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Highlights Portfolio Strategy The financials sector's fortunes are linked to the path of 10-year Treasury yields. BCA's view of a selloff in the bond market bodes well for this interest rate-sensitive sector. The S&P banks index is on the cusp of flexing its earnings power muscle. Higher profits will serve as a catalyst for a valuation rerating in this key financials sub-sector. The still unloved S&P asset management & custody banks index has significant catch-up potential. We reiterate our high-conviction overweight status. Recent Changes There are no changes to our portfolio this week. Table 1 Feature The S&P 500 ended last week on a high note, cheering significant progress on the tax bill front and digesting early earnings beats. Given the equity market's lofty valuation starting point, substantial positive profit surprises are now necessary to move the needle in stocks. Encouragingly, IBM's mention of the fall in the U.S. dollar boosting EPS1 may morph into a broad-based theme this earnings season given the currency's mysterious absence we have been flagging in Q2. Beneath the surface, easy fiscal policy prospects coupled with synchronized global growth will likely continue to underpin equities. Importantly, later stages of the business cycle are synonymous with impressive gains in the S&P 500. The unemployment gap, defined as the unemployment rate minus the non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment (NAIRU), is an excellent leading indicator of the yield curve. Granted, NAIRU is an estimate and we are using the CBO's long-term NAIRU quarterly forecast as an input to the unemployment gap indicator. When the unemployment gap disappears, inflation should start rearing its ugly head, eventually leading the Fed to tighten monetary policy to the point where the yield curve inverts and predicts the end of the business cycle. Empirical evidence suggests that first the unemployment gap closes then the yield curve inverts and the business cycle subsequently ends (Chart 1). However, this indicator has had one miss since the early-1970s, during the second leg of the early-1980s double dip recession. Chart 1Eliminated Unemployment Gap Is Bullish For Equities Table 2 shows the S&P 500 performance from when the unemployment gap clearly closes until the business cycle ends. In all five iterations that lasted, on average, 28 months, the broad market has risen, on average, by 29%. The unemployment gap has been eliminated since February 2017 and if history at least rhymes the next U.S. recession will arrive some time in 2019 as the SPX hits our peak cycle 3,000 target.2 Another later cycle phenomenon is the disappearance of volatility and the plunge in stock correlations as the Fed tightens monetary policy. While large institutional investors aggressively selling volatility this cycle is dampening vol across asset classes, there is another explanation of the non-existence of vol: synchronized global growth. Chart 2 shows that leading up to the prior three recessions, volatility was drifting lower and remained low, and the common denominator was simultaneous global growth in the late-1980s, late-1990s and mid-2000s. BCA's global (40 country) industrial production composite was expanding during the later stages of the business cycle. Similarly, our global (44 country) global EPS diffusion index and the global synchronicity indicator also depict concurrent global growth. Table 2S&P 500 Returns When##br## The Unemployment Gap Closes Chart 2Linking Low Vol To ##br##Synchronized Global Growth During the later stages of the cycle, equity sector correlations also collapse as earnings fundamentals are key performance drivers and sector differentiation generates alpha, as the broad market enters the last stage of the bull market. As we mentioned in our "SPX 3,000?" Weekly Report on July 10th, this does not mean the S&P 500's path is a linear straight line up until the next recession hits. There are high odds of a 5-10% garden variety pullback materializing which we deem a healthy development and our strategy would be to buy the dip, ceteris paribus. This week we update an early cyclical sector and two key sub-components. Financials: In The Shadows Of The Bond Market While financials stocks have cheered the prospects of a tax bill passage sometime in early 2018 (Chart 3), sell-side analysts have been brutally downgrading financials sector EPS estimates, dealing a blow to most sub-indexes net earnings revisions (Chart 4). True, hurricane-related losses may be the culprit, but such indiscriminate downgrades are unwarranted, and we would lean against such pessimism. Recent profit results corroborate our positive sector bias, but we are still early in the earnings season. Chart 3Dissecting Financials Performance Chart 4Extreme EPS Pessimism This early cyclical sector is a core overweight portfolio holding and there are high odds of significant relative gains in the coming quarters. Historically, financials stocks had been almost 100% positively correlated with the yield curve slope (Chart 5): a steepening yield curve gooses financials profits, while a flattening one eats into earnings via narrowing net interest margins. This rang true up until the Great Recession. Since then, unconventional monetary policies likely rendered this multi-decade correlation ineffective. In particular, the fed funds rate's zero lower bound caused a shift in the correlation from the yield curve to the 10-year Treasury yield (Chart 6). In fact, changes in the 10-year Treasury yield are now a carbon copy of relative share price momentum (Chart 6). Chart 5Shifting Correlations Chart 6Financials And UST Yield Are Joined At The Hip Thus, accurately forecasting long term interest rates should also dictate the direction of relative share prices, especially given the still historically low fed funds rate. On that front, the Treasury market is priced for the 10-year yield to hit 2.57% in October 2018 from roughly 2.38% currently. We expect the 10-year yield will rise more quickly than is discounted in the forward curve. Our U.S. bond strategists think core inflation will soon resume its modest cyclical uptrend. A parallel recovery in the cost of inflation protection will impart 50-60 basis points of upside to the 10-year Treasury yield by the time core inflation reaches the Fed's 2% target.3 Chart 7 plots the path of the 10-year Treasury yield discounted in the forward curve alongside a path consistent with BCA's view that inflation is poised to head higher. It also shows what this would mean for the 10-year breakeven inflation rate. If core inflation resumes its uptrend, as BCA expects, then financials will have a stellar return year in 2018, all else equal. Chart 7Lots Of Upside Meanwhile, market participants typically value financials on a price-to-book basis during calamitous times and are very slow in changing metrics once the tremors are behind the sector. We are likely on the cusp of a switch away from P/B and toward forward P/E as a key valuation metric for financials. The current 20% forward P/E discount to the broad market is highly punitive (bottom panel, Chart 5). If the key S&P banks sub-index successfully flexes its earnings power muscle, as we expect, then a valuation rerating phase looms for both banks and financials equities. Banks Hold The Key We remain constructive on the S&P banks index as all three key drivers of bank profits, namely loan growth, price of credit and credit quality, are simultaneously moving in the right direction. Tack on the increasing likelihood of a tax bill becoming law in early 2018, the continued push of the Trump administration to relax bank regulations and pent up demand for shareholder friendly activities including net share retirement and higher dividend payments/payouts, and bank stocks are well positioned to generate impressive returns in the coming quarters. Lower corporate tax rates will boost bank profits directly and indirectly. Fiscal stimulus typically translates into an economic fillip. If small and medium businesses (SME) benefit the most from lower taxes then higher SME profits will lead to a more expansionary mindset and small business owners will likely tap their bankers to finance capital spending plans. As tax certainty increases, so will animal spirits, aiding in kick-starting a virtuous economic cycle. Thus, loan growth is on an upward trajectory. Leading indicators of loan demand are also painting a bright picture for bank profits. C&I and consumer loans, two large credit categories, are both forecast to reaccelerate in the coming months. The ISM manufacturing survey has been on fire lately and consumer confidence has been following closely behind (third & fourth panels, Chart 8). Our credit growth model captures these positive forces and is sending an unambiguously positive message for loan reacceleration in the coming months (Chart 8). Moreover, residential real estate loan origination (the second largest credit category in U.S. dollar terms) should gain steam, underpinned by solid housing market's foundations: house prices are still expanding at a healthy clip (top panel, Chart 9), household formation is running higher than housing starts and mortgage rates are not prohibitive. Chart 8Bright Business And Consumer Credit Outlooks Chart 9Ongoing Valuation Rerating The V-shaped recovery in our U.S. credit impulse corroborates this fertile loan backdrop and is heralding an earnings outperformance phase (Chart 10). On the price of credit front, if BCA's bond view pans out in the next year and the 10-year Treasury yield veers closer to 2.8-3% range with rising inflation expectations in the driver's seat (Chart 11), then bank profits should continue to accelerate. Granted, the Fed will also raise rates next year and, at the margin, push up funding costs for the banking sector. However, our working assumption is that banks will remain linked to the 10-year UST yield's fortunes next year. At some point later in the Fed tightening cycle, the yield curve and bank correlation will likely get re-established. But, a flattening yield curve denting NIMs is a 2019 narrative. Finally, credit quality remains pristine despite some pockets of weakness in, subprime especially, auto loans. At this stage of the cycle, near or at full employment, NPLs will remain muted. Importantly, loan loss reserves have recently crossed above non-current loans in Q2 according to the FDIC, for the first time since 2007. Historically, a rising reserve coverage ratio has been synonymous with increasing valuations and the current message is that the banks rerating phase is in the early innings (Chart 12). Chart 10Heed The Positive Credit Impulse Signal Chart 11Price Of Credit Should Recover Chart 12Pristine Credit Quality Bottom Line: We reiterate our early-May overweight stance in the S&P financials sector and continue to overweight the heavyweight S&P banks sub-index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5BANKX - WFC, JPM, BAC, C, USB, PNC, BBT, STI, MTB, FITB, CFG, RF, KEY, HBAN, CMA, ZION, PBCT. A Few Words On Asset Management & Custody Banks The S&P asset management & custody banks (AMCB) index sits atop of our high-conviction return table (see page 15), outperforming the broad market by 7.2% since inception. While it is tempting to monetize some of these profits, we choose to remain patient. Likely more gains are in store in the coming months as this financials sub sector maintains its leadership position. If BCA's bond view of a selloff in the 10-year Treasury market transpires in 2018, then the budding rotation out of bond and into equity products will further accelerate. The stock-to-bond ratio captures this shift and it is currently flashing green (Chart 13). Overall assets under management are also rising and are a boon for the AMCB group's profit prospects, on the back of higher equity prices and also higher flows into stocks in general (bottom panel, Chart 13). Vibrant global economic sentiment, as measured by the IFO's World Economic Survey (top panel, Chart 14), and domestic (and global) manufacturing resurgence should continue to underpin M&A activity and sustain the high levels of margin debt. Both of these factors suggest that AMCB profit drivers are accelerating and will likely serve as a catalyst to unlock excellent value in this still unloved financials sub-group (middle panel, Chart 14). Chart 13Increasing AUMs... Chart 14...And Rising Animal Spirits Are Bullish For AMCB Adding it up, the still undervalued AMCB index has sizable catch-up potential, especially if the equity risk premium (ERP) continues to narrow in the coming quarters, as we expect (ERP shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 14). Bottom Line: The S&P AMCB index remains a high-conviction overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5AMGT-BK, BLK, STT, AMP, NTRS, TROW, BEN, IVZ, AMG. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy & Global Alpha Sector Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report,"Dollar The Great Reflator" dated September 18, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report,"SPX 3,000?" dated July 10, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report,"Living With The Carry Trade" dated October 17, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps and stay neutral growth over value.
Highlights This week, we are reviewing all our current active trades in our Tactical Overlay. As a reminder, these positions (Table 1) are meant to complement our strategic GFIS Model Fixed Income Portfolio, typically with shorter holding periods and occasionally in smaller or less liquid markets outside our usual core bond market coverage (i.e. U.S. TIPS or Swedish interest rate swaps). This report includes a short summary of the rationale behind each position, as well as a decision on whether to continue holding the trade, close it out or switch to a new position that may more efficiently express our view. The trades are grouped together by the country/region that is most relevant for the performance of each trade. Table 1GFIS Tactical Overlay Trades Feature U.S. Short July 2018 Fed Funds futures (HOLD). Long 5-year U.S. Treasury (UST) bullet vs. 2-year/10-year duration-matched UST barbell (HOLD). Long U.S. TIPS vs. nominal USTs (HOLD). Short 10-year USTs vs. 10-year German Bunds (HOLD). The tactical trades that we have been recommending within U.S. markets all have a common theme - positioning for an expected rebound in U.S. inflation that will push up U.S. bond yields. We are maintaining all of them. The drift lower in realized inflation rates since the spring has been a surprise given the backdrop of above-potential growth, low unemployment and a weakening U.S. dollar. On the back of this, markets have priced out several of the Fed rates hikes that had been expected over the next year, leaving U.S. Treasury yields at overly-depressed levels. Back on July 11th, we initiated a recommendation to short the July 2018 fed funds futures contract (Chart 1). This was a position that would turn a profit if the market moved to once again discount multiple Fed rate hikes by mid-2018. The trade has a modest profit of 9bps, but with scope for additional gains if the market moves to discount 2-3 hikes by the middle of next year. Our base case scenario is that the Fed will lift rates again this December, and deliver additional increases next year amid healthy growth and with inflation likely to grind higher towards the Fed's 2% target. With the market discounting 46bps of rate hikes over the next year, there is scope for additional profits in our fed funds futures trade. Another tactical position that we've been recommending is a butterfly trade within the U.S. Treasury (UST) curve, long a 5-year UST bullet versus a duration-matched 2-year/10-year UST barbell. This is a position that would benefit from a bearish steepening of the UST curve as the market priced in higher longer-term inflation expectations (Chart 2). We have held that trade for a much longer period than a typical tactical trade, going back nearly a full year to December 20th, 2016. Yet while the UST curve has flattened since that date, our trade has delivered a return of +18bps. This outperformance can be attributed to the undervalued level of the 5-year bullet at the initiation of the trade. Chart 1Stay Short July 2018##BR##Fed Funds Futures Chart 2Stay Long The 5yr UST Bullet Vs.##BR##The 2yr/10yr UST Barbell While that valuation cushion no longer exists (bottom panel), longer-term TIPS breakevens are back to the levels seen last December (middle panel), thanks in no small part to much higher energy prices (top panel). This leaves the UST curve at risk of a bearish re-steepening on the back of rising inflation expectations. Add in a U.S. dollar that is -2.5% weaker from year-ago levels (Chart 3, middle panel), and a solid U.S. economic expansion that should eventually translate into rising core inflation momentum (bottom panel), and the case for a steeper UST curve over the next 3-6 months is a strong one. The above logic also supports our trade recommendation to go long U.S. TIPS vs. nominal USTs, which is up +248bps since inception on August 23, 2016. We have been holding this trade for much longer than our usual tactical recommendations, but we will not look to take profits until we see the 10-year breakeven (now at 186bps) return back to levels consistent with the Fed's 2% PCE inflation target (i.e. headline U.S. CPI inflation back to 2.5%). One final tactical trade that will benefit from higher UST yields is our recommendation to position for a wider spread between 10-year USTs and 10-year German Bunds. This trade was initiated on August 9th of this year, and has delivered a profit of +9bps. Yet the UST-Bund spread still looks too low relative to shorter-term interest rate differentials that favor the U.S. (Chart 4, top panel). With U.S. data starting to surprise more on the upside than Euro Area data (middle panel), and with UST positioning still quite long (bottom panel), there is potential for additional near-term UST-Bund spread widening. The upcoming decision by the European Central Bank (ECB) on potential tapering of its asset purchases next year represents a potential risk for the long Bund leg of our recommended trade. Any hawkish surprises on that front would be a likely catalyst for us to close out this position. Chart 3Stay Long U.S. TIPS Vs. Nominal USTs Chart 4Stay Short 10yr USTs Vs. German Bunds Euro Area Long 10yr Euro Area CPI swaps (HOLD). Long 5-year Spain vs. 5-year Italy in government bonds (HOLD). We have two recommended tactical trades that are specifically focused on developments in the Euro Area. We are maintaining both of them. As a way to position for an eventual pickup in European inflation, we entered a long position in 10-year Euro Area CPI swaps back on December 20th, 2016. That trade is now estimated to have a profit of +29bps, as market-based inflation expectations have drifted higher in the Euro Area. The simple reason for that increase is that realized inflation has moved higher on the back of rising energy costs, as there is a very robust correlation between the annual growth rate of oil prices (denominated in euros) and headline Euro Area inflation (Chart 5). More importantly, the booming Euro Area economy, which has eaten up much of the spare capacity in the Europe, has boosted wage growth and core inflation to levels seen prior to the disinflation shock from the 2014/15 collapse in oil prices (bottom panel). With no signs of any imminent slowing of Euro Area growth that could raise unemployment and slow underlying inflation pressures, the trend for inflation expectations in Europe is still upward. The current 10-year Euro Area CPI swap at 1.5% is still well beneath the ECB's inflation target of "just below" 2% on headline CPI, so there is room for inflation expectations to continue drifting higher. ECB tapering of asset purchases is not an immediate threat to this trade, as the central bank is still likely to keep buying bonds next year (at a slower pace), while holding off on any interest rate increases until late 2019. In other words, the ECB will not be looking to act to slow economic growth to bring down Euro Area inflation anytime soon. Our other tactical trade recommendation in Europe is a relative value spread trade, long 5-year Spanish government debt versus 5-year Italian bonds. This trade was initiated on December 13th, 2016 and currently has only a modest gain of +9bps, although the profits were much larger earlier this year. Italian bonds have been outperforming on the back of improving Italian economic growth (Chart 6, top panel) and, recently, a generalized sell-off in Spanish financial assets on the back of the political uncertainty in Catalonia. Chart 5Stay Long 10yr##BR##Euro Area CPI Swaps Chart 6Stay Long 5yr Spanish Government Bonds Vs.##BR##5-Year Italian Debt Our colleagues at BCA Geopolitical Strategy have been downplaying the threat to Spanish political stability from the Catalonian independence movement, given that the polling data shows only 35% for outright independence from Spain. At the same time, the poll numbers in Italy for the upcoming parliamentary elections are much closer, with parties favoring less integration with Europe holding a slight lead over more "establishment" parties (bottom two panels). With the bulk of the cyclical convergence between Italian and Spanish growth now largely completed, and with a greater potential for future political instability in Italy compared to Spain, we expect that Spain-Italy spreads will tighten further back to the lows seen at the beginning of 2017 (-64bps on the 5-year spread). That is a level we are targeting on our current tactical trade recommendation. Canada Short 10-year Canadian government bonds vs. 10-year USTs (TAKE PROFITS). Long Canada/U.K. 2-year/10-year government bond yield curve box, positioning for a relatively flatter Canadian curve (TAKE PROFITS). Short 5-year Canada government bond versus a duration-matched 2-year/10-year barbell (TAKE PROFITS). We have three different Canadian fixed income trades in our Tactical Overlay, all of which were biased towards tighter monetary policy in Canada: a Canada-U.S. bond spread widener, a yield curve box trade versus the U.K. and a curve flattener expressed as a barbell trade (Chart 7) All three positions are in the money, but we now recommend taking profits. We had initiated these recommendations in a very timely fashion earlier in the year at a time when the Bank of Canada (BoC) was sending a relative dovish message. In our view, the Canadian economy was building significant upward momentum that would eventually force the central bank to shift its policy bias. This would especially be true with the Fed also in a tightening cycle, given the typical tendency for the BoC to follow the Fed's policy actions. Several members of the BoC monetary policy committee began to sing a more hawkish tune over the summer, particularly after the release of the Q2 BoC Business Outlook Survey. That robust report, which was confirmed by a 2nd quarter GDP growth rate of nearly 4% (Chart 8), led the BoC to deliver not one by two unexpected interest rate hikes in July and September. Markets reacted accordingly, driving Canadian bond yields higher and flattening the yield curve. Chart 7Take Profits On Bearish Canadian Bond Trades Chart 8Canadian Growth Set To Cool Off A Bit Now, we see the market pricing as having gone a bit too far, too quickly. The Q3 Business Outlook Survey, released yesterday, was still positive but with readings softer than the booming Q2 report. Meanwhile, the commentary from the BoC has become more balanced, with BoC Governor (and BCA alumnus) Stephen Poloz describing the central bank as being more "data dependent" after the recent rate hikes. Markets are now pricing in another 72bps of rate hikes over the next year, even with our own BoC Monitor off the peak (Chart 9). Chart 9Our BoC Monitor Is Peaking From a tactical perspective, the repricing of the BoC that we expected earlier this year is now largely complete. Thus, we are taking profits on all three Canadian trades: Canada-U.S. spread trade: initiated on January 17th, profit of +43bps. Canada/U.K. box trade: initiated on May 16th, profit of +67bps. Canada 2yr/5yr/10yr butterfly trade: initiated on December 6th, 2016, profit of +95bps. From a strategic perspective, we still see a case where the BoC can deliver additional rate hikes and keep upward pressure on Canadian bond yields. The output gap in Canada is now closed, according to BoC estimates, and additional strength in the economy now has a greater chance in translating to higher inflation. Strong global growth, especially in the U.S., will also support Canadian export growth and feed into rising capital spending. While the rate hikes have help boost the value of the Canadian dollar (CAD), the exchange rate (on a trade-weighted basis) also largely reflects a rising value of energy prices and is, therefore, should provide an additional boost to growth via stronger terms-of-trade (bottom panel). In other words, the rising CAD will not prevent additional BoC rate hikes if oil prices remain strong. Thus, we are maintaining our underweight recommendation on Canadian government bonds in our strategic model bond portfolio, even as we take profits on our bearish Canadian tactical trades. Australia Long a 2-year/10-year Australia government bond curve flattener (SELL AND SWITCH TO NEW TRADE). On July 25th of this year, we entered into a 2-year/10-year curve flattener trade for Australia. Though employment was improving and house prices were booming in Australia, the wide output gap, high level of consumer indebtedness and lack of real wage growth was keeping the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) inactive. In our view, nothing has changed since then; the RBA remains in a very difficult position. While the yield curve flattened substantially following the initiation of our trade, the global rise in long-term yields since mid-September lifted Australian longer-maturity yields, and the yield curve with it (Chart 10). Now, Australian long-term yields are not reflecting domestic fundamentals but are instead driven by improving global growth. As such, we are closing the trade and initiating a new position - long Dec 2018 Australian Bank Bill futures - as a more focused way to express the view that the RBA will stay on hold for longer than markets expect. Markets are currently pricing in 30bps of RBA rate hikes over the next twelve months. We believe this will be unlikely, for several reasons. Macroprudential measures on the Australian housing market will continue to dampen credit growth. Core inflation is slowly rising but still far below the central bank's target. Additionally, there is plenty of slack in the labor market despite the spike in employment growth. This is evidenced in anemic real wage growth, stubbornly high underemployment rate, low hours worked and high percentage of part-time to full-time workers (Chart 11). Chart 10Close Australian Government##BR##Bond 2yr/10yr Flattener Chart 11RBA Unlikely To Deliver##BR##Discounted Rate Hikes The biggest risk to our new trade would if signs of a tighter Australian labor market started to feed through into faster wage growth, which would likely coincide with faster underlying price inflation and a more hawkish turn by the RBA. New Zealand Long 5-year NZ government bonds vs. 5-year USTs (currency hedged). Long 5-year NZ government bonds vs. 5-year Germany (currency unhedged). Chart 12Stay Long 5yr NZ Government Bonds##BR##Vs. U.S, & Germany We entered two New Zealand (NZ) tactical bond trades on May 30th, going long 5-year government bonds vs. U.S. and Germany (Chart 12). We expected NZ spreads to tighten faster than the forwards based on our more hawkish views on the Fed and, to a lesser extent, the ECB relative to the more dovish view on the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ). The outright bond spreads have tightened and, on a currency-hedged basis, both trades are in the money. Our dovish view on the RBNZ came from the central bank's own forecasts, which called for slowing headline inflation on the back of softer "tradeables" inflation and a sharp cooling of domestic "non-tradeables" inflation through a slowing housing market (Chart 13, bottom two panels). Our own RBNZ Monitor has been calling for the need for higher interest rates in NZ, mostly from the strength in the labor market. Yet we have been ignoring that signal, as has the market which has priced out one full expected RBNZ rate hike since the beginning of the year. With business confidence rolling over, and with the trade-weighted NZ dollar still staying at stubbornly strong levels, the case for the RBNZ to deliver even a single rate hike is not a strong one - especially given the soft inflation forecasts of the central bank. Thus, we are sticking with our tactical spread trades for NZ versus the U.S. and Germany. We are maintaining the currency hedge on the U.S. version of the trade, as we typically do for the vast majority of our cross-country spread trade recommendations. Occasionally, however, we will make an active decision to do a spread trade UN-hedged if we felt very strongly about a currency move. We did that for our NZ-Germany spread trade and this has cost us in the performance of the trade, which is down -3.4%. This is because of a surprisingly large decline in the New Zealand dollar (NZD) versus the euro since the inception of our trade. Yet a review of the technical indicators on the NZD/EUR currency cross shows that the currency pair is now very stretched versus its medium-term trend (the 40-week moving average), with price momentum also at some of the most negative levels of the past decade (Chart 14). These measures suggest that the worst of the downturn in the currency is likely over. The relative positioning on the two individual currencies is now neutral, as long positions on the NZD have been reduced (bottom panel). Chart 13RBNZ Dovishness Is Justified Chart 14Keep NZ/Germany Position Currency Unhedged Given these technical indicators, and from these current levels, we see greater upside potential for NZD/EUR in the months ahead. This leads us to maintain our unhedged currency position on the NZ-Germany spread trade so as not to realize the current mark-to-market losses on the trade. Sweden Pay 18-month Sweden Overnight Index Swap (OIS) rate (TAKE PROFITS). We entered into a bearish Swedish rates position back on November 22nd, 2016, paying Sweden 18-month Overnight Index swap rates (Chart 15). At the time, we expected the Riksbank to begin hiking interest rates earlier than what was priced in the markets IF inflation reached the central bank target faster due to a weaker Swedish krona. We also believed that the economy would continue to expand at a robust pace when the economy had no spare capacity, creating additional upside inflation surprises. According to the Riksbank's latest Monetary Policy Statement (MPS), the central bank will likely keep the repo rate at -0.5% until mid-2018, while continuing its asset purchase program until the end of this year - even with an overheating economy. This is because realized inflation has remained below the Riksbank target for a long period of time and, although current inflation is above target, it was not necessary to immediately tighten conditions. More likely, the Riskbank is worried about the potential for the krona to appreciate - especially versus the euro - if rate hikes are delivered. It will only be a matter of time before the central bank is forced to tighten policy with the economy likely to strengthen further, led by solid domestic demand, strong productivity growth, and improving exports. Consumption is also expected to increase as households have scope to cut back their high level of savings. Combining the Riksbank's easing policy with the current strength of the economy and the tightness of the labor market, inflation is very likely to return to the 2% target in the next year or two (Chart 16). Chart 15Close Sweden OIS Trade Chart 16Riksbank More Worried About SEK Than Inflation However, if the Riskbank remains too concerned about the currency versus the euro, as we suspect, then this will prevent any shift to a more hawkish stance before any change from the ECB. That is unlikely to happen over the next year, at least, even if the ECB slows the pace of asset purchases as we expect. Thus, we are closing out our Sweden 18-month Overnight Index Swap position at a small profit of 12bps. We have already kept this trade for longer than the typical investment horizon for one of our tactical overlay trades. We will investigate the potential for more profitable trade opportunities in the Swedish fixed income markets in a future report. Korea Long a 2-year/10-year Korean government bond yield curve steepener (HOLD). We recommended entering into a 2-year/10-year steepening trade in the Korean government bond yield curve on May 30th, 2017. Since then, the yield curve has flattened by 7bps, which was mainly caused by an unexpected rise in the 2-year yield, rather than a decline in 10-year yield (Chart 17). Korea is currently enjoying a solid business cycle upturn. Leading economic indicators are rising, the year-over-year growth in exports has risen to a 7-year high and previously sluggish private consumption has also rebounded recently. The Bank of Korea (BoK) is of the view that the recovery will continue and consumer price inflation will stabilize at the target level over the medium-term. This recovery should cause the 2/10 curve to steepen as longer-term inflation expectations rise. Based on South Korean President Moon's aggressive fiscal plans to increase welfare spending and create jobs in the public sector, at a time when the economy is good shape, we still believe that long-end of the curve (10-year) will rise. In addition, as shown in Chart 18, the 26-week rolling beta of changes in the 10-year UST yield and Korean 10-year bond is very high, nearly 1. Given our bearish view on USTs, this implies Korean yields can follow suit. On the other hand, the correlation between the 2-year UST yield and equivalent maturity Korean yields is much lower (4th panel), as Korean rate expectations have not been following those of the U.S. higher - even with a stronger Korean economy. Most likely, this is due to investors downplaying the potential for the BoK to match Fed rate hikes tick-for-tick given the heightened tensions between the U.S. and North Korea. Chart 17Stay In Korea 2yr/10yr##BR##Government Bond Steepener Chart 18Long-Term Korean##BR##Yields Are Too Low We still believe the Korean curve can steepen as longer-term yields rise, although we will be monitoring the behavior of shorter-dated Korean yield as the situation between D.C. and Pyongyang evolves. If investors begin to demand a higher risk premium on Korean assets, particularly the Korean won, then 2-year Korean yields may rise much faster and our curve trade may not go our way. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Patrick Trinh, Associate Editor Patrick@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Revisiting the shadow banking system 10 years later. The September CPI data is unlikely to resolve the inflation debate at the Fed. How to invest in a late cycle environment. Wage Inflation was on the rise even before the hurricanes. Feature Chart 1September CPI And Retail Sales Keep##BR##The Fed On Track To Tighten The state of the U.S. business cycle, and what could end it, were key topics of conversation at BCA's semi-annual Research Advisory Board meeting in early October. Most participants agreed with the BCA view that the economy is in the late stages of the economic cycle, and a few suggested that another bubble in the shadow banking sector may end the expansion. With those discussions in mind, we review the state of the shadow banking in the first section of this report and then examine how key aspects of the economy and U.S. asset classes behave while the U.S. economy is in the final stages of an expansion. In the final section, we take another look at wage inflation signals from the hurricane impacted September jobs report, and conclude that wage growth has accelerated even excluding the effect of the storms. The September CPI and retail sales data were also impacted by the storm, but the message is that the underlying economy is strong enough to generate some inflation (Chart 1), although the September CPI is unlikely to resolve the inflation debate at the Fed. The minutes of last month's FOMC meeting (released last week) indicate that the upcoming inflation data could be pivotal to whether the Fed delivers another rate hike in December. There are two more CPI reports ahead of the December FOMC meeting (with the second release coming on the day of the policy announcement). While the September CPI data was hard to interpret due to the storms, the next few data prints need to affirm the Fed's forecast that core inflation is indeed recovering from the "transitory weakness" seen earlier this year. BCA's U.S. bond strategists believe that inflation will be strong enough for the Fed to justify a hike in December and recommend below-benchmark duration for fixed income portfolios. Shadow Banking Update At current levels, shadow banking activity in the U.S. is not a threat to the economic expansion. The ratio of financial sector debt to non-financial sector debt is a rough proxy of how the system can leverage existing debt into new securities and boost credit creation (Chart 2). As financial innovation and deregulation boosted system liquidity, outstanding financial debt as a percentage of non-financial debt climbed from 10% in the mid-1970s to over 50% in 2008. In Q2 2017, the shadow banking proxy stands at only 33%, because the global financial crisis and subsequent reregulation of the financial sector have reigned in excesses. The last time that the ratio was this low was in the late 1990s. Bank lending standards highlight key differences between the backdrop in the mid-2000s and today (Chart 3). In the mid-2000s, even as the Fed had boosted rates by 425 basis points, lending standards were easy and loosening. In contrast, the 100 bps increase in the Fed funds rate since late 2015 was accompanied by a tightening of lending requirements. Moreover, lending criteria were already tight when the Fed began its latest rate hikes. Chart 2The Shrinking Shadow##BR##Banking Sector Chart 3Bank Lending Standards Tighter##BR##Today Than In Mid '00s The Fed and other regulators are more attuned to financial excesses than they were a decade ago. The central bank under Yellen has raised the profile of financial stability.1 BCA views "financial stability" as a third mandate for the central bank, along with low and stable inflation, and full employment. That said, the Fed did not assess financial stability at the September FOMC meeting and the topic was only briefly mentioned by Fed staff and FOMC participants. At the July 2017 meeting, the central bank's staff characterized the "financial vulnerabilities of the U.S. financial system" as moderate on balance. BCA expects that the Fed will return to the topic at either one or both remaining FOMC meetings in 2017. The October 2017 Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report2 provided a checklist of liquidity measures to watch as the U.S. economy enters the end of an elongated expansion. In view of these indicators, we would describe liquidity conditions in the U.S. as fairly accommodative, although not nearly as abundant as prior to the Lehman event in 2008. Monetary conditions are super easy, while balance sheet and financial market liquidity are reasonably constructive. In contrast, funding liquidity, while vastly improved since the global financial crisis, is still a long way from the pre-Lehman go-go years (as per indicators such as bank leverage). The Fed is set to begin the process of unwinding the massive amount of monetary liquidity created by its quantitative easing program. This has the potential to undermine other types of liquidity in the financial system, leading to a correction in risk assets. However, the BCA Special Report argues that the reaction of the bond market is more important for risk assets than the balance sheet adjustment itself. If inflation only edges higher and market expectations for the upward path of the Fed funds rate remain gentle, then risk assets should take the balance sheet unwind in stride. An abrupt upward shift in inflation would be an altogether different story. Bottom Line: The U.S. expansion entered a late-cycle environment near the close of 2016 as the unemployment rate dipped below NAIRU. Nonetheless, none of our recession-timing indicators warns that a downtown is imminent3 and the financial excesses in the end stage of the 2001-2007 economic expansion are not present today. If the next recession begins in the second half of 2019, then global equities will probably peak earlier that year or in late 2018. Given the starting point for valuations, U.S. equities may decline by 20% to 30% peak-to-trough. Stay overweight equities for now. The time to trim exposure could come in mid-2018. Late-Cycle Playbook Chart 4Easier Financial Conditions##BR##Will Boost U.S. Growth Easing financial conditions will lead to faster U.S. GDP growth in the next few quarters. Financial conditions have eased sharply this year due to a strengthening stock market, narrower credit spreads and a weaker dollar. Changes in financial conditions lead growth by about 6 to 9 months, implying that U.S. growth could reach 3% early next year (Chart 4). This could drop the unemployment rate to 3.5% by end-2018, more than one point below the Fed's estimate of full employment and even lower than the 2008 low of 3.8%. Rising inflation will compel the Fed to lift rates aggressively next year to cool the economy and push the unemployment rate back above NAIRU. The U.S. has never averted a recession in the post-war era when the unemployment rate has increased by more than one-third of a percentage point. BCA's stance is that the U.S. economy enters the expansion's final stage when the unemployment rate dips below NAIRU. Chart 5 shows that the unemployment rate moved below NAIRU in November 2016. In the past 45 years, the economy has spent an average of 33 months in late-cycle mode ahead of 5 recessions. The exception was 1981-82 when the unemployment rate did not dip below NAIRU ahead of the recession; we treated the separate 1980 and 1981-82 recessions as one episode. Note that several of these late-cycle intervals overlap with recessions (vertical lines on Charts 5, 6 and 7 indicate the start of recessions). Chart 5Late Cycle Performance Of Stocks, Bonds, & Commodities The late-cycle environment favors equities over Treasuries, gold and oil, but other risk assets (small caps, investment-grade and high-yield corporates) underperform (Table 1). The dollar drops by an average of 5% in late cycles and it moved lower in 4 of the 5 previous episodes. Oil is a consistent late-cycle performer, climbing in all the stages in our analysis. The average returns across all assets classes are similar, even excluding the 1973 OPEC oil embargo and the 1987 stock market crash. Nonetheless, asset class returns in the current environment have mostly run counter to history. Table 1Late Cycle Performance Of Stocks, Bonds, & Commodities In typical late-cycle performance, U.S. stocks have outperformed Treasuries since November 2016, the dollar has weakened and oil is up, though by far less than in an average late cycle. However, both investment-grade and high-yield corporate bonds have outpaced Treasuries, and small caps have beaten large caps. Moreover, gold prices have dropped. However, the current late-cycle period has been in place for only 10 months, which is more than two years short of the 33-month average of late cycles since 1972 (Table 1). Furthermore, the level of S&P 500 earnings, both trailing and forward, also rise uniformly in late cycles. That said, earnings growth tends to peak about halfway through each cycle, but we note that we have only forward EPS data for three of the five episodes in our analysis. Profit margins take the same course as earnings and earnings growth (Chart 6). The late-cycle climb in wages and labor compensation impacts margins. Additionally, inflation tends to escalate during late cycles (Chart 7). Chart 6S&P 500 Earnings And Margins In Late Cycle Chart 7Inflation And Interest Rates During Late Cycles Bottom Line: The late-cycle environment may persist for another two years or so, favoring stocks over bonds, a weaker dollar and higher oil prices. Although we are overweight both investment-grade and high-yield corporate bonds, these two asset classes tend to underperform Treasuries as the business cycle fades. We also expect wages and inflation to continue to mount, suggesting that duration should be kept short. The late-cycle pattern is at odds with BCA's view that the dollar will appreciate modestly in the next 12 months. However, the dollar's trajectory depends both on Fed policy and the direction of rates in the economies of the major U.S. trading partners. The Bank of Canada will be lifting rates in the coming quarters, but policy rates will be flat for some time in the Eurozone and Japan, such that interest rate differentials will shift in favor of the dollar on a multi-lateral basis. Another Look At Wage Inflation In last week's report4 we indicated that the September jobs report was difficult to interpret due to the impacts of Hurricanes Harvey and Irma. Specifically, we stated that the unexpected 0.5% month-over-month gain in average hourly earnings should be discounted. Employment in the low-paying leisure and hospitality sector fell by 111,000 in September, helping to boost the aggregate average hourly wage. These wages will correct lower as these workers return to their jobs post-hurricane recovery. A closer look at the wage data, however, suggests that the acceleration in wage growth in September 2017 to 2.9% from 2.7% in August and a recent low of 1.9% in 2014, has been in place for some time. Admittedly, the 2.9% year-over-year reading on wage inflation, may have overstated labor costs in September. That said, at 56% in August, the percentage of U.S. states where the year-over-year percentage change in average hourly earnings is rising has been on the upswing since mid-2014. The August reading was the highest since 2012 (Chart 8). In Chart 9, we created an "equally-weighted" AHE measure to adjust for shifts in the composition of the labor market, but we found that the recent deceleration is not linked to compositional effects. Since wage growth bottomed out in late 2012, the compositional shifts slightly lowered wage inflation on average, but the growth rates today are roughly the same. Chart 10 updates research by the Kansas City Fed5 that found only a few industries (mostly in the goods-producing sector) account for most of the rise in wages, notably manufacturing, construction and wholesale trade. Financial services, retail, professional and business services, and leisure and hospitality - all service sector industries - were the laggards. The report shows that although earnings growth has fallen behind in service-oriented industries since 2015, hours worked have increased faster than in the goods-producing sector. Chart 856% Of States Have Seen##BR##Higher Wage Inflation Chart 9Compositional Effects Do Not##BR##Explain Recent Wage Weakness Chart 10Acceleration In Hours Worked##BR##Should Lead To Faster Wage Growth Moreover, the August JOLTS data also provides evidence that the labor market began to tighten before the effects of Harvey and Irma. The quit rate matched a 15-year high in August, and job openings were at an all-time high. Job openings in the leisure and hospitality sector were at all-time highs in August, and the quit rate in that storm-impacted industry stood at 4.2% (Chart 11). Even excluding the leisure and hospitality industry from the average hourly earnings data, wage growth has unambiguously climbed in the past 1- and 3- months (Chart 12). Chart 11Overall Job Openings And Quit Rates##BR##Vs. Leisure And Hospitality Chart 12Wage Acceleration Evident Even##BR##Excluding Leisure And Hospitality Bottom Line: Wage inflation was on the upswing even before the hurricanes hit in late August and September. Persistent wage inflation will allow the Fed to raise rates again in December and three or four times next year. This supports BCA's underweight stance on duration. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Fed's Third Mandate," July 24, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report, "Liquidity And The Great Balance Sheet Unwind," October 2017. Available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA's Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear," October 4, 2017. Available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Small Cap Surge," October 9, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 5 "Wage Leaders and Laggards: Decomposing The Growth In Average Hourly Earnings," Willem Van Zandweghe, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, February 15, 2017.
Highlights Looking into 2018, the major risk factors driving gold - inflation and inflation expectations; fiscal and monetary policy; and geopolitics - will, on balance, continue to favor gold as a strategic portfolio hedge. We expect gold will provide a good hedge against rising inflation. However, this will be partially mitigated by Fed rate hikes next year. On the back of tighter U.S. monetary policy, our macroeconomists expect a recession by 2H19, possibly earlier in 2019, which likely would be sniffed out by equity markets as early as 2H18. Our analysis indicates gold will provide a good hedge against this expected recession and the associated equity bear market.1 Lastly, geopolitical risks from (1) U.S.-North Korea tensions, (2) trade protectionism of the Trump administration and (3) ongoing conflicts in the Middle East will support gold prices next year, given the metal's safe-haven properties. Energy: Overweight. At the end of 3Q17, our open energy recommendations were up 45%, led by our long Dec/17 WTI $50/bbl vs. $55/bbl Call spread. We closed out our long Brent recommendations in 3Q17 for an average gain of 116%. (Please see p. 13 for a summary of trades closed in 3Q17). Base Metals: Neutral. Our tactical short Dec/17 copper position ended 3Q17 up 6%. We are placing a trailing stop at $3.10/lb. Precious Metals: Neutral. Our long gold portfolio hedge ended 3Q17 up 4.3%. The balance of risks continues to favor this as a strategic position, which we discuss below. Ags/Softs: Neutral. We lifted our weighting on ags - particularly grains - to neutral last week. Our long corn/short wheat position is up 1.2%. Feature Chart of the WeekInflation And U.S. Financial Variables##BR##Explain Gold Prices Inflation and U.S. financial variables - particularly the USD broad trade-weighted index (TWIB), and real rates - are the main factors explaining the evolution of gold prices (Chart of the Week).2 Subdued inflation and low unemployment - a decoupling of the so-called Phillips Curve relationship that drives central-bank models of the macroeconomy - have dominated the macro landscape this year (Chart 2). We expect that current low inflation, positive growth, and low interest rates will remain in place for the next 12 months (Chart 3). Although economies such as the U.S. are growing above trend, inflation has remained weak due to a redistribution of demand through imports from countries with spare capacity, according to BCA's Global Investment Strategy.3 This is expected to continue in the near term to end-2018. However, we expect the USD to gradually strengthen, as the Fed cautiously normalizes policy rates, while other systemically important central banks remain accommodative relative to the U.S. central bank (Chart 4). Further falls in the unemployment rate will push the U.S. economy into the steep end of the Phillips Curve. Weak capex in the post-Global Financial Crisis (GFC) era means demand for labor will increase as low unemployment - and associated higher wages - encourage higher consumer spending. This will cause inflation to lift next year or early 2019. Chart 2A Decoupling Of The Phillips Curve Relationship? In such an environment, any U.S. tax cuts - which we still expect by the end of 1Q18 - will simply add fuel to the inflationary fire, and lift inflation expectations for next year and beyond. As BCA's Geopolitical Strategy team puts it, the tax cuts are a "form of modest stimulus ... (which), this far into the economic cycle, could have a significant effect."4 With unemployment at or below levels consistent with full employment in the U.S. and little slack of any sort, it would not take much in the way of fiscal stimulus to further pressure inflation. Chart 3No Pressure From Inflation Or U.S. Financial##BR##Variables...For Now Chart 4A Strengthening U.S. Dollar Will##BR##Keep The Pressure Off Gold Inflation vs. Fed Hikes In the face of the rising inflation we expect next year, gold's appeal will increase. As our previous research reveals, gold's correlation with inflation is strengthened during periods of low real rates, i.e., the difference between nominal rates and inflation. This is a perfect context for gold. However, gold's ability to hedge inflation risks to portfolios will be partially hampered by a more-hawkish Fed. As inflation finally takes off, the Fed will feel confident to hike rates more aggressively. More than anything, this will put a bid under the USD, as U.S. interest-rate differentials vs. other currencies rise in favor of the dollar. In addition, real rates will rise as the Fed gains confidence it can lift policy rates without doing serious harm to the U.S. economy, and follows thru with its normalization. Thus, the gold market will be facing two opposing forces: On the one hand, gold will be an attractive inflation hedge as inflationary pressures build up. On the other, as the Fed begins to tighten to respond to those inflationary pressures, gold will lose its appeal in the face of rising real rates and a strong dollar. Chart 5Fed Will Ease Pressure Off Gold##BR##If It Gets Ahead Of Inflation The timing of the Fed's rate hikes will be critical to the evolution of gold prices next year and beyond. We previously assumed that rate hikes will remain behind wage growth, which would be supportive of gold prices as inflation picks up. However, if the Fed begins hiking ahead of any realized uptick in inflation, this would create a stronger-than-expected headwind for gold (Chart 5). While we expect inflation to take off in 2H18, our House view calls for 2 to 3 hikes by then. This is a risk to our gold view. Longer term, Fed rate hikes could trigger a feedback loop that will make it difficult for the U.S. central bank policy to support low unemployment rates. As real rates rise, increased unemployment will lead households to spend less. Lower demand will force firms to reduce hiring. The accompanying slowing of U.S. growth will disseminate to the rest of the world, pushing the global economy into a shallow recession as early as 2H19. In all likelihood, this higher-inflation/higher-policy-rate period will be sniffed out by equity markets before the economy actually enters a recession, leading to a bear market. Somewhat counterintuitively, this will favor gold as a portfolio hedge, as we discuss below. Bottom Line: As U.S. unemployment continues falling, inflation will re-emerge, as predicted by the Philips Curve trade-off so important to central-bank policy. Gold then will face two opposing forces. Its inflation hedging properties will be partially hamstrung by rising real U.S. rates and a strengthening USD. Nevertheless, we will turn bullish gold towards the end of next year as signs of an equity bear market emerge. Gold Will Outperform In An Equity Bear Market Our modelling indicates gold is an exceptional safe-haven during downturns in equity markets.5 It is especially attractive in equity bear markets because its returns during such episodes are negatively correlated with the U.S. stock market. This relationship with equities does not hold in bull markets -- gold prices typically rise during such periods, but at a slower rate than equities (Table 1). Table 1Gold's Ability To Hedge U.S. Equities In a Special Report titled "Safe Havens: Where To Hide Next Time?" BCA's Global Asset Allocation Strategy team looked at the performance of nine safe-haven assets and found, on average, they are negatively correlated with equities in every bear market since 1972.6 Although the current equity bull market still has room to run, recessions and bear markets tend to coincide (Chart 6). If the economy goes into recession in 2H19, equities could peak as early as the end of next year.7 Chart 6Bear Markets Usually Precede Recessions Gold's role as a global portfolio hedge during bear markets would thus support the hypothesis that the metal could enter a bull market as soon as end-2018 when equity markets start pricing in a recession (Chart 7). Things could get interesting at this point, since a clear indication the economy is entering into a recession likely will cause "traumatized" central bankers to turn overly dovish. This would add support to the gold market longer term.8 Chart 7Gold Outperforms During Recessions##BR##And Geopolitical Crises Correlations between safe havens decline during bear markets, as our GAA strategists found when they compared correlations by dividing the assets into three "buckets": currencies, inflation hedges, and fixed-income instruments. In this analysis, our GAA team found that gold outperformed TIPS and Farmland in the inflation-hedge bucket.9 Bottom Line: Gold is an exceptional hedge against downturns in equity markets. The bear market preceding the late-2019 recession we expect will put a bid under gold. The eventual turn to the dovish side by central bankers will further support the metal. Gold Will Hedge Geopolitical Risks A confluence of elevated geopolitical risks next year will drive part of gold's performance. BCA's Geopolitical Strategy (GPS) group has highlighted the following three themes investors need to track going into next year: U.S.-China Tensions: Our geopolitical strategists believe that the Korean conflict is a derivative of a more important secular trend of U.S.-China tensions. They estimate the risk of total war on the Korean peninsula at less than 3% and believe that the market impact of North Korea's provocations has peaked in the late summer. Nevertheless, they warn against complacency, as the underlying tensions over Pyongyang's nuclear program remain unresolved and North Korea could break with its past patterns.10 If the North stages attacks against U.S. or Japanese assets, or international shipping or aircraft, for instance, it could cause a larger safe-haven rally than what we witnessed earlier this year. At the very least, geopolitically induced volatility may return as U.S. President Trump tries to convince the world that war is a real option - a critical condition for establishing a "credible threat" of war with which to influence North Korean behavior - and as the U.S. and China spar over other issues. Trump's protectionism: Trump's campaign promised significant trade-protectionism. While he has not yet acted on those promises, the risk is that he returns to them next year.11 These policies could impact the gold market by: a. Feeding fears that the United States is abandoning the global liberal order; b. Intensifying U.S. trade tensions and strategic distrust with China; c. Pressuring U.S. domestic inflation via higher import prices. This risk will become even more elevated if the Trump administration and Congress fail to pass any tax legislation this year. Our geopolitical strategists believe that such a failure, while not their baseline scenario, would drive Trump to focus on his foreign policy and trade agenda more intently, especially ahead of the midterm elections in November next year, which would increase safe-haven flows. 3. Mideast Troubles: While we are not alarmist about the Middle East, the risk of market-relevant conflicts will be higher over the coming 12 months than over the previous year, following the fall of ISIS. The latter gave reason for various regional powers to cooperate, while its absence will revive their grievances with each other. Kurdish assertiveness is a key consequence, highlighted by last month's Kurdish independence referendum.12 Iraqi forces have pushed ISIS out of major Iraqi cities and the slowdown in the fight against ISIS could push Iraqi forces to focus on regaining the province of Kirkuk. Kirkuk, which is home to major oil fields and reserves, has been under Kurdish control since 2014 when the Peshmerga forces there captured it from ISIS. As ISIS ceases to be a threat, Baghdad will try to regain control of these precious oil fields. The Kurdish conflict, as well as Trump's pressure tactics against Iran, will increase geopolitical risks in oil-producing (hence market-relevant) areas. Chart 82017 Risks Were Overstated In a recent study investigating how different "safe-havens" assets react to political and financial events, our GPS colleagues found that gold provides the best average returns following a major geopolitical event (Chart 7).13 Our House geopolitical view has maintained that political risks in 2017 were overstated. This was particularly the case in Europe, where much of the risk was exaggerated and merely the product of linear extrapolation from the outcomes of the U.K. referendum on EU membership and the U.S. presidential election. As such, we do not expect any European break-up risk to support gold prices next year. Although elevated Italian Euroscepticism is one lingering European risk that could impact gold markets, we see this as a long-term risk rather than a market catalyst arising from the Italian general election in May next year. Reflecting our view, the policy uncertainty index has fallen drastically in the last two months (Chart 8). Bottom Line: Elevated political risks in 2018 will further support the gold market. Most notable on our geopolitical strategists' minds are continued U.S.-China tensions (most notably over Korea), Trump's protectionist policies, and potential conflicts in the Middle East. Roukaya Ibrahim, Associate Editor Commodity & Energy Strategy RoukayaI@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger, Research Assistant HugoB@bcaresearch.com Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report "Go Long Gold As A Strategic Portfolio Hedge," dated May 4, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 2 Our results show 1% increase in U.S. YoY CPI, 5 year real rates, and USD TWI are associated with a 4% increase, 0.18% decline and a 0.21% decline in gold prices, respectively. The adjusted R2 is 0.88. 3 Please see the Global Investment Strategy Outlook "Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear," dated October 4, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report "Is King Dollar Back," dated October 4, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 We use the S&P 500 Total Return (TR) index as a proxy for U.S. equities. 6 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report "Safe Havens: Where To Hide Next Time?," dated April 21, 2017, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see Global Asset Allocation Quarterly Portfolio Outlook, dated October 2, 2017, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see the Global Investment Strategy Outlook "Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear," dated October 4, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report "Safe Havens: Where To Hide Next Time?," dated April 21, 2017, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com. 10 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Insights From The Road - The Rest Of The World," dated September 6, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 11 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Political Risks Are Understated In 2018," dated April 12, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 12 Armed conflict in the Middle East usually lead to a sharp rally in gold prices. Please see Table 1 from Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market?," dated August 16, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 13 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Geopolitics And Safe Havens," dated November 11, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2017 Summary of Trades Closed in 2016
Highlights Year One Performance: The GFIS recommended model bond portfolio returned 1.1% (hedged into USD) in its first year of existence, slightly underperforming the custom benchmark index by -2bps. Our bearish duration tilts were a drag on performance, while our overweights to U.S. corporate debt were a major contributor. Risk Management Lessons: The maximum overweight to low-beta, but low-yielding, Japanese Government Bonds was a drag on performance by reducing the portfolio yield. This highlights the classic bond management trade-off between controlling portfolio risks, like duration or tracking error, and maximizing sources of return, like interest income. Future Drivers Of Returns: Over the next 6-12 months, we expect the model portfolio returns to again benefit mostly from our below-benchmark duration stance (as global bond yields grind higher) and from our overweight stance on U.S. corporates (as the U.S. economy maintains a solid pace of growth). Feature In September of 2016, we introduced a new element to the BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy (GFIS) service - our recommended model bond portfolio.1 This represented a bit of a departure from the usual macroeconomic analysis and forecasting of financial markets that has been the hallmark of BCA. Yet we felt that it was important to add an actual portfolio, with specific allocations and weightings, given the needs and constraints faced by our readers. With so many of our clients being traditional fixed income managers (or multi-asset managers) who measure investment performance versus benchmark indices, we felt that it was important to have a way to communicate our views within a framework akin to what they deal with each day. Even for clients who are not professional bond managers, the model portfolio can be useful as a way to express how much we prefer one bond market (or sector) versus others. It also gives us a forum to discuss portfolio management issues as an addition to the macro analysis. So far, the reception from clients to this new addition to the GFIS service has been a warm one, and we look forward to additional feedback in the months and years ahead. With the model portfolio just passing its first birthday, we are dedicating this Weekly Report to an overview of the final Year One performance numbers. We will evaluate our winning and losing recommendations, look back at the lessons learned as the model portfolio framework has evolved, and identify what we expect will be the biggest drivers of performance in Year Two based on our current views. Year One Model Portfolio Performance: Winners & Losers Chart 1GFIS Model Portfolio Performance The GFIS model portfolio produced a total return of 1.09% (hedged into U.S. dollars) over first full year since inception on September 20, 2016 (Chart 1). This essentially matched the performance of our custom benchmark index, with the model portfolio lagging by a mere -2bps.2 In terms of the breakdown between government bonds and credit (spread product), the former underperformed the benchmark by -18bps while the latter outperformed by +16bps. A more traditional period to evaluate investment performance is on a calendar year-to-date basis. We also show the 2017 year-to-date (YTD) numbers in Chart 1, measured from January 1st to October 3rd. Over that time period, the total returns are much higher - the model portfolio has returned 2.78%, lagging the index by -6bps. This higher absolute return is mostly due to the strong outperformance of corporate bond markets and the decline in government bond yields seen since March. Broadly speaking, that breakdown of returns lines up with what were our largest strategic market calls: to be underweight overall portfolio duration and overweight U.S. corporate bond exposure (bottom panel). This is obviously a welcome property to see in our returns, which we hope will always line up with our desired tilts! When looking at the detailed decomposition of the returns on the government bond side of the portfolio (Table 1), however, a few points stand out: Table 1A Detailed Breakdown Of The GFIS Model Portfolio The underperformance on the government bond side of the portfolio (Chart 2) came from underweight positions at the long-end (maturities beyond seven years) of yield curves in the U.S. (-4bps), U.K. (-5bps), Germany (-5bps) and, most notably, France (-18bps). Chart 2GFIS Model Portfolio Government Bond Performance Attribution By Country The underweight position in Italy, across the curve, generated another -7bps of underperformance, although this was paired against an overweight to Spanish government bonds that positively contributed to returns (+3bps). Overweights to bonds in the middle and shorter ends of yields curves (maturities less than seven years) positively contributed to returns in the U.S. (+6bps), Germany (+2bps) and France (+2bps). Our significant overweight to Japanese government bonds, intended as a way to reduce portfolio duration by increasing exposure to a market with a low beta to global bond yields, also helped boost performance (+8bps). The conclusion? By concentrating our recommended duration underweights on longer-maturity bonds, and raising the weightings on shorter-maturity government debt, we imparted a bearish curve steepening bias on top of the reduced duration exposure. It is no surprise that our recommended government bond allocations underperformed during the bull-flattening move in global yield curves seen earlier this year. By contrast, the returns on the credit (spread) product allocations within the GFIS model portfolio tell a more positive story (Chart 3): Chart 3GFIS Model Portfolio Spread Product Performance Attribution The outperformance came from our overweight allocations to U.S. Investment Grade (IG) corporate debt, focused on Financials (+14bps) and Industrials (+4bps), and U.S. High-Yield (HY), concentrated on Ba-rated (+13bps) and B-rated (+8bps) bonds. U.S. Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS) were a laggard during the first year of the model bond portfolio (-12bps), which largely came from an ill-timed tactical move to overweight in the 4th quarter of 2016. More recently, our underweight stance on MBS has been only a modest drag on the total return of the portfolio since the peak in U.S. bond yields back in March. Our decisions to reduce exposure to Euro Area IG (-5bps) and HY (-2bps) corporate debt earlier in the year, and our more recent decision to downgrade Emerging Market (EM) sovereign (-1bp) and corporate debt (-4bps), were both small negative contributors to performance. Summing it all up, our spread product allocations performed well because of the overweight to U.S. IG and HY corporates. The underweights in Euro Area and EM credit were set up as relative value allocations versus U.S. equivalents, so the underperformance versus the benchmark should be viewed against the substantial outperformance from U.S. corporates. The MBS underperformance was small on a YTD basis, but we see an opportunity for that to soon turn around, as we discuss later. Bottom Line: The GFIS recommended model bond portfolio returned 1.1% (hedged into USD) in its first year of existence, slightly underperforming the custom benchmark index by -2bps. Our bearish duration tilts were a drag on performance, while our overweights to U.S. corporate debt were a major contributor. Lessons Learned On Risk Management As the first year of the GFIS model portfolio progressed, we added elements to the framework to help us manage the overall risk of the portfolio. Specifically, we began to include a tracking error calculation to show the relative volatility of the portfolio to its benchmark.3 When we first introduced that tracking error back in April, we were running far too little risk in the portfolio given the relatively modest position sizes (Chart 4). Rather than be an "index hugger", we decided to increase the sizes of all our relative tilts (Chart 5), and the tracking error rose accordingly from a mere 25bps to over 60bps. This is still below the 100bps limit that we decided to impose on the relative volatility of the model portfolio, but we were comfortable not running less-than-maximum risk given that valuations on many spread products were not extraordinarily cheap. The time to max out a risk budget is early in the credit cycle when spreads are wide, not when the cycle is far advanced and spreads are relatively tight. Yet one lesson that was learned in Year One was that too much focus on tracking error can result in lost opportunities to boost the performance of the portfolio. As part of our strategic call to maintain a below-benchmark overall duration stance, we upgraded Japan to maximum overweight in the model portfolio back on July 4th.4 With Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs) having such a low beta to yield changes in the overall Developed Markets (Chart 6), adding more Japan exposure was a way to get more defensive on duration in a way that would also boost our desired tracking error (since we were adding more of an asset less correlated to the other government bonds in the portfolio). Chart 4Tracking Error Of##BR##The Model Portfolio Chart 5Allocations Between##BR##Government Bonds & Spread Product Chart 6Are JGBs The##BR##Optimal Duration Hedge? Yet by increasing the allocation to low-beta JGBs, we were also adding exposure to "no-yield" JGBs. The overall yield of the model portfolio suffered as a result, fully offsetting the bump to the portfolio yield from the increase in allocations to spread product in April (Charts 7 & 8). With the benefit of hindsight, increasing the allocation even more to something like U.S. HY corporate bonds would have a been a more prudent way to redirect government bond exposure to a low-beta market that would have boosted the overall portfolio yield (Chart 9). Chart 7Too Much Japan##BR##In The Portfolio ... Chart 8... Offsetting The Yield Pick-Up##BR##From Spread Product Chart 9There Is Not Enough Yield##BR##In The Model Portfolio Going forward, we will pay more attention to managing the portfolio yield more actively as another piece of our model bond portfolio framework that can help boost expected returns. Bottom Line: The maximum overweight to low-beta, but low-yielding, Japanese Government Bonds was a drag on performance by reducing the portfolio yield. This highlights the classic bond management trade-off between controlling portfolio risks, like duration or tracking error, and maximizing sources of return, like interest income. The Outlook For The Next Year Looking towards the next twelve months, the biggest expected drivers of returns in our model bond portfolio are expected to come from the following allocations: Below-benchmark overall duration exposure: We are sticking to our guns on the future direction of global bond yields, which have more room to rise over the next 6-12 months. The coordinated global economic upturn is showing little sign of slowing, with leading indicators still rising and pointing to upward pressure on real bond yields (Chart 10). At the same time, inflation expectations in the developed economies remain too low relative to current levels of inflation (bottom panel). Thus, we expect government bond yield curves to bear-steepen as central banks will respond slowly to the rise in inflation. This will benefit the steepening bias we have in the model portfolio from the underweights in longer maturity buckets in the U.S., Europe and the U.K. (Chart 11). Chart 10Future Drivers Of Performance:##BR##Below-Benchmark Duration Chart 11An Unexpected##BR##Bull Flattening This Year Overweight U.S. corporate bonds (both IG and HY): Looking over the indicators from our U.S. Corporate Bond Checklist, the backdrop is not yet pointing to a period of expected underperformance for U.S. corporates (Chart 12). While balance sheet fundamentals do appear stretched, as indicated by our Corporate Health Monitor (2nd panel), the overall stance of U.S. monetary conditions is neutral (3rd panel), while bank lending standards are not yet restrictive (4th panel). We expect the Fed to deliver another 25bp rate hike in December, and at least another 2-3 hikes in 2018, which will shift monetary conditions into more restrictive territory. A very rapid rise in the U.S. dollar would worsen this trend, but we expect only a moderate grind higher in the greenback as the Fed slowly delivers additional rate hikes and non-U.S. growth remains robust. While the solid global economic backdrop should benefit all growth-sensitive assets like corporate debt, we see more attractive relative valuations on U.S. corporates versus Euro Area or EM equivalents. The upcoming tapering of asset purchases by the European Central Bank (ECB) also represents a major risk to Euro Area corporate debt, as the ECB will be slowing the pace of its corporate bond buying. One other sector that can potentially boost the portfolio performance in Year Two versus Year One is U.S. MBS. Our colleagues at our sister service, U.S. Bond Strategy, now see MBS valuations as looking attractive to other U.S. spread product like IG corporates (Chart 13).5 The relative option-adjusted spreads (OAS) on MBS and U.S. IG are a good leading indicator of the relative performance of the two asset classes and current spread levels should lead to a better return profile for MBS over IG. Another factor benefitting MBS is the continued rising trend in U.S. bond yields (and mortgage rates) that we expect over the next 6-12 months, which will reduce mortgage prepayments that would weigh on MBS returns (bottom panel). Chart 12Future Drivers Of Performance:##BR##Overweight U.S. Corporates Chart 13Upgrade U.S. MBS##BR##To Neutral This week, we are upgrading our MBS allocation to neutral from underweight in our model portfolio. However, given that our allocations to U.S. corporates are already fairly significant, we are choosing to "fund" the MBS upgrade by lowering our weighting on U.S. Treasuries (see the model portfolio allocations on Page 14). Bottom Line: Over the next 6-12 months, we expect the model portfolio returns to again benefit mostly from our below-benchmark duration stance (as global bond yields grind higher) and from our overweight stance on U.S. corporates (as the U.S. economy maintains a solid pace of growth). We are also now more constructive on valuations on U.S. MBS, thus we are upgrading our allocation to neutral at the expense of U.S. Treasuries. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Model Special Report, "Introducing Our Recommended Global Fixed Income Portfolio", dated September 20th, 2016, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2 The GFIS model portfolio custom benchmark index can most simply be described as the Barclays Global Aggregate Index, but with allocations to global high-yield corporate debt replacing very highly-rated spread product. We believe this to be more indicative of the typical internal benchmark used by global multi-sector fixed income managers. 3 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "Adding A Risk Management Framework To Our Model Bond Portfolio", dated June 20th 2017, available at gfis.bcareseach.com. 4 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Central Banks Are Now Playing Catch-Up", dated July 4th 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Dollar Watching: Yet Another Debate", dated October 10th 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Appendix - Selected Sectors From The GFIS Model Portfolio Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Duration: The global economic recovery is more synchronized than at any time since 2011. This suggests that foreign demand will be less of an impediment to the bond bear market and that Treasury yields will rise once U.S. data start to surprise on the upside. Stay at below-benchmark duration. MBS: Agency MBS option-adjusted spreads have widened significantly and no longer look expensive. With Treasury yields moving higher and mortgage refinancings likely to stay depressed, we advise upgrading MBS from underweight to neutral. Economy & Inflation: The U.S. economic data are starting to outperform beaten-down expectations. Survey data point to further GDP acceleration in the second half of this year and we expect inflation will soon follow growth higher. Feature Chart 12-Factor Treasury Model The relationship between the global breadth of economic growth, the value of the dollar and the outlook for Treasury yields has been a running theme in this publication.1 To summarize, stronger global growth pressures bond yields higher (and vice-versa). But how that growth is distributed across different countries matters as well. For example, if global growth is mostly concentrated in the U.S., then yield spreads will widen between the U.S. and the rest of the world and the dollar will appreciate as money pours in from overseas. Investors then respond to a stronger dollar by downgrading their U.S. growth and rate hike expectations. This caps the upside in long-dated U.S. Treasury yields. Conversely, if global growth is more evenly spread out throughout the world, then the dollar will come under less upward pressure when U.S. growth accelerates and Treasury yields can rise further. We developed a simple two-factor model to show how the trade-off between global growth and the exchange rate impacts the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield (Chart 1). The model uses the Global Manufacturing PMI as its proxy for global growth and a survey of bullish sentiment toward the dollar as its proxy for growth synchronization. So far this year, the Global PMI has moved higher and sentiment toward the dollar has become less bullish. Both developments have bond-bearish implications and our model now pegs fair value for the 10-year Treasury yield at 2.65%, 28 bps above the current 10-year yield. In Sync The Global PMI came in at 53.2 in September, the same as in August, but still a strong reading compared to recent history (Chart 2). But the most stunning detail of the September PMI releases is that 33 out of the 36 countries we track had PMIs above the 50 boom/bust line. As a result, our Global PMI Diffusion Index hit 90% for only the second time since 2011 (Chart 2, panel 1). The elevated reading of our diffusion index leads us to two market related observations. First, stronger growth outside of the U.S. explains why the 10-year Treasury yield is only 8 bps lower than at the start of the year despite U.S. economic data that have severely undershot expectations (Chart 2, bottom panel). Second, it suggests that when U.S. economic data inevitably start to surprise on the upside - a process which is only now beginning (see Economy & Inflation section below) - the dollar will appreciate by less than it would have when our PMI diffusion index was near 50. This removes a huge impediment from the bond bear market. In Chart 3 we see that the recent peak in 7-10 year U.S. bond yields occurred at 2.54% on Dec 16th. On that same date the spread between 7-10 year U.S. bond yields and average 7-10 year yields in the rest of the world was 178 bps, and bullish sentiment toward the dollar was above 80%. With the global recovery now more synchronized than it was last year, we anticipate that by the time U.S. yields take out that prior peak, the yield spread and dollar bullish sentiment will still be lower than they were last December. This means that less foreign capital will be encouraged into the U.S. and yields will rise even further. Chart 2Broad Based Recovery Chart 3Spreads Less Of A Constraint Where Is Growth Coming From? Considering the major economic blocs, the biggest change during the past year has been the surging Eurozone PMI (Chart 4). The U.S. PMI is still firmly above the 50 boom/bust line but has actually moderated in 2017. The Japanese PMI is similarly entrenched above 50 and while the Chinese PMI was weak earlier this year, it has rebounded during the past four months. At roughly 20%, China carries the largest weight in the Global PMI. The outlook for the Chinese economy is therefore crucial for the path of bond yields. On that note, while the Chinese PMI has been strong in recent months, a couple of warning signs are beginning to flash (Chart 5). Chart 4Global Manufacturing PMIs Chart 5Chinese Monetary Conditions Commodity prices - which correlate strongly with Chinese PMI - have declined since early September, although they remain above levels seen last year and do not yet pose a major risk. What's more important is that monetary conditions are starting to tighten (Chart 5, panel 2). If tighter monetary conditions persist, then we should expect growth to slow. The mild tightening in monetary conditions that has already occurred will probably lead to some near-term moderation in Chinese growth. But our China Investment Strategy service thinks it's unlikely that monetary conditions will tighten enough to cause a meaningful slowdown.2 Our China strategists note that with GDP growth within the government's target range, inflation exceedingly low and signs that financial excesses have been reigned in, there should not be much appetite for draconian policy tightening. We would also add that the causes of this year's tightening in monetary conditions have been relatively benign. The monetary conditions index shown in Chart 5 has fallen because the trade-weighted RMB is no longer depreciating and because real interest rates have moved a tad higher. Crucially, the RMB has only stabilized, it is not appreciating in trade-weighted terms. Also, the nominal policy rate remains flat at a low level. The increase in real interest rates resulted purely from weaker consumer price inflation. Bottom Line: The global economic recovery is more synchronized than at any time since 2011. This suggests that foreign demand will be less of an impediment to the bond bear market and that Treasury yields will rise once U.S. data start to surprise on the upside. Stay at below-benchmark duration. Buy The News In MBS Last week we upgraded our allocation to Agency MBS from underweight to neutral, noting that spreads had become more attractive during the past few months. In all likelihood this is the result of the market pricing in the wind-down of the Fed's balance sheet.3 With the Fed's plans now well known (and unlikely to change), there is an opportunity to increase MBS exposure from a more attractive starting point. After having sold the rumor, we think it's time to buy the news. The Value Proposition Chart 6OAS Look Attractive To be clear, we are not forecasting stellar excess returns from Agency MBS. But with spreads compressed across the entire U.S. fixed income universe, we would note that the option-adjusted spread (OAS) differential between conventional 30-year Agency MBS and investment grade corporate bonds (in duration-matched terms) has risen back to levels last seen in 2014 (Chart 6). The lagged OAS differential is a decent predictor of relative returns between MBS and corporate credit, and at current levels it suggests that MBS could even outperform corporate bonds at some point during the next 12 months (Chart 6, panel 2). This year's decline in Treasury yields has also biased OAS differentials between MBS and corporate bonds wider. Because of negative convexity, MBS duration is positively correlated with yields (Chart 6, bottom panel). If yields rise from here, as we expect they will, then MBS duration will also extend. This means that MBS OAS will start to appear less and less attractive relative to duration-matched comparables. In other words, MBS are less likely to cheapen relative to other spread product in an environment of rising Treasury yields. The Drivers Of MBS Spreads A simplified formula for excess MBS returns, relative to duration-matched Treasuries, could be written as follows: Excess Return = Starting OAS - Duration*(Change in nominal spread) + 0.5*Convexity*(Change in yield) 2 That is, OAS is the correct measure of MBS carry because it adjusts for expected losses due to prepayments. However, it is the change in the nominal spread (not the OAS) that will determine capital gains and losses during the investment horizon. On that note, we observe that nominal MBS spreads have rarely been tighter during the past 30 years (Chart 7). However, it is also hard for us to see a catalyst for significantly wider nominal spreads during the next 6-12 months. The two factors that correlate most closely with nominal MBS spreads are credit spreads and mortgage refinancings. Chart 7Nominal MBS Spreads Are Driven By Credit Spreads And Refinancings On credit spreads, we have repeatedly outlined why they are unlikely to widen materially in the absence of more significant inflationary pressure.4 As for refis, we are also hard pressed to see much upside for three main reasons: First, changes in mortgage rates are the number one driver of refinancings (Chart 8). Refis only increase when mortgage rates fall, making the proposition of refinancing more attractive. As yields rise during the next 6-12 months, refis will stay low. Second, the distribution of outstanding mortgages across the coupon stack impacts how sensitive refis are to changes in rates. The second panel of Chart 8 shows our measure of "moneyness", aka the dispersion of outstanding mortgages around the current coupon rate.5 Given today's dispersion levels we can calculate that even if the current coupon mortgage rate falls back to its recent low of 2.24%, our measure of moneyness would not get back to its late-2016 peak. For our moneyness indicator to rise back to 2013 levels the current coupon mortgage rate would have to fall all the way to 1.68%. Needless to say, we would characterize that risk as low. Third, the final factor that can impact the pace of mortgage refinancing is the seasoning of outstanding mortgages. Typically, we think of mortgages between 30 and 60 months old as being the most likely to refinance. Given that net mortgage origination was close to zero between 30 and 60 months ago and that mortgage purchase applications were at multi-year lows (Chart 9), most of the outstanding mortgage universe probably falls outside of this zone. Chart 8Refis Will Stay Low Chart 9Most Mortgages Are Not Yet Seasoned Bottom Line: Agency MBS option-adjusted spreads have widened significantly and no longer look expensive. With Treasury yields moving higher and mortgage refinancings likely to stay depressed, we advise upgrading MBS from underweight to neutral. Economy & Inflation Bring On The Upside Surprises As was alluded to in the opening section of this report, after have disappointed expectations year-to-date, we are just now starting to see U.S. economic data surprise to the upside (see Chart 2). The most recent datapoints that caught our eye were the ISM manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMIs.6 Our inclination is to mostly ignore last Friday's employment report as an outlier due to the recent hurricanes.7 The ISM non-manufacturing survey jumped to 59.8 in September, its highest level since 2005. Taken together with other survey indicators that tend to track GDP growth - the BCA Beige Book Indicator and the BCA Composite New Orders Indicator - the case is quite strong for further GDP acceleration in the third and fourth quarters (Chart 10). Of course the pressing issue for bond markets is whether that growth acceleration translates into higher inflation. On that note, we would suggest that the weak inflation we have seen during the past six months was a reaction to the growth slowdown witnessed in 2015 and the first half of 2016. The stronger ISM manufacturing index, in particular, sends a powerful signal that inflation is poised to put in a bottom (Chart 11). Chart 10Survey Indicators Of U.S. Growth Chart 11Inflation Lags Growth Bottom Line: The U.S. economic data are starting to outperform beaten-down expectations. Survey data point to further GDP acceleration in the second half of this year and we expect inflation will soon follow growth higher. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Dollar Watching: Another Update", dated January 31, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "On A Higher Note", dated October 5, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Portfolio Allocation Summary, "Return Of The Trump Trade", dated October 3, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Won't Back Down", dated September 26, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 For each coupon bucket in the Bloomberg Barclays Conventional 30-year Agency MBS index we calculate the squared deviation between its coupon and the current coupon rate. We then weight those squared differences by the market capitalization of each coupon bucket. 6 These are different than the Markit PMI that is included in our 2-factor Treasury model. 7 Please see BCA Daily Insights, "U.S. Jobs Report: All Noise, No Signal", dated October 6, 2017, available at din.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights It's ok to ignore the September jobs report. Is the small cap comeback sustainable? Assessing the threat to the consumer from higher rates and oil prices. The ISM is over 60, now what? Feature Risk assets outperformed again last week, as the S&P 500, the dollar, and the 10 year- Treasury yield all moved higher. Oil was an exception, as WTI dipped back below $50 per barrel, but BCA's Commodity & Energy Strategy service expects WTI to end the year over $55/bbl. Small-cap stocks outperformed as well and conditions are in place for the rise in small caps to continue. The rise in risk assets in recent weeks occurred alongside a marked improvement in the Citi Economic Surprise Index (Chart 1), which moved into positive territory last week for the first time since April, despite the impacts of Hurricanes Harvey and Irma. Chart 1S&P And 10 Year Treasury Yield Tracks Economic Surprise The lack of impact from the hurricanes on the economic data is surprising. Before Hurricane Harvey made landfall, the Atlanta Fed GDP Now reading for Q3 was 3.4%, but moved as low as 2.1% in late September as the August economic data was reported. The most recent Atlanta Fed forecast pegged Q3 GDP at 2.5%. The 60+ readings on September's manufacturing ISM composite and 70+ reading on prices were notably strong, as was the 18.6 million reading on September vehicle sales, the strongest in 12 years. That said, the impact of the storms was evident in the employment data released last week (See below). U.S. Jobs Report: All Noise, No Signal U.S. nonfarm payrolls fell 33,000 in September, which was entirely due to the hurricanes. According to the BLS, 1.47 million workers could not show up for their jobs due to the weather. Because this data series is not seasonally adjusted, one cannot simply add it back to the headline payrolls number. Unfortunately, the separate household survey does not help to shed any better light on the state of the labor market. The household survey is known to be much more volatile than the establishment survey. This was quite apparent with the 906,000 surge in jobs, which followed a 74,000 decline in the previous month. The outsized and unbelievable surge in household employment was the main reason for the decline in the jobless rate to 4.2% from 4.4%. The labor force actually grew by a hefty 575,000 and the participation rate rose to 63.1%, the highest since March 2014 (Chart 2). The 0.5% m/m gain in average hourly earnings needs to be discounted as well. Employment in the low-paying leisure and hospitality sector fell by 111,000 in September, helping to boost the aggregate average hourly wage. As these workers return to their jobs, average hourly wages will correct lower. Bottom Line: Investors should ignore the September jobs report. The 3-month average of payrolls growth from June to August was 172K. This is probably the best gauge of underlying jobs growth and this pace is above the trend growth in the labor force. To the extent that the Fed believes the tightening labor market will push inflation to its 2% target, the calculus for the December FOMC should not change after today's report. Small Caps Make A Comeback Rising prospects for tax cuts have lifted the Trump trades, including small-cap equities. We first initiated an overweight to small caps on November 14, 20161 (Chart 3). Since then, small caps have underperformed large by 162 bps, but not uniformly. The trade was successful from the start through to late January, but faded by late summer along with the prospects for Trump's tax cuts. Starting in mid-August, small cap made a comeback as odds of the tax cut troughed. Chart 2The September Jobs Report Is More Noise Than Signal Chart 3The Trump Trades Are Back On Several factors support our overweight view. According to BCA's U.S. Equity Strategy service S&P 600 valuation indicator, small caps are even more undervalued today than when we last discussed them in June2 (Chart 4). Moreover, the Cyclical Capitalization Indicator (CCI) moved sharply into positive territory following the U.S. election despite a modest dip in subsequent months (Chart 5). In addition, small cap stocks have been a reliably high-beta segment of U.S. capital markets since the middle of the last economic cycle (Chart 5, panel 2). That characteristic of small caps argues for a bullish stance given our upbeat view on growth and our overweight positions in U.S. equities versus bonds. BCA's outlook for regulation, inflation, the dollar, the Fed and the consumer also favor small over large caps. Trump has already made significant progress in slowing the pace of new regulations,3 which has long been a concern for small businesses. We expect inflation to move back to 2% in the coming quarters and then begin to climb higher in 2018. Chart 6 shows that small caps often thrive when inflation accelerates. BCA's outlook is that the dollar will see modest appreciation over the next 12 months. Small-cap stocks are less sensitive to dollar movements than large caps. Gradually rising rates will not impede small caps and credit conditions remain favorable. Finally, small caps are more closely linked to the consumer than the S&P 500, and BCA's view on household spending remains upbeat. Chart 4Small Caps Are Cheap, But Not Historically Cheap Chart 5Our CCI Supports Small Caps Chart 6Accelerating Inflation Usually Supports Small Caps Despite the upbeat prospects for small caps, some risks linger. Tighter credit conditions for consumers and businesses, an abrupt pullback in housing that would trigger a consumer retrenchment, persistent weakness in the dollar, and a "risk off" environment would see small caps underperform large caps. Bottom Line: It is too early to abandon our bullish bias toward small caps. Conditions remain in place for small caps to outpace large caps. Favorable valuation and encouraging prospects for Trump's pro-small business platform are key to BCA's view, as our favorable outlook for the U.S. consumer. Will Higher Rates And Oil Prices Crush The Consumer? Supports remain in place for continued strength in U.S. consumer spending despite rising interest rates and oil prices. That support was confirmed by September's reports on employment and vehicle sales, and August's personal income and spending data, all released in the past two weeks. However, investors should be aware of hurricane-related distortions in the August and September figures.4 Moreover, BCA's position is reinforced by elevated readings on consumer confidence and booming household net worth statistics, and record high FICO scores (Chart 7). The conditions that crushed the consumer ahead of the 2007-2008 recession are not in place and will not be for some time. Chart 8 shows that at 41%, household purchases of essentials as a percentage of disposable income are near an all-time low and have dropped by 1.3 percentage points since 2012. In contrast, spending on necessities rose by a record 3.5% in the five years ending in 2008, matching the bruising impact of higher rates, surging inflation and soaring oil prices seen by the end of 1980. Wrenching consumer-driven economic downturns ensued after both episodes. We see gradual increases ahead for both oil prices and interest rates, but nothing that would trigger the collapse of the consumer.5 Furthermore, BCA forecasts only a modest rise in inflation and an acceleration in wage growth; both will provide a boost to disposable income. Personal tax cuts as part of the plan Trump proposed last month would also enhance incomes. Chart 7Plenty Of Support For The Consumer Chart 8Consumer In Good Shape Despite Rise In Oil, Rates BCA's research shows that sustainable capital spending cycles get underway only when businesses see evidence that consumer final demand is on the upswing. The latest reading on the manufacturing ISM composite and the 60+ readings on the new orders component of ISM since February suggest that managements are starting to note the robust pace of consumer spending. Signals From Elevated ISM Readings September's numbers on the ISM manufacturing index support BCA's case for accelerating corporate profits in the coming quarters. The ISM is a good proxy for industrial production, which in turn tracks S&P 500 sales. The recent strong data on ISM suggests that IP should pick up in the next six months (Chart 9). A rollover in the 12-month change in IP would challenge our constructive stance on earnings. While a decline is possible given that the index is already lofty, the leading components of the ISM, including the new orders index and the new orders-to-inventory ratio, indicate that the ISM will remain above 50 in the months ahead (Chart 10). Chart 9Favorable Macro Backdrop For Earnings And Sales Chart 10ISM Components Suggest IP Poised To Accelerate Some investors question how long the composite and new orders indices will remain beyond 60 and what that will mean for risk assets. Additionally, the second 70+ reading on the ISM Prices index this year challenges the notion that inflation is dormant. Other investors are concerned about what will happen after these ISM components are so elevated. Others may fear that the index will soon fall below 50. We analyze the historical periods when the ISM and its sub-indexes were above the 60 threshold, and then what happens to the returns of risk assets 12 months after they fall below the 60 threshold (Chart 11A, Chart 11B and Chart 11C). Chart 11AComposite ISM And Risk Assets Chart 11BISM New Orders And Risk Assets Chart 11CISM Prices And Risk Assets Historically, the relative performance of large cap equities to Treasuries is typically poor when the ISM Manufacturing Composite Index is over 60, but investment-grade credit outperforms and both gold and oil usually gain. The performance of these assets is similar even excluding the period around the 1973 OPEC oil embargo and the 1987 stock market crash (Chart 11A and Appendix Table 1). The ISM Manufacturing Composite Index ticked up to 60.8 in September, the first 60+ reading since 2004. The indicator also reached 60 three times in the 1970s and twice in the 1980s, and it stayed above 60 on average for 8 months. The last time it breached 60, it remained at that level for 6 months (December 2003 through June 2004). That interval, along with most of the others, was accompanied by tightening monetary policy and accelerating inflation late in the latter half of economic cycles. Gold and oil perform strongly in the 12 months after ISM Composite Index goes below 60, large-cap equities barely do better than Treasuries, while investment-grade credit underperforms. Surprisingly, high-yield bonds and small-cap stocks outperform 12 months after the ISM falls back below 60, although the sample size is limited. In 1974-1975, the economy was in recession. In all but one other instance (the mid- 1980s), the economy was in a late stage of the cycle, nearing full employment and inflation was on the rise. Risk assets also are strong performers when the New Orders component of the ISM exceeds the 60 threshold (Chart 11B and Appendix Table 2). Moreover, the episodes are more numerous (14 since 1971 versus only 6 for the composite) but, on average, they persist as long as the signal from the ISM Composite. New Orders have been above 60 since February 2017 (7 months), just shy of the 46-year average (8 months). Large cap equities and credit (both investment-grade and high-yield) have outperformed Treasuries, and gold has climbed since February. This performance matches the historical pattern when the New Orders index exceeds 60. In the past 8 months, the underperformance of small caps and the drop in oil prices in that span runs counter to history. The performance of risk assets in the year after the new orders index moves below 60 is mixed, at best. In these periods, while the S&P 500 outperforms Treasuries on average, and small caps outperform large caps, credit underperforms. The big winners when the New Orders index is falling from over 60 are gold (average 14% gain) and oil (22%). Chart 11C and Appendix Table 3 shows the performance of risk assets when the ISM Prices index is greater than 70 and then 12 months after the index crosses below 70. Gold and oil are standouts in the first case, and small cap tends to outperform large. Note that 3 of these 11 episodes coincided with recessions (early 1970s, 1980 and 2008) and 1 occurred during the 1987 stock market crash. Small-cap equities continue to outperform as the Prices index fades, and returns on gold and oil are muted. High-yield bonds underperform Treasuries when the ISM Prices index dips back below 70, and the total return on investment-grade corporate struggles, but it beats Treasuries. Moreover, 3 of these 11 occurred during recessions (early 1980s, 2001, 2008-2009). Separately, there has been a tight relationship between the 12-month change in the 10-year Treasury yield and both the overall ISM, the New Orders and Prices component of the ISM in the past 25 years (Chart 12). Nonetheless, the relationship between the ISM Prices component and the 10-year Treasury has broken down since oil prices peaked in 2014. The 12-month jump in ISM Prices surge in 2016 was met with a decline in Treasury yields. Prior to that, a rise in Prices index was almost always accompanied by a move higher in bond yields. BCA's view is that the ISM manufacturing Composite will remain elevated (although not necessarily more than 60 in the months ahead), supporting our bullish stance on corporate sales and earnings. However, if we are wrong and the ISM dips below 60 and then down to 50, would that signal a downturn and concomitant selloff in risk assets? The ISM has a mixed track record as a leading indicator of recessions (Chart 13). Since 1948, the ISM has provided 9 false signals, using 3 consecutive months below 50 as the indication of an economic decline. Furthermore, 5 of the 9 examples occurred since 1985, as the U.S. economy became less reliant on manufacturing. In the 6 instances that the ISM warned of contractions, the average lead time was 4 months. In the 4 other economic slumps, the ISM moved and stayed below 50 for 3 consecutive months only after the start of recession. The lag averaged 4 months. This was the case in the 2007-2009 episode when the ISM did not send a recession signal until May 2008, 5 months after the official start of the downturn. Chart 1210 Year Treasury Vs. ISM Chart 13The Rocky Relationship Between ISM And Recessions Bottom Line: Elevated readings on ISM support BCA's view that profit growth will accelerate for a few more quarters while the recent rise in the ISM Prices index confirms the move higher in Treasury yields. Stay overweight stocks versus bonds and underweight duration. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Easier Fiscal, Tighter Money?," November 14, 2016. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Waiting For The Turn," June 26, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Still Waiting for Inflation, "August 14, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Shelter From the Storm," September 5, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report, "Global Debt Titanic Collides With Fed Iceberg?," February 2017. Available at bca.bcaresearch.com. Appendix: Table 1 Table 2 Table 3
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Go long industrials/short discretionary. Leading indicators of interest rates, relative sentiment, relative demand and relative exports all signal that industrials stocks will outperform their consumer discretionary peers. A price war is gripping airlines anew, and it will suck the air out of the industry. Recent Changes Long S&P Industrials/Short S&P Consumer Discretionary - Initiate this pair trade today. Table 1 Feature Tax relief euphoria propelled the S&P 500 to fresh all-time highs last week. While such exuberance has rekindled the "Trump trade" with small caps outshining mega caps and banks soaring (as a reminder we have a small cap size bias and are overweight financials/banks1), it will likely prove fleeting unless the tax bill becomes law. BCA's Geopolitical Strategy service believes that a tax bill passage is likely in Q1/2018.2 Were that to materialize, it would serve as a catalyst to further fuel the blow off phase in equities. Why? Empirical evidence suggests that easy fiscal policy outweighs the drag from Fed interest rate tightening. Filtering the post WWII era for periods of easing fiscal and tightening monetary policies during expansions is revealing. We define easy fiscal policy as increasing fiscal thrust (year-over-year change in cyclically-adjusted fiscal balance as a percentage of potential GDP, shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 1) and tight monetary policy as a rising fed funds rate. Chart 1Easy Fiscal + Tight Money = Buy SPX While this is a rare occurrence, it has clearly happened seven times since the mid-1950s (shaded areas, Chart 1). As a clarification, we omitted the brief periods in the early-1960s, early-1970s and twice in the early-1980s as they were very close to the end of those recessions and positively skewed the results. All iterations resulted in positive stock returns with the SPX rising on average by over 16%. Table 2 details all seven periods that have an average duration of 16 months. There are high odds that a tax bill enactment coupled with a potential infrastructure spending bill will more than cushion the blow from the Fed's interest rate hikes in 2018, and sustain the overshoot phase in equities. As we recently showed in our equity market indicator White Paper, the business cycle stays intact during Fed tightening cycles, and historically a peak in the fed funds rate presages a recession.3 Importantly, the highly cyclical part of the U.S. economy is humming. The latest ISM manufacturing survey showed that new orders are running 20% higher than inventories, with the headline number soaring to a 13 year high (third panel, Chart 2). Prices paid also spiked to above 70, signaling that commodity inflation is looming. And, were the capex revival to gain steam as most of the leading indicators we track suggest (see Chart 8 from the October 2nd Weekly Report), then late cyclicals will continue to benefit from end-demand resurgence. Table 2SPX Returns During Periods Of Loose##br## Fiscal And Tight Monetary Policy Chart 2It's Deep##br## Cyclicals' Time As a result, we reiterate last week's upgrade of the S&P industrials sector to overweight, and this week we add more deep cyclical exposure to our portfolio by initiating a market-neutral pair trade to benefit from this enticing macro backdrop. Industrials Will Outmuscle Consumer Discretionary In the past few weeks, we have tweaked our cyclical portfolio exposure by downgrading early-cyclical consumer discretionary stocks to a benchmark allocation and lifting the late cyclical industrials complex to overweight. In fact, a once-in-a-generation opportunity to buy industrials at the expense of discretionary stocks has surfaced, and we recommend a new long S&P industrials/short S&P consumer discretionary sector pair trade to exploit this tradable opportunity. Chart 3 shows that relative share prices recently bounced near the early-1970s all-time lows and a mini V-shaped recovery is taking root. The industrials/discretionary price ratio has been in a downtrend for the better part of the past decade and the most recent peak-to-trough collapse has been a 4 standard deviation move (Chart 3). Even a modest relative performance renormalization near the historical mean would translate into impressive returns. Chart 3Compelling Entry Point Four key drivers underpin our warming up to this late over early cyclical pair trade: interest rates, relative sentiment, relative demand and relative export backdrop. The Fed embarked on a fresh tightening interest rate cycle almost two years ago and is on track to lift the fed funds rate another 100bps by the end of 2018 according to the FOMC's median dot forecast. Interest rate-sensitive stocks suffer when the Fed tightens monetary policy, whereas deep cyclicals disproportionately benefit from accelerating economic growth. Chart 4 confirms that over the past four decades a rising fed funds rate has been synonymous with an increase in the relative share price ratio and vice versa. Chart 4Tight Money Is Good For Industrials But Weighs On Discretionary The framework we use on the interest rate front is that higher interest rates represent a sizable hindrance to consumer spending (top and second panel Chart 5). Not only does the price of housing-related credit rise in lockstep with fed hikes, but also auto and credit card interest rates, two major consumer loan categories, increase on the back of the Fed's tighter monetary backdrop. True, C&I loan pricing also suffers a setback, but capital goods producers can bypass banks and raise debt in the bond markets. In fact, this cycle, the global hunt for yield and unconventional monetary policies have suppressed interest rates to the benefit of corporate borrowers. One final relative advantage industrials outfits have this cycle is rising pricing power in the form of firming commodity prices (third panel, Chart 5), while wage growth/median income (a proxy for consumer pricing power) has been subpar. Taken together, higher interest rates and rising commodity prices should continue to underpin relative share price momentum (Chart 5). Relative sentiment readings also suggest that industrials manufacturers have the upper hand versus consumer discretionary companies (Chart 6). The overall ISM manufacturing survey is easily outpacing consumer confidence readings. Importantly, the ISM survey and most of the subcomponents are making multi-year highs, while both the University of Michigan's consumer sentiment survey and The Conference Board's consumer confidence reading peaked in early 2017. Chart 5Commodity Inflation Is A Boon For##br## Industrials But Bane For Discretionary Chart 6Manufacturing Flexing ##br##Its Muscles With regard to the relative demand landscape, a sustained capital expenditure upcycle is promising for capital goods producers (second panel, Chart 7), at a time when personal consumption expenditures (PCE) are anemic at best. Notably, real capital outlays have been rising at a faster clip than real PCE, signaling that the upward trajectory in relative forward EPS estimates is sustainable (middle panel, Chart 7). Our relative pricing power gauge has recently come out of its funk reflecting this improving relative demand backdrop. The implication is that a rerating phase is likely in the coming months (bottom panel, Chart 7). Finally, the relative export backdrop suggests that industrials come out on top of discretionary stocks (top panel, Chart 8). According to FactSet the S&P consumer discretionary sector's foreign revenue exposure stands at 24% of total sales, and it is roughly 60% higher for the S&P industrials sector at 38% of revenues.4 While the year-to-date breakdown in the greenback is stimulative for industrials exporters, it is, at the margin, restrictive for the more domestically oriented consumer discretionary companies (trade-weighted dollar shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 8). Our relative EPS growth models best capture all of these moving parts and suggest that the path of least resistance for relative profit growth is higher in the coming quarters (Chart 9). Chart 7Capex##br## Upcycle... Chart 8... And Export Markets Benefit Industrials##br## At The Expense Of Discretionary Chart 9Relative Profit Growth Models Also Say##br## Buy The Relative Share Price Ratio Adding up, all four key macro variables (interest rates, relative sentiment, relative demand and relative export exposure) signal that the time is ripe for a new industrials versus discretionary pair trade. Bottom Line: Initiate a long S&P industrials/short S&P consumer discretionary sector pair trade. Airlines Update: Mayday While we have turned positive on the broad industrials complex and remain constructive on most transports, we continue to recommend investors avoid the S&P airlines index. This decade has seen a huge recovery in consumer confidence, rising from the depths of the Great Recession. The consumer's revival has been matched by equally steep growth in airline passenger traffic (Chart 10). However, the resurgence in passenger demand has not had the expected uplift in pricing. Rather, the opposite has happened; consumers have not seen a sustainable price increase in years and airline pricing power has collapsed, even in the face of soaring jet fuel costs that eat into profits (Chart 11). The costly price war between the low cost carriers and the largely-restructured legacy airlines the industry is currently embroiled in explains deflating airfares (Chart 12). Chart 10More Passengers... Chart 11... But Higher Fuel Costs... Chart 12... And Price Concessions Crash Profits The industry has been here before, and recently too. 2015 was a tumultuous year that saw pricing collapse as the ultra-low cost carriers entered the traditional hubs, triggering a scramble for market share. Brave airline investors have been whipsawed as the industry recovered and then stumbled again earlier this year. From a profit perspective, airlines have been able to hide poor pricing with efficiency gains (Chart 13). Industry load factors have been steadily moving upward, though those gains appear to have plateaued at peak levels. The implication is that this current price war will hit profit margins and thus the bottom line worse than in the past (Chart 13). Expanding international air travel could provide some relief to the besieged legacy carriers as international airfares look to have pulled out of deflation (Chart 14). However, the sustainability of positive pricing is questionable as international no-frills carriers are gaining greater penetration and often have significantly lower cost structures. Once unheard of trans-Atlantic travel for below $200 is now widely available. Chart 13Masking Poor Pricing Backdrop Chart 14Analysts Ignore Positives At the same time as cash generation appears most threatened, the industry is in the midst of an expensive fleet renewal as airlines seek to replace declining prices and aging fleets with higher volume and more efficient aircraft. In fact, capex as a percentage of sales has nearly tripled since 2012. The result is predictable; the hard deleveraging work the industry put in over the course of this decade is being unwound (Chart 13). An increasingly geared balance sheet, combined with weakening margins should translate directly into a higher risk premium and lower valuation multiples. However, while multiples have fallen from the sky-high levels earlier this decade, they remain well above the lows of 2015-16 (Chart 14). This implies further downside risk should risk premiums expand as we expect. With sell-side analysts jumping on board the bear story, as evidenced by net forward earnings revisions falling off a cliff (Chart 14), this should probably happen sooner rather than later. Bottom Line: With no end in sight to the price war and outsized capacity additions likely to throw fuel on the fire, we think investors should stay away from the S&P airlines index. Accordingly, we reiterate our underweight recommendation. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5AIRL - DAL, LUV, AAL, UAL, ALK. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy & Global Alpha Sector Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report,"Girding For A Breakout?" dated May 1, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report,"Can Equities And Bonds Continue To Rally?" dated September 20, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see Chart 55 of BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, "White Paper: U.S. Equity Market Indicators (Part I)", dated August 7, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 https://www.factset.com/earningsinsight Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps and stay neutral growth over value.
Highlights Slowing global money growth, export orders, and a downgrade in earnings revisions of cyclical relative to defensive equities points to a mild slowdown in non-U.S. growth. This slowdown is not worrisome, but could become so if the U.S. dollar rallies significantly. This risk should be kept in mind by investors. Short AUD/USD at 0.79 ¢. EUR/USD is trading at a premium and is over-owned. Conditions are emerging for investors to upgrade their view of the Fed relative to the ECB. EUR/USD has downside risk. Feature Chart I-1Global Growth Is Booming The world economy is on a roll. Nearly all of the world's PMI indexes are in expansionary territory, suggesting we are experiencing a rare global synchronized expansion. A key bellwether of global trade, Korean exports, are surging at a 35% annual rate, confirming that the global economy is very strong (Chart I-1). When all looks great, it is the ideal time to wonder what could go wrong. At this point, the greatest risk to this global expansion may be the dollar. A strengthening dollar would tighten global financial conditions, especially for EM borrowers, and exacerbate the impact of yellow flags that have already emerged. Yellow Flags Investors are in an ebullient mood these days, and for good reason: global growth is strong, and global policy is still very accommodative, even if some central banks have begun removing support for their economies. However, three yellow flags have emerged that in our view warrant some caution. To be clear, these are not grave signs and we do not foresee either a U.S. or a global recession until late 2019 at the earliest. With this in mind, what are the worrying signs that investors should monitor right now? The first yellow flag comes from global money supply growth. Narrow money has decelerated from a 12% annual growth rate to 9% today. Historically, this has been a leading indicator of global industrial production, global export growth and commodity prices (Chart I-2). While the surge in money growth in 2016 and 2017 was a key reason behind the rebound in global economic activity, especially outside the U.S., its recent slowdown points to an end of the economic upswing, though admittedly not toward a cataclysm. The second yellow flag comes from the U.S. ISM release. While the general tone of the report remains extremely positive, the export component has been in a downtrend since June. The key determinant of export growth for any country tends to be the vigor of its trading partners. Hence, it is not surprising that softness in the export component of the U.S. ISM manufacturing survey tends to be associated with weakening global trade and industrial activity (Chart I-3). The third yellow flag comes from earnings revisions. The earnings revision ratios of cyclical relative to defensive equities in the U.S. and globally have sharply rolled over. While still in positive territory, this development has historically been an early signal that improvements in global growth metrics are ebbing, a signal being flashed today (Chart I-4). Chart I-2Money And Global Growth: ##br##From Tailwind To Headwind Chart I-3A Blemish In An Otherwise##br## Bright Picture Chart I-4EPS Revisions: Cyclicals Have Turned ##br##Vis-A-Vis Defensives Bottom Line: The global economy is experiencing a synchronized upswing, which has left investors in an ebullient mood. However, slowing global money growth, ebbing export sentiment and weakening earnings revisions for cyclical relative to defensive equities suggest this broad-based upswing has reached its zenith. While a mild deceleration is likely to materialize soon, these indicators constitute yellow flags, not red ones. Conditions are still not in place to expect a major global growth slowdown. The Dollar Holds The Key While the factors above point to a mild slowdown, they do not yet indicate a dearth of growth that could prompt panic among investors, especially in the EM space. For this scenario to become reality, another ingredient is needed. In our view, this ingredient is a strong dollar. To begin with, the relationship between global growth and the dollar is well known in the investor community. When global growth is strong and broad-based, the dollar depreciates; when global growth is weak, the dollar appreciates (Chart I-5). The U.S. is a relatively closed economy, and is less exposed to global growth developments than the euro area, Japan or commodities producers (Chart I-6). Thus, when the global economy is in an upswing, the U.S. garners a smaller dividend than the rest of the world. Conversely, when the global economy hits a soft patch, the U.S. suffers less. Chart I-5Strong Global Growth Coincident ##br##With A Weak Dollar Chart I-6The U.S. Is Less Exposed ##br##To Global Growth Factors But the chain of causation is not only from growth to the dollar. The trend in the dollar also affects the trend in global growth. This is because in aggregate, the world remains short the dollar. According to the BIS, there is $27 trillion dollars of foreign-currency liabilities in the world, $14 trillion of which is denominated in U.S. dollars, with an extremely large proportion issued by EM borrowers. When the dollar weakens, the cost of borrowing among companies and banks that finance themselves in USD decreases, incentivizing further borrowing. This eases global liquidity conditions and decreases the cost of financing global trade, leading to increased economic activity and profits as well as expanding global capex. Meanwhile, when the dollar rises, the balance sheet of those foreign firms and governments that have borrowed in U.S. dollars becomes increasingly illiquid, resulting in strong headwinds for additional borrowing, curtailing economic activity, profits and capex. This explains why the dollar and commodities prices, the latter being extremely sensitive to growth and global capex, have displayed such a strong negative relationship over different time periods (Chart I-7). Chart I-7Rising USD Equals Declining Liquidity And Declining Commodity Prices Thanks to these dynamics, the weakness in the dollar this year has been a major boost to growth for the global economy. As Chart I-8 illustrates, the large easing in EM financial conditions was indeed related to the U.S. dollar's weakness. Therefore, as growth momentum could be peaking, a period of renewed strength in the greenback might inflict further damage to a key buttress of EM growth. Moreover, this time around, Chinese policymakers are unlikely to come to the rescue of the global economy as they did in 2015 and 2016. Back then, China was experiencing a deflationary spiral: producer prices were contracting at a 6% annual pace, profits were in free fall and outflows were growing exponentially. The People's bank of China and the central government pulled all the stops, increasing lending and fiscal expenditures and tightening capital controls. Monetary conditions eased massively (Chart I-9). Chart I-8The Falling Dollar Supported Global Growth Chart I-9Tightening Chinese Monetary Conditions Last weekend, the PBoC announced targeted cuts to reserve requirement ratios for banks extending lending to small companies. According to our China Investment Strategy sister publication, this is not a major easing.1 Instead, these are targeted measures aimed at helping small firms that are currently dependent on the predatory lending rates available in the shadow banking sector. Meanwhile, access to credit by large state-owned enterprises and the real estate sector will continue to be slowly curtailed. The mutation of deflation into inflation and the recovery of profit growth imply that China does not currently need the same shot to the arm that it did in 2015 and 2016. Thus, it is unlikely the country will initiate another round of massive credit easing that will boost investment by SOEs and the construction sector, the two main sources of capex and commodities demand. In an environment where global money growth has rolled over and where China is unlikely to press on the gas pedal as hard as it did two years ago, a strong dollar would thus have a nefarious impact on global financial conditions, global growth, and, in turn, EM currencies and commodities currencies. While we remain very negative on the yen for now, the Japanese currency could benefit from a meaningful slowdown in international growth, as such a slowdown would likely exert downward pressure on global bond yields, including in the U.S. Obviously, the rally in the USD will have to be much more pronounced than what has been experienced in the past month before its negative impact on growth begins to be felt in bond yields and the yen. Thus, we remain long USD/JPY for now. The AUD could prove to be a key victim of the developments highlighted above. The AUD is highly levered to global growth and EM financial conditions. Moreover, it is now very expensive on a long-term basis, having overshot terms of trade by a very significant margin (Chart I-10). Adding to the vulnerability in the Aussie, the Australian economy has been incapable of generating any inflationary pressures. The output gap remains very deep, the level of underemployment is still at a 37-year high, and wages continue to hover near record lows, limiting the capacity of the Reserve Bank of Australia to tilt to a hawkish stance (Chart I-11). Yet, investors expect rates to be 42 basis points higher 12 months from now. Finally, speculators are currently very long the AUD. Thus, we will use any rebound above 0.79 to short the AUD/USD, setting a limit-sell at this level with a target at 0.73. Chart I-10The AUD Is Vulnerable Chart I-11Litle Inflationary Pressures In Australia Bottom Line: While the three yellow flags highlighted do not represent a terminal danger to global growth, a stronger dollar at the hands of tightening global financial conditions, especially in EM economies, would be a much bigger threat to the global economy. We do anticipate the dollar to strengthen over the coming 12 months, but it will take a significant move before the USD puts enough of a brake on global growth to hurt global yields. We therefore remain positive on the USD/JPY. However, with this risk lurking in the background, we are implementing a short position on the AUD, a currency that is both expensive and over-owned, and underpinned by an economy full of slack. An Update On EUR/USD We continue to expect some downside to EUR/USD over the remainder of the year. As we have already highlighted, the euro has greatly overshot its implied interest rate parity (IRP) relationships. Our intermediate-term time model - an enhanced IRP model accounting for short- and long-term real rate differentials, global risk aversion, commodities prices and the trend in the pair - shows that EUR/USD remains near its largest premium to fair value since 2009. Confirming this assessment, the euro has also overshot its equilibrium implied by the level of interest rates five years out (Chart I-12). Valuations offer some insight on the potential size of the euro move, but they offer very little information in terms of timing. Instead, we should rely on technical and macro considerations. On this front, we have already highlighted that speculators are currently net long the euro by the largest margin since 2011. Philosophically, we often look at the euro as the anti-dollar, a highly liquid inverse bet on the dollar. Since EUR/USD constitutes 57.6% of the DXY, a short bet on this dollar index and a long bet on the euro are similar wagers. Currently, the sum of both bets is at a level normally followed by sharp drops in EUR/USD, suggesting that euro buying is hitting exhaustion levels (Chart 13). Meanwhile, with investors having very few short bets on the euro, especially when compared to the large stock of short bets on the DXY, a short squeeze in favor of the USD could emerge if European data disappoints relative to the U.S. (Chart I-13, bottom panel). Chart I-12Downside In EUR/USD Chart I-13Tactical Risk To EUR/USD On the macro front, a few developments have caught our eye. We are entering the window where based on historical lags, the euro area's industrial production is likely to start feeling the pain of the common currency's previous strength (Chart I-14). Compounding this worry for euro longs, euro area earnings revisions are lagging those in the U.S. by the greatest margin since 2014, suggesting the euro's strength has sapped some of the euro area's vigor and is in the process of redistributing it to the U.S. economy. Historically, this has led to a period of weakness in EUR/USD (Chart I-15). Chart I-14The Strong Euro ##br##Will Soon Be Felt Chart I-15Falling Relative EPS Revisions ##br##Equals A Weaker EUR/USD Confirming this insight are relative financial conditions. Euro area financial conditions have been tightening relative to the U.S. since the beginning of 2016 - a move that has become especially pronounced this year. The euro area's inflation outperformance vis-à-vis the U.S. this year was first and foremost a reflection of the previous easing in relative European financial conditions (Chart I-16). Thanks to these strong relative inflation dynamics, investors have brought forward the first rate hike expected from the ECB, while simultaneously removing interest rate hikes out of the U.S. OIS curve. This move has been wildly euro bullish. However, the window of opportunity for this bet is closing; the tightening in European financial conditions now points to a reversal in relative inflation, with U.S. prices set to now take the lead over the euro area. This could force a repricing of the Fed relative to the ECB, implying that monetary divergences could once again play against EUR/USD. Catalonia is not a reason to be bearish on the euro. Marko Papic, BCA's Chief Political Strategist, argues that the northeastern region is unlikely to leave Spain.2 The vast majority of Catalonia still favors remaining part of Spain (Chart I-17). Moreover, the region has received immigrants from the rest of the country for many decades, reflecting its superior economic performance. As a result, only 31% of the population speaks Catalan as a first language. In aggregate, the independentists' victory last weekend only reflects a low turnout rate, as individuals who opposed leaving Spain stayed at home, like they did in 2014. Chart I-16The Fed Will Be Repriced ##br##Against The ECB Chart I-17Will Of The People: ##br##Catalonia Will Stay In Spain Bottom Line: The euro will exhibit downside risk in the coming months. EUR/USD is trading well above its fair value implied by its IRP relationship. Additionally, euro buying has hit nosebleed levels, and the dollar is unloved. Moreover, the euro's recent strength could begin to negatively affect growth, especially as European earnings revisions have collapsed versus the U.S. Finally, financial conditions point to a fall in euro area inflation relative to the U.S., highlighting the risk that the policy path for the Fed could be upgraded against that of the ECB. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, titled "On A Higher Note", dated October 5, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Is King Dollar Back?", dated October 4, 2017, and Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, titled "The Geopolitical Risks For The Equity Bull Market", dated May 14, 2014 at gps.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 U.S data has been strong this week: Markit and ISM Manufacturing PMIs beat expectations at 53.1 and 60.8 respectively; ISM Prices Paid rose sharply to 71.5 from 64.0; Markit Services and ISM Non-Manufacturing PMIs also beat expectations at 55.3 and 59.8 respectively; ADP employment change and continuing and initial jobless claims also came out better than expected; The DXY has rebounded meaningfully after a string of stronger data and growing hopes on the fiscal policy front recently. Bond markets have picked up on these developments, with the 10-year yield rising 30 basis points from its bottom last month. However, stronger U.S. inflation is needed in order for the greenback to meaningfully rally. Report Links: Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 European data has been mixed: The latest headline and core inflation readings for the euro area were weaker than expected, at 1.5% and 1.1% respectively; German retail sales also underperformed expectations, however, German unemployment rate decreased; Euro area manufacturing PMI also underperformed, while the services PMI outperformed; Euro area producer prices beat expectations, coming in at 2.5%. With U.S. data outperforming, the euro has softened versus the greenback, but has not displayed similar movements against other currencies. While it is true that European inflation is higher than a year ago, it is still not near the ECB's target. A stronger euro would further restrict inflationary pressures, which would be a cause for concern for ECB officials. Report Links: Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Japanese data has been mixed the past weeks: The jobs/applicants ratio came in at 1.52, underperforming expectations and decreasing from the previous month. Additionally, retail trade and overall housing spending yearly growth both disappointed, coming in at 1.7% and 0.6% respectively. However, on the bright side, Nikkei Manufacturing PMI outperformed expectations, coming in at 52.9. Overall, we continue to be bullish on USD/JPY, as yields in the U.S. will continue to rise vis-à-vis Japanese ones. Economic data has been tepid, and wages continue to contract or remain flat, even if some underlying pressures are slowly emerging. Furthermore we expect that the BoJ will continues its extreme measures of yield curve targeting in order to spur inflation expectations. Nevertheless, the yen could appreciate against carry currencies like the AUD or NZD if Chinese monetary conditions become tight enough. Report Links: Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. has been mixed: Markit services PMI outperformed expectations coming in at 53.6, and increasing from last month's reading However, Markit manufacturing PMI came in under expectations at 55.9, and decreased from last month. Moreover Construction PMI unperformed, coming in at 48.1, the lowest level since July 2016. We would lean against any further strength of the pound against the U.S. dollar. The risks associated with Brexit still looms in the background, while data has been mixed, particularly when it comes to consumption and the housing market. Additionally, the market has already fully priced a rate hike by December. Thus, it seems that any good news for the pound are already in the price, as the BoE certainly has little incentives to follow a hawkish policy beyond removing its post-Brexit emergency measures. Report Links: Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Australian data was mixed: AiG Performance of Manufacturing Index decreased to 54.2 from 59.8; TD Securities Inflation came in at 2.5%, down from 2.6%; HIA New Home Sales increased by 9.1% MoM in August, up from the 15.4% contraction in July; Building permits are still contracting 15.5% annually, but better than the expected 16.2% contraction. This week, the RBA decided to leave rates unchanged at 1.5%. The monetary policy statement focused on the lack of wage pressures in the Australian economy and on the higher exchange rate, which is "expected to contribute to continued subdued price pressures in the economy", as well as "weighing on the outlook for output and employment", stating further that "an appreciating exchange rate would be expected to result in a slower pick-up in economic activity and inflation than currently forecast." Report Links: Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Last week the RBNZ decided to leave rates unchanged at 1.75%. The RBNZ continued with its dovish slant, arguing that monetary policy will remain accommodative for a considerable period. An important development, however, is that the central bank toned down its cautious tone about the kiwi. In previous instances, the RBNZ had been very aggressive in stating that the NZD was too expensive and an adjustment was needed. However, in its most recent statement the RBNZ was much less aggressive in its rhetoric, highlighting the fall in the NZD. Overall, we believe that the NZD will continue to have upside against the AUD, as domestic inflationary pressures are much stronger in New Zealand than in Australia. Meanwhile, global developments, such as a downturn in the Chinese industrial cycle would affect Australia much more than New Zealand. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Canadian data was mixed: Industrial product price grew at a 0.3% monthly pace, less than the expected 0.5%; Raw materials increased by 1%, above the expected 0.3%; GDP stagnated in July on a monthly basis, below the expected 0.1% growth; Merchandise trade slipped even further into a deficit from CAD 2.6 bn to CAD 3.41 bn. Furthermore, Governor Poloz's September 27 speech sent the CAD tumbling, stating that "monetary policy will be particularly data dependent" and that it could be "surprised in either direction". Probability of a hike in October and December declined from 48% to 23%, and 75% to 63%, respectively. While growth is robust, inflation has been declining since January, which may be a cautious sign for the BoC. Report Links: Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Data in Switzerland has outperformed to the upside: The KOF Leading Indicator outperformed expectations, coming in at 105.8 and increasing from last month's reading. The SVME Purchasing Manager's Index also outperformed, coming in at 61.7 Finally, headline inflation also outperformed expectations, with a reading of 0.7%, increasing from 0.5% on August. This recent strength in the Swiss economy is most likely reflective of the sharp appreciation that EUR/CHF has experienced in recent months. However, despite the increase in inflation, the Swiss economy is still too weak for the SNB to stop intervening in the foreign exchange market or to remove their ultra-dovish monetary measures. Once we see both headline and core inflation climb closer to their historical averages, we will reassess this view. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Data in Norway has been mixed: Register unemployment came in line with expectations at 2.5%, decreasing from last month's 2.7% reading. However the credit growth issued by national institutions in Norway, decreased since last month, coming in at 5.6%. Finally, both retail sales and real retail sales yearly growth came below expectations, coming in at -0.6% and 0.2% respectively. These few data points are interesting given that both retail and real retail sales growth dipped into contractionary territory. This shows that the Norwegian economy is still too weak to sustain a higher krone and higher rates. For this reason we continue to be bullish on USD/NOK. This cross is more correlated with rate differentials than with oil. Thus even if oil continues to rise, rising rates in the U.S. will still put upward pressure on USD/NOK. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 The 11-year ruling governor of the world's oldest central bank, Stefan Ingves, will now sit at the helm of the Riksbank for five more years, until 31 December 2022. While Sweden's economy is still performing above par with CPIF at 2.3%, our bullish case for the SEK is under threat by the extension of the governor's term, who introduced negative interest rates to Sweden and who is consistently vigilant over the SEK's appreciation, even threatening intervention if needed. EUR/SEK appreciated 0.6% on the news, but has since given up some those gains as economic data in Sweden rebounded sharply. The Riksbank will still likely hike, but the timing is now in question. It is likely that the tightening cycle will now coincide with the ECB's tapering program, which will limit the SEK's appreciation for now. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Closed Trades
Highlights Economic Outlook: Global growth will stay strong over the next 12 months, with the U.S. surprising on the upside. Unfortunately, the global economy will succumb to a recession in 2019. Stagflation will become a major problem in the 2020s. Portfolio Strategy: We are sticking with our pro-risk stance for the time being, but are trimming our overweight recommendations to global equities and high-yield credit. Fixed Income: Maintain below benchmark duration exposure over the next 12 months. Underweight U.S., euro area, and Canadian government bonds; stay neutral the U.K., Australia, and New Zealand; overweight Japan. Equities: Favor cyclicals over defensives, but look to turn outright bearish on stocks late next year. For now, stay overweight the euro area and Japan relative to the U.S. in local-currency terms. In the EM universe, Chinese H-shares will outperform. Currencies and Commodities: While the recent dollar rebound has further to run, oil-sensitive currencies and the yuan will hold their ground against the greenback. It is too early to buy gold. Feature I. Global Macro Outlook: Reflation, Recession, And Stagflation The economic outlook over the coming years can be summarized in three words: reflation, recession, and stagflation. Reflation A Broad-Based Recovery Global growth is firing on all cylinders. The OECD estimates that all 46 of the economies that it tracks will see positive growth this year, the first time this has happened since 2007. Most leading economic indicators remain upbeat (Chart 1). This has left analysts scrambling to revise up their global GDP growth forecasts (Chart 2). Chart 1Most Leading Economic Indicators Remain Upbeat Chart 2Global Growth Has Accelerated The acceleration in global growth has occurred against the backdrop of tame inflation, which has allowed most central banks to keep interest rates at exceptionally low levels. Not surprisingly, risk assets have reacted positively. These goldilocks conditions should remain in place for the next 12 months. While most economies are growing at an above-trend pace, there is still plenty of spare capacity around the world. This means that inflation in countries such as the U.S. - where the labor market has returned to full employment - is likely to rise only gradually, as excess demand is satiated through higher imports. Such a redistribution of demand from countries with low levels of spare capacity to those with high levels is a win-win outcome for the global economy. Recession Running Out Of Room Unfortunately, all good things must come to an end. Weak productivity growth across most of the world is likely to cause bottlenecks to emerge over time, and this will cause inflation to move higher (Chart 3). Output gaps in the main developed economies would actually be higher today than at the height of the Great Recession had potential GDP grown at the rate the IMF projected back in 2008 (Chart 4). This is a testament to just how exceptionally weak potential growth has been. Chart 3Productivity Growth Has Slowed Across The Globe Chart 4Weak Supply Growth Has Narrowed Output Gaps U.S. growth will surprise to the upside over the next 12 months, leading to an unwelcome burst of inflation in late 2018 or early 2019. Financial conditions have eased sharply this year thanks to lower bond yields, narrower credit spreads, a weaker dollar, and a surging stock market. Changes in financial conditions lead growth by around 6-to-9 months, implying that U.S. growth could reach 3% early next year (Chart 5). This could take the unemployment rate down to 3.5% by end-2018, more than a full point below the Fed's estimate of full employment and even lower than the 2008 low of 3.8%. The unemployment rate could fall even further if Congress succeeds in passing legislation to cut taxes, as we expect it will. Our geopolitical team estimates that the GOP proposal would reduce federal revenues by $1.1-to-$1.2 trillion over ten years, or about 0.5% of GDP.1 In order to appease moderates, the final bill is likely to scale back the size of the tax cuts and shift more of the benefits to middle class households. Under the current proposal, the top 1% of taxpayers would receive 50% of the tax benefits (Chart 6). Our best bet is that the legislation will be enshrined into law in early 2018. Chart 5Easier Financial Conditions Will Boost U.S. Growth Chart 6Republican Tax Would Disproportionately Benefit The Top 1% Welcome To The Steep Side Of The Phillips Curve The so-called Phillips curve, which depicts the relationship between unemployment and inflation, tends to become quite steep once unemployment falls to very low levels (Chart 7). It is easy to see why: When spare capacity is high, a modest decline in slack will still leave many workers idle. In such a setting, inflation is unlikely to rise. However, once the output gap is fully closed, any further decline in slack will cause bottlenecks to emerge, pushing wages and prices higher. The 1960s provide a useful lesson in that regard. Just like today, inflation hovered below 2% during the first half of that decade, even though unemployment was trending downward over this period. To most observers back then, the Phillips curve would have also seemed defunct. However, once the unemployment rate fell below 4%, core inflation took off, rising from 1.5% in early 1966 to nearly 4% in 1967 (Chart 8). The kink in the Phillips curve had been reached. Inflation ultimately made its way to 6% in 1970, four years before the first oil shock struck. Chart 7U.S. Economy Has Moved Into The 'Steep' Side Of The Phillips Curve Chart 8Inflation In The 1960s Took Off Once The Unemployment Rate Fell Below 4% Many commentators have questioned the relevance of the sixties template on the grounds that the U.S. economy was less open to the rest of the world back then, trade unions had greater bargaining power, inflation expectations were not as well anchored, and the deflationary effects of new technologies were not as pervasive. We discussed these arguments in a report published earlier this month, concluding that they are not nearly as persuasive as one might think.2 The Difficulty Of Achieving A Soft Landing Rising inflation will compel the Fed to hike rates aggressively starting late next year in order to push the unemployment rate back towards NAIRU. A turn towards hawkishness is especially likely if Janet Yellen is replaced by someone such as former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh, whom betting markets now think has a 40% chance of becoming the next Fed chair (Chart 9). The problem for whoever ends up running the Fed is that it is very difficult to raise the unemployment rate by just a little bit. Modern economies are subject to massive feedback loops. When unemployment begins rising, households lose confidence and reduce spending. This prompts firms to slow hiring, leading to even less spending. The U.S. has never averted a recession in the post-war era whenever the unemployment rate has increased by more than one-third of a percentage point (Chart 10). Chart 9Who Will The Next Fed Chair Be? Chart 10Even A Small Uptick In The Unemployment Rate Is Bad News For The Business Cycle Lofty valuations are likely to exacerbate the adverse feedback loop described above during the next downturn. As growth slows, risk asset prices will tumble. This will cause business investment spending to dry up. Given America's dominant role in global financial markets, the U.S. recession will spread like wildfire to the rest of the world. Stagflation The Doves Reassert Control The next recession will probably be more painful for Wall Street than for Main Street. Fed-induced downturns tend to be swift but short-lived. The subsequent recoveries are usually V-shaped, rather than the elongated U-shaped recoveries that follow financial crises. Nevertheless, central banks around the world will undoubtedly start slashing rates again, perhaps even restarting their QE programs. Traumatized by the Great Recession, central bankers will overreact. The hawks will be blamed for the recession and forced to turn tail. The doves will reassert control. Fiscal policy will be significantly eased. This will be particularly the case if the next recession coincides with Trump's re-election campaign, brewing populism in Europe, and the spectre of military conflict in a variety of hotspots around the planet. Structural Forces Will Boost Inflation Meanwhile, millions of baby boomers will be in the process of leaving the workforce. This will lead to slower income growth, but not to slower spending growth - spending actually rises late in life due to spiraling health care costs (Chart 11). An increase in spending relative to income tends to push up prices. A recent IMF research report estimated that population aging has been highly deflationary over the past few decades, but will be very inflationary over the coming years (Chart 12). Chart 11Savings Over The Life Cycle Chart 12Demographic Shifts: From Highly Deflationary To Highly Inflationary All this suggests that the dip in inflation during the next recession will be fleeting. As the recovery from the shallow recession unfolds, inflation will reaccelerate. Of course, at that point, central banks could step in to aggressively quell inflationary pressures. However, they are unlikely to do so. After the next recession-induced burst of fiscal stimulus, debt levels will be even higher than they are now. The temptation to inflate away this debt will intensify. And, in an environment of anemic real potential GDP growth, the means to generate inflation will become available: Central banks will simply need to keep rates below their "neutral" level. Central bankers will rationalize their actions on the grounds that higher inflation will allow them to bring real interest rates deeper into negative territory in the event of another economic downturn. A growing chorus of eminent economists has begun to argue that a 2% inflation target is too low. For example, just this week, Larry Summers stated that "I think we probably need to adjust our monetary policy framework ... to [one] that provides for higher nominal rates during normal times, so there's more room to cut rates during downturns."3 II. Financial Markets As with the economic outlook, the three words reflation, recession, and stagflation guide our views of where financial markets are heading over the coming years. We continue to maintain a pro-risk stance, but are trimming our overweight recommendation to equities and high-yield credit due to the fact that valuations have gotten stretched and we are entering the last innings of the business-cycle expansion (Table 1). Table 1BCA's Tactical Global Asset Allocation Recommendations* Equities Sticking With Bullish ... For Now Recessions and bear markets tend to go hand-in-hand (Chart 13). None of our recession timing indicators are warning of an imminent downturn, suggesting that the cyclical global equity bull market has further room to run (Chart 14). Chart 13Recessions And Bear Markets Usually Overlap Chart 14AThis Business Cycle Has Further To Run Chart 14BThis Business Cycle Has Further To Run Strong growth in corporate earnings continues to underpin the rally in equities. The MSCI All-Country World index has increased by 11.9% in the first 9 months of the year, only slightly more than the 9.1% gain in earnings. As a result, the forward P/E ratio has only risen from 15.7 at the start of the year to 16.1 (Table 2). Table 2Earnings-Backed Price Appreciation Favor Cyclicals Over Defensives Above-trend global growth should boost profits over the next 12 months. We favor cyclical sectors over defensives, and are expressing this view through our long global industrial stocks/short utilities trade recommendation. The trade is up 0.9% since we initiated it last Friday and up 2.3% since I previewed it at BCA's annual New York Investment Conference earlier the same week. Capital spending tends to accelerate in the mature phase of business-cycle expansions, as a growing number of firms realize that they have insufficient capacity to meet rising demand. Our model predicts that global capex will grow at the fastest pace in six years (Chart 15). This should benefit industrial stocks. On the flipside, rising global yields will hurt rate-sensitive utilities (Chart 16). Chart 15Global Capex On The Upswing Chart 16Higher Bond Yields Will Hurt Utilities Financials should also outperform. Banks, in particular, will benefit from steeper yield curves, faster credit growth, and ongoing declines in nonperforming loans. Energy stocks are also attractive. As discussed below, we continue to maintain a generally upbeat view on the direction of oil prices. Prefer DM Over EM, Europe And Japan Over The U.S. While it is a close call, we see more upside for DM than EM stocks, as the former are less vulnerable to a dollar rebound and an increasingly hawkish Fed. Emerging market equities have had a good run over the past year, and are due for a breather. Our favorite EM equity idea for the fourth quarter is to be long Chinese H-shares. H-shares are heavily tilted toward financials and deep cyclicals, two sectors that we like. They also trade at a mere seven-times forward earnings and one-times book value (Chart 17). Within the DM space, European and Japanese equities should outperform U.S. stocks in currency-hedged terms. The sector composition of both the European and Japanese market is tilted toward stocks that will gain the most from strong global growth and increased capital spending. As our European strategists have documented, the European stock market is dominated by large multinationals whose fortunes are tied more to the global economy than to domestic prospects. This is largely true for the Japanese stock market as well. If our prediction for a somewhat weaker euro and yen comes to pass, profits in both regions will benefit from the currency translation effect. Valuations in Europe and Japan are also generally more attractive than in the U.S, even if one adjusts for different sector weights (Chart 18). Chart 17Chinese H-Shares: A Valuation Snapshot Chart 18U.S. Stocks Look Pricey Small Cap Value Trumps Large Cap Growth Style-wise, we prefer small cap value over large cap growth. Value stocks generally do better in environments where cyclicals are outperforming defensives, while small caps tend to be high-beta bets on global growth (Chart 19). U.S. small caps will disproportionately benefit from cuts to statutory corporate taxes, since smaller companies typically have less ability to game the tax code in their favor. Timing The Next Bear Market As one looks beyond the next 12 months, the skies begin to darken for global equities. The stock market usually sniffs out recessions before they happen, but the lead time is quite variable and generally not that long (Table 3). For example, the S&P 500 peaked only two months before the start of the Great Recession in December 2007. Chart 19Favor Cyclicals And Value Plays Table 3Stocks And Recessions: Case-By-Case Chart 20Stagflation Was Devastating For Stocks Stagflation Is Not A Stock-Friendly Environment If the next recession begins in the second half of 2019, global equities will probably peak earlier that year or in late 2018. Given the starting point for valuations, U.S. equities are likely to fall 20%-to-30% peak-to-trough. While other global bourses are generally not as expensive, their higher-beta nature means that they will probably face similar if not worse declines. The fact that correlations tend to rise during risk-off episodes will only add to the bloodshed. Stocks And Stagflation If the experience of the 1970s is any guide, equities perform poorly in stagflationary environments (Chart 20). Investors tend to see stocks as a riskier substitute for bonds. When nominal bond yields rise, the dividend yield offered by stocks becomes less attractive. In theory, the increase in the nominal value of corporate net worth resulting from higher inflation should generate enough capital gains over time to compensate for the wider gap between dividend yields and bond yields. In practice, due to "money illusion" and other considerations, that does not fully occur, requiring that stocks become cheaper so that their expected return can rise. The Long-Term Outlook For Profit Margins A complicating factor going into the next decade will be what happens to profit margins. S&P 500 operating margins are close to their all-time highs (Chart 21). While margins will undoubtedly fall during the next recession, their subsequent recovery is likely to be encumbered by a number of shifting structural forces. A slew of labor-saving technological innovations depressed labor's share of income over the past few decades. So did the entry of over one billion new workers into the global labor force following the collapse of the Berlin Wall and China's transition to a capitalist economy. The fixation of central banks on bringing down inflation may have led to higher unemployment than what would otherwise have been the case, thereby undermining the bargaining power of workers. All this may change during the next decade. China's labor force has peaked and is on track to decline by over 400 million workers by the end of the century - a larger decline than the entire U.S. population (Chart 22). A shift towards persistently more expansionary monetary policy could also keep the labor market fairly tight. Chart 21U.S. Profit Margins Are Close To All-Time Highs Chart 22China On Course To Lose More Than 400 Million Workers Technological innovation will persist, but the firms that benefit from it are likely to attract more scrutiny from regulators. Republican voters - the traditional defenders of corporate America's God-given right to make a buck - are growing increasingly wary of big business. Wall Street, Silicon Valley, and the rest of the corporate establishment tend to be liberal on social issues and conservative on economic ones. Very few voters actually share this configuration of views (Chart 23). The Democratic Party's "Better Deal" moves it to the left on many economic issues. This runs the risk of leaving the U.S. without any major party actively pushing a pro-business agenda. That can't be good for profit margins. Bottom Line: Investors should stay overweight global equities, but trim exposure from moderate overweight to small overweight due to rising business-cycle risk, and look to get outright bearish late next year. The long-term outlook for equities is poor, especially in the U.S. where valuations are highly stretched. Chart 24 presents a stylized sketch of how we think the major stock market indices will evolve over the coming years. Chart 23An Absence Of Libertarians Chart 24Market Outlook: Equities Fixed Income Above-trend GDP growth and rising inflation are likely to push up long-term bond yields in most economies over the next few quarters, as flagged by our Central Bank Monitors (Chart 25). Bond yields will fall during the next recession and then begin to inexorably rise higher as stagflationary forces intensify (Chart 26). Looking out over the next 12 months, our regional allocation recommendations are as follows: Chart 25Our Central Bank Monitors Point To Growing Pressures To Tighten Chart 26Market Outlook: Bonds Underweight The U.S., Euro Area, And Canada Chart 27Canada Enjoys Robust Growth We remain underweight U.S. Treasurys in a global fixed-income portfolio. The market is pricing in only 44 basis points in Fed hikes between now and the end of next year, well below the 100 basis points of hikes implied by the dots in the Summary of Economic Projections. The U.S. yield curve has flattened since the start of the year. This should change over the next 12 months, as inflation expectations rebound from currently depressed levels. The yield curve in the euro area should steepen more than in the U.S., since the ECB has pledged not to raise rates until well after its asset purchase program is complete - something that is unlikely to happen until the end of next year. This implies that the 2-year spread between the two regions will widen in favor of the U.S., which should be bullish for the dollar. Canadian bond yields are likely to rise further (Chart 27). The unemployment rate has fallen to a nine-year low and the Bank of Canada expects the output gap to be fully closed by the end of this year. The economy grew by 3.7% year-over-year in the second quarter, well above the BoC's estimate of potential real GDP growth of 1.5%. The Bank's most recent Business Outlook Survey points to continued robust growth ahead. The bubbly housing market remains a concern, but delaying withdrawal of monetary accommodation risks exacerbating the problem. Neutral On Gilts And Aussie And Kiwi Bonds In contrast to most other developed economies, leading indicators point to slower U.K. growth in the months ahead (Chart 28). This undoubtedly reflects the ongoing uncertainty over Brexit negotiations, which are likely to drag on for quite some time. Core inflation has surged to 2.7% on the back of the sharp depreciation of the pound, but market expectations suggest that it is about to roll over. Nevertheless, with 10-year gilts fetching just 1.35%, the downside for yields is limited. The cheap pound should also prop up exports, partly offsetting the impact of diminished market access to the rest of the EU. The unemployment rate stands at 4.3%, slightly below the Bank of England's estimate of NAIRU. One way or another, the uncertainty over Brexit will fade, allowing gilt yields to move higher. As with gilts, the outlook for Australian and New Zealand bonds is mixed. Strong global growth should boost commodity prices. This will help the Australian economy. The unemployment rate in Australia has fallen to 5.6%, but involuntary part-time employment is high and wage growth has been stagnant. Industrial capacity utilization remains low, as reflected in a fairly large output gap (Chart 29). The market expects the RBA to deliver 38 basis points in rate hikes over the next 12 months. We think that's about right. New Zealand's 10-year yield stands at a relatively generous 2.96%, which makes it difficult to be too bearish on kiwi bonds. However, we do not see much scope for yields to fall from current levels. Nominal GDP is growing at over 5% and retail sales are expanding at nearly 7% (Chart 30). The terms of trade have risen to their highest level since the 1970s. The output gap is now fully closed and core inflation is edging higher. Despite this good news, the policy rate remains at a record low of 1.75%. We concur with market expectations that the RBNZ will start raising rates next year. Chart 28U.K. Growth Is Slowing Chart 29There Is Still Slack In The Australian Economy Chart 30New Zealand: Upbeat Indicators Overweight JGBs CPI swaps predict that inflation in Japan will average only 0.5% over the next twenty years. As we argued last week, this is far too low.4 The secular drivers of deflation are fading and inflation will begin to surprise to the upside over the coming years (Chart 31). However, the path between here and there will be a choppy one. Considering that deflationary expectations remain deeply entrenched, the Bank of Japan is unlikely to abandon its yield curve targeting regime for at least the next few years. As government bond yields rise elsewhere in the world, 10-year JGBs will be the default winners. Investors thinking of going short Japanese government bonds should focus on 20-year or 30-year maturities, which are not subject to the BoJ's cap. Credit: Still Overweight, But Trimming Back Exposure High-yield credit spreads have fallen back near their post-recession lows after widening in the wake of the global manufacturing recession (Chart 32). We see little scope for further spread compression. Our U.S. Corporate Health Monitor remains in deteriorating territory (Chart 33), and higher Treasury yields will put downward pressure on corporate bond prices even if spreads remain constant. Nevertheless, the default-adjusted spread on U.S. high-yield debt of 212 basis points is still large enough to warrant a modest overweight to credit, especially since banks have started to loosen lending standards again. Chart 31Japan: Fading Deflationary Forces Chart 32High-Yield Spreads Have Narrowed Chart 33U.S. Corporate Health Continues To Deteriorate Our Global Fixed Income Strategists prefer U.S. over European credit, given that spreads are lower in Europe, and the tapering of ECB asset purchases could reduce the demand for spread product. Currencies And Commodities The Dollar: Comeback Kid? Charts 34 and 35 show our expectations about the future path of the major currencies and commodities. Chart 34Market Outlook: Currencies Chart 35Market Outlook: Commodities BCA's Global Investment Strategy service went long the dollar in October 2014. We reiterated our bullish stance before the U.S. presidential elections, controversially arguing that "Trump Will Win And The Dollar Will Rally."5 Unfortunately, we remained long the dollar over the course of this year, which turned out to be a mistake. Strong growth abroad, weaker-than-expected inflation readings in the U.S., and the fizzling of the "Trump Trade" all contributed to dollar weakness. Technicals also played a role. Sentiment was extremely bullish towards the dollar at the start of the year, but extremely bearish towards the euro (Chart 36). The reversal of these technical trends helps explain why the euro appreciated a lot more than what one would have expected based simply on changes in interest rate differentials (Chart 37). Chart 36Euro: Long Positions Are Getting Stretched Chart 37The Euro Has Overshot Interest Rate Spreads Of course, if the spread between U.S. and euro area interest rates continues to narrow, it is likely that EUR/USD will strengthen. We are skeptical that it will. For one thing, financial conditions have eased sharply in the U.S. since the start of the year, but have tightened in the euro area (Chart 38). This suggests that U.S. growth will surprise on the upside whereas euro area growth could begin to disappoint. Chart 38U.S. Versus Euro Area Diverging Financial Conditions The five-year, five-year forward OIS spread between the two regions stands at 87 basis points in nominal terms, and 25 basis points in real terms. The five-year forward spread is even lower if one calculates a GDP-weighted bond yield for the euro area rather than looking at the expected path of interbank rates. Such a small spread is inconsistent with the fact that the neutral rate is substantially higher in the U.S.6 We expect EUR/USD to fall to $1.15 by the end of 2017, and potentially decline further in 2018 as the Fed picks up the pace of rate hikes. The dollar is also likely to strengthen against the yen, as Treasury yields rise relative to JGB yields. We see less downside for the British pound and the Swedish krona against the greenback. This is reflected in our long GBP/EUR and long SEK/CHF trade recommendations, both of which remain in the black. Upside For Oil-Sensitive Currencies Our energy strategists still see further upside for crude oil prices, owing to favorable supply and demand conditions. They point to the fact that official forecasts by the EIA have consistently underestimated oil demand. They also note that compliance with OPEC 2.0 production cuts has been remarkably good, and that estimates of how much new shale output will hit the market over the next 12 months are too optimistic. Additionally, they believe that the decline in production from conventional oil fields around the world - especially offshore fields, where there has been a dearth of new investment in recent years - could be larger than expected.7 Geopolitical risks in Iraq, Libya, and Venezuela could also adversely affect supply. Firmer demand and lackluster supply will lead to further drawdowns in OECD oil inventories, which should be supportive of prices (Chart 39). We recently took profits of 13.8% on our recommendation to go long the December-2017 Brent oil futures contract, but are maintaining exposure to oil through our long CAD/EUR and RUB/EUR positions, as well as through our bias towards cyclical equities. Resilient Chinese Economy Should Support Metal Prices And The RMB Recent Chinese data have been on the soft side, giving rise to fears that the economy is heading towards a major slowdown. We are more optimistic. While growth has clearly slowed since the start of the year, it remains at an above-trend pace, as evidenced by numerous real-time measures of economic activity (Chart 40). Chart 39Falling Oil Inventories Should Lead To Higher Crude Prices Chart 40Chinese Economy: No Need To Be Pessimistic Even the housing market has managed to stay resilient, despite widespread predictions of imminent doom (Chart 41). The share of households planning to buy a new home remains close to all-time highs. The amount of land purchased by developers - a good leading indicator for housing starts - is accelerating. Reflecting these developments, property stocks are surging. Financial conditions have tightened, but so far this has largely bypassed the real economy. In fact, long-term bank lending to nonfinancial institutions has accelerated since the start of the year (Chart 42). The recently announced cuts to reserve requirements for small business loans should facilitate this trend. Chart 41Chinese Housing Market Remains Resilient Chart 42Credit To Real Economy And Profit Rebound Bode Well For Capex Meanwhile, industrial profits have rebounded, as rampant producer price deflation last year has given way to modest price gains this year. Increased retained earnings will give Chinese companies the wherewithal to spend more on capital equipment. A recovery in global trade should also help stoke export growth. (Chart 43). Despite strengthening this year, our indicators suggest the yuan is still in undervalued territory (Chart 44). Buoyant economic growth should alleviate capital flight and reduce the pressure on the authorities to engineer a further depreciation of the currency. This, in turn, should help support metal prices and other EM currencies, even in a setting where the dollar remains well bid. Chart 43Positive Global Trade Momentum: A Tailwind For Chinese Exports Chart 44The Chinese Yuan Is Undervalued Chart 45Gold: Waiting For Drivers Of Sustained Price Appreciation Buy Gold ... But Not Yet Lastly, a few words on gold. Gold does well in situations where real rates are falling and the dollar is weakening (Chart 45). That's not the environment we find ourselves in today. Gold will have its day in the sun, but probably not before the stagflationary era begins in earnest after the next recession. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 This revenue loss is measured against a baseline where a number of tax breaks, which are currently set to expire, are extended. Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Is King Dollar Back?" dated October 4, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Is The Phillips Curve Dead Or Dormant?" dated September 22, 2017. 3 Summers, Lawrence, H. (@LHSummers). "Great piece by @jasonfurman in today's @WSJ: The U.S. can no longer afford deficit-increasing tax cuts." 01 Oct 2017. Tweet. 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Three Tantalizing Trades," dated September 29, 2017. 5 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "Three (New) Controversial Calls," dated September 30, 2016. 6 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Central Bank Showdown," dated September 8, 2017. 7 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy, "OPEC 2.0 Will Extend Cuts to June 2018," dated September 21, 2017. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades