Asset Allocation
Highlights As government bond yields have fallen to zero or below, many of our clients have asked us how to obtain income from other asset classes. In this report we analyze three income opportunities in the equity market: high-dividend yield stocks, dividend growth stocks, and preferred shares. High-dividend yield stocks have a large style bias to the value factor. Thus, investors who wish to invest in high-dividend yield stocks might be better served by investing in dividend plays in the non-value universe. Dividend growth stocks – such as the ones in the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats index – are historically less likely to cut their dividends, thanks to their defensive nature and corporate incentives. The Aristocrats should continue increasing dividends during this crisis. Our screening points to the following as the most attractive: ExxonMobil, Franklin Resources, 3M, Procter & Gamble, AT&T, and Genuine Parts. We would not buy US preferred shares, given that they are heavily weighted to Financials, a sector that will do poorly in an environment of low interest rates. Feature As the crisis caused by COVID-19 has battered risk assets, many of our clients have asked us how to obtain income in this current environment. In the past, investors could rely on a consistent coupon provided by government bonds. However, this is no longer the case. The crisis has dragged DM government bond yields around the world to below or near zero, which means that investors looking for income opportunities must search outside of government bonds, in riskier asset classes. One such asset class is equities. Over the last 50 years, income return has accounted for roughly a third of the total return of global equities (Chart 1, top panel). Moreover, in contrast to other sources of equity return such as earnings growth or multiple expansion, income return is always positive, making it much more consistent through time as well as resilient to recessions (Chart 1, middle and bottom panels). However, there are a couple of drawbacks to equities as income-generating assets: The income yield of equities is not particularly high, especially when one compares them with asset classes such as corporate debt which have similar or lower volatility (Chart 2, top panel). As opposed to fixed-income assets, where a set income return is guaranteed provided there is no default and the security is held to maturity, companies can actually cut their equity dividends when they come under stress. As a consequence, while trailing dividend yield is often an accurate indicator of future income return, it can overestimate it during bear markets (Chart 2, bottom panel). Chart 1Dividends Make Up A Substantial Portion Of Equity Returns
Dividends Make Up A Substantial Portion Of Equity Returns
Dividends Make Up A Substantial Portion Of Equity Returns
Chart 2The Income Return Of Equities Is Low And Can Be Deceiving During Bear Markets
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
In this report we examine two different dividend strategies that try to address the issues above: high-dividend yield stocks and dividend growth stocks. In addition to these strategies within the common equity space, we also explore whether preferred shares can be an attractive income opportunity. For each of these three income strategies we try to answer the following questions: How are these dividend indices constructed? How has each strategy performed historically? How has it performed during bear markets? What is the sector composition of each strategy? How are valuations now? To answer these questions, we examine the MSCI High-Dividend Yield indices, the S&P Dividend Aristocrat indices and the iShares Preferred Shares indices. Moreover, based on our analysis, we also make some recommendations as to which is the best income strategy in equity markets for the current environment. Please see our Investment Implications section for more details. High-Dividend Yield Stocks As their name suggests, high-dividend yield indices select for stocks with the highest dividend yields. In practice however, many more screening criteria are imposed. In order to ensure some stability in dividend payout, MSCI excludes REITs, payout outliers, negative dividend growth stocks, low-quality stocks, and low-performance stocks. Once all of these screening criteria are applied, MSCI selects for stocks which have a dividend yield that is at least 30% higher than its benchmark. Table 1 shows details on these screening criteria. Table 1Criteria For MSCI High-Dividend Yield Indices
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
How has the MSCI High-Dividend index performed historically? Since 1996, high-dividend yield stocks have outperformed the benchmark at the global level by 50% (Chart 3, top panel). This outperformance has been mostly a result of the income advantage this index provides, given that price return has outperformed only by a paltry 3%. It is also worth noting that price performance has been particularly poor since the Financial Crisis, and has actually caused high-dividend yield stocks to underperform on a total return basis over the past decade. Relative performance has been flat to down, even in those markets where high-dividend yield had been very successful previously such as Canada, Japan, and Emerging Markets (Chart 3, bottom panel). What has caused this underperformance? One reason is the low allocation that the high-yield index has to Technology (Chart 4, panel 1). Another reason is style tilt. Factor analysis reveals that the high-dividend yield index has a very strong value bias1 (Chart 4, panel 2). This strong style tilt is likely responsible for the poor relative price performance of high-dividend yield stocks, as value has been notorious for underperforming over the past decade (Chart 4, panel 3). Chart 3High-Dividend Yield Stocks Have Not Outperformed In The Past Decade
High-Dividend Yield Stocks Have Not Outperformed In The Past Decade
High-Dividend Yield Stocks Have Not Outperformed In The Past Decade
Chart 4The High-Dividend Yield Index Has A Strong Value Bias
The High-Dividend Yield Index Has A Strong Value Bias
The High-Dividend Yield Index Has A Strong Value Bias
But while high-dividend yield stocks are an implicit bet on value, there is evidence that investing in high-dividend yield stocks within the non-value universe is a profitable strategy. In the paper “What Difference Do Dividends Make?”, Coronover et al. found that high-dividend yield companies actually outperform their low-dividend yield counterparts in the high and median price-to-book universes2 (Table 2). Additionally, they found that high-dividend yield stocks also performed better vis-à-vis low-dividend yield stocks in the mid-cap and large-cap universes. Table 2High-Dividend And Low-Dividend Yield Stocks Sorted By Price-To-Book And Market Cap
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
Dividend Growth Stocks Dividend growth stocks are securities that have increased their dividend for a certain number of consecutive years. In the US, companies with a track record of at least 25 years of dividend increases are usually called “dividend aristocrats”, while companies with a 10-year track record are known as “dividend achievers”.3 However, the requirements to be classified as a dividend aristocrat or a dividend achiever are not uniform across index providers, and even within providers they are not uniform across different countries, which means that investors need to pay attention to selection criteria when investing in a dividend growth index (Table 3). In this report we will focus on the best-known dividend growth index: the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats index. Table 3Different Criteria To Become A Dividend Aristocrat In Different Countries
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
How has this index performed historically? The S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats index has outperformed the S&P 500 by nearly 60% since 1995 in total-return terms and by more than 30% in price terms. Additionally, it has enjoyed less volatility and has outperformed significantly during recessions (Chart 5, panel 1). Chart 5Dividend Aristocrats Outperform During Bear Markets
Dividend Aristocrats Outperform During Bear Markets
Dividend Aristocrats Outperform During Bear Markets
The main difference between the benchmark and the Aristocrats index comes down to sector tilt and leverage. The second panel of Chart 5 shows that the Aristocrats index has a large overweight in Consumer Staples and a large underweight in Technology relative to the S&P 500. Meanwhile, while valuations are not that different, and equity profitability is actually lower, the companies in the Aristocrats index are significantly less levered than those of the S&P 500, a testament to their defensive nature (Table 4). Table 4Dividend Aristocrats Have Low Leverage
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
But are dividend aristocrats really a more reliable source of income than the rest of the market? Empirically, they have been. In the US, the likelihood of a dividend increase in any given year has historically been a function of how many consecutive dividend increases a company has done before (Chart 6). Beyond the strong balance sheets and stable business models that dividend aristocrat companies have, this is most likely a result of the incentives created by the asymmetry of the index: A multi-decade policy of dividend increases is a significant investment of time and resources to signal stability to the market. However, the status obtained by this policy – and all the resources devoted to it– is immediately lost the moment dividends are cut, with no possibility of reclaiming it in at least a quarter century.4 Importantly, the longer a company raises dividends the bigger the investment becomes, creating a very high incentive to not cut dividends. That being said, sometimes this incentive is not enough to overcome extreme business conditions, such as those that occurred in 2008. Chart 7 shows that the members of the S&P Dividend Aristocrats index declined by roughly a third during the Financial Crisis, mostly as a result of previously reliable banks that had to cut their dividends in 2008 and 2009.5 Chart 6The Likelihood Of A Dividend Increase Is Higher For Dividend Aristocrats
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
Chart 7Extreme Business Conditions Can Force Some Aristocrats Off The Index
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
Preferred Shares Preferred shares are securities which have traits of both debt and common equity: Like debt, they have a par value, no voting rights, and they provide a prespecified cash flow. Nevertheless, they do not have a maturity date and they represent an ownership stake in the company, just like common equity. Analyzing the historical performance of preferred shares is difficult since most indices begin only around the Financial Crisis. However, from the limited data we have, we can make some observations: Preferred shares in the US have underperformed common equity, investment- grade debt and high-yield debt since 2004 (Chart 8). They also experienced very deep selloffs during recessions, often similar to the selloffs that common equities have experienced (Table 5). However, preferred shares do seem to have similar return drivers to corporate credit. In particular, much like corporate credit, they tend to fall whenever yields on corporate debt rise (Chart 9). Chart 8Preferred Equity Has Underperformed Credit And Common Equity
Preferred Equity Has Underperformed Credit And Common Equity
Preferred Equity Has Underperformed Credit And Common Equity
Table 5Preferred Equity Has Similar Drawdowns To Common Equity During Recessions
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
Chart 9US Preferred Shares React Negatively To Rising Credit Yields
US Preferred Shares React Negatively To Rising Credit Yields
US Preferred Shares React Negatively To Rising Credit Yields
Chart 10US Preferred Shares Are Heavily Tilted To Financials
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
In theory, the co-movement of preferred equity and corporate debt is not that surprising. Much like credit, preferred shares are fixed-income securities which are subject to credit risk. Whenever yields on risky credit rise, these fixed-income securities become relatively less attractive, making their price fall. Chart 11Canadian Preferred Shares Are An Oil Play
Canadian Preferred Shares Are An Oil Play
Canadian Preferred Shares Are An Oil Play
However, what is surprising is that preferred shares have underperformed both investment-grade and high-yield credit. How could an asset that technically has more risk – and thus should offer a better rate of return – underperform for such a long time? One plausible explanation is sector skew. Preferred shares are heavily skewed to Financials, a sector that has underperformed significantly over the past decade (Chart 10). While Financials tend to dominate most preferred indices, other factor may also affect returns. In Canada, the preferred share index is most sensitive to changes in the price of oil – a consequence of both the relatively high weight of Energy in the index, and the importance of the commodity for the Canadian economy (Chart 11). There are many types of preferred shares which include rate-resets, perpetuals, and variable rate. We do not analyze them in this report since indices tracking most of these securities have a very short history. We do advise our clients to be wary of compositional differences between indices, since sector composition could be a larger driver of returns than the type of preferred equity itself. Finally, while it is outside the scope of this report, it is worth remembering that preferred shares might still be worth looking at for taxable investors, given that dividends and interest income are often not taxed at the same rates. Investment Implications Dividend Growth Stocks Investors should consider including dividend growth stocks in their portfolios. Their defensive nature means that they should be able to weather the recession brought about by the coronavirus lockdowns better than the overall market, while their long-term dividend policy implies that these companies will be more reluctant to cut dividends. One drawback of the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrat index is that it is yielding less than 3%. Thus, investors would be better served by selecting individual securities within the index. In order to help with this exercise, we have ranked the companies in the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrat index according to our own GAA Income Score. The score is based on the following three traits: Raw Income: the company’s current dividend yield. Yield Stability: the number of consecutive years the company has raised its dividend. Attractiveness: The company’s current score from the BCA Equity Trading Strategy service. Please find the ranking of the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats in Appendix A. According to our GAA Income Score the best S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats are ExxonMobil, Franklin Resources, 3M, Procter & Gamble, AT&T, and Genuine Parts. High-Dividend Yield Stocks What about high-dividend yield stocks? The MSCI All-Country World High-Dividend Yield index is currently yielding a formidable 5%, making it an attractive income opportunity. However, investors should remember that high-dividend yield stocks have a significant exposure to the value factor. GAA is currently neutral on value versus growth, but we are concerned that value continued to underperform when equities were falling and has not been able to outperform in recent weeks as equities rebounded. For those who do not want to take on value exposure, overweighting high-dividend yield within non-value stocks and mid and large caps might be a better option. Preferred Equity Currently preferred shares have a dividend yield of roughly 5%. Do they make an attractive income opportunity? We don’t believe so. Low interest rates and tepid loan growth even after the quarantines are over will likely weigh on Financials – the sector which preferred shares are most exposed to. Moreover, its strong similarity to corporate debt makes this asset somewhat redundant for investors who already own credit. Appendix
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
Dividend Strategies: Exploring Income Opportunities In Equity Markets
Juan Correa Ossa Associate Editor juanc@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 This is in part by construction. The MSCI Value index uses dividend yield as one of its variables to asses value. 2 Mitchell Coronover, Gerald R. Jensen, and Marc W. Simpson, “What Difference Do Dividends Make?”, Financial Analyst Journal, Volume 72, Number 6 (2016). 3 Companies which have increased their dividend for at least 50 years are sometimes called “dividend kings”. 4 Eberner Asem and Ahamsul Alam, “The Market’s Reaction To Consecutive Dividend Increases,” (December 2017). 5 Not all companies exit the index due to dividend cuts. Some companies exit because of corporate restructurings or because they no longer meet the minimum market capitalization to qualify.
Highlights Risk assets have rallied thanks to a healthy dose of economic stimulus and mounting evidence that the number of new COVID-19 cases has peaked. Unfortunately, the odds of a second wave of infections remain high. In the absence of a vaccine or effective treatment, only mass testing can keep the virus at bay. Such testing will become available, but probably not for a few more months. Meanwhile, the global economy remains depressed. As earnings estimates are revised lower, stocks could give up some of their recent gains. Despite the fact that the supply of goods and services has fallen sharply during this recession, the overall effect has been deflationary. Deflationary pressures should subside later this year as demand picks up, commodity prices rise, and the US dollar weakens. Looking several years out, deglobalization and the increasing politicization of central banking could lead to accelerating inflation. Long-term investors should maintain a structurally below-benchmark duration stance in fixed-income portfolios, and position for steeper yield curves. Now What? Imagine being chased through the woods by an angry bear. You manage to climb a tree, getting high enough so that the bear cannot reach you. You breathe a sigh of relief. You are out of harm's way. Or so you think. You look down, and the bear is waiting for you at the base of the tree. You have no weapons. You feel cold and hungry. It is getting dark. This is the state the world finds itself in today. We have climbed up the tree. The number of new infections has peaked in Italy and Spain, the first large European countries hit by the virus. Hospital admissions in New York are falling. This, combined with a generous dose of economic stimulus, has allowed stocks to rally by 28% from their March 23 intraday lows. Yet, we have neither a vaccine nor a cure for the virus (although as we go to press, unconfirmed news reports suggest that Gilead’s drug, remdesivir, has had success in treating patients at a Chicago hospital). Chart 1Widespread Social Distancing Dampened The Spread Of All Flus And Colds
Still Stuck In The Tree
Still Stuck In The Tree
COVID-19 is part of the coronavirus family, which includes four members that are responsible for up to 30% of common colds (most other colds are caused by rhino-viruses). Social distancing has driven the number of cold and influenza-like cases in the US to very low levels (Chart 1). But does anyone really think that the common cold or flu will be permanently eradicated because of recent measures? If not, what will prevent COVID-19, which is no less contagious than these other illnesses, from resurfacing? In short, the bear is still there, waiting for us to reopen the economy. A Deep Recession As we wait, the economic damage continues to mount. The IMF’s baseline scenario foresees the global economy contracting by 3% in 2020, with advanced economies shrinking by 6.1%. This is far deeper than during the 2008/09 financial crisis (Chart 2). The IMF’s projections assume that the pandemic subsides in the second half of 2020, allowing containment measures to be relaxed. If the pandemic were to last longer than that, global output would fall by an additional 3% in 2020 relative to the Fund’s already bleak baseline. A second outbreak next year would push global GDP almost 5% below the IMF’s baseline in 2021, while the combination of a longer outbreak this year and a second outbreak next year would cause the level of output to fall 8% below the 2021 baseline (Chart 3). Chart 2Severe Damage To The Global Economy This Year
Severe Damage To The Global Economy This Year
Severe Damage To The Global Economy This Year
Chart 3Downside Risks To The IMF's Projections
Still Stuck In The Tree
Still Stuck In The Tree
The Ties That Bind The sudden stop in economic activity has led to a dramatic surge in unemployment. US initial unemployment claims have risen by a cumulative 22 million over the past four weeks. The true scale of layoffs is probably higher than that, given that some state websites have been unable to handle the flood of insurance applications. Chart 4Only About One-Third Of Those Who Lose Their Jobs Apply For Benefits
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Still Stuck In The Tree
Historically, only about one-third of those laid off have applied for benefits (Chart 4). While the take-up rate will be higher this time – the CARES Act increases weekly unemployment compensation, while expanding eligibility to self-employed workers – it is still reasonable to assume that the claims data do not capture how much of the workforce has been laid idle. The one piece of good news is that at least so far, temporarily laid-off workers account for the vast majority of the increase in unemployment. This is encouraging because it implies that in most cases, the ties that bind workers to firms have not been permanently severed. In this respect, the recovery in employment following this recession may end up resembling that of another “man-made” recession: the 1982 downturn (Chart 5). Back then, policymakers felt that a recession was a price worth paying to quash inflation. Once inflation fell, central banks were able to cut rates, allowing economic activity to recover. Today, the hope is that by shutting down all nonessential businesses, the virus will be quashed, and life will return to normal. Chart 5Comparing The 1982 Recession Versus Today: Employment Edition
Comparing The 1982 Recession Versus Today: Employment Edition
Comparing The 1982 Recession Versus Today: Employment Edition
Exit Plans It remains to be seen whether vanquishing the virus will be as straightforward as vanquishing inflation was in the early 1980s. As we noted last week, in the absence of a vaccine or an effective treatment, our best hope is that mass testing will allow businesses to reopen.1 The technology for such tests already exists; it just has yet to become available on a large enough scale. Just like during the Second World War, the production of weapons necessary to fight the virus will grow at an exponential pace (Chart 6). Chart 6Now Let's Do The Same For Test Kits
Still Stuck In The Tree
Still Stuck In The Tree
Near-Term Pressures On Risk Assets Exponential change is a difficult concept for the human mind to grasp. What seems painfully slow at first can quickly become unfathomably fast later on. The apocryphal story about the origins of the game of chess comes to mind.2 This puts investors in a bit of a quandary. Growth is likely to recover in the latter half of 2020 as COVID-19 testing becomes pervasive and the effects of fiscal and monetary stimulus make their way through the economy. But, the near-term picture could be soured by news stories of continued acute shortages of medical supplies and delays in providing financial assistance to hard-hit households and businesses, not to mention dire corporate earnings performance. The one piece of good news is that at least so far, temporarily laid-off workers account for the vast majority of the increase in unemployment. Indeed, bottom-up analyst earnings estimates still have further to fall. The Wall Street consensus expects S&P 500 companies to earn $142 per share this year and $174 in 2021. Our US equity strategists are projecting only $100 and $140 in EPS, respectively. Stock prices and earnings estimates generally travel together (Chart 7). On balance, we continue to favor global equities over bonds on a 12-month horizon, owing to the fact that the cyclically-adjusted earnings yield is quite a bit higher than the bond yield (Chart 8). However, we have less conviction about the near-term (3-month) direction of stocks, and would recommend that investors maintain above-average cash levels for now which can be deployed on any major selloff. Chart 7Negative Earnings Revisions Will Weigh On Stocks In The Near Term
Negative Earnings Revisions Will Weigh On Stocks In The Near Term
Negative Earnings Revisions Will Weigh On Stocks In The Near Term
Chart 8Favor Equities Over Bonds Over A 12-Month Horizon
Favor Equities Over Bonds Over A 12-Month Horizon
Favor Equities Over Bonds Over A 12-Month Horizon
Inflation And Supply Shocks: A Keynesian Paradox? One of the distinguishing features of this recession is that it has involved a simultaneous supply shock and a demand shock. Businesses have had to curb supply in order to allow workers to stay at home, while workers have reduced spending out of fear of going to stores or other venues where they could inadvertently contract the virus. Worries about job losses have further dented demand. There is no question about what happens to output when both demand and supply decline: output falls. In contrast, the impact on the price level depends on which shock dominates (Chart 9). Chart 9Inflation And Supply Shocks
Still Stuck In The Tree
Still Stuck In The Tree
As Appendix 1 illustrates with a set of simple numerical examples, in theory, a negative supply shock spread evenly across all sectors of the economy should cause the price level to rise. This is because unemployed workers, who are no longer contributing to output, will still end up consuming some goods and services by tapping into their savings, taking on new debt, or by receiving income transfers from the government. In the current situation, however, the supply shock has not been spread evenly throughout the economy. Some businesses have been completely shuttered, while others deemed essential have been allowed to operate. As the appendix shows, in such cases, the drop in aggregate demand is likely to be larger than if all sectors were equally impacted. In fact, it is possible for a supply shock to trigger a demand shock that is larger than the supply shock itself, leading to a perverse situation where a decline in supply results in a surfeit of output. A recent paper by Guerrieri, Lorenzoni, Straub, and Werning argues that the current pandemic represents such a “Keynesian supply shock.”3 Intuitively, such perverse supply shocks can arise if workers are cut off from purchasing many of the goods that they would normally buy. When the menu of available goods shrinks, even workers who are still employed could end up saving much of their income. Deflationary For Now All this implies that the pandemic is likely to be deflationary until more businesses reopen. The data seem to bear this out. The US core consumer price index fell by 0.1% month-over-month in March on a seasonally adjusted basis, led by steep declines in airfares and hotel lodging prices. High-frequency indicators, as well as the prices paid components of various purchasing manager indices, suggest that deflationary pressures have persisted into April (Chart 10). Chart 10Deflation Reigns For Now
Deflation Reigns For Now
Deflation Reigns For Now
Shelter inflation was reasonably firm in March but should soften over the coming months. A number of major apartment operators have announced rent freezes. In addition, the lagged effects from a stronger dollar and lower energy prices will contribute to lower goods inflation, while higher unemployment will hold back service inflation. Inflation Should Bounce Back In 2021 The discussion of Keynesian supply shocks suggests that aggregate demand will increase faster than supply as more sectors of the economy reopen. This should ease deflationary pressures. In addition, a rebound in global growth starting in the second half of 2020 will prompt a recovery in commodity prices. The forward oil curve is predicting that Brent and WTI crude prices will rise by 42% and 79%, respectively, over the next 12 months (Chart 11). Inflation expectations and oil prices tend to move closely together (Chart 12). Chart 11H2 2020 Rebound In Growth Will Lift Oil Prices
H2 2020 Rebound In Growth Will Lift Oil Prices
H2 2020 Rebound In Growth Will Lift Oil Prices
Chart 12Inflation Expectations And Oil Prices Tend To Move Closely Together
Inflation Expectations And Oil Prices Tend To Move Closely Together
Inflation Expectations And Oil Prices Tend To Move Closely Together
As a countercyclical currency, the US dollar will weaken over the next 12-to-18 months as global growth rebounds, providing an additional reflationary impulse (Chart 13). Falling unemployment will also eat into labor market slack, helping to support wages. Chart 13Stronger Global Growth In The Back Half Of The Year Will Weaken The Dollar, Putting Upward Pressure On US Inflation
Stronger Global Growth In The Back Half Of The Year Will Weaken The Dollar, Putting Upward Pressure On US Inflation
Stronger Global Growth In The Back Half Of The Year Will Weaken The Dollar, Putting Upward Pressure On US Inflation
The Structural Outlook For Inflation… And Bond Yields Looking further out, the outlook for inflation will depend on whether the structural forces that have suppressed the rise in consumer prices over the past few decades intensify or abate. On the one hand, it is possible that the pandemic will cast a pall over consumer and business sentiment for years to come. If households and firms restrain spending, this would exacerbate deflationary pressures. Likewise, if governments tighten fiscal policy in order to pay off the debts incurred during the pandemic, this could weigh on growth. On the other hand, high government debt levels may increase the political pressure on central banks to keep rates low, even once the labor market recovers. This could eventually lead to economic overheating in two-to-three years. Chart 14Global Trade Was Already Stagnating
Global Trade Was Already Stagnating
Global Trade Was Already Stagnating
A partial roll back in globalization could also cause consumer prices to rise. Global trade was already stagnant even before the trade war flared up (Chart 14). The pandemic may further inflame nationalist sentiment. Against the backdrop of high unemployment, Donald Trump is likely to campaign as a “war president,” relentlessly chiding Joe Biden for having too cozy a relationship with China. On balance, we suspect that inflation will rise more than expected over the long haul. This is not a particularly high bar to clear. Investors currently expect US inflation to average only 1.2% over the next decade based on TIPS breakevens. Market-based inflation expectations are even more subdued in most other advanced economies. If inflation does surprise to the upside, long-term bond yields are likely to increase by more than expected. Investors should maintain a structurally below-benchmark duration stance in fixed-income portfolios, and position for steeper yield curves. APPENDIX 1: Keynesian Supply Shocks Suppose there are two sectors, A and B. The economy consists of 2,000 workers, with each sector employing 1,000 workers. To keep things simple, assume that workers in each sector evenly split their consumption between the two sectors. Thus, a worker in sector A spends as much on goods from sector A as from sector B, and vice versa. Also assume that each worker, if employed, produces $1,000 of goods and receives a salary of $1,000 for his or her efforts. With this in mind, let us consider three scenarios: Scenario 1: Both Sectors Are Open For Business In this scenario, $1 million of good A and $1 million of good B are produced and supplied to the market. Since each of the 2,000 workers spends $500 on good A and $500 on good B, a total of $1 million of both goods are demanded. Aggregate demand equals aggregate supply.
Still Stuck In The Tree
Still Stuck In The Tree
Scenario 2: Partial Closure Of Both Sectors Suppose that half the workers in both sectors are laid off. While the unemployed workers do not earn any income, they still spend half as much as they used to by tapping into their savings ($250 on good A and $250 on good B for each unemployed worker). Each employed worker continues to spend $500 on good A and $500 on good B. Now there is $500,000 in total of each good produced, but $750,000 of each good demanded. Aggregate demand exceeds supply.
Still Stuck In The Tree
Still Stuck In The Tree
Scenario 3: Sector A, Deemed The Essential Sector, Remains Completely Open, While B Is Closed In this case, all sector A workers are still employed, earning $1,000 each. Since good B is no longer available for purchase, sector A workers increase spending on good A by 20% (from $500 to $600 per worker). Workers in sector B are all unemployed. However, they continue to tap into their savings. Rather than spending $250 on good A as they did in scenario 2, they increase their expenditures on good A by 20% (from $250 to $300). A total of $900,000 of good A is now demanded ($600*1,000+$300*1,000), which is less than the $1 million of good A supplied. Aggregate supply now exceeds demand for the part of the economy that is still open. The chart and table below summarize the results. The key insight is that a 50% shock to the entire economy curbs aggregate demand less than a 100% shock to half the economy. This implies that demand is likely to grow faster than supply as mass testing allows more of the economy to reopen.
Still Stuck In The Tree
Still Stuck In The Tree
Still Stuck In The Tree
Still Stuck In The Tree
Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Testing Times,” dated April 9, 2020. 2 In one account, the King of India was so impressed when the game of chess was demonstrated to him that he offered its inventor any reward he desired. After thinking for a while, the inventor said “Your Highness, please give me one grain of rice for the first square on the chessboard, two grains for the next square, four grains for the one after that, doubling the number of grains until the 64th square.” Stunned that the inventor would ask for such a puny reward, the King quickly agreed. A week later, the King’s treasurer informed His Highness that he would need to give the inventor 18 quintillion grains of rice, which is more than enough rice to cover the entire planet’s surface. “Holy Ganges, what have I done?” the King exclaimed, before having the inventor executed. 3 Veronica Guerrieri, Guido Lorenzoni, Ludwig Straub, and Iván Werning, “Macroeconomic Implications of COVID-19: Can Negative Supply Shocks Cause Demand Shortages?” NBER Working Paper No. 26918 (April 2020). Global Investment Strategy View Matrix
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Still Stuck In The Tree
Current MacroQuant Model Scores
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Still Stuck In The Tree
Highlights Stay tactically neutral to equities. The market may meet some short-term resistance, especially as a slew of poor earnings are released in the coming weeks. The long-term threat to equities comes from the pandemic’s lasting after-effects, such as financial and corporate distress, and/or a political backlash against the private sector. Long-term investors should prefer equities over bonds, with the caveat that the threat does not materialise. Long-term equity investors should avoid oil and gas and European banks at all costs… …but healthcare, European personal products, and European clothes and accessories should all form core long-term holdings. Fractal trade: long nickel / short copper. Feature Chart of the WeekSales Per Share Must 'Catch Down' With GDP, Just Like In 2008
Sales Per Share Must 'Catch Down' With GDP, Just Like In 2008
Sales Per Share Must 'Catch Down' With GDP, Just Like In 2008
The sharp snapback rally in stock markets has reached an important resistance point – the critical Fibonacci level of a 38.2 percent proportionate retracement of the sell-off.1 Technical analysts define the sell-off in terms of the most recent peak to trough. But we define it differently. We define it in terms of the longest time horizon of investors that capitulated at the sell-off. The market may meet some short-term resistance. The longest time horizon of investors that capitulated at the sell-off’s climax on March 18 was a seven-quarter horizon. Hence, we define the sell-off as the seven-quarter decline to March 18. On that basis, and using the DAX as our benchmark, we would expect the index to meet resistance at around a 21 percent retracement rally from the March 18 low. Which is pretty much where the DAX stands right now (Chart I-2).2 Chart I-22020 Low: A Seven-Quarter Capitulation Followed By A Fibonacci Retracement
2020 Low: A Seven-Quarter Capitulation Followed By A Fibonacci Retracement
2020 Low: A Seven-Quarter Capitulation Followed By A Fibonacci Retracement
After A Sharp Snapback Rally What Happens Next? The maximum length of investment horizons that capitulated on March 18 was unusually long at seven quarters. This should comfort long-term investors because of an important investment identity: Financial markets have fully priced a downturn when the longest time horizon of investors that have capitulated = the length of the downturn. So, the good news is that the March 18 bottom should hold if the downturn does not last longer than seven quarters. In this regard, the main risk of a protracted downturn comes not from the pandemic itself. Even if the pandemic returns in second and third waves, any economic shutdowns, full or partial, should last considerably less than seven quarters. Instead, the main risk comes from lasting after-effects, such as financial and corporate distress, and/or a political backlash against the private sector. The long-term threat comes from the pandemic’s after-effects on economic and political systems. But a protracted downturn of what? As we are focussing on the stock market, the downturn is not of GDP per se but its stock market equivalent: sales per share. In the long run, sales per share and GDP advance at the same rate. But the sector compositions of the stock market and GDP are not the same, so over shorter periods sales per share can underperform or outperform GDP. In which case, sales per share must catch up or catch down (Chart of the Week). In 2008, sales per share had to catch down. As a result, world sales per share declined for seven quarters through 2008-10, considerably longer than the decline in GDP (Chart I-3). Hence, the stock market found its bottom in early March 2009 when the longest time horizon of investors that had capitulated had reached seven quarters (Chart I-4). Chart I-32008-10: Sales Per Share Fell For Seven Quarters
2008-10: Sales Per Share Fell For Seven Quarters
2008-10: Sales Per Share Fell For Seven Quarters
Chart I-42009 Low: A Seven-Quarter Capitulation Followed By A Fibonacci Retracement
2009 Low: A Seven-Quarter Capitulation Followed By A Fibonacci Retracement
2009 Low: A Seven-Quarter Capitulation Followed By A Fibonacci Retracement
From this March 2009 bottom, the Fibonacci retracement equated to a 35 percent advance, which the market achieved by early June 2009. Thereafter, stocks met short-term resistance and gave back some of the snapback rally. Fast forward to 2020. Having likewise reached the Fibonacci retracement, the market may meet some short-term resistance, especially as a slew of poor earnings are released in the coming weeks. Assuming no lasting after-effects from financial distress or political backlash, the next sustained advance will happen later this year. Valuations Flatter Equities, But They Still Beat Bonds Turning to long-term investors the three most important things are: valuation, valuation, and valuation. Our favourite valuation measure is price to sales, which has been a good predictor of 10-year prospective returns going back to at least the 1980s (Chart I-5). Chart I-5Price To Sales Might Over-Estimate Prospective Returns In 2020, Just Like In 2008
Price To Sales Might Over-Estimate Prospective Returns In 2020, Just Like In 2008
Price To Sales Might Over-Estimate Prospective Returns In 2020, Just Like In 2008
But the predictive power depends on a crucial underlying assumption – that the past is a good guide to the future. Specifically, today we must assume that the pandemic causes just a brief blip in the multi-decade uptrend in stock market sales and profits. To repeat, the main long-term threat to stock markets comes not from the pandemic itself. The long-term threat comes from the pandemic’s after-effects on economic and political systems – such as crippled banking systems or large-scale nationalisations of the private sector. Furthermore, price to sales will err in its prediction if sales per share have deviated from GDP – implying either a future catch up or catch down. In the 1990s sales per share had underperformed GDP, so future returns outperformed the valuation prediction. However, in 2008 sales per share had outperformed GDP, so future returns underperformed the prediction. Today, just as in 2008, sales per share have become overstretched relative to GDP, so there will be a catch down. Which will weigh down prospective returns relative to what valuations appear to imply. Still, even adjusting for this, equities are likely to produce annualised nominal returns in the mid-single digits, comfortably higher than the yields on long-term government bonds. Hence, with the caveat that the pandemic does not generate lasting after-effects for economic and political systems, long-term investors should prefer equities over bonds. What Not To Buy, And What To Buy If a stock, sector, or stock market maintains a structural uptrend in sales and profits, then a big drop in the share price provides an excellent buying opportunity for long-term investors. In this case, the lower share price is stretching the elastic between the price and the up-trending profits, resulting in an eventual snap upwards. However, if sales and profits are in terminal decline, then the sell-off is not a buying opportunity other than on a tactical basis. This is because the elastic will lose its tension as profits drift down towards the lower price. In fact, despite the sell-off, if the profit downtrend continues, the elastic may be forced to snap downwards! Do not buy sectors whose profits are in major downtrends. This leads to a somewhat counterintuitive conclusion for long-term investors. After a big drop in the stock market, do not buy everything that has dropped. And do not buy the stocks and sectors that have dropped the most if their profits are in major downtrends. Specifically, the profits of oil and gas and European banks are in major structural downtrends (Chart I-6 and Chart I-7). Long-term equity investors should avoid these sectors at all costs. Chart I-6Oil And Gas Profits In A Major ##br##Downtrend
Oil And Gas Profits In A Major Downtrend
Oil And Gas Profits In A Major Downtrend
Chart I-7European Banks Profits In A Major Downtrend
European Banks Profits In A Major Downtrend
European Banks Profits In A Major Downtrend
Conversely, the profits of healthcare, European personal products, and European clothes and accessories are all in major structural uptrends (Chart I-8 - Chart I-10). As such, all three sectors should be core holdings for all long-term equity investors. Chart I-8Healthcare Profits In A ##br##Major Uptrend
Healthcare Profits In A Major Uptrend
Healthcare Profits In A Major Uptrend
Chart I-9European Personal Products Profits In A Major Uptrend
European Personal Products Profits In A Major Uptrend
European Personal Products Profits In A Major Uptrend
Chart I-10European Clothing Profits In A Major Uptrend
European Clothing Profits In A Major Uptrend
European Clothing Profits In A Major Uptrend
Fractal Trading System* Given the outsized moves in markets over the past month, all assets have become highly correlated making it more difficult to find candidates for trend reversals. Chart I-11Nickel Vs. Copper
Nickel Vs. Copper
Nickel Vs. Copper
However, we find that some relative moves within the commodity complex have not correlated with risk on/off. Specifically, the underperformance of nickel versus copper is technically stretched, so this week’s recommended trade is long nickel / short copper, setting a profit target of 11 percent with a symmetrical stop-loss. The rolling 1-year win ratio now stands at 67 percent. 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. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 0.382 = 1- phi. Where phi is the Golden Ratio, defined as the ratio of successive Fibonacci numbers in the limit. Alternatively, phi =1 / (1 + phi). 2 The seven-quarter sell-off in the DAX (capital only) to March 18 2020 was 39.4 percent, so a full retracement rally equals 65.1 percent, and a 0.382 geometric retracement equals 21.1 percent. Fractal Trading System Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Portfolio Strategy The Fed’s QE and ZIRP, the collapse in gasoline prices and extremely depressed breadth readings that are contrarily positive, all signal that it no longer pays to be bearish consumer discretionary stocks. A boost in demand for e-commerce, the high-growth profile of internet retailers along with neutral valuations and technicals, all compel us to trigger our upgrade alert and lift the S&P internet retail index to overweight. The rising gap between house price inflation and mortgage rates, the looming increase in residential investment’s contribution to GDP growth and firming industry operating metrics, all argue for an above benchmark allocation in the S&P home improvement retail index. Recent Changes Boost the S&P consumer discretionary sector to overweight today. Execute the upgrade alert and lift the S&P internet retail index to overweight today. Augment exposure to the S&P home improvement retail index to above benchmark today. Table 1
Fight Central Banks At Your Own Peril
Fight Central Banks At Your Own Peril
Feature The SPX oscillated violently last week, and a glimmer of good news on the coronavirus fight front, the Fed’s newly announced bazooka and a tick down in unemployment insurance claims all signaled that the bulls have the upper hand. We first showed the Google Trends’ worldwide searches for “coronavirus” series in our early-March Weekly Report,1 when stocks were unhinged and we were still bearish. Now, the most recent update of this indicator suggests that the recessionary lows are likely in for the SPX – this search term peaked a week prior to the overall stock market’s bottom (Google Trends shown inverted, Chart 1) – and we therefore reiterate our cyclically sanguine equity market view.2 Moreover, two weeks ago we highlighted that market internals were confirming the SPX recessionary lows.3 Not only did the SOX versus NDX and small caps versus large caps bottom in advance of the S&P 500, but also transports along with the Value Line Geometric and Arithmetic Indexes relative ratios all led the broad market’s trough.4 Chart 1Joined At The Hip
Joined At The Hip
Joined At The Hip
Chart 2Dr. Copper...
Fight Central Banks At Your Own Peril
Fight Central Banks At Your Own Peril
Importantly, Dr. Copper is also sending a bullish signal for the broad equity market. Economically sensitive copper tends to trough prior to the SPX especially in recessions. Copper collapsed below $2/lb recently leading the SPX by a few days (Chart 2). Similarly, in the recent late-2015/early-2016 manufacturing recession, the 2007/09 and 2001 recessions, copper sniffed out the bottom before the overall equity market troughed (Chart 3). Turning over to the macro backdrop, keep in mind that the Fed first cut rates this year on March 3, 2020, a mere nine trading days following the SPX peak when it fell just below the 10% correction mark. Then, on Sunday March 15, 2020 the Fed cut rates to zero, as the SPX had fallen another 10% into a bear market. Chart 3...Tends To Lead
...Tends To Lead
...Tends To Lead
Just to put these moves into perspective, the last time the SPX fell roughly 20% from its peak was on Christmas Eve 2018, and it took the Fed seven months to cut interest rates. While a retest of the 2174 ES futures lows is possible, we would rather not fight the Fed. Instead, we continue to recommend investors deploy cyclically oriented capital in the broad equity market with a 9-12 month time horizon. Chart 4 shows that the Fed is on track to balloon its balance sheet over $11tn in the coming year, i.e. almost trebling it, and soaring to over 50% of GDP. Chart 4Follow The…
Follow The…
Follow The…
Beyond the Fed’s QE5 liquidity injection and skyrocketing bank credit, in response to firms tapping existing credit lines, money seems to be growing on trees. M2 money supply growth spiked to 14.8% of late, the highest rate since WWII! This breakneck pace of M2 growth translates into $2tn created versus last year. In the past two weeks alone, M2 grew by $805bn. Deposits and money market funds’ assets are surging, driving the money supply to unprecedented levels. While we have sympathy to some investors’ view that very little of this money and credit will flow to the real economy, such flush liquidity is likely to spillover from the banking system. Asset prices will be the primary beneficiaries of that flood, albeit with a slight lag (Chart 5). Chart 5…Money Trail
…Money Trail
…Money Trail
Meanwhile, we have heeded our research of how to prepare a portfolio from the SPX peak to the recessionary trough highlighted in the Special Report penned in May 2018, and we have been overweight health care and consumer staples (please refer to Table 5 in that Special Report).5 We are now building on the research from that report. Table 2 shows the (unweighted) average relative sector performance six, twelve and eighteen months out from the SPX recessionary troughs, using market cycles since the 1960s. Table 2Sector Winners From Recessionary Recoveries
Fight Central Banks At Your Own Peril
Fight Central Banks At Your Own Peril
Early cyclicals financials and consumer discretionary along with tech are clear winners in all three periods we analyzed. This empirical evidence confirms the theoretical backdrop that early cyclicals are the first to sniff out a recovery during a recession. At the opposite end of the spectrum, defensive utilities, consumer staples and telecom services fare poorly in the three time frames we examined. Impressively, health care (we are overweight), which is the defensive sector with the largest market cap weight, manages to eke out modest relative gains. Charts 6 & 7 depict these time series profiles for the ten GICS1 sectors (we use telecom services instead of communication services due to lack of historical data). Chart 6Early Cyclicals Rise To The Occasion...
Early Cyclicals Rise To The Occasion...
Early Cyclicals Rise To The Occasion...
Chart 7...But Defensives Lag
...But Defensives Lag
...But Defensives Lag
We are already overweight financials, hence, this week we heed this empirical evidence and are upgrading the S&P consumer discretionary sector to overweight via executing the upgrade alert on the S&P internet retail index and also via augmenting the S&P home improvement retail (HIR) index to an above benchmark allocation. Boost Consumer Discretionary To Overweight… While we may be a bit early, we recommend investors augment exposure to the S&P consumer discretionary index to overweight, today. The Fed really cares about household net worth (HNW). It is a key pillar of consumer spending, which powers over 70% of the US economy. Greenspan in the late 1990s eloquently described this relationship between HNW and the economy. In Q1/2020 HNW will take a beating, but the Fed is making sure it recovers in Q2, and is doing everything in its power to keep the stock and residential real estate markets afloat (roughly 50% of HNW). Granted employment and income are also currently of paramount importance, and the Main Street Fed programs along with the massive fiscal easing package should partially cushion the blow from the looming surge in the unemployment rate. We are therefore comfortable with lifting consumer discretionary to an above benchmark allocation. Chart 8 highlights the inverse correlation between consumer discretionary relative performance and the fed funds rate dating back to the 1980s. Now that the Fed has returned to ZIRP and is on track to expand its balance sheet to over $11tn, the risk/reward tradeoff favors consumer discretionary stocks. Keep in mind household balance sheets have been repaired since the Great Recession with both debt/income and debt/GDP ratios plumbing multi-year lows as the GFC hit the consumer (and financial sector) hardest (bottom panel, Chart 8). Chart 8Buy Consumer Discretionary Stocks
Buy Consumer Discretionary Stocks
Buy Consumer Discretionary Stocks
Our consumer drag indicator comprising interest rates and oil prices also signals that the path of least resistance for this early cyclical sector is higher (Chart 9). Not only will consumers eventually take advantage of ultra-low interest rates to buy big ticket items on credit, but also a wave of mortgage refinancing at lower rates translates into more cash in consumers’ wallets. Keep in mind that $20/bbl oil also saves US consumers money as retail gas at the pump has now plunged to $1.8/gallon from a recent high of $2.8/gallon. If we are correct and the US economy avoids a Great Depression/Recession, then the swift economic collapse will likely prove transitory as the authorities will have to slowly reopen the economy in early May, and the US consumer will come roaring back in the back half of the year. Finally, sentiment is bombed out toward consumer discretionary equities. Earnings breadth is as bad as it gets, technicals are washed out and a lot of damage has already been done to these interest rate-hypersensitive stocks (Chart 10). True, valuations are a bit extended, but were our thesis to pan out, these early cyclical stocks will grow into their expensive valuations. Chart 9Tailwinds
Tailwinds
Tailwinds
Netting it all out, the Fed’s QE and ZIRP, the collapse in gasoline prices and extremely depressed breadth readings that are contrarily positive, all signal that it no longer pays to be bearish consumer discretionary stocks. Chart 10As Bad As It Gets
As Bad As It Gets
As Bad As It Gets
Bottom Line: Boost the S&P consumer discretionary sector to overweight today from previously underweight, for a modest loss of 1.4% since inception. …Via Executing The Upgrade Alert On Internet Retail To Overweight… E-commerce has been garnering a rising market share of total retail sales uninterruptedly for over two decades. In fact, this juggernaut accelerates during recessions not only because overall retail sales level off, but also internet sales prove resilient during downturns. We are thus compelled to boost the bellwether S&P internet retail index to overweight by executing our upgrade alert to take advantage of the ongoing explosion of internet sales in the face of the coronavirus pandemic (Chart 11). AMZN dominates the internet retail space and by extension the broad consumer discretionary index, especially ever since the media complex migrated to the newly formed S&P communications services index in October 2018. Therefore, as AMZN goes so goes the rest of the consumer discretionary sector. Chart 11Market Share Gains As Far As The Eye Can See
Market Share Gains As Far As The Eye Can See
Market Share Gains As Far As The Eye Can See
AMZN is a retail category killer and the “amazonification” of the economy is not something new as evidenced by the shopping mall evisceration and the dampening of retail sales price inflation. Nearly every segment AMZN has entered it has dominated. The Whole Foods acquisition has also positioned this internet retail behemoth to benefit from an online push for groceries. All of these forces were ongoing prior to the current recession. Now we deem they will accelerate and disproportionately benefit internet retailers at the expense of bricks and mortar retailers: the howling out of the latter is best evidenced by the recent double demotion of Macy’s from the big leagues to the S&P 600 small cap index. Related to the inevitable rise in demand for e-commerce owing to social distancing, growth is a highly sought after attribute that this index enjoys. Time and again we have stressed that when growth is scarce investors flock to industries that exemplify growth (Chart 12). AMZN’s cloud business, AWS, represents another aspect of significant growth, that will remain on an exponential trajectory as more and more businesses move to the SaaS model catalyzed by the current recession. While at first sight this index appears expensive, versus its own history it has worked off previously extreme valuation readings. In more detail, our relative Valuation Indicator has fallen from three standard deviations above the mean back to the historical average. Similarly, despite the recent run-up in prices, relative technicals are only back up to the neutral zone (Chart 13). Chart 12Seek Out Growth…
Seek Out Growth…
Seek Out Growth…
Chart 13...At A Reasonable Price
...At A Reasonable Price
...At A Reasonable Price
Adding it all up, a boost in demand for e-commerce, the high-growth profile of internet retailers along with neutral valuations and technicals, all compel us to trigger our upgrade alert and lift the S&P internet retail index to overweight. Bottom Line: Execute the upgrade alert and boost the S&P internet retail index to overweight, today. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5INRE - AMZN, BKNG, EBAY, EXPE. …And Upgrading Home Improvement Retailers To Overweight Home improvement retailers (HIR) were the first consumer discretionary stocks to sniff out the end of the Great Recession, troughing even prior to the China-sensitive materials and industrials equities (Chart 14). As such we believe these economically hyper-sensitive stocks will once again showcase their early cyclical status, and we recommend augmenting exposure to above benchmark. ZIRP along with the rising gap between house price inflation and mortgage refinancing rates are a tonic for home improvement retailers (fed funds rate shown inverted, Chart 14). While the residential real estate market will remain in the doldrums for a few months (we recently monetized impressive gains in our underweight stance in the S&P homebuilding index and lifted to neutral), mortgage holders that retain their jobs will be quick to benefit from lower refinancing rates, and boost their savings. Some of these savings will likely flow into home improvement activities courtesy of the recent quarantine rules. One big assumption is that these retailers remain open during the coronavirus induced lockdown. Chart 14Overweight Home Improvement Retailers…
Overweight Home Improvement Retailers…
Overweight Home Improvement Retailers…
If our thesis pans out, then given the looming drubbing in Q2 GDP, residential investment/GDP should jump and provide a relative boost to the S&P HIR index (second panel, Chart 15). None of this positive news is priced in relative forward sales or profits that are flirting with the zero line (third panel, Chart 15). Importantly, relative valuations have dropped below par and are 30% below the historical mean, offering a compelling entry point for fresh capital with a 12-18 month time horizon (bottom panel, Chart 15). Turning over to industry operating metrics, there is a budding recovery in a number of the indicators we track. Chart 15...As A Play On A Relative Rise In Fixed Residential Investment
...As A Play On A Relative Rise In Fixed Residential Investment
...As A Play On A Relative Rise In Fixed Residential Investment
Chart 16Firming Operating Metrics
Firming Operating Metrics
Firming Operating Metrics
While it is not very visible in Chart 16, lumber prices have bounced from $275/tbf to over $338/tbf of late, signaling gains for industry relative profits. As a reminder, HIR make a set margin on lumber sales, thus earnings tend to move with the ebb and flow of lumber prices. Moreover, the Fed is resolute to keep the residential real estate market afloat, as we aforementioned, owing to the HNW effect and all these new and old Fed QE policies should underpin the US residential market and by extension lumber prices (Chart 16). Meanwhile, the HIR price deflator has made an effort to exit deflation recently and should also contribute to the sector’s profitability in the coming quarters (Chart 16). Tack on the V-shaped recovery in the HIR sales-to-inventories ratio, albeit from depressed levels, and factors are falling into place for an earnings-led rebound in relative share prices (Chart 16). In sum, the Fed’s ZIRP and QE5, the rising gap between house price inflation and mortgage rates, the looming increase in residential investment’s contribution to GDP growth and firming industry operating metrics, all argue for an above benchmark allocation in the S&P home improvement retail index. Bottom Line: Lift the S&P HIR index to overweight, today. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HOMI – HD, LOW. Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “From "Stairway To Heaven" To "Highway To Hell"?” dated March 2, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, ““The Darkest Hour Is Just Before The Dawn”” dated March 23, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “What Is Priced In?” dated March 30, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Daily Report, “Watch The Value Line Geometric Index” dated April 1, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Special Report, “Portfolio Positioning For A Late Cycle Surge” dated May 22, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Strategic (10-Year) Trade Recommendations
Fight Central Banks At Your Own Peril
Fight Central Banks At Your Own Peril
Size And Style Views June 3, 2019 Stay neutral cyclicals over defensives (downgrade alert) January 22, 2018 Favor value over growth May 10, 2018 Favor large over small caps (Stop 10%) June 11, 2018 Long the BCA Millennial basket The ticker symbols are: (AAPL, AMZN, UBER, HD, LEN, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, TSLA, V).
Highlights The Fed has been awfully busy since the middle of March, … : Over the last 30 days, the Fed has unleashed a barrage of measures to support market liquidity and alleviate economic hardship. … unveiling a package of facilities to keep credit flowing to consumers, businesses and municipalities, … : The Fed is building a sizable firewall against market seizure, touching on commercial paper, money market funds, asset-backed securities, small business loans, municipal notes, investment-grade corporate bonds and ETFs and high-yield corporate ETFs. … and loosening regulatory strictures to encourage banks to put their capital buffers to work: The Fed and other major bank regulators have eased some of the post-2008 rules to encourage banks to ramp up market-making activity and increase lending to cushion the shock to the economy. Investors should buy what the Fed is buying: Fixed income investors should look to capture excess spreads in markets that have not yet priced in the full effect of the Fed’s indemnity. Banks and agency mortgage REITs offer a way to implement this theme in equities. Feature What A Difference A Pandemic Makes “Whatever it takes” is clearly the order of the day for Jay Powell and company, as well as Congress and the White House, to mitigate the potentially pernicious second-round economic damage from COVID-19. In this Special Report, we detail the Fed’s key initiatives. Central banks are neither omniscient nor omnipotent, and they cannot stave off all of the pressure from mass quarantines, but we do expect the Fed’s measures will cushion the economic blow, and reflate prices in targeted asset markets. The Fed began pulling out all the stops to fight the virus on Sunday, March 15th with what have now become stock emergency responses: zero rates and purchases of Treasuries and agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS). Although the MBS purchases began the week of March 23rd, and have continued at a steady clip despite appearing to have swiftly surpassed their $200 billion target, they have not yet achieved much traction in the mortgage market. The spread between the current coupon agency MBS and the 10-year Treasury yield has come down a bit, but the average 30-year fixed-rate home mortgage rate does not reflect the 150 basis points ("bps") of rate cuts since the beginning of March (Chart 1). The Fed’s measures are intended to help direct the flow of credit to adversely affected constituencies with a pressing need for it. Other measures to relieve liquidity pressures, like the Fed’s ongoing overnight repo operations, have achieved their aim. The signal indicator of liquidity strains, the effective fed funds rate, was bumping up against the top of the Fed’s target range for several days after the return to zero interest rate policy. Over the last week, however, it has settled around 5 bps, near the bottom of its range (Chart 2), suggesting that the formerly tight overnight funding market is now amply supplied. Chart 1MBS Purchases Haven't Helped Main Street Yet
MBS Purchases Haven't Helped Main Street Yet
MBS Purchases Haven't Helped Main Street Yet
Chart 2Overnight Funding Stresses ##br##Have Eased
Overnight Funding Stresses Have Eased
Overnight Funding Stresses Have Eased
The rest of the Fed’s measures (Table 1) have been more finely targeted, intended to help direct the flow of credit to adversely affected constituencies with a pressing need for it. We focus on the most important measures in the following section and summarize their common elements in Table 2. The following discussions of the individual programs highlight their intent, their chances of success, and yardsticks for tracking their progress. We conclude with the fixed income and equity niches that are most likely to benefit from the Fed’s efforts. Table 1A Frenzied Month Of Activity
Alphabet Soup: A Summary Of The Fed's Anti-Virus Measures
Alphabet Soup: A Summary Of The Fed's Anti-Virus Measures
Table 2The 2020 Federal Reserve Emergency Programs
Alphabet Soup: A Summary Of The Fed's Anti-Virus Measures
Alphabet Soup: A Summary Of The Fed's Anti-Virus Measures
A Field Guide To The Acronym Jungle Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility (MMLF) Under the MMLF, which started on March 23rd, US banks can borrow from the Fed to purchase eligible assets mainly from prime money market funds. These assets are in turn pledged to the Fed as collateral, effectively allowing the Fed to lend to prime money market funds via banks. Assets eligible for purchase from these funds include: US Treasuries & fully guaranteed agencies Securities issued by US GSEs Asset-backed commercial paper (ABCP) rated A1 or its equivalent, issued by a US issuer US municipal short-term debt (excluding variable rate demand notes) Backed by $10 billion of credit protection from the Treasury, the Fed will lend at the primary credit rate (the discount rate, currently 0.25%) for pledged asset purchases of US Treasuries, fully guaranteed agencies or securities issued by US GSEs. For any other assets pledged, the Fed will charge an additional 100 bps – with the exception of US municipal short-term debt to which the Fed only applies a 25-bps surcharge. Chart 3The MMLF Already Providing Some Relief
The MMLF Already Providing Some Relief
The MMLF Already Providing Some Relief
Loans made under the MMLF are fully non-recourse (the Fed can recover nothing more from the borrower than the pledged collateral). Banks borrowing from the Fed under the MMLF bear no credit risk and have therefore been exempted from risk-based capital and leverage requirements for any asset pledged to the MMLF, an important element that should promote MMLF participation. This facility is a direct descendant of the Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility (AMLF), which operated from September 2008 to February 2010 to prevent a run on prime money market funds after a prominent fund “broke the buck.” Its objective is to help prime money market funds meet redemption requests from investors and increase liquidity in the markets for the assets held by these funds – most notably commercial paper where prime money market funds represent 21% of the market. Those funds have experienced large outflows in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic and building economic crisis – erasing $140 billion, or 18%, of the fund segment’s total net assets in a matter of days (Chart 3, top panel). Since it started, the MMLF has extended $53 billion of credit to prime money funds, about a third of AMLF’s output in its first 10 days of operation. The financial sector is suffering a big shock, but it is not the source of the problem like it was in 2008, so the situation is not as dire as it was in late 2008, and we are already seeing a tentative stabilization of asset outflows from money market funds. Commercial paper spreads have also narrowed, implying that the combination of the MMLF and the CPFF (see below) is having the intended effect (Chart 3, bottom panel). Commercial Paper Funding Facility (CPFF) Starting today, April 14th, the Fed will revive 2008’s Commercial Paper Funding Facility (CPFF) with the aim of restoring liquidity to a market where investment grade corporate borrowers raise cash to finance payroll, inventories, accounts payable and other short-term liabilities. The 2020 iteration applies to municipalities as well, extending its reach across the real economy. Via a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) (see Box) funded with a $10 billion equity investment from the Treasury Department, the CPFF will purchase US dollar-denominated investment-grade (A1/P1/F1) three-month asset-backed, corporate and municipal commercial paper priced at the overnight index swap rate (OIS) plus 110 bps. Lower-rated issuers are not eligible, but investment-grade borrowers who were downgraded to A2/P2/F2 after March 17th, 2020 can be grandfathered into the program at a higher spread of OIS+200 bps. The pricing is tighter than it was in 2008, when unsecured investment grade and asset-backed issues were priced at OIS+100 bps and OIS+300 bps, respectively, and the Fed did not have the loss protection provided by an equity investment in the SPV. Box 1 - SPV Mechanics The Fed has set up Special Purpose Vehicles (SPV) in connection with most of the facilities we examine here. Each SPV has been seeded by the Treasury department to carry out the facility’s work. The Fed lends several multiples of the Treasury’s initial equity investment to each SPV to provide it with a total capacity of anywhere from eight to fourteen times its equity capital, based on the riskiness of the assets the SPV is purchasing or lending against. The result is that most of the cash used to operate the facilities will come from the Fed in the form of loans with full recourse to the SPVs’ assets, but the Treasury department will own the equity tranche. The Treasury therefore bears the first credit losses, should any occur. Issuers are only eligible if they have issued three-month commercial paper in the twelve months preceding the March 17th announcement of the program. The Federal Reserve did not set an explicit limit on the size of the program, but funding for any single issuer is limited to the amount of outstanding commercial paper it had during that twelve-month period. The 2020 CPFF could therefore max out above $750 billion, the peak size of the domestic commercial paper market over the past year (Chart 4). If the first CPFF’s experience is any guide, however, it’s unlikely that its full capacity will be needed. Its assets peaked at $350 billion in January 2009, around a quarter of 2008’s $1.5 trillion average outstanding balance. A similar proportion today would cap the fund at $175-200 billion. As in 2008 (Chart 5, bottom panel), the mere announcement of the program has driven commercial paper spreads significantly below their previously stressed levels (Chart 5, top panel). Chart 4Pressure On The Domestic Commercial Paper Market...
Pressure On The Domestic Commercial Paper Market...
Pressure On The Domestic Commercial Paper Market...
Chart 5...Is Being Relieved Ahead Of The CPFF Implementation
...Is Being Relieved Ahead Of The CPFF Implementation
...Is Being Relieved Ahead Of The CPFF Implementation
Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF) The asset-backed securities (ABS) market funds a significant share of the credit extended to consumers and small businesses. The Fed’s TALF program that started on March 23rd aims to provide US companies holding AAA collateral with funding of up to $100 billion, in the form of 3-year non-recourse loans secured by AAA-rated ABS. It will be conducted via an SPV backed by a $10 billion equity investment from the US Treasury Department. Chart 6Narrower Spreads Promote Easier Financial Conditions At The Margin
Narrower Spreads Promote Easier Financial Conditions At The Margin
Narrower Spreads Promote Easier Financial Conditions At The Margin
Eligible collateral includes ABS with exposure to auto loans, student loans, credit card receivables, equipment loans, floorplan loans, insurance premium finance loans, SBA-guaranteed loans and leveraged loans issued after March 23rd, 2020. Last week, the Fed added agency CMBS issued before March 23rd, 2020 and left the door open to further expansion of the pool of eligible securities. The rate charged on the loans is based on the type of collateral and its weighted average life. Depending on the ABS, the spreads will range from 75 bps to 150 bps over one of four different benchmarks (LIBOR, SOFR, OIS or the upper 25-bps bound of the target fed funds range). The spreads are reasonable, and will not keep ABS holders away from the facility, but they’re not meant to be giveaways. The 2009 TALF program originally had a $200 billion capacity, which was later expanded to $1 trillion. Those numbers make the current iteration’s $100 billion limit look awfully modest, but only $71 billion worth of loans were eventually granted the first time around. ABS spreads have already narrowed significantly (Chart 6), suggesting the program is already making a difference. Although an incremental $100 billion of loans is not likely to move the needle much for the US economy, narrower spreads will promote easier financial conditions at the margin. Secondary Market Corporate Credit Facility (SMCCF) Though no firm start date has been given, the Fed will soon enter the secondary market and start purchasing corporate bonds. As with all of the other facilities discussed in this section except the MMLF, the SMCCF is set up as an SPV. It will have up to $250 billion of buying power, anchored by $25 billion of equity funding from the Treasury department. Once it’s up and running, the SMCCF will buy non-bank corporate bonds in the secondary market that meet the following criteria: Issuer rated at least BBB-/Baa3 (the lowest investment grade tier) as of March 22nd, 2020 A remaining maturity of 5 years or less Issuer is a US business with material operations, and a majority of its employees, in the US Issuer is not expected to receive direct financial assistance from the federal government The SMCCF can own a maximum of 10% of any single firm’s outstanding debt, and it may dip into the BB-rated market for securities that were downgraded from BBB after March 22nd. In addition to cash bonds, the SMCCF will also buy ETFs that track the broad corporate bond market. The Fed says that the “preponderance” of SMCCF ETF purchases will be of ETFs tracking investment grade corporate bond benchmarks (like LQD), but it will also buy some high-yield ETFs (like HYG). We expect that the SMCCF will be able to achieve its direct goal of driving down borrowing costs for otherwise healthy firms that may struggle to access credit markets in the current environment. One way to track the program’s success is to monitor investment grade corporate credit spreads (Chart 7). Spreads have been tightening aggressively since the Fed announced the program on March 23rd but are still elevated compared to average historical levels. The slope of the line of investment grade corporate bond spreads plotted by maturity will be another important metric (Chart 8). An inverted spread slope tends to coincide with a sharply rising default rate, since it signals that investors are worried about near-term default risk. By purchasing investment grade bonds with maturities of 5 years or less, the Fed hopes to maintain a positively sloped spread curve. Chart 7SMCCF Announcement Marked The Peak In Spreads
SMCCF Announcement Marked The Peak In Spreads
SMCCF Announcement Marked The Peak In Spreads
Chart 8Fed Wants A Positive ##br##Spread Slope
Fed Wants A Positive Spread Slope
Fed Wants A Positive Spread Slope
Primary Market Corporate Credit Facility (PMCCF) The PMCCF employs the same structure as the SMCCF, but it is twice as large. The Treasury’s initial equity investment will be $50 billion and Fed loans will scale its capacity up to $500 billion. As a complement to the SMCCF, the PMCCF will purchase newly issued non-bank corporate bonds. The eligibility criteria are the same as the SMCCF’s, but the PMCCF will only buy bonds with a maturity of 4 years or less. The new issuance purchased by the PMCCF can be new debt or it can be used to refinance existing debt. The only caveat is that the maximum amount of borrowing from the facility cannot exceed 130% of the issuer’s maximum debt outstanding on any day between March 22nd, 2019 and March 22nd, 2020. Essentially, eligible firms can use the facility to refinance their entire stock of debt and then top it up by another 30% if they so choose. The goals of the PMCCF are to keep the primary issuance markets open and to prevent bankruptcy for firms that were rated investment grade before the virus outbreak. Investment grade corporate bond issuance shut down completely for a stretch in early March, but then surged once the Fed announced the PMCCF and SMCCF on March 23rd. The PMCCF will have achieved lasting traction if gross corporate bond issuance holds up in the coming months (Chart 9). It should also meet its bankruptcy-prevention goal, since firms will be able to refinance their maturing obligations and tack on some new debt to get through the next few months. Given the large amount of outstanding BBB-rated debt, a lot of fallen angel supply is poised to hit the high-yield bond market. While we expect the PMCCF will succeed in achieving its primary aims, it is unlikely to prevent a large number of ratings downgrades. If a given firm only makes use of the facility to refinance its existing debt at a lower rate, then its ability to service its debt will improve at the margin and its rating should be safe. However, any firm that increases its debt load via this facility will end up with a riskier balance sheet. Ratings agencies will not look through an increased debt burden, and we expect a significant number of ratings downgrades in the coming months (Chart 10, top panel). Chart 9Primary Markets Have Re-Opened
Primary Markets Have Re-Opened
Primary Markets Have Re-Opened
Chart 10Fed Actions Won't Prevent Downgrades
Fed Actions Won't Prevent Downgrades
Fed Actions Won't Prevent Downgrades
Given the large amount of outstanding BBB-rated debt, a lot of fallen angel supply is poised to hit the high-yield bond market (Chart 10, middle and bottom panels). The Fed will try to contain the surge by allowing the SMCCF to purchase fallen angel debt, and by providing some support to the upper tiers of high-yield credits through its Main Street Lending Programs. Main Street New Loan Facility (MSNLF) and Main Street Expanded Loan Facility (MSELF) The goal of the MSNLF and MSELF is to provide relief to large firms that are not investment grade credits. Both facilities will draw from the same SPV, which will be funded by a $75 billion equity stake from the Treasury and will then be levered up to a total size of “up to $600 billion” by the Fed. The Main Street facilities are structured differently than the PMCCF and SMCCF in that the Fed will not transact directly with nonfinancial corporate issuers. Rather, the Fed will purchase 95% of the par value of eligible loans from banks (which will retain 5% of the credit risk of each loan), hoping to free up enough extra room on bank balance sheets to promote more lending. To be eligible for purchase by the Main Street New Loan Facility, loans must be issued after April 8th, 2020 and meet the following criteria: Borrowers have less than 10,000 employees or $2.5 billion of 2019 revenue Borrowers are US firms with significant operations, and a majority of employees, in the US Loans are unsecured and have a maturity of 4 years Loans are made at an adjustable rate of SOFR + 250-400 bps Principal and interest payments are deferred for one year Loan size of $1 million to the lesser of $25 million or the amount that keeps the borrower’s Debt-to-EBITDA ratio below 4.01 Loan proceeds cannot be used to refinance existing debt Borrowers must commit to “make reasonable efforts to maintain payroll and retain employees during the term of the loan” The Main Street Expanded Loan Facility applies similar criteria to existing loans that banks will upsize before transferring 95% of the incremental risk to the Fed. The MSELF allows for loans up to the lesser of $150 million, 30% of the borrower’s existing debt (including undrawn commitments) or the amount keeps the borrower’s Debt-to-EBITDA ratio below 6.0. Borrowers can participate in only one of the MSNLF, MSELF and PMCCF, though they can tap the PPP alongside one of the Main Street lending facilities. Chart 11Main Street Programs Will Spur Bank Lending
Main Street Programs Will Spur Bank Lending
Main Street Programs Will Spur Bank Lending
The Main Street facilities endeavor to have banks adopt an “originate to distribute” model. With the Fed assuming 95% of each loan’s credit risk, banks will have nearly unlimited balance sheet capacity to continue originating these sorts of loans. Retaining 5% of each loan ensures that the banks will have enough skin in the game to perform proper due diligence. We expect to see a significant increase in commercial bank C&I loan growth in the coming months once these facilities are up to speed (Chart 11). Crucially for high-yield investors, the debt-to-EBITDA constraints ensure that the Main Street facilities will aid BB- and some B-rated issuers but will not bail out high-default-risk issuers rated CCC and below. BB-rated firms typically have debt-to-EBITDA ratios between 3 and 4, while B-rated issuers typically fall in a range of 4 to 6. For the most part, BB-rated firms will be able to make use of either the MSNLF or MSELF, while B-rated firms will be limited to the MSELF. By leaving out issuers rated CCC & below, the Fed is acquiescing to a significant spike in corporate defaults over the next 12 months. The bulk of corporate defaults come from firms that were rated CCC or below 12 months prior (Chart 12). Chart 12A Significant Increase In Corporate Defaults Is Coming
A Significant Increase In Corporate Defaults Is Coming
A Significant Increase In Corporate Defaults Is Coming
As with the PMCCF, we note that the Main Street facilities offer loans, not grants. While they will address firms’ immediate liquidity issues, they will do so at the cost of more indebted balance sheets. Downgrade risk remains high for BB- and B-rated companies. Paycheck Protection Program Liquidity Facility (PPPLF) The Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) is a component of the CARES Act that was designed to forestall layoffs by small businesses. PPP loans are fully guaranteed by the Small Business Association (SBA), which will forgive them if the borrower maintains its employee headcount for eight weeks. The size of the PPPLF has yet to be announced, along with the details of its funding, but its intent is to get PPP loans off of issuers’ balance sheets so as to free up their capital and allow them to make more loans, expanding the PPP’s reach. The Fed will lend on a non-recourse basis at a rate of 0.35% to any depository institution making PPP loans,2 taking PPP loans as collateral at their full face value. PPP loans placed with the Fed are exempt from both risk-weighted and leverage-based capital adequacy measures (please see “Easing Up On The Regulatory Reins,” below). PPP is meant to be no less than a lifeline for households and small businesses, but the devil is in the details. Banks were reportedly overwhelmed with demand for PPP loans over the first five business days that they were available, suggesting that many small businesses still qualify, despite 17 million initial unemployment claims over the last three weeks. Media reports about the program highlighted that there are quite a few kinks yet to be worked out, and it has arrived too late to stave off the first waves of layoffs. Success may be most easily measured by the size of the PPPLF, which should eventually translate into fewer layoffs and bankruptcies than would otherwise have occurred. Municipal Liquidity Facility (MLF) Chart 13State & Local Governments Need Support
State & Local Governments Need Support
State & Local Governments Need Support
The Municipal Liquidity Facility is similar in structure to the PMCCF, only it is designed to support state and local governments. The MLF SPV will be funded by a $35 billion equity investment from the Treasury, and the Fed will lever it up to a maximum size of $500 billion to purchase newly issued securities directly from state and local governments that meet the following criteria: All states (including D.C.) are eligible, as are cities with populations above 1 million and counties with populations above 2 million. The newly issued notes will have a maximum maturity of 2 years. The MLF can buy new issuance from any one state, city or county up to an amount equal to 20% of that borrower’s fiscal year 2017 general revenue. States can request a higher limit to procure funds for political subdivisions or instrumentalities that aren’t eligible themselves for the MLF. The MLF’s goal is to keep state and local governments liquid as they deal with the COVID-19 pandemic. The large size of the facility – $500 billion is five times 2019’s aggregate muni issuance – should allow it to meet its goal. However, as with the Fed’s other facilities, the support comes in the form of loans, not grants. The lost tax revenue and increased pandemic expenditures cannot be recovered. State and local government balance sheets will emerge from the recession weaker. We can track the program’s success by looking at the spread between municipal bond yields and comparable US Treasury yields. These spreads widened to all-time highs in March, but have since come in significantly, even for longer maturities (Chart 13). If this tightening does not continue, the Fed may eventually enter the secondary market to purchase long-maturity municipal bonds. Supporting such a fragmented market will be tricky, and the Fed may be hoping that more aid will come from Capitol Hill. Central Bank Liquidity Swaps Chart 14US Dollar Debt Is A Global Problem
US Dollar Debt Is A Global Problem
US Dollar Debt Is A Global Problem
The global economy is loaded with USD-denominated debt issued by entities outside of the US. As of 3Q19, there was roughly $12 trillion of outstanding foreign-issued US dollar debt, exceeding the domestic nonfinancial corporate sector’s total issuance (Chart 14). As the sole provider of US dollars, the Fed has a role to play in supporting foreign dollar-debt issuers during this tumultuous period. Currency swap lines linking the Fed with other central banks can help alleviate the pressure on foreign borrowers to access the US dollars they need to service their debt. For example, once the Fed exchanges dollars for euros using its swap line with the European Central Bank (ECB), the ECB can then direct those US dollars toward USD-denominated borrowers within the Euro Area. Widening cross-currency basis swap spreads are a tried-and-true signal that US dollars are becoming too scarce. The Fed responded to widening basis swap spreads by instituting swap lines during the financial crisis and again during the Eurozone debt crisis of 2011. In both instances, the swap lines eventually calmed the market and basis swap spreads moved back toward zero (Chart 15). Chart 15The Cost Of US Dollars
The Cost Of US Dollars
The Cost Of US Dollars
Since 2013, the Fed has maintained unlimited swap lines with the central banks of the Euro Area, Canada, UK, Japan and Switzerland. On March 19th, it extended limited swap lines to the central banks of Australia, Brazil, Denmark, Korea, Mexico, Norway, New Zealand, Singapore and Sweden. These swap lines will help ease stresses for some foreign issuers of US dollar debt, but not all. One potential problem is that the foreign central banks that acquire dollars via the swap lines may be unwilling or unable to direct those dollars to debtors in their countries. Another problem is that several emerging markets (EM) countries do not have access to the Fed’s swap facility. EM issuers account for roughly one-third of foreign-issued dollar debt (Chart 14, bottom panel). For example, the governments of the Philippines, Colombia, Indonesia and Turkey all carry large US dollar debt balances, not to mention US dollar debt issued by the EM corporate sector in non-swap line countries. Currency swap lines linking the Fed with other central banks can help alleviate the pressure on foreign borrowers to access the US dollars they need to service their debt. The swap lines that are already in place have led to basis swap spread tightening in developed markets. If global growth eventually rebounds and the dollar weakens, EM dollar-debt burdens will become easier to service. However, until that happens, a default by some foreign issuer of US dollar debt remains a non-trivial tail risk. The Fed may need to extend swap lines to more countries to mitigate this risk in the months ahead. Easing Up On The Regulatory Reins As we’ve argued in US Investment Strategy Special Reports the last two weeks, the largest US banks are extremely well capitalized.3 The Fed agrees, and over the last 30 days, it has issued six separate statements encouraging the banks to lend or to work with struggling borrowers, all but one of them in concert with its fellow banking regulators. Although the largest banks have amassed sizable capital cushions that would support increased lending, post-GFC regulations often crimp incentives to deploy them. Over the last 30 days, the Fed and the other federal regulators have granted banks relief from the key binding constraints. Those constraints fall into two broad categories: risk-based requirements, which are based on risk weightings assigned to individual assets, and leverage requirements, which are based on total assets or total leverage exposure. All banks are required to maintain minimum ratios of equity capital to risk-weighted assets under the former and to total leverage, which includes some off-balance-sheet exposures, under the latter. The three federal banking regulators have amended rules to exclude MMLF and PPP exposures from the regulatory capital denominator used to calculate risk-weighted and leverage ratios. The Fed also made a similar move by excluding Treasury securities and deposits held at the Fed from the denominator of the supplementary leverage ratio large banks must maintain (3% for banks with greater than $250 billion in assets, 5% for SIFIs). Reducing the denominators increases the banks’ ratios and expands their lending capacity. Community banks’ capital adequacy is determined by their leverage ratio (equity to total assets), and regulators have temporarily cut it to 8% from 9%. We expect that easing capital constraints will spur the banks to lend more in the coming weeks and months, but it’s not a sure thing. A clear lesson from the Bernanke Fed’s three rounds of quantitative easing is that the Fed can lead banks to water, but it can’t make them drink. A considerable amount of the funds the Fed deployed to buy Treasury and agency securities was simply squirreled away by banks, and wound up being neither lent nor spent. Lending is not the Fed’s sole focus, though: it hopes that easing capital regulations will also encourage banks and broker-dealers to ramp up their market-making activity, improving capital market liquidity across a range of instruments. Investment Implications While all of the programs discussed above have expiration dates, they can be extended if necessary. Flexible end dates illustrate the open-ended nature of the Fed’s (and Congress’) support, and help underpin our contention that more aid will be forthcoming at the drop of a hat. Confronting the most severe recession in 90 years and an especially competitive election, policymakers can be counted upon to err to the side of providing too much stimulus. That is not to say, however, that the measures amount to a justification for loading up on all risk assets. Every space will not be helped equally. Spreads for all corporate credit tiers are cheap compared to history, but only BB-rated and higher benefit from the Fed’s programs. Within US fixed income, investors should look for opportunities in sectors that offer attractive spreads and directly benefit from Fed support. In the corporate bond market this means owning securities rated BB or higher and avoiding debt rated B and below. Spreads for all corporate credit tiers are cheap compared to history (Charts 16A & 16B), but only BB-rated and higher benefit from the Fed’s programs. Some B-rated issuers will be able to access the MSELF, but Fed support for the B-rated credit tier is limited. Fed support is non-existent for securities rated CCC or lower. Chart 16AInvestment Grade Valuation
Investment Grade Valuation
Investment Grade Valuation
Chart 16BHigh-Yield Valuation
High-Yield Valuation
High-Yield Valuation
Elsewhere, several traditionally low-risk spread sectors also meet our criteria of offering attractive spreads and benefitting from Fed support. AAA-rated Consumer ABS spreads are wide and will benefit from TALF. Agency CMBS spreads are also attractive and those securities are being directly purchased by the Fed (Chart 17). We also like the opportunity in Agency bonds (the debt of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) and Supranationals, where spreads are currently well above historical levels (Chart 17, third panel). Chart 17Opportunities In Low-Risk Spread Product
Opportunities In Low-Risk Spread Product
Opportunities In Low-Risk Spread Product
Chart 18Not Enough Value In Agency MBS
Not Enough Value In Agency MBS
Not Enough Value In Agency MBS
Agency MBS are less appealing. Spreads have already tightened back to pre-COVID levels and while continued Fed buying should keep them low, returns will be much better in the investment grade corporate space (Chart 18). Meanwhile, we would also advocate long positions in municipal bonds. Spreads are wide and the Fed is now providing support out to the 2-year maturity point (see Chart 13). We also see potential for the Fed to start purchasing longer-maturity municipal debt if spreads don’t tighten quickly enough. Chart 19Look For Attractive Spreads In Countries With Swap Lines
Look For Attractive Spreads In Countries With Swap Lines
Look For Attractive Spreads In Countries With Swap Lines
Finally, we would also consider the USD-denominated sovereign debt of countries to which the Fed has extended swap lines, with Mexico offering a prime example. Its USD-denominated debt offers an attractive spread and it has been extended a swap line (Chart 19). In equities, agency mortgage REITs – monoline lenders that manage MBS portfolios 8-10 times the size of their equity capital – are a levered play on buying what the Fed’s buying. They were beaten up quite badly throughout March, and have been de-rated enough to deliver double-digit total returns as long as the repo market doesn’t flare up again, and agency MBS spreads do not widen anew. We see large banks as a direct beneficiary of policymakers’ efforts to limit credit distress and expect that their loan losses could ultimately be less than markets fear. While lenders have an incentive to be the first to push secured borrowers into default in a normal recession to ensure they’re first in line to liquidate collateral, they now have an incentive to keep borrowers from defaulting lest they end up having to carry the millstone of seized collateral on their balance sheets for an indefinite period. Regulatory forbearance may end up being every bit as helpful for bank book values as the ability to move securities into the Fed’s non-recourse facilities. Footnotes 1 This calculation uses 2019 EBITDA and includes undrawn loan commitments in total debt. 2 The Fed plans to expand the program to include non-bank SBA-approved lenders in the near future. 3 Please see the US Investment Strategy Special Reports, “How Vulnerable Are US Banks? Part 1: A 50-Year Bottom-Up Case Study,” and “How Vulnerable Are US Banks? Part 2: It’s Complicated,” published March 30 and April 6, 2020, respectively, available at usis.bcaresearch.com. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Jennifer Lacombe Associate Editor jenniferl@bcaresearch.com Jeremie Peloso Senior Analyst jeremiep@bcaresearch.com
Highlights US Corporates: The Fed continues to expand the reach of its extraordinary monetary policies designed to combat the COVID-19 recession, now giving itself the ability to hold BB-rated US high-yield bonds within its corporate bond buying programs. Raise allocations to US BB-rated corporates to overweight, within a neutral overall strategic (6-12 months) allocation to US high-yield. Euro Area Corporates: European investment grade corporate debt has seen significant spread widening over the past month, but spreads have stabilized with the ECB introducing a new asset purchase program with fewer restrictions. Upgrade euro area investment grade corporates to neutral from underweight on both a tactical (0-6 months) and strategic (6-12 months) basis. Favor debt from beaten-up sectors that are already priced for severe economic weakness like Energy, Transportation and non-bank Financials. Central Banks Are A Corporate Bond Investor’s Best Friend Right Now Chart of the WeekThe Fed & ECB Are Supporting Bond Markets
The Fed & ECB Are Supporting Bond Markets
The Fed & ECB Are Supporting Bond Markets
The actions of policymakers worldwide to help mitigate the severe economic shock from the COVID-19 recession have helped boost global risk assets over the past couple of weeks. This is particularly notable in US corporate bond markets, where credit spreads have tightened for both shorter-maturity investment grade bonds and Ba-rated high-yield (Chart of the Week). It is not a coincidence that those are the parts of the US corporate bond market that the Fed is now explicitly backstopping through its off-balance-sheet investment programs. Last week, the Fed unveiled yet another “bazooka” to help ease US financial conditions, broadening the scope of its previously investment grade-only corporate bond purchase programs to include Ba-rated high-yield corporate bonds and high-yield ETFs. In Europe, meanwhile, the European Central Bank (ECB) is also providing additional monetary support through increased asset purchases of both government and corporate debt. Those purchases are focused more on the weakest links in the euro area financial and economic chain like Italian sovereign bonds. This has helped to stabilize credit spreads for both Italian government bonds and euro area investment grade corporate debt. This support from policymakers is critical to prevent a further tightening of financial conditions during a severe global recession (Chart 2). The excess return (over government bonds) for the Bloomberg Barclays global high-yield bond index is now down 15% on a year-over-year basis. High-yield corporate bond spreads are well above the lows seen earlier this year on both sides of the Atlantic, across all credit quality tiers. In the US, spreads between credit quality tiers had widened to levels not seen in several years. Within the US investment grade universe, the gap between Baa-rated and Aa-rated spreads had widened from 20bps to 60bps (Chart 3), a level last seen in September 2011, but now sits at 39bps. Chart 2Junk Bonds Already Discount A Big Recession
Junk Bonds Already Discount A Big Recession
Junk Bonds Already Discount A Big Recession
Chart 3The Fed Wants These Spreads To Tighten
The Fed Wants These Spreads To Tighten
The Fed Wants These Spreads To Tighten
Looking in the other direction of the credit quality spectrum, the spread between Baa-rated and Ba-rated corporates – the line of demarcation between investment grade and high-yield bonds – had blown out from 132bps in February to 556bps, but is now at 360bps. This is the market pricing in the growing risk of fallen angels being downgraded from investment grade to junk. In our view, the Ba-Baa spread is the best indicator to follow to see if the Fed’s extension of its bond purchase program to high-yield is working to reduce borrowing costs for lower-rated US companies. Both in the US and Europe, we continue to recommend a credit investment strategy that favors the parts of the markets that the Fed and ECB are most directly involved in now. That means staying overweight US investment grade corporate bonds with maturities of less than five years (the Fed’s maturity limit for its bond buying program). It also means staying overweight Italian government debt versus core European equivalents. The Fed’s new extension into high-yield corporates within its buying programs means we need to upgrade our recommendation on US BB-rated high-yield to overweight within our recommended neutral strategic (6-12 months) allocation to US junk bonds. We are making that change on a tactical basis in our model bond portfolio, as well, as can be seen on pages 14-15. As the title of this Weekly Report suggests, buy what the central banks are buying. The Fed’s new extension into high-yield corporates within its buying programs means we need to upgrade our recommendation on US BB-rated high-yield to overweight within our recommended neutral strategic (6-12 months) allocation to US junk bonds. In Europe, there is now scope to also raise allocations to euro area corporate bonds, as well, as we discuss over the remainder of this report. Bottom Line: The Fed continues to expand the reach of its extraordinary monetary policies designed to combat the COVID-19 recession, now giving itself the ability to hold BB-rated US high-yield bonds within its corporate bond buying programs. Raise allocations to US BB-rated corporates to overweight within a neutral overall strategic (6-12 months) allocation to US high-yield. Looking For Value In Euro Area Investment Grade Bonds The outlook for euro area spread product does not have as clean-cut a story as is the case for US credit. The ECB is not explicitly supporting European corporate credit markets to the same degree as the Fed is with its open-ended off-balance sheet investment vehicles. While the ECB has introduced a new large €750bn asset purchase program, the Pandemic Emergency Purchase Program (PEPP), to help ease financial conditions in the euro area, no specific details have yet been provided specifying how much of the PEPP will go towards corporate debt versus sovereign bonds. The ECB has already loosened the country and issuer limit restrictions it has imposed on its existing Asset Purchase Program (APP), however, which means that the central bank will be very flexible with the PEPP purchases. That means helping reduce sovereign risk premiums in Peripheral Europe by buying greater amounts of Italian, Spanish and even Greek government debt. That also likely means buying more corporate debt in the most stressed sectors of the euro area economy, as needed. Greater ECB bond purchases would make euro area investment grade credit – which has seen some value restored after the recent bout of spread widening - more attractive over both tactical and strategic investment horizons. This is true even with much of the euro area now in a deep recession because of COVID-19 lockdowns, which has already been discounted in the poor investment performance of euro area corporates. Greater ECB bond purchases would make euro area investment grade credit – which has seen some value restored after the recent bout of spread widening - more attractive over both tactical and strategic investment horizons. Year-to-date, euro area corporate credit markets have been hit hard by the global credit selloff (Table 1). In total return terms denominated in euros, the Bloomberg Barclays euro area investment grade corporate bond index is down -5.0% so far in 2020. The numbers are slightly better relative to duration-matched euro area government bonds (the pure credit component), with the index excess return down -5.5% year-to-date. At the broad sector level, the laggards so far in 2020 have been the sectors most exposed to the sharp downturn in European (and global) economic growth. In excess return terms, the worst performing sectors year-to-date within the eleven major groupings shown in Table 1 have been Consumer Cyclicals (-8.5%), Transportation (-8.1%), Energy (-7.2%). The best performing sectors are those that would be categorized as less cyclical and more “defensive”, like Utilities (-4.3%), Technology (-4.3%) and Financials (-4.7%). In many ways, this is a mirror image of 2019, when Consumer Cyclicals and Transportation were among the top performers while Technology was the worst performer. Table 1Euro Area Investment Grade Corporate Bond Returns
Buy What The Central Banks Are Buying
Buy What The Central Banks Are Buying
Chart 4Euro Area Corporate Spreads Are Relatively Subdued Vs. Past Credit Cycles
Euro Area Corporate Spreads Are Relatively Subdued Vs. Past Credit Cycles
Euro Area Corporate Spreads Are Relatively Subdued Vs. Past Credit Cycles
When looking at the differences in spreads between credit tiers in the euro area, the gaps are not as wide as in the US (Chart 4). The index spread on Baa-rated euro area corporates is only 44bps above that of Aa-rated credit, far below the 100bps gap seen at the peak of the 2001 and 2011 spread widening episodes and well below the 200bps witnessed in 2008. Looking at the difference between Ba-rated and Baa-rated euro area spreads paints a similar picture, with the gap between the highest high-yield credit tier and lowest investment grade credit tier now sitting at 297bps after getting as wide as 431bps in late March – close to the 500bps peak seen in 2011 but far below the 1000bps levels seen in 2001 and 2007 The broad conclusion looking strictly at credit tiers is that euro area corporates have cheapened up a bit during the COVID-19 selloff, but on a more modest scale compared to previous euro area credit cycles. A similar conclusion is reached when looking at industry-level credit spreads. The broad conclusion looking strictly at credit tiers is that euro area corporates have cheapened up a bit during the COVID-19 selloff, but on a more modest scale compared to previous euro area credit cycles. A similar conclusion is reached when looking at industry-level credit spreads. In Charts 5 & 6, we show the history of option-adjusted spreads (OAS) for the major industrial sub-groupings of the Bloomberg Barclays euro area investment grade corporate indices. Unsurprisingly, spreads look relatively wide for the biggest underperforming sectors like Energy, Consumer Cyclicals and Transportation. The spread widening has been more contained in the better performing sectors like Technology. Chart 5A Mixed Performance For Euro Area Investment Grade Spreads By Industry …
A Mixed Performance For Euro Area Investment Grade Spreads By Industry ...
A Mixed Performance For Euro Area Investment Grade Spreads By Industry ...
Chart 6…. With Spreads Well Below 2001 And 2008 Credit Cycle Peaks
... With Spreads Well Below 2001 And 2008 Credit Cycle Peaks
... With Spreads Well Below 2001 And 2008 Credit Cycle Peaks
When looking at the individual country corporate bond indices within the euro area, the current levels of spreads do not look particularly wide in an historical context. In Chart 7, we show a bar chart of the range of index OAS for the six largest euro area countries (Germany, France, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, Belgium and Austria). The current OAS is shown within that historical range. The chart shows that current spreads are in the middle of that range for most countries, suggesting some better value has been restored by the COVID-19 selloff but with spreads remaining relatively subdued compared to past euro area credit cycles.1 Chart 7Euro Area Investment Grade Corporate Spreads By Country
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Buy What The Central Banks Are Buying
On a relative basis, investment grade spreads are tightest in France (203bps), the Netherlands (202bps) and Belgium (226bps), and widest in Germany (255bps), Italy (255bps), Austria (251bps) and Spain (234bps). With the ECB already promising greater flexibility in the country allocations of its sovereign bond purchases within the PEPP, Italian corporates may offer the best value within the major euro area countries. With the ECB already promising greater flexibility in the country allocations of its sovereign bond purchases within the PEPP, Italian corporates may offer the best value within the major euro area countries. We can get a better sense of relative corporate bond spread valuation at the country level by looking at the 12-month breakeven spread percentile rankings of those spreads. This is one of the tools we use to assess value in global credit spreads, as measured by historical “spread cushions”. Specifically, we calculate how much spread widening is required over a one-year horizon to eliminate the yield advantage of owning corporate bonds versus duration-matched government debt. We then show those breakeven spreads as a percentile ranking versus its own history, to allow comparisons over periods with differing underlying spread volatility. In Charts 8 & 9, we show the 12-month breakeven spread percentile rankings for Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Belgium and Austria. On this basis, the current level of spreads looks most historically attractive in Germany, Italy and France, with the breakeven spread in the upper quartile versus its history dating back to the year 2000. Spreads in Spain, Belgium and Austria also look relatively wide versus their own history, but to a lesser extent than in Germany, France and Italy. Chart 8German, Italian & French Investment Grade Corporates Offer Better Value On A Breakeven Spread Basis ….
German, Italian & French Investment Grade Corporates Offer Better Value On A Breakeven Spread Basis ...
German, Italian & French Investment Grade Corporates Offer Better Value On A Breakeven Spread Basis ...
Chart 9… Than Spanish, Belgian & Austrian Investment Grade Corporates
Buy What The Central Banks Are Buying
Buy What The Central Banks Are Buying
Chart 10Euro Area Investment Grade Corporate Spreads Are Relatively Wide Across All Credit Tiers
Euro Area Investment Grade Corporate Spreads Are Relatively Wide Across All Credit Tiers
Euro Area Investment Grade Corporate Spreads Are Relatively Wide Across All Credit Tiers
So while there are some modest differences in value to exploit within the euro area investment grade corporate bond universe at the country level, there is less to choose from across credit tiers. The 12-month breakeven spreads for Aaa-rated, Aa-rated, A-rated and Baa-rated euro area corporates are all within the upper quartiles of their own history (Chart 10). One other tool we can use to assess value across euro area investment grade corporates is our sector relative value framework. Borrowing from the methodology used by our colleagues at BCA Research US Bond Strategy to assess US investment grade corporates, the sector relative value framework determines “fair value” spreads for each of the major and minor industry level sub-indices of the overall euro area investment grade universe. The methodology takes each sector's individual OAS and regresses it in a cross-sectional regression with all other sectors. The independent variables in the model are each sector's duration, trailing 12-month spread volatility, and credit rating - the primary risk factors for any corporate bond. Using the common coefficients from that regression, a risk-adjusted "fair value" spread is calculated. The difference between the actual OAS and fair value OAS is our valuation metric used to inform our sector allocation ranking. The latest output from the euro area relative value spread model can be found in Table 2. We also show the duration-times-spread (DTS) for each sector in those tables, which we use as the primary way to measure the riskiness (volatility) of each sector. The scatterplot in Chart 11 shows the tradeoff between the valuation residual from our model and each sector's DTS. Table 2Euro Area Investment Grade Corporate Sector Valuation & Recommended Allocation
Buy What The Central Banks Are Buying
Buy What The Central Banks Are Buying
We can then apply individual sector weights based on the model output and our desired level of overall spread risk to come up with a recommended credit portfolio. The weights are determined at our discretion and are not the output from any quantitative portfolio optimization process. The only constraints are that all sector weights must add to 100% (i.e. the portfolio is fully invested with no use of leverage) and the overall level of spread risk (DTS) must equal our desired target. The strongest overweight candidates (a DTS score equal to or greater than that of the overall index with the highest positive valuation residual) are the following euro area investment grade sectors: Packaging, Tobacco, Other Industrials, Media Entertainment, Supermarkets, Integrated Energy, Consumer Cyclical Services and all non-bank Financials (Insurance, REITs, Brokerages and Finance Companies). Against the current backdrop of euro area corporate spreads offering relatively wide spreads on a breakeven spread basis, and with the ECB providing a highly accommodative monetary backdrop that includes more purchases of both government and corporate debt, we think targeting an overall portfolio DTS greater than that of the euro area investment grade corporate bond index is reasonable. On that basis, we are looking to go overweight sectors with relatively higher DTS and positive risk-adjusted spread residuals from our relative value model (and vice versa). Those overweight candidates would ideally be located in the upper right quadrant of Chart 11. Chart 11Euro Area Investment Grade Corporate Sectors: Valuation Versus Risk
Buy What The Central Banks Are Buying
Buy What The Central Banks Are Buying
Based on the latest output from the relative value model, the strongest overweight candidates (a DTS score equal to or greater than that of the overall index with the highest positive valuation residual) are the following euro area investment grade sectors: Packaging, Tobacco, Other Industrials, Media Entertainment, Supermarkets, Integrated Energy, Consumer Cyclical Services and all non-bank Financials (Insurance, REITs, Brokerages and Finance Companies). The least attractive sectors within this framework (negative risk-adjusted valuations) are: Senior Bank Debt, Natural Gas, Other Utilities, Metals and Mining, Chemicals, Construction Machinery, Lodging, Cable and Satellite, Restaurants, Food/Beverage, Health Care, Oil Field Services, Building Materials and Aerospace/Defense. Bottom Line: European investment grade corporate debt has seen significant spread widening over the past month, but spreads should stabilize with the ECB introducing a new asset purchase program with fewer restrictions. Upgrade euro area investment grade corporates to neutral from underweight on both a tactical (0-6 months) and strategic (6-12 months) basis. Favor debt from beaten-up sectors that are already priced for severe economic weakness like Energy, Transportation and non-bank Financials. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 For the Netherlands, there is a much shorter history of corporate bond index data available from Bloomberg Barclays than the other euro area countries shown in Chart 7. The OAS range only encompasses about seven years of data, while the other countries go back as far as the early 2000s. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
Buy What The Central Banks Are Buying
Buy What The Central Banks Are Buying
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Oil prices are up strongly from their lows, but conditions for a durable bottom may not yet be in place. The main hiccup is that an air pocket will likely remain under global oil demand until most social-distancing measures are lifted. That said, most petrocurrencies offer a significant valuation cushion, making them attractive for longer-term investors. We will look to buy a basket of petrocurrencies on further weakness. The Asian economies that were closer to the epicenter of the epidemic are likely to recover faster than the West. Transport and electricity energy demand should pick up in these economies faster. AUD/CAD and AUD/EUR should benefit from this dynamic. CAD/USD is likely to weaken in the short term as Canadian crude remains trapped in Alberta, but then strengthen as the global economy recovers. Feature Chart I-1Massive Liquidation In Crude Oil
Massive Liquidation In Crude Oil
Massive Liquidation In Crude Oil
Just over a decade ago, the price of crude oil was firmly above $100 per barrel. Fast forward to today and many blends are trading south of $20 (Chart I-1). The extraordinary drop has sent many petrocurrencies, including the Norwegian krone, Mexican peso, and Canadian dollar, into freefall. The oil industry has been hit by multiple tectonic shocks, including a sudden stop in economic activity, a fallout from the OPEC cartel, divestment from ESG funds, and falling oil intensity in many economies. Meanwhile, the trading of petrocurrencies is also complicated by a shifting production landscape among many oil producers. For investors, three key questions will determine whether petrocurrencies are a buy: Have we approached capitulation lows in oil prices? If so, what will be the velocity and magnitude of the demand recovery? Will the correlation between oil and petrocurrencies still hold once the dust settles? Have We Approached Capitulation Lows? In terms of magnitude and duration, yes. Over the last two decades, oil price drawdowns have tended to last between 8 and 20 months before a durable rally ensues. The oil price collapse from July 2008 to February 2009 lasted around 8 months. The decline from June 2014 to February 2016 was much longer, around 20 months. Given the October 2018 peak in oil prices, we should be very close to the bottom in terms of duration. Remarkably, in all episodes, the peak-to-trough decline in the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) blend has been around 75% (Chart I-2). However, since the 1970s, oil has moved in a well-defined pattern of a 10-year bull market, followed by a 20-year bear market (Chart I-3). Assuming the bear market in oil began just after the global financial crisis, it does suggest that even if prices do recover, it will most likely be a bear-market rally. That said, history also suggests that these bear market rallies in oil can be quite powerful, with prices often doubling or trebling. As we go to press, oil prices are up a remarkable 18% from their lows Chart I-2Similar In Magnitude To Prior Oil Crashes
Similar In Magnitude To Prior Oil Crashes
Similar In Magnitude To Prior Oil Crashes
Chart I-3Oil Prices Are Close To Capitulation Lows
Oil Prices Are Close To Capitulation Lows
Oil Prices Are Close To Capitulation Lows
What is different this time? Aside from a breakdown in OPEC+, a few other factors are in play. This alters the timing and duration of an intermediate-term bottom: Any coordinated supply response will need to involve the US to be viable.1 The OPEC+ cartel, specifically the alliance between Russia and Saudi Arabia, is broken. Chart I-4 illustrates why. While being the stewards of global oil production discipline, there has been one sole benefactor – the US. In 2010, only about 6% of global crude output came from the US. Collectively, Canada, Norway and Mexico shared about 10% of the oil market. Meanwhile, OPEC’s market share sat just north of 40%. Fast forward to today and the US produces around 15% of global crude, having grabbed market share from many other countries. Chart I-4US Is The Big Winner From OPEC Cuts
US Is The Big Winner From OPEC Cuts
US Is The Big Winner From OPEC Cuts
As we go to press, there are reports that Saudi Arabia and Russia have come to an agreement. However, the history of OPEC alliances suggests that it is fraught with broken promises. Oil still trades above cash costs for many producing countries, meaning the incentive to boost production in times of a demand shock is quite strong (Chart I-5). Ditto if oil prices are recovering. Oil futures are in a massive contango, with WTI trading close to $40 per barrel two years out. This incentivizes players with strong balance sheets to keep the taps open. The oil curve needs to shift significantly lower, probably pushing some blends into negative spot territory, in order to force production discipline on some players. Chart I-5Oil Still Trading Above Cost Of Production
A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies
A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies
The dollar has been strong, meaning the local-currency revenues of oil producers have been cushioning part of the downdraft in oil prices. This could sustain production longer than would otherwise be the case, especially in a liquidation phase. The New York Fed’s model suggests that most of the downdraft in oil prices since 2010 has been due to rising supply (Chart I-6). Chart I-6Oil Downdraft Driven By Supply
A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies
A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies
Both Saudi Arabia and Russia have low public debt and ample foreign exchange reserves. This buys them time in terms of dealing with a prolonged period of low prices. We know there will be massive economic pain from the oil price collapse (Chart I-7). The good news is that with the economic slowdown already in place, it may well be the catalyst needed to enforce any agreement put into effect. Chart I-7The Coming Economic Pain For Oil Producers
The Coming Economic Pain For Oil Producers
The Coming Economic Pain For Oil Producers
While the positive correlation between oil prices and petrocurrencies has weakened in recent years, it has been re-established during the current downturn. More importantly, should production cuts be led by US shale producers, this will redistribute market share to OPEC and other non-OPEC members, allowing their currencies to benefit. Should production cuts be led by US shale producers, this will redistribute market share to OPEC and other non-OPEC members, allowing their currencies to benefit. In statistical terms, petrocurrencies had a near-perfect positive correlation with oil around the time US production was about to take off (Chart I-8). Since then, that correlation has fallen from around 0.9 to about 0.3. Chart I-8Falling Correlation Between Petrocurrencies And The US Dollar
Falling Correlation Between Petrocurrencies And The US Dollar
Falling Correlation Between Petrocurrencies And The US Dollar
Take the Mexican peso as an example. Since 2013, Mexico has become a net importer of oil, as the US moves towards becoming a net exporter (Chart I-9). This explains why the positive correlation between the peso and oil prices has weakened significantly in recent years. Put another way, rising oil prices benefit the US industrial base much more than in the past, while the benefits for countries like Canada and Mexico are slowly fading. Chart I-9A Shifting Export Landscape
A Shifting Export Landscape
A Shifting Export Landscape
That said, in the case of Canada and Norway, petroleum still represents over 20% and 50% of total exports. For Russia, Saudi Arabia, Iran or Venezuela, the number is much higher. Therefore, it is easy to see why a big fluctuation in the price of oil can have deep repercussions for their external balances. Historically, getting the price of oil right was usually the most important step in any petrocurrency forecast. Bottom Line: Both the CAD and NOK remain positively correlated with oil. So do the Russian ruble and the Colombian peso. This correlation should remain in place if oil prices put in a definitive bottom, and it should strengthen if production cuts are led by the US. When Will Oil Demand Recover? Oil demand tends to follow the ebb and flow of the business cycle, with demand having slowed sharply on the back of a sudden stop in economic activity. Transport constitutes the largest share of global petroleum demand. Ergo the economic lockdowns have brought a lot of freighters, bulk ships, large crude carriers and heavy trucks to a halt. Encouragingly, passenger traffic in China has started to pick up as the number of new Covid-19 cases flattens, and the country is gradually reopening for business. There has also been an improvement in the manufacturing data. All eyes will be watching if the relaxation of measures in China lead to a second wave of infections. Otherwise, should the Western economies follow the Chinese recovery path, then the world will be open for business by the end of the summer (Chart I-10). One way to play an early restart in Asia relative to the West is to go long the Australian dollar, relative to a basket of the Canadian dollar and the euro. Part of the slowdown in global demand is being reflected through elevated oil inventories. However, part of the inventory building has also been a function of refinery maintenance (Chart I-11). Chinese oil imports continue to hold up well, and should easier financial conditions continue to put a floor under the manufacturing cycle, overall consumption will follow suit. Chart I-10Some Optimism For The West
Some Optimism For The West
Some Optimism For The West
Chart I-11Watch For A Peak In Inventories
Watch For A Peak In Inventories
Watch For A Peak In Inventories
One way to play an early restart in Asia relative to the West is to go long the Australian dollar, relative to a basket of the Canadian dollar and the euro. There are three key reasons which support this trade: Liquefied natural gas will become the most important component of Australia’s export mix in the next few years (Chart I-12). As Beijing restarts its economy and electricity production picks up, Aussie exports will benefit. Beijing has a clear environmental push to shift its economy away from coal electricity generation and towards natural gas. The massive drop in pollution resulting from the shutdown will all but assure that this push occurs sooner rather than later. Chart I-12LNG Will Be A Game-Changer For Australia
LNG Will Be A Game-Changer For Australia
LNG Will Be A Game-Changer For Australia
There was already pent-up demand in the Australian economy going into the crisis, given the destruction of the capital stock from the fires. With an economy that was already running well below capacity, construction activity should see a V-shaped rebound once social distancing measures are relaxed. As the currency of the now largest oil producer in the world, the US dollar is becoming a petrocurrency itself. In this new paradigm, a better strategy for playing oil upside is to be long a basket of energy producers versus energy consumers. AUD/EUR benefits from this. Chart I-13 shows that a currency basket of oil producers versus consumers has both had a strong positive correlation with the oil price and has outperformed a traditional petrocurrency basket. Rising oil prices are a terms-of-trade boost for oil exporters but lead to demand destruction for oil importers. Chart I-13Buy Oil Producers Versus Oil Consumers
Buy Oil Producers Versus Oil Consumers
Buy Oil Producers Versus Oil Consumers
Eventually, a pickup in manufacturing activity will be a global phenomenon rather than localized within Asia. When this happens, other petrocurrencies will begin to benefit. This will especially be the case for producers where production is more landlocked. Bottom Line: A recovery in global transport will help revive oil demand. This should be positive for oil prices in general and petrocurrencies in particular. One way to play the recovery in Asia relative to the West for now is to go long AUD/CAD and AUD/EUR. On CAD, NOK, MXN, RUB And COP Chart I-14NOK Will Outperform CAD
NOK Will Outperform CAD
NOK Will Outperform CAD
While Canadian crude is likely to remain trapped in the oil sands, North Sea crude will face less transportation bottlenecks in the near term. This suggests the path of least resistance for CAD/NOK is down (Chart I-14). We were stopped out of our short CAD/NOK trade, but still recommend this position as a play on this dynamic. We are already long the Norwegian krone versus a basket of the euro and dollar. CAD/USD has been displaying a series of higher lows since the March 18 bottom, but the double-top formation in place since then suggests we could see some weakness in the near term. Should CAD/USD retest its recent lows, driven by a relapse in oil prices, we will be buyers. Many petrocurrencies, including the Mexican and Colombian pesos, have become quite cheap and are attractive on a longer-term basis (Chart I-15). Given the uncertainty surrounding the nearer-term outlook, we a placing a limit buy on a broad basket of these currencies at -5%. Should oil prices retest the lows in the coming weeks/months, it will imply an 18% drop. Given the correlation between petrocurrencies and oil of 0.3, this suggests a 5.3% move lower. Chart I-15ASome Petrocurrencies Are Very Cheap
Some Petrocurrencies Are Very Cheap
Some Petrocurrencies Are Very Cheap
Chart I-15BSome Petrocurrencies Are Very Cheap
Some Petrocurrencies Are Very Cheap
Some Petrocurrencies Are Very Cheap
Bottom Line: Place a limit buy on a petrocurrency basket at -5%. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, “The Birth Of WOPEC,” dated April 9, 2020, available at ces.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
Chart II-2USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
Recent data in the US have been negative: The unemployment rate soared from 3.5% to 4.4% in March. Nonfarm payrolls recorded a total loss of 701K jobs, the first decline in payrolls since September 2010. The NFIB business optimism index plunged from 104.5 to 96.4 in March. Initial jobless claims surged by 6.6 million last week, higher than the expected 5.3 million. Michigan consumer sentiment declined to 71 from 89.1 in April. The DXY index fell by 0.7% this week. Risk assets have recovered, fueled by an extra USD $2.3 trillion stimulus from the Federal Reserve. The lesson we are learning is that the deeper the perceived slowdown, the more the Fed will do to assuage any economic damage. As for currencies, what matters is relative monetary policies. The key variable to stem the rise in the USD is that the liquidity crisis does not morph into a solvency one. Report Links: Capitulation? - April 3, 2020 The Dollar Funding Crisis - March 19, 2020 Are Competitive Devaluations Next? - March 6, 2020 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Recent data in the euro area have been mostly negative: Markit services PMI fell further to 26.4 in March from 28.4 the previous month. The Sentix investor confidence dived to -42.9 from -17.1 in April. Moreover, the Sentix current situation index fell from -15 to -66 in April, while the outlook index moved up slightly from -20 to -15. EUR/USD appreciated by 0.5% this week. The euro zone members failed to reach an agreement on the joint EU debt issuance. On the other hand, the ECB adopted an unprecedented set of collateral measures to mitigate the negative impacts from COVID-19 across the euro area, including easing collateral conditions for credit claims, reduction of collateral valuation haircut, and waiver to accept Greek sovereign debt instruments as collateral. Report Links: On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 On Money Velocity, EUR/USD And Silver - October 11, 2019 Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
Recent data in Japan have been negative: Consumer confidence fell to 30.9 from 38.4 in March. Labor cash earnings grew by 1% year-on-year in February, but slowed from 1.2% in January. The Eco Watchers Survey current index fell from 27.4 to 14.2 in March. The outlook index also declined from 24.6 to 18.8. The Japanese yen fell by 1% against the US dollar this week. On Wednesday, the BoJ announced that it would scale back some non-urgent operations such as long-term research and studies for academic papers, following the government’s decision to declare a state of emergency. The Reuters poll forecasted the Q1 GDP to shrink by 3.7% quarter-on-quarter and Q2 by 6.1%. Report Links: The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar - February 28, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
Recent data in the UK have been dismal: Markit construction PMI plunged to 39.3 from 52.6 in March. GfK consumer confidence crashed to -34 from -9 in March. Total trade balance (including EU) shifted to a deficit of £2.8 billion from a surplus of £2.4 billion in February. The goods trade deficit widened from £5.8 billion to £11.5 billion. GBP/USD rose by 0.6% this week. After being told to cut dividends last week, the UK banks are now pressuring the BoE on fresh capital relief to help fight the COVID-19. The BoE has also agreed to temporarily lend the government money, funded through money printing. The details suggest the operations are temporary, but the BoE might be the first central bank to formally step closer to MMT. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 2019 United Kingdom: Cyclical Slowdown Or Structural Malaise? - Sept. 20, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
Recent data in Australia have been negative: The AiG services performance index fell from 47 to 38.7 in March. Imports and exports both slumped 4% and 5% month-on-month respectively in February. The trade surplus narrowed from A$5.2 billion to A$4.4 billion. The Australian dollar surged by 3.8% against the US dollar, making it the best performing G10 currency this week. The RBA held interest rate steady at 0.25% on Tuesday, while warning the country is in for a “very large” economic contraction. Lowe also suggested that the economy will “much depend on the success of the efforts to contain the virus and how long the social distancing measures need to remain in place”. Report Links: On AUD And CNY - January 17, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Contrarian View On The Australian Dollar - May 24, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
Recent data in New Zealand have been dismal: NZIER business confidence survey reported that a net 70% of firms expect general business conditions to deteriorate in Q1, compared to 21% in the previous quarter. Electronic card retail sales contracted by 1.8% year-on-year in March, down from 8.6% growth the previous month. The New Zealand dollar recovered by 1.7% against the US dollar this week. In addition to the NZ$30 billion purchases of central government bonds, the RBNZ is stepping up the QE program by offering to buy up to NZ$3 billion of local government bonds to support liquidity. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Place A Limit Sell On DXY At 100 - November 15, 2019 USD/CNY And Market Turbulence - August 9, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
Recent data in Canada have been dismal: Bloomberg Nanos confidence fell further from 46.9 to 42.7 the week ended April 3. Housing starts increased by 195K year-on-year in March, down from 211K in February. Building permits contracted by 7.3% month-on-month in February. On the labor market front, the pandemic has caused the unemployment rate to rise sharply from 5.6% to 7.8% in March, higher than the expected 7.2%. Employment fell by more than one million (-1,011,000 or -5.3%). The Canadian dollar rose by 1.2% against the US dollar this week, supported by the tentative rebound in oil prices. The BoC spring Business Outlook Survey shows that business sentiment had softened even before COVID-19 concerns intensified in Canada. The overall survey indicator fell below 0 to -0.68 in Q1. Businesses tied to the energy sector were hit the most due to falling oil prices. Report Links: The Loonie: Upside Versus The Dollar, But Downside At The Crosses Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Making Money With Petrocurrencies - November 8, 2019 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
Recent data in Switzerland have been negative: Total sight deposits were little changed at CHF 627 billion for the week ended April 3. The unemployment rate jumped from 2.5% to 2.9% in March, above expectations of 2.8%. The number of total unemployed increased by 15%, now reaching 136K. The Swiss franc appreciated by 0.6% against the US dollar this week. The Swiss government forecasted the output to slump 10% this year under the worst-case scenario, given the incoming data proved worse than expected. On the positive side, the government said it would gradually relax restriction measures later this month should the current situation improve. Report Links: On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 Portfolio Tweaks Before The Chinese New Year - January 24, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
Recent data in Norway have been negative: The unemployment rate surged to 10.7% in March from 2.3%. Manufacturing output fell by 0.5% month-on-month in February. Headline inflation fell from 0.9% to 0.7% year-on-year in March, while core inflation remained unchanged at 2.1%. The Norwegian krone rose by 2.8% against the US dollar this week, up 18% from its recent low three weeks ago. Norway will likely relax some restrictions later this month while the ban on public gatherings will still remain in place. The loosening of COVID-19 measures, together with oil prices recovering and cheap valuations all underpin the Norwegian krone in the long run. Please refer to our front section this week for more detailed analysis. Report Links: Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 On Oil, Growth And The Dollar - January 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
Recent data in Sweden have been mixed: Industrial production fell by 0.2% year-on-year in February. Manufacturing new orders increased by 6% year-on-year in February. Household consumption increased by 2.3% year-on-year in February, up from 1.6% the previous month. The Swedish krona increased by 1% against the US dollar this week. The recent efforts in buying up bonds by the Riksbank to increase liquidity amid COVID-19 is likely to increase the debt burden in Sweden. The stock of Swedish Treasury bills held by the Riksbank is estimated to be SEK 300 billion by the end of this year, compared to only 55 billion in February. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Highlights Global growth should bounce back in the third quarter, as mass COVID-19 testing allows more people to return to work. Temporary layoffs have accounted for the vast majority of the increase in unemployment so far. Ample fiscal and monetary support should prevent these layoffs from becoming permanent. The equity risk premium remains quite high, which warrants overweighting equities relative to bonds over a 12-month horizon. The near-term outlook for stocks is less flattering, given the strong rally in equities over the past two weeks and the fact that earnings estimates are likely to fall sharply once companies begin to report first quarter results. Accordingly, we recommend that investors take some chips off the table in preparation for a temporary stock market pullback. We are also shifting our near-term regional equity allocation and currency views in a somewhat more defensive direction. As Bad As It Gets? Chart 1Nosedive In High-Frequency Activity Indicators
Nosedive In High-Frequency Activity Indicators
Nosedive In High-Frequency Activity Indicators
The global economy has plunged into a deep recession. The New York Fed’s weekly economic index, which tracks a variety of high-frequency activity indicators such as same-store retail sales, consumer sentiment, fuel sales, and unemployment insurance claims, has plunged below its 2008 lows (Chart 1). Service-sector purchasing manager indices have collapsed to the weakest levels on record (Chart 2). The OECD estimates that the shutdowns have reduced the level of output by between one-fifth and one-quarter in most advanced economies (Chart 3).1 If business closures were to last three months, this would shave between 4-to-6 percentage points from annual growth in the OECD in 2020. Chart 2Service-Sector Activity Has Collapsed To Unprecedented Lows
Service-Sector Activity Has Collapsed To Unprecedented Lows
Service-Sector Activity Has Collapsed To Unprecedented Lows
Chart 3Severe Economic Consequences Resulting From World War V
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At times like these, it is easy to despair about the future. Yet, there are three reasons to think that the worst of the economic damage will be over within the next few months: The measures necessary to control the virus are likely to be relaxed without this leading to a new wave of infections. Recessions following exogenous shocks, such the one we are currently experiencing, tend to produce faster recoveries than those stemming from endogenous slowdowns. Policy will remain highly supportive, mitigating possible adverse second-round effects. Quarantine Measures Are Likely To Be Relaxed In our recently published Q2 Strategy Outlook, we likened the current situation to one where a cyclist fails to apply the brakes when starting to descend a steep hill. Not only does the cyclist need to squeeze the brake levers to slow down, he needs to squeeze them harder than he would otherwise have in order to compensate for failing to squeeze them at the outset. Only once the bicycle has decelerated to a safe speed can he ease off the brakes a bit. Most countries find themselves in the position of the cyclist. Policymakers were too slow to react at the outset of the pandemic, and now have to compensate for their inaction by imposing draconian containment measures. In epidemiological language, policymakers are seeking to reduce the effective reproduction number – the average number of people a carrier of the virus will infect – from well above one to well below one. As long as the reproduction number stays below one, the number of new infections will keep falling. Once the number of new cases has declined to a level that no longer overwhelms hospitals, policymakers will be able to relax containment measures by just enough to bring the reproduction number back to one. This will create a new steady state where the number of new infections remains at a stable and manageable level. The good news is that the strategy appears to be working. The number of new cases and deaths have started to decline in both Italy and Spain, the two hardest hit European countries. In the US, while the number of new cases has yet to show a clear downward trend, there are glimmers of hope (Chart 4). For example, the net number of people admitted to New York hospitals has declined sharply since the beginning of April (Chart 5). Chart 4New Cases And Deaths: Have We Turned The Corner?
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Chart 5Glimmer Of Hope Emanating From The Big Apple?
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Test, Test, Test While keeping the reproduction number from rising above one will still require a variety of containment measures, the economic burden of these measures will decline over time. Using the bicycle analogy above, this is equivalent to saying that the road will become flatter the further down we go. To some extent, we will be able to relax containment measures because the virus will find it more difficult to propagate as more people are infected. However, unless it turns out that the number of asymptomatic cases is currently much greater than most estimates suggest, the benefits from this effect are likely to be small. The bigger impact will come not from making headway towards herd immunity, but from scaling up existing testing technologies to figure out who is dangerous to others and who is not. Forcing almost everyone who is not deemed to be an “essential worker” to stay at home is hardly an optimal strategy. Rather than trying to isolate most people, it would be preferable to isolate only those who are infected. The problem is that we currently do not know who those people are. That will change as testing capacity ramps up. Right now, we are in the same predicament as if there had been a major terrorist attack using an explosive device that was invisible to conventional detectors. Just like there would have been a temptation to stop all air travel until we figured out how to detect the new type of bomb, we have decided to stop most commerce because we do not know who may be carrying the virus. The good news is that the technology to test people for COVID-19 exists. Abbott Labs has already unveiled a PCR test, which detects specific genetic material within the virus, that can render a positive result in as little as five minutes and a negative one in thirteen minutes. Last Wednesday, the FDA authorized a rapid antibody blood test for COVID-19 developed by Cellex, which can determine if someone previously had the virus and has recovered. Pessimists would highlight that there is currently a severe shortage of test kits. That is true, but we should avoid the trap of linear thinking that got us into this mess to begin with. Producing more tests is an engineering problem that will be solved. As the number of tests performed begins to increase exponentially, testing will become ubiquitous. How much would mass testing help? The answer is a lot. Paul Romer has shown that a strategy of randomly testing everyone roughly once every two weeks would bring down the total number of people who contract the virus to under 20% of the population.2 In his simulation, only 5%-to-10% of the population would need to be quarantined at any given time. In the absence of mass testing, 50% of the population would need to be quarantined to yield the same result (See Appendix 1 for details). The economy can handle isolating 5%-to-10% of its population at any given time. It cannot handle isolating half its population. Just like you have to X-ray your luggage at the airport, you may end up having to take a COVID-19 test before boarding a flight. Children will be tested at school several times a week; first responders more often than that. It will be a nuisance, but the alternative of a Great Depression is much worse. And if it is any consolation, at least this is one test you won’t have to study for! Unemployment Dynamics Following Exogenous Shocks Chart 6Historically, It Has Taken Some Time For Employment To Return To Pre-Recession Levels
Historically, It Has Taken Some Time For Employment To Return To Pre-Recession Levels
Historically, It Has Taken Some Time For Employment To Return To Pre-Recession Levels
Economic life is full of asymmetries. It is easier to go bankrupt than to start a new business. It is also easier to lose a job than to find a new one. Once the links between companies and workers are severed, it can be difficult to restore them. This is partly because it is time-consuming and costly to match available workers with open positions. It is also because there are feedback loops at work: If someone is unemployed and not earning an income, they have less money to spend. If people are not spending much, there is less incentive for firms to hire new workers. In the United States, it took more than six years for the level of employment to return to its January 2008 peak. Even during the fairly mild 2001 downturn, employment did not return to pre-recession levels until February 2005 (Chart 6). Given the recent steep drop in output, it is likely that the unemployment rate will eclipse 10% in the US and most other economies during the coming months. Does this mean that it will take many years for the labor market to heal? Not necessarily. So far, most of the workers who have lost their jobs have been furloughed rather than permanently dismissed. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 86% of the roughly 1.2 million US workers who lost their jobs in March were laid off temporarily (Chart 7). As a share of all unemployed, the number of workers on temporary layoff doubled in March to the highest level on record (Chart 8). Chart 7US Job Losses: Furlough Or Permanent Dismissal?
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Chart 8US Temporary Job Losses Have Skyrocketed
US Temporary Job Losses Have Skyrocketed
US Temporary Job Losses Have Skyrocketed
The Role Of Stimulus Of course, it is possible that temporary layoffs will turn into permanent ones. This is where governments need to step in. Nothing can be done about the near-term decline in economic activity. That is the price which needs to be paid to keep the virus under control. However, transfers of income from governments to struggling households and firms can alleviate a lot of needless hardship, while making sure there is enough pent-up demand around for when businesses reopen their doors. We have discussed at length the various monetary and fiscal measures that have been introduced to combat the crisis.3 We will not get into the nitty-gritty of that discussion now, other than to note that the sizes of the various rescue packages have generally been in the ballpark of what is needed. And if it turns out that more help is necessary, it will be forthcoming. Chart 9 shows that there is widespread bipartisan support for further stimulus among US voters of all ages and backgrounds. Chart 9US: Support For Further Stimulus Is Widespread
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The WWII Comparison In some economic respects, the pandemic may end up resembling World War II. Just like today, the volume of nonessential goods and services was greatly curtailed during the war in order to make room for essential production (Chart 10). Instead of an exponential increase in facemasks and test kits, there was an exponential increase in the production of military equipment (Chart 11). Chart 10WW2 Versus World War V
WW2 Versus World War V
WW2 Versus World War V
Chart 11Now Let's Do The Same For Test Kits And Ventilators
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Similar to today, the US government ran massive budget deficits to finance the war effort. The ratio of federal debt-to-GDP rose from 45% in 1942 to more than 100% by the end of 1945. Today there is widespread fear that returning workers will find themselves out of a job. Back then, people worried that returning soldiers would be unable to secure work, leading to a second Great Depression. Future Nobel laureate Paul Samuelson warned that the US faced the “greatest period of unemployment and industrial dislocation” unless wartime controls were extended. Gunnar Myrdal, another future Nobel laureate, predicted an “epidemic of violence” stemming from mass unemployment. Looking back, while the unemployment rate did rise briefly after the war, it quickly fell back, as the pent-up demand from years of frugality and a slew of war-time inventions ushered in two decades of unprecedented growth. Policy also did its part. Even though government spending fell by 75% in real terms between 1944 and 1947, the GI Bill, which provided free education, low-cost mortgages, and unemployment benefits to returning soldiers, cushioned the blow. The Marshall Plan also helped rebuild post-war Europe, boosting US exports in the process. We are not predicting that the pandemic will usher in a period of unparalleled prosperity. Nevertheless, just like the bleak forecasts following WWII proved to be unfounded, today’s forecasts of prolonged mass unemployment will likely not materialize. Gauging The Fair Value Of Equities To what extent has the recession reduced the fair value of corporate equities? Let us try to answer this question analytically. Consider a baseline where earnings grow by 2% per year, the risk-free rate is 2%, and the equity risk premium is 5%. Now suppose that the recession temporarily reduces corporate profits by 60% this year, 40% next year, and 20% the year after next relative to the aforementioned baseline, with earnings returning to trend beyond then. Chart 12 shows that such a recessionary shock would reduce the present value of earnings by 5.4%. Now let’s consider a more ominous scenario where corporate profits fall by 60% this year, 40% next year, 20% the year after that, and then remain 10% lower relative to the baseline forever. In that case, the present value of future earnings would fall by 14.1%. One might notice that even in this ominous scenario, the present value of future earnings falls less than one might have assumed. And this is before we take into account any possible mitigating effects from a drop in the risk-free rate. For example, suppose that the risk-free rate declines by one percentage point, which is roughly how much both the US 30-year Treasury yield and our 5-year/5-year forward terminal rate proxy have fallen since the start of the year (Chart 13). In that case, the present value of earnings would increase by 7.3% even if profits followed the ominous path described above. Chart 12What Happens To Earnings During A Recessionary Shock?
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Chart 13Long-Term Rates Have Dropped This Year
Long-Term Rates Have Dropped This Year
Long-Term Rates Have Dropped This Year
Of course, in practice, stocks tend to fall a lot more during recessions than you would expect based on the sort of fair value calculations described above. This is because the equity risk premium, which we have kept constant in our examples, usually rises in periods of economic turmoil. A higher risk premium increases the discount rate applied to future earnings, leading to lower stock prices. The equity risk premium is mean reverting. This explains why the prospective return to equities is usually highest during recessions and lowest following long economic booms. The equity risk premium is quite high at present, which warrants overweighting equities relative to bonds over a 12-month horizon (Chart 14). That said, the high equity risk premium mainly reflects exceptionally low bond yields. In absolute terms, stocks are not especially cheap, particularly in the US, where the S&P 500 trades at 17.3-forward earnings (Chart 15). That is actually above the P/E ratio of 15.1 that the S&P 500 reached in October 2007 at the peak of the bull market before the start of the Global Financial Crisis. Chart 14The Equity Risk Premium Is Quite High, Especially Outside The US
The Equity Risk Premium Is Quite High, Especially Outside The US
The Equity Risk Premium Is Quite High, Especially Outside The US
Chart 15US Stocks Are Not Particularly Cheap In Absolute Terms
US Stocks Are Not Particularly Cheap In Absolute Terms
US Stocks Are Not Particularly Cheap In Absolute Terms
Moreover, today’s forward P/E ratio is based on stale earnings estimates which will come down over the coming weeks. The bottom-up consensus calls for S&P 500 companies to earn $153 per share this year. Our US equity strategists expect something closer to $100. We noted earlier this month that we would be aggressive buyers of stocks if the S&P 500 fell below 2250, but would turn neutral if the S&P 500 rose above 2750. The index briefly fell below 2250 on March 23, only to surge to 2789 as of the close of trading today. As such, we are downgrading our tactical 3-month view on global equities back to neutral. We are also trimming our tactical 3-month recommendation on the more cyclical currencies and stock markets such as those in Europe and EM. For now, we are maintaining our overweight stance on global stocks over a 12-month horizon, but will consider curbing that too if the S&P 500 rises above 3000 without a corresponding improvement in the news flow. Our full slate of views is shown in the matrix at the end of this report. Going forward, we will use this matrix as the primary tool for communicating our market views, reserving trade recommendations only for special situations that are not well covered by the views expressed in the matrix. To enhance accountability, we will start tracking all the positions in the matrix versus an appropriate market benchmark. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com APPENDIX 1: Testing Versus Mass Quarantines (I) In a series of blog posts, Paul Romer presented a model that simulates and visualizes the effects of various policies aimed at containing the spread of Covid-19. At its core, similar to models used by epidemiologists, Romer’s model shows that without any intervention, a vast majority of populations will end up becoming infected. His simulations suggest that the policy of isolation based on random testing can be as effective in containing the virus as mass indiscriminate isolation. However, the economic and social costs of the latter are much higher than they are for the former. In Romer’s simulations, the policy of test-based isolation keeps the cumulative fraction of the population that is infected at below 20%. This policy relies on frequent testing where 7% of the population is randomly tested every day, equivalent to testing everyone roughly once every two weeks. Those who test positive are isolated. It is further assumed that these tests are imperfect: they yield 20% false negatives and 1% false positives. To achieve a similar profile of virus propagation without tests, Romer finds that a random isolation policy would require an average isolation rate in the population of about 50%. Appendix Chart 1 provides a graphical comparison of the intensity of the quarantining that is required under the two policy simulations. It shows that an isolation policy relying on tests results in much less disruption to normal patterns of social interactions. Appendix Chart 1
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APPENDIX 1: Testing Versus Mass Quarantines (II) The following two animations visualize the differences between the two policies: The blue inverted triangles show those who are vulnerable to catching the virus; the red circles signify those who are infectious; the purple squares mark those who were previously infectious but have now recovered and can neither catch nor transmit the virus; and the hollow orange box illustrates isolation. Isolating Based On Test Results .iframe-container{ position: relative; width 100%; padding-bottom: 56.25%; height: 0; } .iframe-container iframe{ position: absolute; top:0; left:0; width:100%; height: 100%; } Isolating At Random .iframe-container{ position: relative; width 100%; padding-bottom: 56.25%; height: 0; } .iframe-container iframe{ position: absolute; top:0; left:0; width:100%; height: 100%; } Source: Paul Romer, “Simulating Covid-19: Part 2,” March 24, 2020. For more details about the models and simulations as well as sensitivity analysis, please visit: https://paulromer.net/. Footnotes 1 “Evaluating The Initial Impact Of Covid-19 Containment Measures On Economic Activity,” OECD, 2020. 2 Paul Romer, “Simulating Covid-19: Part 2,” March 24, 2020. 3 Please see Global Investment Strategy, “Second Quarter 2020 Strategy Outlook: World War V,” dated March 27, 2020. Global Investment Strategy View Matrix
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Current MacroQuant Model Scores
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Highlights Bond Yield Differentials: The deepening global recession has prompted aggressive monetary easing measures by virtually every developed economy central bank. With policy rates now near zero everywhere, government bond yield differentials between countries have been reduced substantially. Currency Hedged vs Unhedged Yields: Opportunities still exist in some countries to create synthetically “higher” yields relative to low local rates by hedging the currency exposure of foreign bonds. Country Allocation: Italy and Spain government bonds offer the most attractive yields, hedged into any of the major currencies (USD, EUR, GBP, JPY). Among the lower yielders, Canadian, Australian, French and Japanese government bonds offer the most attractive yield pickups, on a currency-hedged basis, versus yields in the US, Germany, and the UK. Feature Chart 1A Synchronized Collapse
A Synchronized Collapse
A Synchronized Collapse
The COVID-19 economic downturn is already shaping up to be one of the deepest global recessions in history. While there have been worldwide industrial slowdowns and manufacturing recessions in the past, what is happening now is different in that all countries are suffering sharp contractions in activity in the much larger services sectors that employ far more workers. The result will be massive increases in unemployment, as is already happening in the US where a staggering 10 million workers have filed for jobless benefits over just the past two weeks. Central bankers have responded to the shock to growth by following essentially the same playbook: cutting interest rates to zero as rapidly as possible, followed up with quantitative easing and other programs to support financial markets. With a synchronized economic collapse leading to policy convergence, government bond yields have plunged worldwide, but yield differentials between countries have also fallen sharply as a result (Chart of the Week). In this report, we will present the case for using currency hedging more actively than usual to create more attractive global bond yields. What can a global government bond investor do in this environment of tiny-but-highly-correlated bond yields to squeeze out some incremental additional return? In this report, we will present the case for using currency hedging more actively than usual to create more attractive global bond yields. A Fundamentally Driven Yield Convergence Chart 2Yields Are Low Everywhere
Yields Are Low Everywhere
Yields Are Low Everywhere
As a simple starting point, just looking at the level of government bond yields in the developed economies is a good indication of how little there is to choose from between countries right now. For example, a 10-year government bond in the US was yielding 0.67% yesterday, compared to a 10-year yield in Australia, Canada and the UK of 0.82%, 0.75%, and 0.33% respectively (Chart 2). Not only are those low absolute yields, but those spreads versus US Treasuries are very narrow in an historical context. Another way to see how similar interest rate structures have become within the major developed markets is by looking at market expectations of future policy rates. Our proxy for the market’s pricing of the terminal nominal policy rate – the 5-year overnight index swap (OIS) rate, 5-years forward – shows that interest rate markets are expecting policy rates to stay very low over the next few years. The fall in the terminal rate estimate has been the largest in the US and Canada, where the markets were still pricing in a “peak” policy rate level around 2% as late as December – the figure is now 0.6% in the US and 1.1% in Canada (Chart 3). Chart 3Global Policy Rate Convergence
Global Policy Rate Convergence
Global Policy Rate Convergence
So if the bond markets now believe that the current levels of bond yields will be sustained for longer, is that a realistic belief? There is already a considerable amount of both monetary and fiscal stimulus that has been introduced by policymakers. At some point, this stimulus should begin to stabilize and boost economic growth, but only after the immediate public health crisis of the COVID-19 outbreak has begun to subside. That will eventually help put a floor under developed market government bond yields. Chart 4The Backdrop Remains Conducive To Global Bond Yields Staying Low
The Backdrop Remains Conducive To Global Bond Yields Staying Low
The Backdrop Remains Conducive To Global Bond Yields Staying Low
As we discussed in a recent weekly report, three elements must all happen before a true and lasting bottom for both risk assets and bond yields can begin to take place (Chart 4):1 The net number of new COVID-19 cases must begin to slow in critical countries like the US and Italy, a first step before the lockdown restrictions can start to be lifted; The US dollar (USD) must peak out and begin to roll over, taking stress off non-US borrowers of USD-denominated debt; The VIX must sustainably fall back from the levels above 40 that imply very volatile markets and continued investor nervousness about the future. Global government bond yields are likely to remain relatively range bound over the next month or two, at least. Out of this list, the slowing in the number of new cases of the virus in Italy is a positive sign, as is the VIX falling back to the mid-40s. The sticky USD is still a major issue, however, particularly for borrowers with major dollar debts in the emerging world. There is not yet an “all clear” from this checklist, suggesting that global government bond yields are likely to remain relatively range bound over the next month or two, at least. This means bond investors need to consider alternative strategies to boost the yield of their government bond portfolios. Bottom Line: The deepening global recession has prompted similar monetary easing measures by virtually every developed economy central bank. With policy rates near zero everywhere, government bond yield differentials between countries have been largely eliminated. Searching For More Attractive Yields - With Currency Hedging When discussing our country allocation strategy, we have always looked at the yields and relative returns of government bonds in each country in hedged currency terms rather than in local currency terms. This is to remove the significant return volatility coming from currency exposure, while also making an appropriate “apples-to-apples” comparison of the yields on offer in each country. We have chosen the USD as the “base currency” for all these comparisons. In Chart 5, we show a static snapshot of the government bond yield curves, in local currency terms, for the US, Germany, France, Italy, the UK, Japan, Canada and Australia. The US, Canada and Australia remain the relative high-yielders within the major developed markets, although the “riskier” credits of Italy and Spain offer the highest outright yields. Unhedged German yields look particularly unattractive here, with the entire yield curve offering yields below 0%. Chart 5Currency-Unhedged Global Government Bond Yield Curves
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Chart 6USD-Hedged Global Government Bond Yield Curves
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
In Chart 6, we show those same yield curves, but with the non-US yields all shown on a USD-hedged basis. The yields include the net gain/cost of hedging foreign currency back into US dollars using 3-month currency forwards. Shown this way, the non-US yield curves can be more directly compared to the “base” US Treasury curve. Looking at those yields shows that there is a much tighter convergence of yields with the US for most countries, but in a relative narrower range between 0.5% and 1.25% across the full maturity spectrum. The Fed’s rapid easing cycle, which started with the 75bps of rate cuts in the summer of 2019 and continued with the rapid move to a near-zero funds rate during the COVID-19 crisis, has dramatically altered the calculus for both global bond country allocation and currency hedging. Chart 7Fed Rate Cuts Have Reduced The Yield Advantage of USTs
Fed Rate Cuts Have Reduced The Yield Advantage of USTs
Fed Rate Cuts Have Reduced The Yield Advantage of USTs
Chart 8Fed Rate Cuts Have Taken The Carry Out Of The USD
Fed Rate Cuts Have Taken The Carry Out Of The USD
Fed Rate Cuts Have Taken The Carry Out Of The USD
First, the Fed’s easing cycle triggered a major decline in US Treasury yields that was not matched in other countries, eliminating much of the unhedged yield advantage of Treasuries over non-US peers (Chart 7). At the same time, the Fed’s rate cuts eliminated much of the interest rate “carry” of owning US dollars versus other currencies. The amount of that reduction was significant, with the gain of hedging a euro or yen currency exposure into dollars reduced from nearly around 250bps in the spring of 2019 to just over 100bps today (Chart 8). That dramatically alters the attractiveness of even negative-yielding German and Japanese government bonds, whose yields could once have been transformed into a relatively high USD-based yield via currency hedging. The Fed’s easing cycle triggered a major decline in US Treasury yields that was not matched in other countries, eliminating much of the unhedged yield advantage of Treasuries over non-US peers. At the same time, the Fed’s rate cuts eliminated much of the interest rate “carry” of owning US dollars versus other currencies. Country Allocation Strategy Implications For dedicated global government bond investors, the only way to earn meaningfully higher yields in the current environment is to consider selective currency hedging of bond exposures. In Tables 1-4, we show 2-year, 5-year, 10-year and 30-year government bond yields for the major developed economy bond markets. The yields are hedged into USD, EUR, GBP and JPY, to allow comparisons of foreign yields for investors with those four base currencies. Table 1Currency-Hedged 2-Year Government Bond Yields
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Table 2Currency-Hedged 5-Year Government Bond Yields
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Table 3Currency-Hedged 10-Year Government Bond Yields
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Table 4Currency-Hedged 30-Year Government Bond Yields
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
For USD-based investors, there are still some interesting opportunities available to find a USD-hedged foreign yield that can exceed that of US Treasuries. The higher-yielding European markets like Italy and Spain are the obvious places to find yield, and we continue to recommend those bonds with the ECB now buying more of the riskier euro area government bonds as part of its new Pandemic Emergency Purchase Program. However, Canadian, Australian and French bonds – hedged into USD – all offer intriguing yield pickups over US Treasuries. Even the negative yields available in Japan and Switzerland look interesting when expressed in USD terms, although that is not the case for negative yielding German bonds. Canadian, Australian and French bonds – hedged into USD – all offer intriguing yield pickups over US Treasuries. Even the negative yields available in Japan and Switzerland look interesting when expressed in USD terms, although that is not the case for negative yielding German bonds. In Tables 5-8, the currency-hedged yields for each country are shown as a spread to the relevant “base” bond yield for each currency. For example, under the “EUR” column in Table 6, the cells show the yield spread between 5-year government bonds hedged into euros and 5-year German bonds. Here, we can see that there are far fewer opportunities for euro-based bond investors to find non-European yields that offer adequate yield pickups versus German yields. The pickings are even less slim for Japanese investors, with many non-Japanese yields trading below Japanese yields on a JPY-hedged basis. Table 5Currency-Hedged 2-Year Govt. Bond Yield Spreads Versus The
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Table 6Currency-Hedged 5-Year Govt. Bond Yield Spreads Versus The
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Table 7Currency-Hedged 10-Year Govt. Bond Yield Spreads Versus The
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Table 8Currency-Hedged 30-Year Govt. Bond Yield Spreads Versus The
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
In sum, looking across all eight tables shown, the most consistently attractive yields, across all currencies and maturities, can be found in Australia, Canada, France, Italy and Spain. Bottom Line: Opportunities still exist in some countries to create synthetically “higher” yields relative to low local rates by hedging the currency exposure of foreign bonds. Italy and Spain government bonds offer the most attractive yields, hedged into any of the major currencies (USD, EUR, GBP, JPY). Among the lower yielders, Canadian, Australian, French and Japanese government bonds offer the most attractive yield pickups, on a currency-hedged basis, versus yields in the US, Germany, and the UK. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Central Banks To Markets: Redefining "Whatever It Takes"", dated March 24, 2020, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Get Out The Magnifying Glass: Finding Value In Government Bond Yields
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Chart 1Will Fed Purchases Mark The Top?
Will Fed Purchases Mark The Top?
Will Fed Purchases Mark The Top?
Policymakers can’t do much to boost economic activity when the entire population is under quarantine, but they can take steps to contain the ongoing credit shock and mitigate the risk of widespread corporate bankruptcy. If most firms can stay afloat, then at least there will be jobs to return to when shelter in place restrictions are lifted. Are the steps taken so far by the Federal Reserve and Congress sufficient in this regard? We expect that the Fed’s announcement of investment grade corporate bond purchases will mark the peak in investment grade corporate bond spreads (Chart 1). However, the Fed is doing nothing for high-yield issuers and its purchases only lower borrowing costs for investment grade firms, they don’t clean up highly levered balance sheets. Similarly, much of Congress’ fiscal stimulus package comes in the form of loans instead of grants. As such, ratings downgrades will surge and high-yield spreads probably have more near-term upside. Investors should keep portfolio duration close to benchmark, overweight investment grade corporate bonds and remain cautious vis-à-vis high-yield. Investors should also take advantage of the attractive long-run value in TIPS. Investment Grade: Overweight Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview
Investment Grade Market Overview
Investment Grade Market Overview
Investment grade corporate bonds underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 1040 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -1268 bps. The average index spread widened 251 bps from the beginning of the month until the Fed announced its corporate bond purchase programs. It then tightened by 90 bps. It currently sits at 283 bps. Even after the recent tightening, investment grade spreads are extremely high relative to history. Our measure of the 12-month breakeven spread adjusted for changing index credit quality ranks at its 89th percentile since 1989 (Chart 2).1 This means that the sector has only been cheaper 11% of the time since 1989. As we wrote in last week’s Special Report, the Fed’s two new corporate bond purchase programs could be thought of as adding an agency guarantee to eligible securities (those with 5-years to maturity or less).2 We would also expect ineligible (longer maturity) securities to benefit from some knock-on effects, since many firms issue at both the short and long ends of the curve. As such, we recommend an overweight allocation to investment grade corporate bonds, with a preference for the short-end of the curve (5-years or less). The Fed’s purchases should lead to spread tightening, and a steepening of the spread curve (panel 4). Table 3ACorporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation*
Containing The Credit Shock
Containing The Credit Shock
Table 3BCorporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward*
Containing The Credit Shock
Containing The Credit Shock
High-Yield: Neutral Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview
High-Yield Market Overview
High-Yield Market Overview
High-Yield underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 1330 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -1659 bps. The average index spread widened 600 bps from the beginning of the month until the Fed announced its corporate bond purchase programs. It then tightened by 158 bps. It currently sits at 942 bps. As we wrote in last week’s Special Report, the Fed’s corporate bond purchases will cause investment grade corporate spreads to tighten, but so far, high-yield has been left out in the cold.3 This means that we must view high-yield spreads in the context of what sort of default cycle we expect for the next 12 months. To do that, we use our Default-Adjusted Spread – the excess spread available in the index after accounting for default losses. At current spreads, our base case expectation of an 11%-13% default rate and 20%-25% recovery rate implies a Default-Adjusted Spread between -98 bps and +117bps (Chart 3). For a true buying opportunity, we would prefer a Default-Adjusted Spread above its historical average of 250 bps. This means that we would consider upgrading high-yield to overweight if the index spread widens to a range of 1075 bps – 1290 bps, in the near-term. Until then, junk investors should stay cautious. MBS: Underweight Chart 4MBS Market Overview
MBS Market Overview
MBS Market Overview
Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 22 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -81 bps. The conventional 30-year zero-volatility spread widened 13 bps on the month, driven by a 16 bps widening of the option-adjusted spread that was offset by a 3 bps decline in expected prepayment losses (aka option cost). Like investment grade corporates, MBS spreads will benefit from aggressive Fed purchases for the foreseeable future. However, we prefer investment grade corporates over MBS because of much more attractive valuations. Notice that the option-adjusted spread offered by a Aa-rated corporate bond is 98 bps greater than that offered by a conventional 30-year MBS (Chart 4). Further, servicer back-log is currently keeping primary mortgage rates elevated compared to both Treasury and MBS yields (panels 4 & 5). This is preventing many homeowners from refinancing, despite the Fed’s dramatic rate cuts. However, we expect these homeowners will eventually get their chance. The Fed will be very cautious about raising rates in the future, and primary mortgage spreads will tighten as servicers add capacity. This means that there is a significant amount of refi risk that is not yet priced into MBS. Government-Related: Underweight Chart 5Government-Related Market Overview
Government-Related Market Overview
Government-Related Market Overview
The Government-Related Index underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 574 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -667 bps. Sovereign debt underperformed duration-equivalent Treasuries by 1046 bps in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -1375 bps. Foreign Agencies underperformed the Treasury benchmark by 850 bps on the month, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -1023 bps. Local Authority debt underperformed Treasuries by 990 bps in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -948 bps. Domestic Agency bonds underperformed by 96 bps in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -103 bps. Supranationals underperformed by 70 bps on the month, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -63 bps. USD-denominated Sovereigns handily outperformed Baa-rated corporate bonds during last month’s market riot (Chart 5). But going forward, we prefer to grab the extra spread available in Baa-rated corporates, with the added bonus that the corporate sector now benefits from direct Fed purchases. The Fed’s dollar swap lines should remove some of the liquidity premium priced into sovereign spreads, but these swap lines only extend to 14 countries (Euro Area, Canada, UK, Japan, Switzerland, Australia, Brazil, Denmark, Korea, Mexico, Norway, New Zealand, Singapore and Sweden) and further dollar appreciation is possible until global growth recovers. One silver lining of last month’s indiscriminate spread widening is that some value has been created in traditionally low-risk sectors. Specifically, the Domestic Agency and Supranational option-adjusted spreads are at 46 bps and 31 bps, respectively (bottom panel). Both look like attractive buying opportunities. Municipal Bonds: Overweight Chart 6Municipal Market Overview
Municipal Market Overview
Municipal Market Overview
Municipal bonds underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by a whopping 649 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -755 bps (before adjusting for the tax advantage). In fact, Aaa-rated Municipal / Treasury yield ratios have blown out across the entire curve and have made new all-time highs, above where they were during the 2008 financial crisis (Chart 6). While the spread levels are alarming, it’s not hard to understand why muni spread widening has been so dramatic. State and local governments are not only shouldering massive expenses fighting the COVID-19 crisis, but will also see tax revenues plunge as economic activity grinds to a halt. This opens up a massive whole in state & local government budgets and municipal bond prices are reacting in kind. Support in the form of Fed municipal bond purchases and direct cash injections from the federal government is required to right the ship. So far, the Fed is only supporting municipal debt with less than six months to maturity and federal government aid has come in the form of grants directed at specific spending areas. Ideally, the Fed will start purchasing long-dated municipal bonds (as it is doing with corporates) and the federal government will provide more direct aid to fill budget gaps. We expect both of those policies to be launched in the coming weeks, and thus think it is a good time to buy municipal bonds on the expectation that the “policy put” will drive spreads lower. Treasury Curve: Buy 5-Year Bullet Versus 2/10 Barbell Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview
Treasury Yield Curve Overview
Treasury Yield Curve Overview
The Treasury curve underwent a massive bull-steepening in March, as the Fed cut rates by 100 bps, all the way back to the zero bound. The 2-year/10-year Treasury slope steepened 20 bps on the month. It currently sits at 39 bps. The 5-year/30-year Treasury slope steepened 22 bps on the month. It currently sits at 85 bps. One good thing about the fed funds rate being pinned at zero is that it greatly simplifies yield curve strategy. As we showed in a recent report, when the funds rate is at its lower bound the Treasury slope will trade directionally with yields.4 That is, the yield curve will steepen when yields rise and flatten when they fall. Therefore, if you want to put on a position that will profit from lower yields but that doesn’t increase the average duration of your portfolio, you can enter a duration-neutral flattener: long a 2/10 or 2/30 barbell and short the 5-year or 7-year bullet, in duration-matched terms. Or, if like us, you do not want to make a large duration bet but suspect that Treasury yields will be higher in 12 months, you can enter a duration-neutral steepener: long the 5-year bullet and short a duration-matched 2/10 barbell.5 In terms of value, the 5-year yield no longer trades deeply negative relative to the 2/10 and 2/30 barbells (Chart 7), though it remains somewhat expensive according to our models (see Appendix B). TIPS: Overweight Chart 8Inflation Compensation
Inflation Compensation
Inflation Compensation
TIPS underperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 515 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -735 bps. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate fell 55 bps on the month. It currently sits at 1.09%. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate fell 24 bps on the month. It currently sits at 1.39%. As we noted in a recent report, the market crash has created an extraordinary amount of long-run value in TIPS.6 For example, the 10-year and 5-year TIPS breakeven inflation rates have fallen to 1.09% and 0.78%, respectively. This means that a buy & hold position long the TIPS and short the equivalent-maturity nominal Treasury will make money if average annual inflation is greater than 0.78% for the next five years, or greater than 1.09% for the next ten (Chart 8). This seems like a slam dunk. Even on a 1-year horizon, we would argue that TIPS trades make sense. We calculate that the TIPS note maturing in April 2021 will deliver greater returns than a 12-month T-bill as long as headline CPI inflation is above -1.25% during the next 12 months (panel 4). Granted, the oil price collapse is a significant drag on CPI (bottom panel). But, we would also note that the worst year-over-year CPI print during the 2008 financial crisis was -2.1% and this included deflation in the shelter component. Shelter accounts for 33% of the CPI, compared to only 7% for Energy. ABS: Underweight Overweight Chart 9ABS Market Overview
ABS Market Overview
ABS Market Overview
Asset-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 342 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -317 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated ABS soared 158 bps on the month. It currently sits at 163 bps, well above average historical levels (Chart 9). Aaa-rated consumer ABS were not immune to the recent sell-off, but we think today’s elevated spreads signal an opportunity to increase exposure to the sector. In addition to the value argument, the Fed’s re-launched Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF) should cause Aaa-rated ABS spreads to tighten in the coming months. Through TALF, eligible private investors can take out non-recourse loans from the Fed and use the proceeds to purchase Aaa-rated ABS. In our view, the combination of elevated spreads and direct Fed support for the sector suggests a buying opportunity in Aaa-rated consumer ABS. Non-Agency CMBS: Neutral Underweight Chart 10CMBS Market Overview
CMBS Market Overview
CMBS Market Overview
Non-agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 786 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -785 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS widened 133 bps on the month. It currently sits at 217 bps, well above typical historical levels (Chart 10). Despite wide spreads, we are hesitant about stepping into the sector. The Fed has so far not extended its asset purchases to non-agency CMBS. There are other sectors – such as consumer ABS, Agency CMBS, and investment grade corporate bonds – that also offer attractive spreads and are benefitting directly from Fed support. Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 394 basis points in March, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -361 bps. The average index spread for Agency CMBS widened 74 bps on the month. It currently sits at 121 bps, well above typical historical levels (panel 3). Unlike its non-agency counterpart, the Fed is buying Agency CMBS as part of its mortgage-backed securities purchase program. The combination of an elevated spread and direct Fed support makes the Agency CMBS sector a high conviction overweight. Appendix A: The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing With the federal funds rate pinned at its effective lower bound for the foreseeable future, yield volatility at the front-end of the curve will decline markedly. This means that the 12-month fed funds rate expectations embedded in the yield curve provide little useful information. As such, our Golden Rule of Bond Investing is not a useful framework for implementing duration trades when the fed funds rate is pinned at zero. We will therefore temporarily stop updating the Golden Rule tables that were previously shown in Appendix A of our monthly Portfolio Allocation Summary. The Golden Rule framework will return when the fed funds rate is close to lifting off from zero. Please feel free to contact us if you have any questions. Appendix B: Butterfly Strategy Valuations The following tables present the current read-outs from our butterfly spread models. We use these models to identify opportunities to take duration-neutral positions across the Treasury curve. The following two Special Reports explain the models in more detail: US Bond Strategy Special Report, “Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated July 25, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com US Bond Strategy Special Report, “More Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated May 15, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Table 4 shows the raw residuals from each model. A positive value indicates that the bullet is cheap relative to the duration-matched barbell. A negative value indicates that the barbell is cheap relative to the bullet. Table 4Butterfly Strategy Valuation: Raw Residuals In Basis Points (As Of April 3, 2020)
Containing The Credit Shock
Containing The Credit Shock
Table 5 scales the raw residuals in Table 4 by their historical means and standard deviations. This facilitates comparison between the different butterfly spreads. Table 5Butterfly Strategy Valuation: Standardized Residuals (As Of April 3, 2020)
Containing The Credit Shock
Containing The Credit Shock
Table 6 flips the models on their heads. It shows the change in the slope between the two barbell maturities that must be realized during the next six months to make returns between the bullet and barbell equal. For example, a reading of 46 bps in the 5 over 2/10 cell means that we would only expect the 5-year to outperform the 2/10 if the 2/10 slope steepens by more than 46 bps during the next six months. Otherwise, we would expect the 2/10 barbell to outperform the 5-year bullet. Table 6Discounted Slope Change During Next 6 Months (BPs)
Containing The Credit Shock
Containing The Credit Shock
Appendix C: Excess Return Bond Map The Excess Return Bond Map is used to assess the relative risk/reward trade-off between different sectors of the US bond market. It is a purely computational exercise and does not impose any macroeconomic view. The Map’s vertical axis shows 12-month expected excess returns. These are proxied by each sector’s option-adjusted spread. Sectors plotting further toward the top of the Map have higher expected returns and vice-versa. Our novel risk measure called the “Risk Of Losing 100 bps” is shown on the Map’s horizontal axis. To calculate it, we first compute the spread widening required on a 12-month horizon for each sector to lose 100 bps or more relative to a duration-matched position in Treasury securities. Then, we divide that amount of spread widening by each sector’s historical spread volatility. The end result is the number of standard deviations of 12-month spread widening required for each sector to lose 100 bps or more versus a position in Treasuries. Lower risk sectors plot further to the right of the Map, and higher risk sectors plot further to the left. Chart 11Excess Return Bond Map (As Of April 3, 2020)
The Golden Rule's Track Record
The Golden Rule's Track Record
Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The 12-month breakeven spread is the spread widening required to deliver negative excess returns versus duration-matched Treasuries on a 12-month horizon. 2 Please see US Bond Strategy/Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, “Trading The US Corporate Bond Market In A Time Of Crisis”, dated March 31, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see US Bond Strategy/Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, “Trading The US Corporate Bond Market In A Time Of Crisis”, dated March 31, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Life At The Zero Bound”, dated March 24, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 The rationale for why barbell positions profit from curve flattening and bullet positions profit from curve steepening is found in US Bond Strategy Special Report, “Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated July 25, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification Corporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation