-term expectations for the ECB policy rate possess an asymmetry: they cannot go significantly lower, but they could go significantly higher. Exactly the same applies to long-term expectations for the BoJ policy rate. In contrast, long-term expectations for the Fed policy rate possess full symmetry: they could go either way, lower or higher. This stark asymmetry of central bank 'degrees of freedom' favours the euro and the yen over the dollar. Which Sectors And Countries To Own And Which To Avoid? Pulling together the preceding two sections, the global economic mini-cycle is set to weaken while the euro is set to grind higher. This puts Europe in quadrant four of our four quadrant framework for cyclical investing. Unsurprisingly, the relative performance of the most cyclical sectors - Banks, Basic Materials and Energy - very closely tracks the regular mini-cycles in the global 6-month credit impulse. In a mini-downswing these cyclical sectors always underperform (Chart I-6, Chart I-7 and Chart I-8). Accordingly, underweight these three sectors on a two to three quarter horizon. Chart I-6In A Mini-Downswing, ##br##Banks Always Underperform Chart I-7In A Mini-Downswing,##br## Basic Materials Always Underperform Chart I-8In A Mini-Downswing,##br## Energy Always Underperforms Conversely, overweight the relatively defensive Healthcare sector. Also overweight the Airlines sector. Airlines' performance is a mirror-image of the oil price cycle, given that aviation fuel comprises the sector's main variable cost. Furthermore, as aviation fuel is priced in dollars, it also insulates European Airlines against a strengthening euro. Today, we are also upgrading the Telecoms sector to overweight given its relative non-cyclicality (Chart I-9), its domestic-focus, and the excessively negative groupthink towards it (Chart I-10). Chart I-9In A Mini-Downswing, ##br##Telecoms Always Outperform Chart I-10Telecoms Are Due ##br##A Trend Reversal In summary: Overweight: Healthcare, Telecoms, and Airlines Underweight: Banks, Basic Materials and Energy Then to arrive at a country allocation, just combine the cyclical view on the major sectors with the country sector skews in Box 1. The result is the following unchanged European equity market allocation. Overweight: France, Ireland, U.K., Switzerland and Denmark Neutral: Germany and Netherlands Underweight: Italy, Spain, Sweden and Norway Lastly, what is the prognosis for the Eurostoxx50 relative to the S&P500? Essentially, this reduces to a battle between the multinational cyclicals - especially banks - that dominate euro area bourses and the multinational technology giants that dominate the U.S. stock market. With the global economic mini-cycle set to weaken and the euro set to grind higher, the Eurostoxx50 will struggle to outperform the S&P500. Box 1: The Vital Few Sector Skews That Drive Country Relative Performance For major equity indexes in the euro area, the dominant sector skews that drive relative performance are as follows: Germany (DAX) is overweight Chemicals, underweight Banks. France (CAC) is underweight Banks and Basic Materials. Italy (MIB) is overweight Banks. Spain (IBEX) is overweight Banks. Netherlands (AEX) is overweight Technology, underweight Banks. Ireland (ISEQ) is overweight Airlines (Ryanair) which is, in effect, underweight Energy. And for major equity indexes outside the euro area: The U.K. (FTSE100) is effectively underweight the pound. Switzerland (SMI) is overweight Healthcare, underweight Energy. Sweden (OMX) is overweight Industrials. Denmark (OMX20) is overweight Healthcare and Industrials. Norway (OBX) is overweight Energy. The U.S. (S&P500) is overweight Technology, underweight Banks. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 The Pareto Principle, often known as the 80-20 rule, says that 80% of effects come from just 20% of causes. Occam's Razor says that when there are many competing explanations for the same effect, the simplest explanation is usually the best. 2 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report 'The Cobweb Theory And Market Cycles' published on January 11, 2018 and available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Fractal Trading Model* This week's recommended trade is to short the Helsinki OMX versus the Eurostoxx600. Apply a profit target of 3% with a symmetrical stop-loss. In other trades, we are pleased to report that short Japanese Energy versus the market achieved its 8% profit target at which it was closed. This leaves four open positions. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart 11 The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Bond Strategy: The investment backdrop is broadly evolving the way that we forecasted in our 2018 Outlook, thus we continue to maintain our core strategic recommendations. Maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration and overweight global corporate debt versus government bonds (focused on the U.S.). Look to reverse that positioning sometime during the latter half of 2018 after global inflation increases and central banks tighten policy more aggressively. Japan Corporates: Japanese companies are in excellent financial shape, according to our new Japan Corporate Health Monitor. Although softening Japanese growth and a firming yen may prevent an outperformance of Japanese corporate debt in the coming months. Feature "I love it when a plan comes together." - Hannibal Smith, Leader of The A-Team Many investors likely came down with serious case of a sore neck last week, given the head-turning headlines that came out: Chart 1A Pause In The 'Inflation Scare' U.S. President Donald Trump announcing a blanket tariff on metals imports, then exempting some important countries (Canada, Mexico, Australia) only days later. Trump agreeing to an unprecedented meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on the nuclear issue, only to have the White House press secretary later announce that no meeting would take place without North Korean "concessions". The European Central Bank (ECB) hawkishly altering its forward guidance to markets at the March monetary policy meeting, but then having that immediately followed by dovish comments from ECB President Mario Draghi. The strong headline number on the February U.S. employment report blowing away expectations, but the soft readings on wages suggesting that the Fed will not have to move more aggressively on rate hikes. For bond markets in particular, the ECB announcement and the U.S. Payrolls report were most important. Investors had been growing worried about a more hawkish monetary policy shift in Europe or the U.S. This was especially true in the U.S. after the previous set of employment data was released in early February showing a pickup in wage inflation that could force the Fed to shift to a more hawkish stance. That created a spike in Treasury yields and the VIX and a full-blown equity market correction. Since then, inflation expectations have eased a bit and market pricing of future Fed and ECB moves has stabilized, helping to bring down volatility and supporting some recovery in global equity markets (Chart 1). With all of these "tape bombs" hitting the news wires, investors can be forgiven for re-thinking their medium-term investment strategy in light of the changing events. We think it is more productive to check if the initial expectations on which that strategy was based still make sense. On that note, the developments seen so far this year fit right in with the key themes we outlined in our 2018 Outlook, which we will review in this Weekly Report. The Critical Points From Our Outlook Still Hold Up In a pair of reports published last December, we translated BCA's overall 2018 Outlook into broad investment themes (and strategic implications) for global fixed income markets. We repeat those themes below, with our updated assessment on where we currently stand. Theme #1: A more bearish backdrop for bonds, led by the U.S.: Faster global growth, with rebounding inflation expectations, will trigger tighter overall global monetary policy. This will be led by Fed rate hikes and, later in 2018, ECB tapering. Global bond yields will rise in response, primarily due to higher inflation expectations. ASSESSMENT: UNFOLDING AS PLANNED, BUT WATCH INFLATION EXPECTATIONS. Economic growth is still broadly expanding at a solid pace, as evidenced by the elevated levels of the OECD leading economic indicator and our global manufacturing PMI (Chart 2). The U.S. is clearly exhibiting the strongest growth momentum looking at the individual country PMIs (bottom panel), while there is a more mixed picture in the most recent readings in other countries and regions. Importantly, all of the manufacturing PMIs remain well above the 50 line indicating expanding economic activity. Last week's U.S. Payrolls report for February showed that great American job creation machine can still produce outsized employment gains with only moderate wage inflation pressures, even in an economy that appears to be at "full employment". The +313k increase in jobs, which included upward revisions to both of the previous two months of a combined +54k, generated no change in the U.S. unemployment rate which stayed unchanged at 4.1% with the labor force participation rate increasing modestly (Chart 3). Chart 2U.S. Growth Leading The Way Chart 3The Fed Can Still Hike Rates Only 'Gradually' The wage data was perhaps the most important part of the report, given that the spike in global market volatility seen last month came on the heels of an upside surprise in U.S. average hourly earnings (AHE) for January. There was no follow through of that acceleration in February, with the year-over-year growth rate of AHE slowing back to 2.6% from 2.9%, reversing the previous month's increase (middle panel). The immediate implication is that the Fed does not have to start raising rates faster or by more than planned. That pullback in U.S. wage growth, combined with the continued sluggishness of inflation in the other developed economies and the sideways price action seen in global oil markets, does suggest that inflation expectations may struggle to be the main driver of higher global bond yields in the near term. Overall nominal bond yields are unlikely to decline, however, as real yields are slowly rising in response to faster global growth and markets pricing in tighter monetary policy in response (Chart 4). Chart 4Real Yields Rising Now,##BR##Inflation Expectations Will Rise Again Later We have not seen enough evidence to cause us to change our view on inflation expectations moving higher over the course of 2018, particularly with BCA's commodity strategists now expecting oil prices to trade between $70-$80/bbl in the latter half of 2018.1 One final point: it is far too soon to determine if the protectionist trade leanings of President Trump will alter the current trajectory of global growth and interest rates. The implication is that investors should not change their overall planned investment strategy for this year at this juncture. Theme #2: Growth & policy divergences will create cross-market bond investment opportunities: Global growth in 2018 will become less synchronized compared to 2016 & 2017, as will individual country monetary policies. Government bonds in the U.S. and Canada, where rate hikes will happen, will underperform, while bonds in the U.K. and Australia, where rates will likely be held steady, will outperform. ASSESSMENT: UNFOLDING AS PLANNED. As shown in Chart 2, the big coordinated upward move in global growth seen in 2017 is already starting to become less synchronized in 2018. Recent readings on euro area growth have softened a bit while, more worryingly, a growing list of Japanese data is slowing. U.K. data remains mixed, while the Canadian economy is showing few signs of cooling off. China's growth remains critical for so many countries, including Australia, but so far the Chinese data is showing only some moderation off of last year's pace. Net-net, the data seen so far this year is playing out according to our 2018 Themes - better in the U.S. and Canada, softer in the U.K. and Australia. We are sticking to our view that the rate hikes currently discounted by markets in the U.S. and Canada will be delivered, but that there will be little-to-no monetary tightening in the U.K. and Australia (Chart 5). Theme #3: The most dovish central banks will be forced to turn less dovish: The ECB and Bank of Japan (BoJ) will both slow the pace of their asset purchases in 2018, in response to strong domestic economies and rising inflation. This will lead to bear-steepening of yield curves in Europe, mostly in the latter half of 2018. The BoJ could raise its target on JGB yields, but only modestly, in response to an overall higher level of global bond yields. ASSESSMENT: UNFOLDING AS PLANNED, ALTHOUGH WE NOW EXPECT NO BoJ MOVE TO TAKE PLACE THIS YEAR. Both central banks have already dialed back to pace of the asset purchases in recent months. This is in addition to the Fed beginning its own process of reducing its balance sheet by not rolling over maturing bonds in its portfolio. Growth of the combined balance sheet of the "G-4" central banks (the Fed, ECB, BoJ and Bank of England) has been slowing steadily as a result (Chart 6). The ECB continues to contribute the greatest share of that aggregate "G-4" liquidity expansion, although that is projected to slow over the balance of 2018 as the ECB moves towards a full tapering of its bond buying program by the end of the year (top panel). Chart 5Not Every Central Bank##BR##Will Deliver What's Priced Chart 6Risk Assets Are##BR##Exposed To ECB Tapering Barring a sudden sharp downturn in the euro area economy, the ECB is still on track for that taper. We have been expecting a signaling of the taper sometime in the summer, likely after the ECB gains even greater confidence that its inflation target can be reached within its typical two-year forecasting horizon. That story will not be repeated in Japan, however, where core inflation is still struggling to stay much above 0% and economic data is softening. We see very little chance that the BoJ will make any alterations of its current policy settings - with negative deposit rates and a target of 0% on the 10-year JGB yield - this year, as we discussed in a recent Special Report.2 We continue to expect a diminishing liquidity tailwind for global risk assets over the rest of 2018 (bottom two panels). Theme #4: The low market volatility backdrop will end through higher bond volatility: Incremental tightening by central banks, in response to faster inflation, will raise the volatility of global interest rates. This will eventually weigh on global growth expectations over the course of 2018, and create a more volatile backdrop for risk assets in the latter half of the year. ASSESSMENT: UNFOLDING AS PLANNED. We saw a sneak preview of how this theme would play out during that volatility spike at the beginning of February, triggered by only a brief blip up higher in U.S. wage inflation. With a more sustained increase in realized global inflation likely to develop within the next 3-6 months, a return to that world of high volatility is still set to unfold in the latter half of 2018, in our view. After reviewing our four investment themes for 2018 in light of the latest news, we conclude that the themes are largely playing out. Therefore, we will continue to stick with the investment strategy conclusions for this year that were derived from those themes (Table 1):3 Table 1A Pro-Risk Recommended Portfolio In H1/2018, Looking To Get Defensive Later In The Year 2018 Model Bond Portfolio Positioning: Target a moderate level of portfolio risk, with below-benchmark duration and overweights on corporate credit versus government debt. These allocations will shift later in the year as central banks shift to a more restrictive monetary policy stance and growth expectations for 2018 become more uncertain. Chart 7Tracking Our Recommendations 2018 Country Allocations: Maintain underweight positions in the U.S., Canada and the Euro Area, keeping a moderate overweight in low-beta Japan, and add small overweights in the U.K. and Australia (where rate hikes are unlikely). The year-to-date performance of the main elements of our model bond portfolio are shown in Chart 7. All returns are shown on a currency-hedged basis in U.S. dollars. Our country underweights are shown in the top panel, our country overweights in the 2nd panel, our credit overweights in the 3rd panel and our credit underweights in the bottom panel. The broad conclusion is that our best performing underweight is the U.S. and best performing overweight is Japan. All other country allocations are essentially flat on the year (in currency-hedged terms). Our call to overweight corporate debt vs. government debt, focused on the U.S., has performed well, but mostly through our overweight stance on U.S. high-yield. Bottom Line: The investment backdrop is broadly evolving the way that we forecasted in our 2018 Outlook, thus we continue to maintain our core strategic recommendations. Maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration and overweight global corporate debt versus government bonds (focused on the U.S.). Look to reverse that positioning sometime during the latter half of 2018 after global inflation increases and central banks tighten policy more aggressively. Introducing The Japan Corporate Health Monitor Japan's relatively small corporate bond market has not provided much excitement for non-Japanese investors over the years. Japanese companies have always been highly cautious when managing leverage on their balance sheets, and have traditionally relied heavily on bank loans, rather than bond issuance, for debt financing. The result is a corporate bond market with far fewer defaults and downgrades compared to other developed economies, with much lower yields and spreads as well. Due to its small size, poor liquidity and low yields/spreads, we have not paid much attention to Japanese corporate debt in the past. Thus, we don't have the same kinds of indicators available to us for Japanese corporate bond analysis as we have in the U.S., euro area or U.K. One such indicator is the Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) to assess the financial health of corporate issuers.4 We are changing that this week by adding a Japan CHM to our global CHM suite of indicators. In other countries, we have both top-down and bottom-up versions of the CHM. The former uses GDP-level data on income statements and balance sheets to determine the individual ratios that go into the CHM (a description of the ratios is shown in Table 2), while the latter uses actual reported financial data at the individual firm level which is aggregated into the CHM. Table 2Definitions Of Ratios##BR##That Go Into The CHM Consistent and timely data availability is an issue for building a top-down CHM, as there is no one source of top-down data on the corporate sector. Some data is available from the BoJ or the Ministry of Finance, or even from international research groups like the OECD, but not all are presented using a consistent methodology. Some data is only available on an annual basis, which significantly diminishes the usefulness of a top-down CHM as a timely indicator for bond investment. Thus, we focused our efforts on only building a bottom-up version of a Japan CHM, using publically available financial information released with higher frequency (quarterly). We focused on non-financial companies (as we do in the CHMs for other countries) and exclude non-Japanese issuers of yen-denominated corporate bonds. In the end, we used data on 43 companies for our bottom-up CHM. By way of comparison, there are only 36 individual issuers in the Bloomberg Barclays Japan Corporate Bond Index that fit the same description of non-financial, non-foreign issuers, highlighting the relatively tiny size of the Japanese corporate bond market. Our new Japan bottom-up CHM is presented in Chart 8. The overall conclusions are the following: Japanese corporate health is in overall excellent shape, with the CHM being in the "improving health" zone for the full decade since the 2008 Financial Crisis. Corporate leverage has steadily declined since 2012, mirroring the rise in company profits and cash balances over the same period. Return on capital is currently back to the pre-2008 highs just below 6%, although operating margins remain two full percentage points below the pre-2008 highs. Interest coverage and the liquidity ratio are both at the highest levels since the mid-2000s, while debt coverage is steadily improving. The overall reading from the CHM is one of solid Japanese creditworthiness and low downgrade and default risks. It is no surprise, then, that corporate bond spreads have traded in a far narrower range than seen in other countries. In Chart 9, we present the yield, spread, return and duration data for the Bloomberg Barclays Japanese Corporate Bond Index. We also show similar data for the Japanese Government Bond Index for comparison. Japanese corporates have a much lower index duration than that of governments, which reflects the greater concentration of corporate issuance at shorter maturities. Chart 8The Japan Corporate Health Monitor Chart 9The Details Of Japan Corporate Bond Index Japanese corporates currently trade at a relatively modest spread of 36bps over Japanese government debt, although that spread only reached a high of just over 100bps during the 2008 Global Financial Crisis - a much lower spread compared to U.S. and European debt of similar credit quality. That is likely a combination of many factors, including the small size of the Japanese corporate market and the relatively smaller level of interest rate volatility in Japan versus other countries. Given the dearth of available bond alternatives with a positive yield in Japan, the "stretch for yield" dynamic has created a demand/supply balance that is very favorable for valuations - especially given the strong health of Japanese issuers. Chart 10Japan Corporates Do Not Like A Rising Yen It remains to be seen how the market will respond to a future economic slowdown in Japan, which may be starting to unfold given the recent string of sluggish data. On that note, the performance of the Japanese yen bears watching, as the currency has a positive correlation to Japanese corporate spreads (Chart 10). The linkage there could be a typical one of risk-aversion, where the yen goes up as risky assets selloff. Or it could be linked to growth expectations, where markets begin to price in the impact on Japanese growth and corporate profits from a stronger currency. Given our view that the BoJ is highly unlikely to make any changes to its monetary policy settings this year, the latest bout of yen strength may not last for much longer. For now, given the link between the yen and Japanese credit spreads, we would advise looking for signs that the yen is rolling over before considering any allocations to Japanese corporate debt. Bottom Line: Japanese companies are in excellent financial shape, according to our new Japan Corporate Health Monitor. Although softening Japanese growth and a firming yen may prevent an outperformance of Japanese corporate debt in the coming months. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst Ray@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "OPEC 2.0 Getting Comfortable With Higher Prices", dated February 22nd 2018, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "What Would It Take For The Bank Of Japan To Raise Its Yield Target?", dated February 13th 2018, available at gfis.bcareseach.com. 3 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Our Model Bond Portfolio In 2018: A Tale Of Two Halves", dated December 19th 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 4 For a summary of all of our individual country CHMs, including a description of the methodology, please see the BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "BCA Corporate Health Monitor Chartbook: No Improvement Despite A Strong Economy", dated November 21st 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Special Report Highlights Data based on Bloomberg/Barclays global treasury/aggregate indexes from December 1990 to January 2018 supports the argument that foreign government bonds are not worthy of investing in when unhedged, due to extremely high volatility. On a hedged basis, however, foreign bonds are a good source of risk reduction for bond portfolios. Hedging not only reduces volatility of a foreign government bond portfolio, it reduces it so much that on a risk adjusted-return basis, foreign government bonds outperform both domestic government bonds and domestic credit for investors in Australia, New Zealand, the U.K., the U.S. and Canada. Aussie and kiwi fixed income investors stand out as the biggest beneficiaries of investing overseas, because hedged foreign government bonds not only provide lower volatility compared to domestic bonds, but also higher returns. This empirical evidence does not support the strong home bias of Aussie and kiwi investors. Investors in the euro area also benefit from the risk reduction of hedged foreign exposure. However, they also suffer significant return reduction - such that the improvement in risk-adjusted returns is not significant. Investors in Japan do enjoy higher returns from foreign government bonds, hedged and unhedged, yet at the cost of much higher volatility, with risk-adjusted returns also not justifying investing overseas. This empirical finding does not lend support to the "search for yield" strategy that has been very popular among Japanese investors. Feature Practitioners and academics do not often agree with one another on investment management issues, but when it comes to whether to hedge foreign government bonds, both accept that foreign government bonds should be fully hedged because currency volatility overwhelms bond volatility. Yet hedged total returns from foreign government bonds are very similar to those from domestic bonds for investors in the U.S., U.K. and Canada, while worse in the euro area. Only in Japan, Australia and New Zealand do investors enjoy higher hedged returns from investing in foreign bonds, as shown in Chart 1 based on Bloomberg/Barclays Global Treasury Indexes hedged to their respective home currencies. So why do investors in the U.S., U.K. and euro area, whose own government bond markets currently account for about 60% of the global treasury index universe (Chart 2), even bother to invest in foreign government bonds? Even for those who may achieve higher returns overseas, would they not be better off just buying domestic corporate bonds (for the potentially higher returns from taking domestic credit risk) rather than venturing into foreign countries and taking the trouble to hedge currency risk? Indeed, home bias among bond investors globally is a lot higher than among equity investors. Chart 1Domestic Vs. Foreign Bonds Chart 2Country Weights In Global Treasury Index In this report, we present empirical evidence based on Bloomberg/Barclays domestic treasury indexes and aggregate bond indexes, hedged and unhedged global treasury indexes in seven different currencies (USD, EUR, JPY, GBP, CAD, AUD and NZD), in the context of strategic asset allocation. In a future report, we will attempt to identify the driving forces underpinning the decisions between investing in domestic bonds versus foreign bonds in the context of tactical asset allocation. Hedged Foreign Government Bonds Are a Good Source Of Diversification When a foreign bond is hedged back to the domestic currency, its total return correlation with domestic bonds is quite high. As shown in Chart 3, domestic bonds and their respective hedged foreign bonds have an average correlation of around 70% for all currencies, with the exception of the JPY. For Japanese investors, hedged foreign bonds have a much lower correlation with JGBs, averaging around 30%. Intuitively, there should not be a high incentive for USD, GBP, CAD, EUR, AUD and NZD based investors to invest in foreign bonds, while JPY based investors should benefit from the diversification of hedged foreign bonds. In reality, the very high home bias among fixed income investors in general and the popularity of search-for-yield carry trades among Japanese individual investors seems to support this. Is there empirical evidence that shows the same thing? Table 1 presents statistics from Bloomberg/Barclays domestic treasury indexes and their respective market cap-weighted foreign treasury indexes, hedged and unhedged, in USD, JPY, GBP, EUR, CAD, AUD and NZD. Please see Appendix 1 for the hedged return calculation. Chart 3High Correlations Table 1Domestic And Foreign Government Bond Profile (Dec 1999 - Jan 2018) On an unhedged basis, foreign bonds have much higher volatility compared to domestic bonds for all investors. In terms of return, only Japanese investors enjoy higher yields overseas. On a risk-adjusted return basis, all investors are worse off in investing in unhedged foreign bonds. This is in line with the "conventional wisdom" acknowledged by both academics and practitioners. Hedging not only reduces the corresponding foreign bond portfolio's volatility, it reduces it so much, for all currencies other than the JPY, that the foreign bond portfolio has lower volatility than domestic bonds. As such, in terms of risk-adjusted return, hedged foreign bonds outperform domestic government bonds in all countries except Japan. This implies that on a risk-adjusted return basis, Japanese investors should not invest in hedged foreign bonds at all, while other investors should. Even more shockingly, Table 1 shows that AUD and NZD investors would have achieved both higher returns and lower volatility by investing in hedged foreign bonds. These implications appear to fly in the face of common sense for AUD and NZD investors, because their domestic bonds have much higher returns than others, while in reality Japanese retail investors are keen on "carry trades" as a way to enhance yields. What has caused such significant discrepancies? Could it be simply due to the time period chosen? Chart 4 and Chart 5 present the results of the same analysis performed over different periods: the whole period from 1990, when the majority of the Bloomberg/Barclays indexes first became available; pre-euro (1990-2000); after the euro and before the global financial crisis (GFC); and after the GFC (the extremely low-yield period). Surprisingly, the relative performance of hedged foreign bonds versus domestic bonds for each currency has been quite consistent across all the time periods in terms of risk-adjusted returns, even though absolute performance varied in different periods. Chart 4Domestic Vs. Foreign Treasury Bonds: Consistent Performance Across Time (1) Chart 5Domestic Vs. Foreign Treasury Bonds: Consistent Performance Across Time (2) So when it comes to investing in hedged foreign government bonds, investors with different home currencies should bear the following observations in mind: For Japanese investors, the slightly higher yield enhancement from hedged foreign bonds comes with sharply higher volatility compared to JGBs. The risk-adjusted return does not justify investing in foreign bonds.1 This is mostly because Japanese bonds have below-average volatility, while hedged foreign bonds have above-average volatility. For euro area investors, the lower volatility from foreign bonds is at the expense of lower returns. The improvement in risk-adjusted returns is not significant enough to justify the extra work in hedging. U.K. gilts have the highest volatility. As such, U.K. investors have benefited the most in risk reduction from buying hedged foreign bonds, to the slight detriment of returns. Consequently, they are better off investing in hedged foreign government bonds if improving risk-adjusted return is the objective. The Aussie and kiwi government bond markets are very small in terms of market cap (Chart 2). Fortunately, hedged foreign bonds not only have lower volatility than domestic bonds, they also provide much higher returns. Indeed, Aussie and kiwi investors are the most suitable candidates for going global. For U.S. and Canadian investors, hedged foreign portfolios and domestic indexes share similar returns, but foreign portfolios have much lower volatility, hence better risk-adjusted returns. Hedging currencies is not an easy task. Would investors not be better off taking domestic credit risks than investing in hedged foreign government bonds? Domestic Credit Or Hedged Foreign Government Bonds? The Bloomberg/Barclays domestic aggregate bond indexes are comprised of treasuries, government-related, corporate, and securitized bonds. Chart 6 shows the total returns of the aggregate bond indexes and the corresponding treasury weights in each country index. It is clear that Japan's credit portion is very small, while the U.S. and Canadian credit markets dominate their corresponding treasury markets. In the euro area and Australia, credit accounts for about half of the aggregate index, while it is only about 30% in the U.K. Since some aggregate indexes have a short history (Chart 6), we use the corresponding treasury index to fill in the missing links. In the case of New Zealand, an aggregate index does not exist at all, local treasury bonds are used instead in our analysis below. Table 2 presents the risk/return profiles of the Bloomberg/Barclays domestic aggregate bond indexes, and the same market cap-weighted global treasury index hedged and unhedged in USD JPY, GBP, EUR, CAD, AUD and NZD. Chart 6Aggregate Bond Index Composition Table 2Domestic Aggregate Bond Index Vs. Hedged Global Treasury Index (Dec 1999 - Jan 2018) Domestic credits also improve the risk-adjusted returns for all the investors, and for investors in the U.S., Canada and Australia, credits also add returns while reducing volatility compared to their respective treasury indexes. However, the hedged global treasury index has much lower volatility than the domestic aggregate index such that on a risk-adjusted-return basis, the hedged global treasury index still outperforms the local aggregate index for all investors except those in Japan and the euro area. Similar to the findings in the previous section, this observation also holds true across all the time periods as shown in Charts 7 and 8. Aussie and kiwi investors stand out again as the best beneficiaries of going global because the hedged global treasury indexes not only have lower volatility than the domestic aggregate bond indexes, they also provide higher returns. Chart 7Domestic Aggregate Vs. Global Treasury: Consistent Performance Across Time (3) Chart 8Domestic Aggregate Vs. Global Treasury: Consistent Performance Across Time (4) This raises an interesting question for asset allocators: which bond index should one use to measure the performances of global bond managers? It is common for some pension funds and mutual funds to use a domestic aggregate bond index as a benchmark to measure their bond managers' performance. In such a case, what are you really paying for if your managers have the discretion to buy hedged foreign government bonds? Another interesting observation is that the hedged global treasury index has almost the same volatility around 2.85% in different currencies. This essentially levels out the playing-field for bond managers globally in terms of volatility, a very important criteria for bond investors. Is High Home Bias Justifiable? There are many well-known reasons that explain why home bias in bond portfolios is typically high. But are investors giving up too much for the comfort of "staying home"? Chart 9 shows the effects of adding hedged foreign government bonds into a portfolio of domestic aggregate bonds for each investor based on two timeframes - from 1990 and from 1999 to the present. The messages are clear: If investors are comfortable with the volatility in their domestic aggregate bond index, which is already a lot lower than equities, then investors in the U.S., the U.K., Canada and the euro area are better off staying home for higher returns without dealing with currency hedging operations. For Aussie, kiwi and Japanese investors, however, going abroad enhances returns. Chart 9Is High Home Bias Justifiable? If investors focus on lower volatility, then all investors should invest a large portion of their portfolios overseas, with the exception of Japanese investors. If investors focus on risk-adjusted returns, then investors in Australia, New Zealand, the U.S., the U.K., the euro area and Canada are better off investing a large portion overseas. In short, while there may be some justification for most fixed-income investors to maintain a home bias, empirical evidence does not lend strong support to Aussie and kiwi investors having a home bias at all. Chart 9 shows that Australian and New Zealand investors should consider investing 70-90% of their fixed income portfolio in hedged foreign government bonds for higher returns and lower volatility. Implications For Asset Allocators Chart 10What Drives The Dynamics Between ##br## Foreign And Domestic Bonds? The analysis presented in this report is by nature based on historical data. The findings may not apply to the future, especially because the periods for which we have data cover only the great bull market in government bonds. However, this exercise does provide some interesting aspects for consideration: Should hedged foreign government bonds have a presence in strategic asset allocation? If your fixed income managers have the discretion to invest in foreign government bonds, then is it appropriate for you to use a domestic aggregate bond index to measure their performance? In the context of strategic asset allocation, the answer to the first question is yes and to the second is no, as implied by the analysis in this report. In the context of tactical asset allocation, however, the answer may well be different. In a later report, we will attempt to identify the factors that drive the dynamics between domestic and hedged foreign bonds because the most obvious factor, interest rate differentials, cannot fully explain it as shown in Chart 10. Stay tuned. Xiaoli Tang, Associate Vice President xiaoliT@bcaresearch.com 1 Granted, Japanese retail investors do not pay attention to risk adjusted returns as much as institutional investors do. Therefore their buying unhedged foreign bonds is consistent with their yield enhancement objective, albeit at much higher volatility. Appendix 1: Bond Hedged Return Calculation We use the same methodology as Bloomberg/Barclays1 to calculate hedged return using one-month forward contracts and re-balancing on a monthly basis. This is unlike equity hedging, where the gain or loss of the underlying index during the month is not hedged.2 A bond index can be reasonably assumed to grow at the nominal yield (yield to worst is used). Only the gain/loss that is different from the stated yield during the month is not hedged, but converted back to the home currency at the month-end spot rate. Hedged return using forward contract: 1+Rd,t+1= (Pt+1 * St+1 ) / (Pt * St ) + Ht*(Ft - St+1)/ St..............................................(1) Where: Pt and Pt+1 are the foreign bond total return index levels at time t and t+1 in corresponding foreign currencies; St and St+1 are the foreign currency exchange rates versus the domestic currency at time t and t+1, quoted as one unit of foreign currency equal to how many units of domestic currency; Ht = (1 + Yt/2)(1/6) is the hedged notional; Yt is the yield to worst; Ft is the foreign currency's one-month forward rate at time t for delivery at time t+1; Rd,t+1 is the hedged total return in domestic currency of the foreign hedge index between time t and t+1. 1 https://www.bbhub.io/indices/sites/2/2017/03/Index-Methodology-2017-03-17-FINAL-FINAL.pdf 2 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report, "Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Equity Investors," dated September 29, 2017, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com
Highlights Federal Reserve: Is the U.S. neutral rate now higher? ECB: How much has the euro rally damaged European growth? Bank of Japan: Will a stronger yen tip Japan back into deflation? Bank of England: Will higher real wages offset Brexit uncertainties? Bank of Canada & Reserve Bank Of Australia: How much spare capacity truly exists? Feature We have not published a regular Weekly Report in Global Fixed Income Strategy since February 6th. We instead published necessary Special Reports on two countries of immediate relevance: Japan, because of the recent surprising strength in the yen, and Italy, because of the upcoming election. The pause in our regular commentary on the state of the markets, however, was useful. It has given us more time to reflect on the potential for a continuation of the global bond bear market after the volatility spike earlier in the month. What we find interesting is that, despite the common narrative that the back-up in global bond yields seen in 2018 has been about rising inflation fears, market pricing suggests the big shift has instead been in real bond yields and central bank policy expectations. In Table 1, we present the year-to-date change in the 10-year government bond yield for the major developed markets. We also show the changes in various other interest rate measures, including: Table 12018 Year-To-Date Changes In Government Bond Yield Components Our 12-month Policy Rate Discounters, which show the change in short-term interest rates priced into money market curves Our proxy measure of the market pricing of the real neutral ("terminal") interest rate - the 5-year Overnight Index Swap (OIS) rate, 5-years forward minus the 5-year CPI swap rate, 5-years forward Our estimate of the term premium on the 10-year government bond yield. What stands out in the table is that markets have moved to price in both a higher amount of expected rate hikes over the next year (Chart 1) and a higher neutral real interest rate, even with very little change in expected inflation. This can also been seen by looking at recent declines in the correlations between inflation expectations and nominal bond yields in the major economies, which are off from the peaks seen late in 2017 (Chart 2). Chart 1Rising Rate Expectations Have##BR##Been Pushing Yields Higher Of Late... Chart 2...Rather Than Higher##BR##Inflation Expectations The obvious conclusion is that the bulk of the rise in global bond yields seen year-to-date has been driven by increases in the real yield component, which itself has been heavily influenced by expected changes to central bank policy rates. Keeping that in mind, in this Weekly Report, we take a look at the most important question faced by each major central bank, and what that means for future decisions on policy interest rates - and by extension, for government bond yields. The Federal Reserve: "Is The U.S. Neutral Rate Now Higher?" With the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield having taken several runs at the critical 3% level in recent weeks, the debate has raged among investors as to whether that should be considered a breakout point or a buying opportunity. Comparing the U.S. economy now to what it looked like the last time the 10-year yield was at 3% at the end of 2013 suggests that yields could have more upside: Real GDP growth: 1.7% then, 2.3% now1 The unemployment rate: 6.7% then, 4.1% now Headline CPI inflation: 1.4% then, 2.1% now Core CPI inflation: 1.7% then, 1.8% now Average Hourly Earnings growth: 1.9% then, 2.9% now Growth is faster, there is less spare capacity, and inflation is higher now than it was just over four years ago. Yet when looking at the decomposition of the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield into its real and inflation expectations component (Chart 3, 2nd panel), we find that the mix is only slightly more skewed to real yields today: Chart 3Treasury Yields Still Have More Upside,##BR##Based On 2013 Comparisons Nominal 10-year Treasury yield: 3.03% then (December 31st, 2013), 2.87% now (February 26th, 2018) Inflation expectations (10-year CPI swap): 2.54% then, 2.30% now Real yields (nominal 10-year yield minus 10-year CPI swap): 0.49% then, 0.57% now In other words, the real yield today is 20% of the total nominal 10-year yield compared to 16% back at the end of 2013. Not a major difference. Yet there are much bigger discrepancies between the elements that go into our real neutral rate proxy for the U.S. (bottom two panels): 5-year OIS rate, 5-years forward: 4.1% then, 2.6% now 5-year CPI swap rate, 5-years forward: 2.9% then, 2.3% now Real neutral rate proxy: 1.2% then, 0.3% now The market is now pricing in a real neutral funds rate that is nearly one full percentage point below the level that prevailed the last time the 10-year Treasury yield reached 3% prior to 2018. Even though the U.S. economy is now growing faster, with far less spare capacity and higher inflation, than it did at the end of 2013. This does suggest that the level of the neutral real fed funds rate has likely gone up, which the 43bps increase in our market-implied real neutral rate proxy so far in 2018 is likely reflecting. But does the Fed actually believe that the neutral funds rate should be higher? The minutes from the January FOMC meeting, released last week, noted that there was discussion on the neutral funds rate, but one that was different than during previous FOMC meetings in 2017 - the actual appropriate level of the neutral funds rate was a topic of debate: "Some participants also commented on the likely evolution of the neutral federal funds rate. [...] the outlook for the neutral rate was uncertain and would depend on the interplay of a number of forces. For example, the neutral rate, which appeared to have fallen sharply during the Global Financial Crisis when financial headwinds had restrained demand, might move up more than anticipated as the global economy strengthened. Alternatively, the longer-run level of the neutral rate might remain low in the absence of fundamental shifts in trends in productivity, demographics, or the demand for safe assets."2 Any change in the Fed's estimation of the long-run neutral funds rate is critical for the future path of Treasury yields, given where market pricing is at the moment. The U.S. OIS curve has now fully converged to the FOMC interest rate projections (the "dots") for this year and next year. More importantly, the market-implied terminal rate (the nominal 5-year OIS rate, 5-years forward) has now caught up to the FOMC terminal rate dot (Chart 4). The implication is that any further meaningful increase in Treasury yields can only come from higher inflation expectations - unless the Fed signals that a higher neutral rate is required. Our colleagues at our sister publication, U.S. Bond Strategy, recently noted that the Fed has historically been much more reluctant to raise its terminal rate projection in response to rising inflation than it was in cutting the projection when inflation falls.3 The conclusion is that inflation expectations will likely need to return to levels consistent with the Fed's inflation target - 2.3-2.5% on both the 10-year TIPS breakeven rate and the 5-year breakeven rate, 5-years forward - before the Fed would make any significant upward revisions to its terminal rate projection. In the meantime, Treasury yields are more likely to see a near-term consolidation, as U.S. data surprises have rolled over, market positioning has become very short, momentum is oversold and market pricing has fully converged with Fed expectations (Chart 5). In terms of data, the release of the next U.S. Employment report on March 9th is critical for the Treasury market in the near term, given that the January uptick in wage growth was the trigger for the spike in bond yields, and subsequent equity market correction, at the beginning of February (bottom panel). Chart 4Could The Fed Move##BR##The Interest Rate 'Goalposts'? Chart 5Treasury Selloff May Be##BR##Due For A Pause The ECB: "How Much Has The Euro Rally Damaged European Growth?" The European Central Bank (ECB) has been slowly preparing markets for an eventual withdrawal of its extraordinary monetary policy stimulus since last summer. Specifically, the ECB has begun a discussion of what it would take to end its bond buying program. Already, the central bank cut the monthly pace of its asset purchases in half at the beginning of 2018, and the topic of "tapering" has come up in many speeches from ECB officials. The ECB has been trying to not present an overly hawkish message when discussing an eventual end to its hyper-easy monetary stance. The overall level of government bond yields - both in the core and Periphery of the Euro Area - has been drifting higher, but by less than the increases seen in the U.S. Inflation expectations have been rising since the middle of 2017, although most of the 23bps increase in the benchmark 10-year German Bund yield seen so far in 2018 can be attributed to rising real yields (Chart 6). The market-implied real neutral rate has also been increasing, but still remains below zero (-0.2%). Yet despite only the modest increase in European interest rate expectations, there has been a substantially larger move in the euro. The trade-weighted euro has bond up by 8% over the past year, bringing the currency back to levels last seen in 2014 (Chart 7, top panel). The appreciating euro has become a subject of focus by the ECB, although it is not yet a cause for worry according to the minutes of the January ECB meeting released last week: Chart 6Only A Modest Rise In European Yields, So Far Chart 7A Potential ECB Dilemma "[...] although the past appreciation of the euro had so far had no significant impact on euro area external demand, volatility in foreign exchange markets represented a further increase that need monitoring."4 Chart 8No Damage Yet To European##BR##Exports From The Euro Rally The ECB is correct that the rising euro has not yet impacted Euro Area exports, the growth rate of which remains solid at 8% (bottom panel). This contrasts sharply with the performance the last time the trade-weighted euro was at current levels in 2014, when exports were barely growing at all. The difference is a much stronger global economy that is demanding far more European goods and services now compared to four years ago. For now, the ECB can look to the stability of export demand as a sign that the euro has not become a drag on the economy, but some warning signals may be flashing. Euro Area economic data surprises have plunged sharply, and the manufacturing PMI data has been softer in the past couple of months (Chart 8). While the absolute levels of the PMIs suggest an economy that is still growing at an above-trend pace, a continuation of the recent drops could pose a problem for the ECB as it tries to communicate its next policy move to the markets. The surging euro has done very little to drag down overall Euro Area headline inflation, given the strength in global oil prices over the past year (3rd panel). Core inflation has struggled to stay much above 1% over the past year or so, but our core inflation diffusion index - which measures the number of core Euro Area HICP sectors with rising inflation rates versus those with falling inflation rates - has surged in the past couple of months, which typically leads to a faster rate of core inflation (bottom panel). As long as the Euro Area export growth data holds up, the ECB is likely to focus more on rising core inflation than a stronger euro and should begin signaling an end to the asset purchase program by year-end. The Bank Of England: "Will Faster Wage Growth Offset Brexit Uncertainty?" The Bank of England (BoE) has surprised markets with its more hawkish commentary of late, particularly given the reason for the change - faster wage growth. The BoE had previously been cautious on its outlook for the U.K. economy, which was suffering from two powerful drags. First, the uncertainty over the Brexit negotiations was dampening business confidence and restraining capital spending. Second, the surge in realized inflation following the post-Brexit collapse of the British Pound triggered a period of contracting real wages that would be a drag on consumer spending. Until these were resolved, the BoE would be cautious with its future policy moves. Next month's European Union (EU) summit can provide some news on Brexit, as the U.K. government will be seeking a transition agreement that would give U.K. businesses a firm timeline for the separation of the U.K. from the EU. The U.K. government is reported to be seeking a two-year period for the agreement, but it may take longer than that to hammer out all the deals involved with the contentious issues of trade, immigration, etc. The longer the Brexit transition period, the more likely that U.K. firms will hold back on long-term investment spending because of uncertainty. As for the wage side of the story, the annual growth rate of Average Weekly Earnings has increased from 1.7% to 2.6% since the April 2017 low, but this is still below the headline CPI inflation rate of 3% (Chart 9, bottom panel). With the U.K. unemployment rate at a cyclical low of 4.4% - far below the OECD's estimate of the full employment NAIRU rate of 5.1% - additional increases in wage growth are possible if hiring demand does not begin to slow. Yet with U.K. data surprises rolling over (top panel), and with the OECD's U.K. leading economic indicator decelerating (middle panel), there is a growing risk that economic growth will slow in the coming quarters, to the detriment of hiring activity and wages. The current market pricing shows that there remains a wide gap between U.K. inflation expectations and nominal Gilt yields (Chart 10). The real 10-year Gilt yield is -1.84% (deflated by CPI swaps), while the market-implied neutral real interest rate is -1.94%. While such a deeply negative interest rate is unlikely to be a permanent state of affairs in the U.K., such an accommodative policy setting is required to prevent the economy from falling into a deep slump. Chart 9Is The BoE More Worried About##BR##Wage Pressures Than Growth? Chart 10Real Gilt Yields Rising,##BR##But Still Very Low As we noted back in January, we do not see the BoE being able to raise rates much at all this year given the likelihood of prolonged sluggishness of the U.K. economy and some reversal of the currency-fueled surge in inflation seen in 2017.5 The BoE choosing to tackle rising wage inflation while growth was decelerating would be a huge policy error that would eventually benefit the performance of U.K. Gilts. The Bank Of Japan: "Will A Stronger Yen Tip Japan Back Into Deflation?" The extraordinary monetary policy accommodation provided by the Bank of Japan (BoJ) makes an analysis of Japanese Government Bond (JGB) yields far less interesting. After all, when the central bank is actively intervening in large quantities to hold the level of the 10-year JGB around 0%, do the signals sent from money market and bond yield curves have any meaning vis-à-vis the actual Japanese economy? Right now, the pricing of the real 10-year JGB yield (deflated by CPI swaps) is just below 0%, as is the real terminal rate proxy from the Japanese OIS curve (Chart 11). Keeping JGB yields at such low levels is part of the BoJ's attempt to raise Japanese inflation back towards the central bank's 2% yield target. The mechanism by which that should happen is through a weaker Japanese yen. Yet the yen has been showing surprising strength in recent weeks, most notably the USD/JPY exchange rate that has been falling in the face of rising U.S.-Japan interest rate differentials (Chart 12, top panel). Chart 11Negative Real Rates Still Necessary In Japan Chart 12An Unwelcome Rise In The Yen The risk going forward is that the strengthening yen will create a drag on headline Japanese inflation that has recently accelerated back to 1% (middle panel). Given that both core CPI and nominal wages barely growing at all (bottom panel), the odds are increasing that Japanese inflation could begin to move lower without getting anywhere close to the BoJ's 2% target. As we discussed in our recent Special Report, a much weaker yen (i.e. USD/JPY between 115 and 120) is the first necessary precondition before the BoJ would consider raising its yield target on the 10-year JGB.6 We had placed odds of no more than 20% that the BoJ would raise its yield target in 2018, but if the yen continues to hold firm or even strengthen further from current levels, those odds fall to zero. Bank Of Canada & Reserve Bank Of Australia: "How Much Spare Capacity Truly Exists?" We are lumping the Bank of Canada (BoC) and Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) together in this report, as both are facing the same critical question. The BoC has already raised its policy rate three times since last summer, in response to accelerating growth and diminished spare capacity in Canada. Canadian bond yields have risen in response through higher inflation expectations, rising real yields and greater expected rate increases from the BoC (Chart 13). The real 10-year Canadian yield has risen back to the highs last seen in late 2013, while inflation expectations are not quite back to those levels - a similar story to that seen in the U.S. The BoC's own estimate of the Canadian output gap flipped into positive territory at the end of 2017, signifying that there was no longer any spare capacity in the Canadian economy (Chart 14, top panel). The signal from the Canadian labor market is similar, with the unemployment rate now at 5.9% - well below the OECD NAIRU estimate of 6.5% (middle panel). Yet Canadian inflation rates, both for headline and core CPI, are only at 1.7% and 1.5%, respectively - both not even at the midpoint of the BoC's 1-3% target band (bottom panel). At the same time, wages have been accelerating, with the annual growth rate of Average Hourly Earnings now up to a two-year high of 3.3%. Chart 13All Bond Yield Components Rising In Canada Chart 14Where's The Inflation? Such a wide gap between price inflation and wage growth does throw into the question if the BoC's own output gap estimate is correct. We expect Canadian price inflation to eventually begin to close the gap with wage inflation, which will keep the BoC on its current expected rate hiking path in 2018 as long as the economy does not begin to slow meaningfully. The CPI inflation reports will be the most important data to watch in Canada over the next few months to determine if our view will pan out. In Australia, the market pricing is nowhere near as hawkish as in Canada, with inflation expectations (10-year CPI swaps) having been stuck in a range between 2.2-2.4% for the past two years (Chart 15, 2nd panel). The market-implied neutral real interest rate is stuck at 0% and has not been sustainably above that level since 2014 (bottom panel). Yet, like Canada, there are questions about the true degree of slack in the economy. The Australian unemployment rate is currently at 5.5%, well below NAIRU (Chart 16, top panel). The last time that the Australian economy ran for so long beyond full employment was in 2010-11, when headline inflation breached the upper limit of the RBA's 1-3% target band (bottom panel). Yet the so-called "underemployment rate" - essentially, those working part-time that would like to work full-time - has been much higher in recent years and now sits at 8.3%. This also fits with the IMF's estimate of the Australian output gap, which is still a very large -1.8%. Chart 15Australian Yields Are Stuck In A Range Chart 16Very Different Than 2011-12 Given these signs of excess capacity in both the labor market and the overall economy, it is no surprise that Australian inflation has struggled to surpass even the 2% midpoint of the RBA target band. The implication is that the Australian NAIRU is much lower than the official OECD estimate, and that the RBA is under no pressure to contemplate any interest rate increases for at least the rest of 2018. Net-net, while both the BoC and RBA are facing questions over the true amount of spare capacity in their economies, the situation is much more bullish for Australian government bonds than Canadian equivalents given the greater slack Down Under. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 These are average quarterly growth rates of U.S. real GDP for the full calendar year of 2013 and 2017, respectively. 2 https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomcminutes20180131.pdf 3 Please see BCA U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Two-Stage Bear Market In Bonds", dated February 20th, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 4 https://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/accounts/2018/html/ecb.mg180222.en.html 5 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "A Melt Up In Equities AND Bond Yields?", dated January 23rd, 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "What Would It Take For The Bank Of Japan To Raise Its Yield Target?", dated February 13th 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights The best recession indicators are not flashing red, but volatility is rising as the end of the cycle approaches; U.S. fiscal policy is surprising to the upside, as we expected; The next recession will usher in an inflationary political paradigm shift, with wealth transferred from Baby Boomers to Millennials; Expect a new U.K. election ahead of March 2019, but do not expect a second referendum unless popular opinion swings decisively against Brexit; Stay short U.S. 10-year Treasuries versus German bunds; short Fed Funds Dec 2018 futures; and initiate a short GBP/USD trade. Feature February has been tough for global markets, with the S&P 500 falling by 5.9% since the beginning of the month. Several clients have pointed out that the market may be sniffing out a recession and that the "buy the dip" strategy is therefore no longer applicable. It is true that markets and recessions go together (Chart 1), but it is not clear from the data that the equity market alone predicts recessions correctly. Chart 1Bear Markets & Recessions: Unclear Which One Leads The Other BCA's House View is that a recession is likely at the end of 2019.1 This view is in no small part based on our political analysis.2 President Trump ran on a populist electoral platform and populist policymakers globally have a successful track record of delivering higher nominal GDP growth than their non-populist counterparts (Chart 2). We assume that the Powell Fed will respond to such higher growth and inflation prospects no differently from the Yellen Fed and that it will restrict monetary policy to an extent that will usher in a mild recession by the end of next year. Chart 2Populists Deliver (Nominal) GDP Growth Of course, predicting recessions is extraordinarily difficult. Being six months early or late would still be an achievement, but the implications for the equity market would likely be considerably different. If our "late 2019" call is actually an "early 2019" recession, then equity markets may indeed be at or near their cyclical peaks. A "buy on dips" strategy may work for the next quarter or so, but superior returns over the course of the year may be achieved with a bearish strategy. To help guide clients through the uncertainty, our colleague Doug Peta, chief strategist of BCA's Global ETF Strategy, has recently updated BCA's methodology for identifying the inflection points that usher in a recession.3 In our 70-year history as an investment research house, we have picked up two definitive truths: valuation and technical indicators cannot call a recession. So what can? We encourage clients to pick up a copy of Doug's analysis.4 The report highlights the three BCA Research recession indicators: the orientation of the yield curve, the year-over-year change in the leading economic indicator (LEI),5 and the monetary policy backdrop. Charts 3, 4, and 5 show how successful the three indicators are in calling recessions. In our 50-year sample period, the yield curve has successfully called all seven recessions with just one false positive. However, it tends to be overly eager, preceding the onset of a recession by an average of nearly twelve months. When we combine the yield curve indicator with the LEI, the false positives go away. Chart 3The Yield Curve Has Called Seven Of The Last Eight Recessions... Chart 4... And So Has The Leading Economic Indicator To confirm the recession signal and make it more robust, we also consider the monetary policy backdrop. Over the nearly 60 years for which BCA's equilibrium fed funds rate model has calculated an estimate of the equilibrium policy rate, every recession has occurred when the fed funds rate exceeded our estimate of equilibrium. In other words, recessions only occur when monetary policy settings are restrictive. Today, none of the indicators are even close to pointing to a recession, with the LEI at a cyclical peak. However, the yield curve and monetary policy are directionally moving towards the end of the cycle. Taken together, they suggest that the only controversy about our late 2019 recession call is that it is so early. So why the market volatility? Because wage growth in the U.S. has begun to pick up in earnest (Chart 6), revealing that BCA's concerns about inflation may at last be coming true. Investors, after more than a year of rationalizing weak inflation by means of dubious concepts (Amazon, AI, robots, etc.), may be reassessing their forecasts in real time, causing market turbulence. Chart 5Tight Policy Is A Necessary,##br## If Not Sufficient, Recession Ingredient Chart 6Wages Picking##br## Up In Earnest There is of course a political explanation as well. Our colleague Peter Berezin correctly called the end of the 35-year bond bull market on July 5, 2016.6 The timing of the call - mere days after the U.K. EU membership referendum - was not a coincidence. As Peter mused at the time, "the post-Brexit shock running through policy circles leads to a further easing in fiscal and monetary policy." He was not speaking about the U.K. alone, but in global terms. Indeed, the populists have begun to deliver. Ever since President Trump's election, we have cautioned clients not to doubt the White House's populist credentials.7 After a surge in bond bearishness immediately following the election, investors lost faith in the populist narrative due to the failure of Congress to pass any significant legislation, as if Congress has ever been a nimble institution under previous presidents. But investors are beginning to realize that their collective political analysis was extremely wrong. Not only have profligate tax cuts been passed, as we controversially expected throughout 2017, but Congress is now on the brink of a monumental two-year appropriations bill that will add nearly 1% of GDP worth of fiscal thrust in 2018 higher than what the IMF expected for the U.S. (Chart 7). In addition, Congress has set in motion the process to re-authorize the use of "earmarks" - i.e. legislative tags that direct funding to special interests in representatives' home districts (Chart 8).8 Chart 72018 Fiscal Thrust Was Unexpected Chart 8Here Comes Pork! By our back-of-the-envelope accounting, Congress is about to authorize just shy of $400bn in extra spending over the next two years.9 If earmarks are allowed back into the legislative process, we could see up to another $50bn in spending. An infrastructure deal, which now also looks likely given that the Democrats have realized that their "resistance"/ "outrage" strategy does not work against the Trump White House, could add significantly to that total. We are already positioned for these political developments through two fixed-income recommendations. We are short U.S. 10-year Treasuries vs. German Bunds, a recommendation that has returned 27.7 bps since September 2017. In addition, we are short the Fed Funds December 2018 futures, a recommendation that has returned 43.17 bps since the same initiation date. In addition, we went long the U.S. dollar index (DXY) on January 31, right before the stock market correction and precisely when the greenback appeared to bottom. Should investors prepare for runaway inflation this cycle? Is it time to load up on gold? We do not think so. The fiscal impulse from the two-year budget deal will become negative in 2020. The capex incentives from the tax cut plan are also front-loaded. The paradigm-shifting impact on inflation will require a policy paradigm shift. And we expect such a shift only after the next recession. To put it bluntly, U.S. voters elected a TV game show host due to angst at a time when unemployment stood at 4.6% (the rate on November 2016). Who will they elect with unemployment rising to 6% in the aftermath of the next recession, or God forbid if that next recession is worse than we think it will be? Policymakers are unlikely to sit around and wait for an answer to that question. Extraordinary measures will be taken to prevent the median voter from lashing out against the system when the next recession hits. Inflation, which is a redistributive mechanism, will be employed to transfer wealth from savers (mainly well-to-do retirees) to consumers (their children). In large part, this will be a generational wealth transfer between Baby Boomers (or at least those with some savings) and their Millennial children. Given that Millennials have become the largest voting bloc in the U.S. as of the 2016 election, this will be a populist policy with firm backing in the electorate. The next recession will therefore usher in the inflationary era of the next decade, regardless of how painful the actual recession is. In the meantime, we recommend that clients with a 9-to-12 month horizon continue to "buy on dips," given that a recession is not on the horizon. However, with the U.S. 10-year yield approaching 3%, China moderately slowing down (with considerable risk to the downside), and the U.S. dollar slide arrested, we think that the outperformance of EM equities is over. Brexit: We Can't Work It Out10 The EU agreed on January 29 to its negotiation guidelines for the temporary transition period after the U.K. officially leaves the bloc in March 2019.11 The British press predictably balked at the conditions - the term "vassal state" has been liberally bandied about - which in our view included absolutely nothing out of the expected. The EU conditions for the transition period are not the fundamental problem. Rather, the problem is that the "Vote Leave" campaign was never honest with its promises. Boris Johnson, the most prominent supporter of Brexit ahead of the vote and now the foreign minister in Prime Minister Theresa May's cabinet, famously quipped after the referendum that "there will continue to be free trade and access to the single market."12 The problem with that promise, however, was that it was predicated on using London's "superior negotiating position" vis-à-vis the EU in order to force the Europeans to redefine what membership in the Common Market means. As we pointed out in our net assessment ahead of the Brexit referendum, the problem with exiting the EU but remaining in the Common Market is that the issue of sovereignty is not resolved (Diagram 1).13 As such, Johnson and other Brexit supporters argued that they could change the relationship by forcing the EU to change how the Common Market works. Diagram 1Common Market Membership Is Illogical Except for one problem: the U.K.'s negotiating position is not, never was, nor ever will be, superior. Anyone with a rudimentary understanding of how trade works can understand this. For example, the U.K. is a significant market for Germany, at 6% of German exports (right in line with the 6% of total EU exports that go to the U.K.). However, the EU is a far greater destination for British exports, with 47% of all exports going to the bloc.14 As we expected, the EU has surprised the conventional wisdom by remaining united in the face of negotiations. And as we also predicted, the Tories are now completely divided.15 PM May will attempt to hammer out an internal deal on how to approach the transition deal. But her political capital is so drained by the disastrous early election results that there is practically no way that she can produce a set of negotiating guidelines that will not be pilloried in the press. As such, we expect a new election to take place in the U.K. ahead of March 2019, perhaps sooner. We do not see how May's negotiating position will satisfy all wings of the Conservative Party. In addition, we see no scenario by which the ultimate exit deal with the EU gets enough votes in Westminster. Investors betting on that election replacing a second Brexit referendum would be wrong. A Jeremy Corbyn-led, Labour government will only turn against Brexit once the polls definitively turn against it. This has not yet happened, as the gap between supporters and opponents of Brexit in the polls, while widening in favor of opponents, remains within a margin of error (Chart 9). As such, Corbyn would scrap the Tory-led negotiations with the EU and ask Brussels for even more time - and thus more market uncertainty! - in order to produce a Labour-led Brexit deal.16 In order for the probability of Brexit to definitively decline, the polls have to show that "Bregret" or "Bremorse" is setting in. Without a move in the polls, U.K. politicians will continue to pursue Brexit, no matter how flawed their tactics may be. Policymakers are ultimately not the price makers but the price takers. On the issue of Brexit, the U.K. median voter is only slightly miffed regarding the outcome. Current polls suggest that Labour could win the next election, albeit needing to rule with a coalition (Chart 10). This would prolong the uncertainty facing the economy. Not only is Corbyn the most left-leaning politician in a major European economy since François Mitterand, but also his coalition would likely include the Scottish National Party and potentially the Liberal Democrats. Keeping all their priorities aligned could be even more difficult than the balancing act PM May is performing between soft-Brexiters, hard-Brexiters, and the Democratic Unionist Party. Chart 9Bremorse: Rising, But Not Definitive Chart 10Anti-Brexit Forces On The Rise Meanwhile, on the economic front, the situation is not much better. Our colleague Rob Robis, BCA's chief bond strategist, recently penned a critical assessment of the U.K. economy.17 As Rob pointed out, the OECD leading economic indicator is decelerating steadily and pointing to a real GDP growth rate below 2% in 2018 (Chart 11). The biggest factors that will weigh on growth will be a sluggish consumer and softer capex. Household consumer growth has been slowing since early 2017, driven by diminishing consumer confidence (Chart 12, top panel). High realized inflation, which has sapped the purchasing power of U.K. workers who have not seen matching increases in wages, is weighing on confidence (third panel). Consumers were able to maintain a decent pace of spending during a period of stagnant real income growth by drawing on savings, but that looks to be tapped out now with the saving rate down to a 19-year low of 5.5% (bottom panel). Chart 11U.K. Growth Set To Slow Chart 12The U.K. Consumer Looks Tapped Out Making matters worse, U.K. consumers are not seeing much of a wealth effect from the housing market. The January 2018 readings of the year-over-year growth rate of U.K. house prices from the Halifax and Nationwide indexes came in at 1.9% and 3.1% respectively (Chart 13). In addition, the net balance of national house price expectations from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) has steadily declined since mid-2016 and now sits just above zero (i.e. equal number of respondents expecting higher prices and falling prices). The same indicator for London was a staggering -47% in January 2018. Apparently, foreigners are no longer interested in a Brexit discount. Our global bond team goes on to point out that political uncertainty is also weighing on U.K. business investment spending. Capital expenditure growth slowed to 4.3% year-over-year in nominal terms in Q3 2017 and is even lower in real terms (Chart 14). Chart 13No Wealth Effect ##br## From Housing Chart 14Brexit Gloom Trumps ##br##Export Boom For U.K. Companies Putting all of this together, neither our global bond team nor our foreign exchange team expect the Bank of England to raise interest rates, despite the market pricing in 36 bps of rate hikes over the next twelve months. As Chart 15 illustrates, inflation across a broad swath of components is likely to slow sharply in the coming months as the trade-weighted pound has stopped depreciating. Thus, the pass-through from a lower exchange rate is beginning to dissipate.18 In the long-term, we understand why investors are itching to bet on Brexit never happening. But to get from here to there, the market will have to riot. And that means more downside to U.K. assets. Chart 15U.K. Inflation:##br## Less Pass-Through From The Pound Chart 16GBP:##br## Stuck In A Rut Bottom Line: BCA's FX strategist, Mathieu Savary, has pointed out that the trade-weighted pound is testing the upper bound of its post-Brexit trading range (Chart 16). As our FX and bond teams show in their respective research, the economics currently at play make it unlikely that the pound will be able to punch above the ceiling of this range. Our political assessment adds to this view. In fact, we expect that the coming political uncertainty, including an early election prior to March 2019, is likely to take the pound back to the floor of its trading range. As such, we are recommending that clients short cable, GBP/USD. Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Timing Of The Next Recession," June 16, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Special Report, "Beware The 2019 Trump Recession," dated March 7, 2017, and "2018 Outlook - Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," dated November 20, 2017, available at bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Special Report, "Timing The Next Equity Bear Market," dated January 24, 2014, and "Timing Equity Bear Markets," dated April 6, 2011, available at bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Global ETF Strategy Special Report, "A Guide To Spotting And Weathering Bear Markets," dated August 16, 2017, available at etf.bcaresearch.com. 5 The ten components of leading economic index for the U.S. include: 1. Average weekly hours, manufacturing; 2. Average weekly initial claims for unemployment insurance; 3. Manufacturers' new orders, consumer goods and materials; 4. ISM® Index of New Orders; 5. Manufacturers' new orders, nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft orders; 6. Building permits, new private housing units; 7. Stock prices, 500 common stocks; 8. Leading Credit Index TM; 9. Interest rate spread, 10-year Treasury bonds less federal funds; and 10. Index of consumer expectations. Source: The Conference Board. 6 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "End Of The 35-Year Bond Bull Market," dated July 5, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "U.S. Election: Outcomes & Investment Implications," dated November 9, 2016, and "Constraints & Preferences Of The Trump Presidency," dated November 30, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Upside Risks In U.S., Downside Risks In China," dated January 17, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 9 We are referring to the Senate deal struck last week to authorize additional military spending ($80bn in FY2018 and $85bn in FY2019) and discretionary spending ($63bn in FY2018 and $68bn in FY2019), as well as to provide disaster relief in the amount of $45bn for both fiscal years. 10 Life is very short, and there's no time ... For fussing and fighting, my friend ... 11 Please see European Council, "Brexit: Council (Article 50) adopts negotiating directives on the transition period," dated January 29, 2018, available at consilium.europa.eu. 12 Please see "UK will retain access to the EU single market: Brexit leader Johnson," Reuters, dated June 26, 2016, available at uk.reuters.com. 13 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and European Investment Strategy Special Report, "With Or Without You: The U.K. And The EU," dated March 17, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 14 This is not a coincidence. The whole point of the EU is that it is the world's richest consumer market. As such, it has massive negotiating leverage with all trade partners. As a side note, this throws into doubt the logic that the U.K. can get better trade deals by leaving the bloc. The first test of that premise will be its negotiations with the EU itself. 15 Please see BCA Special Report, "Break Glass To Brexit: A Fact Sheet," dated June 17, 2016, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 16 Investors should remember that Westminster voted decisively 319 to 23 to reject the Liberal Democrats' amendment seeking a referendum on the final Brexit agreement. Only nine Labour MPs voted in favor of the amendment after Jeremy Corbyn instructed his party to abstain. 17 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "A Melt-Up In Equities AND Bond Yields?" dated January 23, 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 18 Please see BCA Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "The Euro's Tricky Spot," dated February 2, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com.
Special Report Dear Client, Wednesday, we sent you a Special Report by our Global Investment Strategist, Peter Berezin titled: The Return of Vol, which fleshed out BCA's view on the recent volatility spike and the associated market selloff. BCA believes that markets are realizing that U.S. inflation is not forever dead. As such, market volatility is set to rise, even if global equities can make new highs. From an FX perspective, a rise in U.S. inflation, especially when accompanied by the kind of spending programs announced this week in Washington DC, could result in a period of strength for the U.S. dollar. Additionally, since financial markets tend to experience clusters of volatility, the recent bout of volatility can stay in place for a while. High volatility tends to be negative for carry trades, hence EM currencies could suffer this quarter. The Australian dollar and the euro could also decline under this scenario. However, the yen and CHF may experience upside, but mostly against other currencies than the greenback. In this present report, we are updating our views on the G10 central banks. Best regards, Mathieu Savary Feature In our Special Report published last summer titled "Who Hikes Next?" we examined which of the G10 central banks would be next to join the Federal Reserve on its tightening path.1 Seven months later, we now know that the Bank of Canada and, to a lesser extent, the Bank of England, were respective second and third to begin raising their own policy rates. It is now time to revisit the topic and see which central banks are most likely to adjust their policy further. As Chart 1 shows, global goods prices have picked up steam, which has been translated in an ebbing of global deflationary forces. A few factors lie behind this improvement. First, China is not exporting deflation around the world anymore because the trade-weighted yuan has been stable and producer price inflation, which currently stands at 5%, has been in positive territory for 15 straight months. Second, thanks to ebullient global growth, global capacity utilization has grown significantly. Third, oil prices have climbed further. This development has been particularly meaningful as it has contributed to a significant pick-up in market-based inflation expectations. But as in every economic cycle, some risks are worth monitoring. As we have highlighted before, global money growth has slowed, Chinese monetary conditions have tightened meaningfully and Asian manufacturing activity has decelerated in a wide swath of countries. Even BCA's Global Capex Indicator (Chart 1, bottom panel), which flashed an unabashed green light last June, has begun to roll over. The recent market shakeup has also reminded investors that higher bond yields do have an impact on asset prices and economic growth. Despite these worries, we expect more central banks to join the fray this year and begin removing accommodation one way or another. Others will shy away, but they will guide markets toward expecting less monetary accommodation next year. Finally, some central banks will likely stand pat, and will leave their policy settings unchanged. Chart 2 illustrates where we think G10 central banks stand in their respective hiking cycles. Chart 1The Reasons Why Central Banks Are Tightening Chart 2G10 Central Banks Map The Hikers 1) The U.S. Chart 3U.S. The Federal Reserve will continue to tighten policy this year. To begin with, its communications on the topic have been extremely clear: the Federal Open Market Committee wants to increase interest rates three times in 2018. The Fed has good reasons for this hawkish stance. The gap between the real policy rate and the recent average of real GDP growth remains in stimulative territory (Chart 3). Meanwhile, U.S. financial conditions have rarely been easier, yet the economy is receiving a boost thanks to tax cuts and spending increases. There is, therefore, little mystery as to why survey data point to healthy GDP growth for the first half of 2018. In fact, the Atlanta Fed GDPnow model currently forecasts a growth rate of 4.0% for the first quarter of this year. This is an inflationary combination. It is not just growth conditions that are creating tailwinds for the Fed. Resource utilization is also elevated. According to the CBO, the U.S. output gap closed last year, and the unemployment rate not only stands at its lowest level in 17 years, but it is also well below equilibrium. We are already seeing the symptoms of this state of affairs: the employment cost index is growing at 2.6%/annum, its highest rate in three years; the growth of average hourly earnings just hit 2.9%/annum, and even core inflation is bottoming. These developments will give comfort to the Fed that hiking rates three times this year is the right strategy. The Hikers 2) Canada Chart 4Canada The Bank of Canada has already increased rates three times since we first explored this topic last summer. Like the Fed, the BoC has strong justification behind its hawkish stance. While the policy rate is not as stimulative as it was last year, capacity utilization has become much tighter (Chart 4). The unemployment rate is now back in line with its underlying equilibrium, and the BoC's Business Outlook Survey shows that the quantity and intensity of labor shortages have become elevated, which has historically led to higher wages. Additionally, the OECD's approximation of the output gap has closed, something also acknowledged by the BoC's models. Core inflation has begun to respond, rising to 1.5% in December. The current backdrop suggests this trend has further to go. Moreover, as exports to the U.S. represent 20% of Canada's GDP, the economic vigor south of the border will only translate into further inflationary pressures up north. Based on these factors, we expect the BoC to increase rates as much as the Fed in 2018. This view is not without risks. NAFTA negotiations remain rocky, and the uncertainty emanating from trade policy could hurt Canadian capex. Additionally, Canadian house prices remain 31% above fair value, Canadians sport a debt load of 170% of disposable income, and a growing array of macro-prudential measures are being implemented to slow the housing market. If this combination bites deeply - which remains to be seen - the BoC may be forced to, at least, pause its tightening policy faster than anticipated. Still Hiking? 3) The U.K. Chart 5U.K. On many metrics, the Bank of England looks set to hike again in 2018. There is no denying that British monetary policy remains extremely easy, as the gap between the real policy rate and real GDP growth is still in massively stimulative territory (Chart 5). Moreover, according to the OECD, the output gap stands at 0.4% of potential GDP. This observation seems to be corroborated by the fact that the unemployment rate remains nearly 1% below its equilibrium value. Adding credence to these assertions, U.K. core inflation spiked as high as 2.9% one month ago. However, make no mistake: the spike in inflation, while facilitated by tight supply conditions, is still mostly a consequence of the pass-through created by the pound's collapse in 2016. Because the rate of change of the pound has stabilized, the U.K.'s inflation rate will fall back to earth. Moreover, the outlook for British consumption is murky as the household savings rate has plunged to a mere 5.2% of disposable income, and debt growth is peaking. Corporations too have curtailed their borrowings, pointing to a weak capex outlook. While the MPC would like to hike once or twice this year, since a policy tightening is contingent on elevated inflation, the central bank may once again disappoint. For now, rate hikes look likely, but this may change if inflation decelerates sharply. In The Starting Blocs For 2018 4) Sweden Chart 6Sweden The December policy statement by the Riksbank highlighted that while the world's oldest central bank will reinvest the proceeds from redemptions and coupon payments from its large bond portfolio, it still expects to begin lifting its benchmark rate in the middle of 2018. This is not a minute too soon. Swedish monetary conditions are incredibly easy: Real interest rates are 6% below the average real GDP growth of the past three years (Chart 6). Moreover, Sweden is facing growing capacity constraints. The unemployment rate is nearly 1% below equilibrium, and according to the OECD, the output gap stands at 1.5% of GDP, the most positive number among the G10. The Riksbank's own capacity utilization measure - an excellent leading indicator of inflation - is at a 10-year high, pointing to further acceleration in a core inflation that is already very close to 2%. Additionally, Sweden is in the thralls of a massive real estate bubble, a byproduct of extremely loose monetary policy. The external environment will remain the main source of risk to this hawkish outlook. On the plus side, the European Central Bank has begun tapering its QE program and should end new purchases in September 2018. This limits how high the SEK can spike against the euro - the currency of Sweden's main trading partner - if the Riksbank tightens policy. However, Asian industrial production has slowed sharply, and Swedish PMIs are already buckling. Any deepening of the recent selloff in risk assets, especially if it spreads further into commodities, could cause Riksbank Governor Stefan Ingves to retreat to his dovish safe place. In The Starting Blocs For 2019... Or 2018 5) New Zealand Chart 7New Zealand The Reserve Banks of New Zealand is slated to hike rates by mid-2019. However, risks are growing that the RBNZ could be forced into an earlier first hike. Policy is currently massively accommodating as the real official cash rate stands nearly 4% below the average real GDP growth of the past three years (Chart 7). At 1.4%, core inflation remains below the RBNZ's target, but it is on a rising trend, especially as the Kiwi economy is beyond full employment and the OECD's measure for New Zealand's output gap is at 0.8% of potential GDP. Moreover, GDP growth remains robust, and terms of trade have been improving as dairy prices are still firm, thus a further overheating in this economy is likely. The political front could also give impetus for the RBNZ to hike earlier than it recently suggested. The Ardern government has proposed increasing the minimum wage to NZ$20/hour by 2021, starting in April 2018. This could fuel already improving wages, and thus fan inflation. This government also plans to increase fiscal spending, which tends to exacerbate inflationary pressures when an economy is at full capacity. Thus, inflationary risks in New Zealand are skewed to the upside. In The Starting Blocs For 2019... Or 2018 6) Norway Chart 8Norway The Norges Bank anticipates it will begin to increase rates toward the middle of 2018. The Norwegian central bank is facing an interesting cross current. On the one hand, when compared with other nations on the list, the Norwegian economy seems less ripe to withstand higher rates. To begin with, because Norwegian core inflation has fallen precipitously in recent years, the gap between real interest rates and the average real GDP growth of the past three years has narrowed considerably (Chart 8). Moreover, the unemployment rate remains 0.9% above equilibrium, while a more broad-based measure of slack, the output gap, stands at -1.6% of potential GDP, at least according to the OECD. Moreover, core inflation only hovers near a 1.2% annual pace and is expected to stay below 2.5% in the coming years. Despite these negatives for Norway, some important positives also exist, which explains the Norges Bank's optimism. The Norwegian economy did not go through much of a financial crisis this cycle; as a result, Norwegian banks are healthy, and the Norwegian money multiplier never imploded as it did in other G10 countries. Also, the Norwegian krone is very cheap, adding a further reflationary impulse beyond low rates. Moreover, Norwegian GDP growth has experienced a rebound on the back of rallying oil prices. However, oil prices are nearing the top end of our energy strategists' forecasts, suggesting this tailwind is receding. Altogether, this confluence of factors suggests that similar to the RBNZ, the Norges Bank is likely to hike rates in early 2019 or late 2018. 2019 Take Off 7) Australia Chart 9Australia The Reserve Bank of Australia may well begin increasing interest rates in early 2019. Many factors would argue that the RBA could in fact increase interest rates earlier. Even though it is less accommodative than Sweden's or New Zealand's, Australian monetary policy is quite easy as the gap between the real policy rate and the average real GDP growth rate of the past three years is well into negative territory (Chart 9). Additionally, core inflation has rebounded hitting 1.9% recently, while trimmed-mean CPI stands at 1.8%. Among additional positives, Australia's national income is growing at a robust 4.3% annual pace and job creation is brisk, with payrolls expanding at an impressive 3.6% rate on a yearly basis. These positives mask some stiff headwinds. Rapid national income growth will likely peter out. It was the result of the very large rebound in the RBA's commodity price index, however, this benchmark, which was growing at a 53% annual rate in February 2017, is now contracting at a 1% annual rate. Additionally, the OECD's measure for the Australian output gap stands at -1.5%. While it is true that the unemployment rate is below its equilibrium rate, the RBA's labor underutilization measure remains near 25-year highs. This explains why robust job creation is not being translated into wage gains, and suggests that the RBA is right to expect trimmed-mean inflation to durably be at 2-2.25% only by the end of 2019. Moreover, the recent strength in the AUD will also weigh on inflation going forward. Netting out pros and cons suggests that the most likely first hike by the RBA will be in early 2019. 2019 Take Off 8) Euro Area Chart 10Euro Area The European Central Bank has begun tapering its QE program, and if the global economy does not experience any meaningful relapse, the ECB will end new purchases this September. However, a rate hike is not in the offing this year. To begin with, the ECB's communications on the topic have been rather clear: At its latest press conference, President Mario Draghi once again rejected any possibility of a move this year, and even Jens Weidmann, the Bundesbank's head, acknowledged that the current market pricing - a hike in the summer of 2019 - is about right. While it is true that the ECB's monetary policy setting is still very accommodative, the unemployment rate remains 0.8% above equilibrium, and outside of Germany, labor underutilization is still high. Moreover, the OECD's estimate of the euro area's output gap still stands at -0.5% of potential GDP (Chart 10). Another hurdle is core CPI which remains well below the ECB's objective; in fact, after hitting 1.2% in May, inflation excluding food and energy has now relapsed to 0.9%. Peripheral nations are experiencing even weaker inflation readings. With the ECB's inflation forecast still well below target until 2020, a rate hike will have to wait until next year. The Laggards 9) Switzerland Chart 11Switzerland The Swiss National Bank remains firmly among the lagging central banks within the G10. Because inflation is still at only 0.7%, the gap between real interest rates and average real GDP growth of the past three years is among the least stimulative in the G10 (Chart 11). Corroborating this observation, loan growth has averaged a paltry 4% over the course of the past three years. Moreover, the Swiss economy is still replete with excess capacity. The unemployment rate may be a low 3%, but it still stands 1.3% above equilibrium, and Swiss wage growth remains very depressed. Moreover, the OECD pegs the Swiss output gap at -1.2% of potential GDP. On a PPP basis, the Swiss franc remains 5% overvalued against the euro, Swiss core inflation was only 0.7% in December, but better than the -1% posted in early 2016. The SNB is likely to officially abandon its foreign asset purchases this year. The Swiss economy has recovered from its doldrums of the past several years, and most importantly, the euro crisis is now fully in the rearview mirror. This means that safe-haven flows out of the euro area, which were pushing the CHF to nosebleed valuation levels, have dried up. In fact, this year's weakness in the franc versus the euro was not accompanied by much increases in SNB sight deposits, suggesting this depreciation has been organic and not manufactured in Bern and Zurich. However, until core CPI moves closer to 2% and Swiss wages pick up, the SNB will likely lag the ECB when it comes to actual interest rate increases amid fears that the Swiss franc will rebound and tighten policy again. A late 2019 or early 2020 hike remains the most likely scenario. The Laggards 10) Japan Chart 12Japan The Bank of Japan is also faraway from increasing policy rates. This is not because the Japanese economy is replete with excess slack. It is not. The active job openings-to-applicants ratio stands at a whopping 44-year high, the unemployment rate is 0.8% below equilibrium and the OECD's estimate of the output gap is in positive territory (Chart 12). However, despite this very inflationary backdrop, inflation excluding food and energy remains a paltry 0.3%/annum. The BoJ has rightfully identified moribund inflation expectations as the key to unlocking this mystery. Decades of deflation have created a deflationary mindset among Japanese economic agents. As a result, wages and inflation itself are not experiencing much of a lift. The BoJ is tackling this issue head on, and has made it clear that it will not abandon its yield curve control strategy until inflation is well above its 2% target. In the BoJ's view, an inflationary overshoot is now necessary to shock deflationary mentalities, which will be the keystone to let inflation take off in durable fashion. For now, the tight negative relationship between Japanese financial conditions and inflation suggests the BoJ will do its utmost to contain the yen, which would undermine the progress made in recent quarters. As such, we do not foresee any rate hikes until well into 2019. QQE is likely to be abandoned first, as in practice the BoJ has not hit its JGB purchases target since the first half of 2016. Investment Implications The dollar could experience a further lift in the first half of 2018. Investors plunked the greenback last year and in the opening weeks of 2018 because they had been focusing on the far future - a future in which the ECB hikes rates faster than the Fed. But the reality remains that this year and next, the Fed will lift interest rates much more than the ECB. This means the euro is vulnerable to a pullback as it is very expensive relative to differentials at the front end of the curve. The outlook for EUR/USD will improve again once we get closer to 2019. The CAD has niether much upside nor downside. Interest rate markets are pricing in as many interest rate increases as we are. The key for the CAD will once again be oil prices, but keep in mind that Brent prices are not far off from our energy strategists' target of US$67/bbl. The SEK and the NOK will likely experience upside versus the euro. Their central banks are also set to pull the trigger before the ECB. Moreover, these two currencies are very cheap. However, the ride is unlikely to be a smooth one. The budding slowdown in Asian manufacturing could generate temporary hiccups before yearend that will cause these extremely pro-cyclical currencies to swoon. The picture for the pound remains as murky as ever. On one hand, the BoE has begun to increase rates. However, this progress could run astray very easily if, as we expect, British inflation weakens anew. Moreover, Brexit negotiations with the rest of the EU are far from fully settled. Further, the trade-weighted pound is moving toward the top end of its post-Brexit range, making it highly vulnerable to even a modest disappointment. The Australian dollar is likely to experience a poor 2018, as the RBA is a long way from increasing interest rates, and on all the long-term metrics we track, the AUD is one of the most expensive currencies. A continuation of the recent spat of asset market volatility could prove to be unkind to the Aussie. The kiwi will likely outperform its antipodean brethren as we see upside risk for interest rates in New Zealand. Finally, Swiss and Japanese interest rates will remain near current levels for a few more years. This suggests that the Swiss franc and the yen have little durable upside this year. The same holds true for the first half of 2019. However, since Switzerland and Japan still sport hefty current account surpluses and supersized positive net international investment positions, the CHF and JPY will continue to behave as safe-haven currencies, rallying when global asset prices weaken. This means that since markets tend to experience volatility clusters, the recent bout of market volatility could continue, which will help both the Swiss franc and the yen over the coming weeks. This will be especially true if the CHF and JPY are bought against the EUR, AUD, CAD, and NZD. But beware: the yen is especially cheap, so any signs that inflation expectations of Japanese agents pick up could be associated with a sharp rally in the yen, as it will spell imminent doom for the BoJ's YCC strategy. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, titled "Who Hikes Next?", dated June 30, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades