Canada
Dear Clients, In addition to this Weekly Report, you will also be getting a Special Report authored by some of our top strategists on global growth. The manufacturing recession that began in early 2018 has lasted longer than most expected. The risk is that this is an additional end-of-cycle indicator, with important ramifications for the U.S. dollar. The dollar tends to stage meaningful rallies in recessions. In this week’s publication, we highlight some of the key indicators we are watching for justification on maintaining a pro-cyclical stance, but the internal debate from the Special Report highlights how delicate the balance of forces for this stance are. A fortnight ago we suggested a few portfolio hedges, and recommend maintaining tight stops on all positions until September. Next week, we will be sending you a Special Report on gold, from our colleagues in the Commodity & Energy Strategy team. In the interim, I will be learning from our clients in Latin America about some of the forces currently shaping global FX markets. I will report back with my findings in a few weeks. Kind Regards, Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist Highlights There is very scant evidence that global growth is bottoming. That said, it is usually darkest before dawn. A few key indicators are beginning to flash amber, which we will continue to closely monitor. The deceleration phase this cycle has been as prolonged as others, warning that the rebound could also be V-shaped. The AUD/JPY cross will be a very useful barometer. Stay long a basket of petrocurrencies versus the euro and short USD/JPY. Feature One of the most cyclical developed-market indices is the Japanese Nikkei (Table I-1).1 Almost 60% of all sectors are concentrated in just three: consumer discretionary, information technology and industrials. Boasting a wide spectrum of global robotic, automotive and construction machinery giants, Japanese companies sit at the epicenter of the global manufacturing supply chain. As such, it is very telling when Japanese share prices – which track global bond yields very closely – appear to be making a tentative bottom (Chart I-1). On the currency front, a lower greenback has also tended to be a very useful confirmation signal that we are entering a reflationary window. A slowing global economy on the back of deteriorating trade is positive for the greenback. As a reserve and counter-cyclical currency, the dollar has tended to rise during times of capital flight. On the other hand, a dovish Federal Reserve knocks down U.S. interest rate expectations relative to the rest of the world. This has historically been bearish for the dollar, and positive for global growth (Chart I-2). More importantly, even if the Fed does not proceed to cut rates as much as the market expects, it will be because global growth has bottomed, which will also favor non-U.S. rates. Chart I-1Japanese Share Prices Usually Bottom Before Bond Yields Chart I-2A Dovish Fed Will Be Dollar Bearish The commodity and export channel also helps explain why rising global growth is negative for the dollar. In theory, rising commodity prices (or rising terms of trade) allow for increased government spending in export-driven economies, making room for the resident central bank to tighten monetary policy. This is usually bullish for the currency. Rising terms of trade also further increases the fair value of the exchange rate. Balance-of-payments dynamics also tend to improve when exports are booming. Altogether, these forces combine to be powerful undercurrents for pro-cyclical currencies. Both political and domestic pressure for central banks to ease policy is the highest it has ever been. Chart I-3Both Economic And Political Pressure For Central Banks To Alter Policy Both political and domestic pressure for central banks to ease policy is the highest it has ever been.2 This suggests that either they have already done so or the conditions warranting stimulus have hit climactic pressure. Going forward, such a synchronized move by global central banks is usually accompanied by a synchronized recovery, for the simple reason that central banks are usually behind the curve (Chart I-3). Finally, the starting point for long dollar positions is one of an overcrowded trade, along with U.S. Treasury bonds. The latest downdraft in global manufacturing has nudged U.S. net speculative long positions to a point where they typically experience exhaustion (Chart I-4). This suggests there may be a scarcity in fresh dollar bulls. 2018 was particularly favorable for the dollar, as a liquidity crunch (the Fed’s balance sheet runoff) underpinned a sizeable rally. The big surge in cryptocurrencies this year (and gold) could suggest that the liquidity environment is once again becoming favorable. Chart I-4Dollar Positioning Is Stretched Chart I-5Carry Trades Are Usually Consistent With Higher Yields An improving liquidity environment will be especially favorable for carry trades. High-beta currencies such as the RUB/USD, ZAR/USD and BRL/USD have stopped falling and are off their lows of the year. These currencies are usually good at sniffing out a change in the investment landscape. The message so far is that the drop in U.S. bond yields may have been sufficient to make these currencies attractive again (Chart I-5). Bottom Line: There is very scant evidence that global growth is bottoming. That said, it is usually darkest before dawn. A few key indicators are beginning to flash amber, which we will continue to monitor closely. A Few Growth Barometers A key difference from last year is that U.S. growth leadership is set to give way to the rest of the world. The U.S. ISM manufacturing Purchasing Manager’s Index (PMI) peaked last August and has been steadily rolling over relative to its trading partners. Historically, the relative growth differential between the U.S. and elsewhere has had a pretty good track record of dictating trends in the dollar. The message is that the manufacturing PMI should pick up from 47.6 currently to the 50 boom/bust level in the coming months. Meanwhile, there is some evidence that there are tentative signs of a bottom in global growth: Chart I-6Euro Area Might Be Close To A Bottom Europe: The Swedish new orders to inventory ratio has a long and pretty accurate track record of calling bottoms in European growth, and the message is that the manufacturing PMI should pick up from 47.6 currently to the 50 boom/bust level in the coming months. Importantly, the recoveries have tended to be V-shaped pretty much throughout the past two decades. Any further decline in the PMI will pin it at levels consistent with the last European debt crisis (Chart I-6). Japan: Japan is closely impacted by the industrial cycle, especially demand from China. And while overall machinery orders remain weak, machine tool orders from China have bottomed. China: The Chinese credit impulse has bottomed. This suggests the contraction in imports, along with Korean and Taiwanese exports, is near its nadir (Chart I-7). The domestic bond market in China is becoming pretty good at signaling reflationary conditions for domestic demand (Chart I-8). Singapore exports this week were deeply negative, but this could be the bottom if all credit-injection so far in China starts flowing. Shipping indices are already recovering very strongly, and global machinery stocks are re-rating. Chart I-7A Modest Recovery For Exports Chart I-8Chinese Imports Should Bounce A pickup in Chinese growth should begin to benefit commodity currencies, especially the Australian dollar. A lot of the bad news already appears to be priced into the Aussie, which is down 14% from its 2018 peak and 37% from its 2011 peak. This suggests outright short AUD bets are susceptible to either upside surprises in global growth or simply forces of mean reversion. Importantly, the AUD/JPY cross is sitting at an important technical level. Ever since the financial crisis, the 72-74 cent zone has proven to be formidable resistance, with the cross failing to break below both during the euro area debt crisis in 2011-2012 and the China slowdown of 2015-2016. Speculators are now massively short the cross, suggesting that any upward move could be powerful and significant (Chart I-9). A rally in the Swedish krona will be another confirmation that global growth may have bottomed. A rally in the Swedish krona will be another confirmation that global growth may have bottomed. On a relative basis, the Swedish economy appears to have troughed relative to that of the U.S., making the USD/SEK an attractive way to play USD downside. From a technical perspective, USD/SEK failed to break decisively above 9.60, and is now trading below a major resistance at 9.40 (Chart I-10). Aggressive investors can slowly begin accumulating short positions, while being cognizant of the negative carry. Chart I-9AUD/JPY Near A Critical Zone Chart I-10The Swedish Krona Is Attractive Bottom Line: We are already long the SEK versus NZD, and the thesis remains intact from our June 7th recommendation. The AUD/JPY cross is very close to a bottom. Hold EUR/CAD For A Trade Chart I-11EUR/CAD Technicals: Limited Downside The EUR/CAD has reached an important technical level, and what will follow is either a major breakdown or a powerful bounce (Chart I-11). With Canadian data firing on all cylinders and the euro area in the depths of a manufacturing recession, the cross has rightly responded to growth divergences. On the downside, the EUR/CAD is at the bottom of the upward trending channel that has existed since 2012, in the vicinity of 1.45-1.46. A bounce here will not meet initial upside resistance until the triple top, a nudge above 1.6. The biggest catalyst for this cross going forward will likely be interest rate differentials, since any improvement in euro area data will continue to reduce the scope by which the European Central Bank stays dovish relative to the Bank of Canada. European rates are further below equilibrium, and the ECB’s dovish shift will help lift the growth potential of the euro area. Meanwhile, the Canadian neutral rate will be heavily weighed down by the large stock of debt in the Canadian private sector, exacerbated by overvaluation in the housing market. Valuations and balance-of-payment dynamics also favor the euro versus the CAD on a long-term basis. Bottom Line: Hold the EUR/CAD for a trade with a stop at 1.45. Chart I-12Gold/Silver Ratio Near Speculative Extreme Trade Idea: Buy Silver, Sell Gold The gold/silver ratio is reaching a speculative extreme. Usually, reflationary cycles benefit silver more than gold, with 100 usually the upper bound of the gold/silver ratio. We are very close to such a tipping point. Stay tuned (Chart I-12). Chester Ntonifor, Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.S. have continued to soften: Headline PPI fell to 1.7% year-on-year in June. Core PPI was unchanged at 2.3% year-on-year in June. NY Empire State manufacturing index increased to 4.3 in July. Retail sales increased by 0.4% month-on-month in June. Import and export prices contracted by 0.9% and 2% year-on-year respectively in June. Building permits contracted by 6.1% month-on-month in June. Housing starts softened by 0.9% month-on-month. Philadelphia Fed manufacturing index rose to 21.8 in July from 0.3 in June. Continuing jobless claims fell to 1.686 million this week, while initial jobless claims increased to 216 thousand. DXY increased by 0.4% this week. On Tuesday, Fed Chair Powell gave a short speech in Paris, regarding the current developments in the U.S. economy, and some post-crisis structural shifts. While U.S. economy has been on the 11th consecutive year of expansion, Powell highlighted concerns towards softer growth this year, in the manufacturing sector in particular, weighed down by weaker consumer spending, sluggish business investment, and trade war uncertainties. Report Links: On Gold, Oil And Cryptocurrencies - June 28, 2019 Battle Of The Central Banks - June 21, 2019 EUR/USD And The Neutral Rate Of Interest - June 14, 2019 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Recent data in the euro area have been weak: Industrial production contracted by 0.5% year-on-year in May. Trade balance widened to €20.2 billion in May. Headline and core inflation increased by 1.3% and 1.1% year-on-year respectively in June. EUR/USD fell by 0.36% this week. ZEW data continue to soften in July: The sentiment index in the euro area fell to -20.3, and the sentiment in Germany decreased to -24.5. Moreover, the European Commission’s summer forecast released last week cut the 2020 euro area GDP projection from 1.5% (spring forecast) to 1.4%, and lowered inflation to 1.3% for both this year and next year. Report Links: Battle Of The Central Banks - June 21, 2019 EUR/USD And The Neutral Rate Of Interest - June 14, 2019 Take Out Some Insurance - May 3, 2019 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan have been negative: Industrial production contracted by 2.1% year-on-year in May. Capacity utilization increased by 1.7% in May. Exports contracted by 6.7% year-on-year in June. Imports also fell by 5.2% year-on-year. Total trade balance increased to ¥589.5 billion. USD/JPY fell by 0.2% this week. The weak Q2 data worldwide, driven by a significant slowdown in the manufacturing sector have raised concerns for a possible near-term recession. This has been exacerbated by a trade war, U.S.-Iranian tensions and Brexit uncertainties. We continue to favor the yen as a safe-haven currency. Hold to the short USD/JPY and short XAU/JPY positions. Report Links: Portfolio Tweaks Into Thin Summer Trading - July 5, 2019 Battle Of The Central Banks - June 21, 2019 Short USD/JPY: Heads I Win, Tails I Don’t Lose Too Much - May 31, 2019 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. have been mixed: Rightmove house price index contracted by 0.2% year-on-year in July. On the labor market front, ILO unemployment rate was unchanged at 3.8% in May. Average earnings including bonus increased by 3.4% in May. Headline inflation was unchanged at 2% year-on-year in June. Core inflation increased to 1.8% year-on-year. Retail sales increased by 3.8% year-on-year in June. GBP/USD fell by 0.5% this week, now trading around 1.2486. The Brexit uncertainties still loom over the U.K. Boris Johnson and Jeremy Hunt are fighting to take over from Theresa May as the leader of the Conservative Party and the UK’s next Prime Minister. In addition, the Q2 credit conditions survey released this Thursday indicates that default rates on loans to corporates increased for small and large businesses in Q2. Meanwhile, these are expected to increase for businesses of all sizes in Q3. Report Links: Battle Of The Central Banks - June 21, 2019 A Contrarian View On The Australian Dollar - May 24, 2019 Take Out Some Insurance - May 3, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Recent data in Australia have been mixed: Westpac leading index fell by 0.08% month-on-month in June. On the labor market front, unemployment rate was unchanged at 5.2% in June. Participation rate was steady at 66%. 500 new jobs were created in June, including 21.1 thousand new full-time positions, and a loss of 20.6 thousand part-time positions. AUD/USD increased by 0.3% this week. The RBA minutes released this week reiterated that the central bank is ready to adjust interest rates if required, in order to support sustainable growth and achieve the inflation target overtime. The easing financial conditions and rising terms of trade all underpin the Aussie dollar in the long term. Report Links: A Contrarian View On The Australian Dollar - May 24, 2019 Beware Of Diminishing Marginal Returns- April 19, 2019 Not Out Of The Woods Yet - April 5, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Recent data in New Zealand have been mostly positive: House sales keep contracting by 3.8% year-on-year in June. Business manufacturing PMI increased to 51.3 in June. Headline inflation increased to 1.7% year-on-year in Q2. NZD/USD rose by 0.6% this week. Solid incoming data have lifted the New Zealand dollar for the past few weeks. However, the kiwi might lag the Aussie given the RBNZ is behind the RBA. The market is currently pricing in an 84% probability of a rate cut at the beginning of next month, but more cuts could be needed down the road. Hold to our long AUD/NZD and SEK/NZD positions. Report Links: Where To Next For The U.S. Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Not Out Of The Woods Yet - April 5, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Recent data in Canada have been mostly positive: Headline and core inflation both fell to 2% year-on-year in June. ADP employment shows an increase of 30.4 thousand new jobs in June. USD/CAD increased by 0.3% this week. Just last week, the BoC kept its interest rate on hold. With a more dovish Fed, this might narrow the interest rate differentials between the Fed and the BoC. We favor the loonie in the near-term based on the interest rate differentials, crude oil prices, and relatively more positive data incoming from Canada. Report Links: Portfolio Tweaks Into Thin Summer Trading - July 5, 2019 On Gold, Oil And Cryptocurrencies - June 28, 2019 Currency Complacency Amid A Global Dovish Shift - April 26, 2019 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland have been mixed: Producer and import prices contracted by 1.4% year-on-year in June. Exports increased to CHF 20,328 million, while imports fell to CHF 17,131 million in June. This lifted the trade balance up to 3,251 million. USD/CHF increased by 0.35% this week. We continue to favor the Swiss franc in the long term. The rising market volatility has increased the appetite for the Swiss franc. Moreover, the Swiss franc is still cheap compared to its fair value. Report Links: What To Do About The Swiss Franc? - May 17, 2019 Beware Of Diminishing Marginal Returns - April 19, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Recent data in Norway have been negative: Trade balance narrowed to NOK 5.2 billion in June. USD/NOK increased by 0.8% this week. The recent energy price volatility, mostly due to the uncertainties of oil demand has knocked down the Norwegian krone. In the long term, we continue to believe that the OPEC 2.0’s production strategy of reducing global oil inventories, and U.S. – Iran tension will drive oil prices higher, thus bullish for petrocurrencies including the Norwegian krone. Report Links: Portfolio Tweaks Into Thin Summer Trading - July 5, 2019 On Gold, Oil And Cryptocurrencies - June 28, 2019 Currency Complacency Amid A Global Dovish Shift - April 26, 2019 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Recent data in Sweden have been positive. Industrial orders increased by 3.2% year-on-year in May. Budget balance came in at SEK -24.8 billion in June. USD/SEK fell by 0.28% this week. Recent data shows that the Swedish government debt is sliding below 35% of GDP. This is triggering political pressure on the government to expand fiscal support. More fiscal expenditure will allow for a more hawkish Risksbank, supporting the Swedish Krona. Report Links: Where To Next For The U.S. Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Footnotes 1 The Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS) classification does not really apply for euro zone companies, so we used the Industry Classification Benchmark (ICB) for the euro area, the U.S., and Japan. The difference between GICS and ICB is that the new GICS standard (which took effect last year) splits Telecom into an additional Communication Services sector. ICB may also apply this later this year. 2 Carola Binder, “Political Pressure on Central Banks,” SSRN, December 16, 2018. Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Canadian data has been firing on all cylinders of late, so it was no surprise that Governor Stephen Poloz decided to keep interest rates on hold today. That said, details in its monetary policy report were notably cautious: Risks from the slowdown in…
Highlights The sharp fall in the bond-to-gold ratio is an important signal to pay heed to. It might suggest that confidence in the U.S. dollar is finally waning. If correct, the sharp rally in crypto currencies over the past few months warrants monitoring. We are maintaining a pro-cyclical currency stance, while cognizant of the fact that many growth barometers remain in freefall. Oil and petrocurrencies are being supported by geopolitical risk, but a rebound in underlying demand could supercharge the uptrend. We are looking to buy a speculative basket of the Russian ruble and Colombian peso versus the U.S. dollar or Japanese yen. The Norges Bank remains the most hawkish G10 central bank. Hold long NOK/SEK positions. Meanwhile, North Sea crude should continue trading at a premium to WTI, while Norway should also outperform Canada domestically. Remain short CAD/NOK at current levels. Feature Chart I-1Major Peak In The Bond-To-Gold Ratio Gold continues to outperform Treasurys, which has historically been an ominous sign for the U.S. dollar. Ever since the end of the Bretton Woods agreement broke the gold/dollar link in the early ‘70s, bullion has stood as a viable threat to dollar liabilities, capturing the ebbs and flows of investor confidence in the greenback tick for tick. With the Federal Reserve’s dovish shift, we may just have triggered one of the necessary catalysts for a selloff in the U.S. dollar (Chart I-1). The implications for currency strategy could be far and wide, especially vis-à-vis our procyclical stance. For example, one of the crosses we are watching fervently is the AUD/JPY exchange rate, since the Aussie tends to be a high-beta currency among G10 FX traders, while the yen tends to be the lowest. More importantly, the AUD/JPY cross is bouncing off an important technical level, having failed to punch below the critical 72-74 zone. In our eyes, the recent bounce could be the prologue to a reflationary rally. On Gold One beneficiary from a lower U.S. dollar is gold. Gold may be breaking out to multi-year highs, but the important takeaway for macro traders is that we may be entering a seismic shift in the investment landscape. Almost every major economy now has or is inching towards negative real interest rates. So, investors who are worried about the U.S. twin deficits and the crowded trade of being long Treasurys will shift into gold, given other major bond markets are getting perilously expensive. Gold has a long-standing relationship with negative interest rates, though the correlation has shifted over time (Chart I-2). The intuition behind falling real rates and rising gold prices is that low rates reduce the opportunity cost of holding non-income generating assets such as gold. And while odds are that yields may creep higher from current low levels, this will still be bullish for gold, if driven by rising inflation expectations. Gold tends to be a “Giffen good” meaning physical demand tends to increase as prices rise. Support for the dollar is fraying at the edges, judging from relative interest rate differentials, international flows and balance-of-payment dynamics. Data from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) shows that the global allocation of foreign exchange reserves towards the U.S. dollar peaked at about 72% in the early 2000s and has been in a downtrend since. At the same time, foreign central banks have been amassing tremendous gold reserves, notably Russia and China, almost to the tune of the total annual output of the yellow metal (Chart I-3). The U.S. dollar remains the reserve currency of the world today, but that exorbitant privilege is clearly fading. Chart I-2Gold And Real ##br##Yields Chart I-3Central Banks Are Absorbing Most Gold Production Gold tends to be a “Giffen good” meaning physical demand tends to increase as prices rise. Ever since the gold bubble burst in 2011, both financial and jewelry demand has evaporated. The reality is that both China and India went on a buying binge of coins and jewelry during gold’s last bull market, and there is no reason to expect this time to be different (Chart I-4). For all the talk about flexible exchange rate regimes, it seems as if the world’s major central banks have been fixing their exchange rates to the gold price (Chart I-5). This suggests that gold price risks could be asymmetric to the upside, at least for now. A fall in prices encourages accumulation by EM central banks as a way to diversify out of their dollar reserves, while a rise in prices encourages financial demand and jewelry consumption. Chart I-4Gold Is A Giffen Good Chart I-5Fixed Exchange Rates Versus Gold? The explosive rise in cryptocurrency prices highlights that the world is becoming flush again with liquidity, but also signals trepidation against global monetary policy settings (Chart I-6). In its basic function, money should be a store of value, a unit of account and a medium of exchange. Bitcoin’s high price volatility violates its function as a unit of account, but so do other currencies such as the Venezuelan peso or the Turkish Lira. In all, this boosts the demand for alternative assets, including gold. Bottom Line: Interest rate differentials are moving against the dollar, but our important takeaway – that gold continues to outperform Treasurys – is an ominous sign. This is bullish for pro-cyclical currency trades and gold. Chart I-6Confidence In The Dollar Is Waning On Oil Oil prices have been supported by rising geopolitical tensions between the U.S. and Iran, but will be supercharged if demand bottoms later this year. The view of our Geopolitical strategists is that the risk of escalation between the two factions is high, given Iran has been pinned into a corner with falling oil exports.1 Together with a falling U.S. dollar, this will be categorically bullish for petrocurrencies. In the cases of Canada and Norway, petroleum represents around 20% and 60% of total exports, so it is easy to see why a big fluctuation in the price of oil can have deep repercussions for their external balances. Our baseline still calls for Brent prices to touch $75/bbl by year-end. Oil demand tends to follow the ebbs and flows of the business cycle, and demand is contracting along with the slowdown in global trade (Chart I-7). But there is rising evidence of more and more activity along sea routes, judging from the Baltic Dry and Harpex shipping indexes. With over 60% of global petroleum consumed fueling the transportation sector, this is positive. This obviously hinges critically on a resolution to the trade war between the U.S. and China. However, with Chinese and Indian oil imports still growing healthily, this should also put a floor under global demand growth (Chart I-8). Chart I-7Global Oil Demand Has Been Weak Chart I-8Oil Demand Green Shoots Any increase in oil demand will materialize at a time when OPEC spare capacity is low. Global spare capacity cannot handle the loss of both Venezuelan and Iranian exports. Unplanned outages wiped off about 1.5% of supply in 2018, and lost output from both countries is nudging the oil market dangerously close to a negative supply shock (Chart I-9). The explosive rise in cryptocurrency prices signals trepidation against global monetary policy settings. In terms of petrocurrencies, there remains a gaping wedge that has opened vis-à-vis the price of oil (Chart I-10). While it is true that the landscape for oil production is rapidly shifting with the U.S. shale revolution grabbing market share from both OPEC and non-OPEC members, terms of trade still matter for petrocurrencies. Chart I-9A New Oil Baron Chart I-10Opportunity Or Regime Shift? The positive correlation between petrocurrencies and oil has been gradually eroded as the U.S. economy has become less and less of an oil importer. Meanwhile, Norwegian production has been falling for a few years. In statistical terms, petrocurrencies had a near-perfect positive correlation with oil around the time U.S. production was about to take off (Chart I-11). Since then, that correlation has fallen from around 0.8 to roughly 0.3. This is why it may be increasingly more profitable to be long petrocurrencies versus a basket of oil-consuming nations, rather than the U.S. Chart I-11Shifting Landscape For Petrocurrencies Bottom Line: Both the CAD and NOK remain positively correlated with oil. So do the Russian ruble and the Colombian and Mexican pesos. That said, a loss of global market share has hurt the oil sensitivity of many petrocurrencies. Transportation bottlenecks for Canadian crude and falling production in Norway are also added negatives. Remain Long NOK/SEK And Short CAD/NOK The Norges Bank remains the most hawkish G10 central bank, having hiked interest rates to 1.25% at last week’s meeting. Governor Øystein Olsen signaled further rate increases later this year – at a time when global central banks are turning dovish. This will continue to put upward pressure under the Norwegian krone. Our recommendation is to stay long NOK/SEK and short CAD/NOK. Both the CAD and NOK remain positively correlated with oil. So do the Russian ruble and the Colombian and Mexican pesos. The Norwegian economy remains closely tied to oil, with the bottom in oil prices in 2016 having jumpstarted employment growth, business confidence and wage growth. With inflation near the central bank’s target and our expectation for oil prices to grind higher, we agree with the central bank’s assessment that the future path of interest rates is likely higher (Chart I-12). Short CAD/NOK positions are an excellent way to play U.S. dollar downside (Chart I-13). The 6.50-6.60 level for the CAD/NOK has proven to be a formidable resistance since 2015. Chart I-12The Norwegian Economy Will Rebound Chart I-13Sell USD Via CAD/NOK At $20/bbl, the discount between Western Canadian Select crude oil and Brent has narrowed, but remains wide. This has usually pinned CAD/NOK around the 6.30 level (Chart I-14). The NOK tends to outperform the SEK when oil prices are rising. This trade also benefits from a positive carry. Both the Canadian and Norwegian housing markets continue to be frothy, but in the latter it has been concentrated in Oslo, with Bergen and Trondheim having had more muted increases. In Canada, the rise in house prices could rotate to smaller cities, as macro-prudential measures implemented in Toronto and Vancouver nudge investors away from those markets. The Canadian government has decided to provide residents with a potential line of credit in exchange for equity stakes of up to 10% in residential homes. While this does little to improve the affordability of houses in expensive cities, it almost guarantees that those in competitive markets will be bid up. This will encourage a continued buildup of household leverage, which is a long-term negative for the Canadian dollar (Chart I-15). Chart I-14Oil Differentials Will Weigh On CAD/NOK Chart I-15The CAD Looks Vulnerable Longer-Term Bottom Line: Remain short CAD/NOK and long NOK/SEK for a trade. Chester Ntonifor, Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, titled “Escalation … Everywhere,” dated June 21, 2019, available at gps.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.S. have been mostly negative: The Markit composite PMI fell to 50.6 in June. Both manufacturing and services fell to 50.1 and 50.7 respectively. On the housing market front, existing home sales increased by 2.5% month-on-month in May. However, new home sales contracted by 7.8% month-on-month. The house price index increased by 0.4% month-on-month in April. Both Dallas and Richmond Fed Manufacturing indices fell to -12.1 and 3 in June. Advanced goods trade balance fell to $74.55 billion in May. Final annualized Q1 GDP was unchanged at 3.1% quarter-on-quarter, and core PCE increased by 1.2% quarter-on-quarter in Q1. DXY index has been flat this week. As we mentioned in last week’s report, we are closely monitoring the bond-to-gold ratio to gauge the direction of the U.S. dollar. Gold prices continue to soar this week by 5% due to safe-haven buying, the Fed’s dovish pivot, and rising inflation expectations. Our bias is that the balance of forces are moving away from the U.S. dollar. Report Links: Battle Of The Central Banks - June 21, 2019 EUR/USD And The Neutral Rate Of Interest - June 14, 2019 Where To Next For The U.S. Dollar? - June 7, 2019 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Recent data in the euro area remain negative: The Markit composite PMI increased to 52.1 in June. The manufacturing PMI increased slightly to 47.8, and services PMI increased to 53.4. Sentiment remains depressed in June: Business climate fell to 0.17; Industrial confidence decreased to -5.6; Economic sentiment dropped to 103.3; Services sentiment came in at 11; Consumer confidence declined to -7.2. EUR/USD has been flat this week. The dovish message by Mario Draghi last week has limited the upside for the euro recently. However, in the long term, the dovish contest by global central banks will support a global economic recovery. That said, the trade war remains one of the biggest downside risks to our baseline scenario. Any deal or no-deal coming out of the G20 summit will likely re-shape expectations for the global economy and the euro. Report Links: Battle Of The Central Banks - June 21, 2019 EUR/USD And The Neutral Rate Of Interest - June 14, 2019 Take Out Some Insurance - May 3, 2019 Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan have been mixed: Headline and core CPI fell to 0.7% and 0.5% year-on-year respectively in May. The Nikkei manufacturing PMI declined to 49.5 in June. The leading economic index increased to 95.9 in April. The coincident index rose to 102.1 in April. Retail sales grew by 1.2% year-on-year in May. USD/JPY rose by 0.2% this week. The BoJ published the monetary policy meetings minutes this week, highlighting the upside and downside risk factors to their forecast. Close attention is being paid to outside economic developments and the scheduled consumption tax hike for the fiscal year 2019, and peaking-out of Olympic games-related demand and IT sector developments for the fiscal year 2020. Besides that, the BoJ members agree that the accommodative monetary policy should be sustained for an extended period. Report Links: Battle Of The Central Banks - June 21, 2019 Short USD/JPY: Heads I Win, Tails I Don’t Lose Too Much - May 31, 2019 Beware Of Diminishing Marginal Returns - April 19, 2019 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. have been negative: Public sector net borrowing fell to £4.5 billion in May. CBI retailing survey fell to -42 in June, from a previous reading of -27. GBP/USD fell by 0.4% this week. The probability of a “no-deal” Brexit has increased as a result of the new leadership contest. However, during the inflation report hearings this week, BoE Governor Carney highlighted that unless the next PM makes a “no-deal” Brexit their preferred policy, additional dovishness might not be warranted. We continue to favor the pound but will respect the stop loss at 1.25 if triggered. Report Links: Battle Of The Central Banks - June 21, 2019 A Contrarian View On The Australian Dollar - May 24, 2019 Take Out Some Insurance - May 3, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Recent data in Australia have been positive: CBA composite PMI increased to 53.1 in June. Manufacturing and services PMI increased to 51.7 and 53.3 respectively. ANZ Roy Morgan weekly consumer confidence increased slightly from 114.2 to 114.3. AUD/USD increased by 1% this week, now trading around 0.6996. Any good news coming out of the trade deal during the G20 summit could support the Aussie dollar and put a floor under this cross. Report Links: A Contrarian View On The Australian Dollar - May 24, 2019 Beware Of Diminishing Marginal Returns- April 19, 2019 Not Out Of The Woods Yet - April 5, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Recent data in New Zealand have been negative: Exports and imports both increased to NZ$5.81 billion and NZ$5.54 billion in May. The total trade balance fell to NZ$264 million in May. ANZ activity outlook fell to 8 in June, and business confidence fell to -38.1. NZD/USD increased by 1.7% this week. On Wednesday, the RBNZ kept interest rates unchanged at 1.5% and the market is currently pricing a 71.6% probability of rate cuts for the next policy meeting in August. Our bias remains that while the kiwi will benefit from broad dollar weakness, it will underperform its antipodean counterpart. We remain long AUD/NZD and SEK/NZD. Report Links: Where To Next For The U.S. Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Not Out Of The Woods Yet - April 5, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Recent data in Canada have been mostly positive: Retail sales growth slowed down to 0.1% month-on-month in April. Wholesale trade sales soared by 1.7% month-on-month in April. Bloomberg Nanos weekly confidence index rose to 57.8. CFIB business barometer increased to 61.5 in June. USD/CAD fell by 0.8% this week. The Canadian dollar continues to strengthen on the back of positive data surprises and recovering oil prices. U.S. EIA reported falling commercial crude oil inventories for last week. The tension continues between the U.S. and Iran. Moreover, OPEC is likely to cut their oil supply during the next meeting beginning in July. All these factors point to higher oil prices and will likely lift the loonie. Report Links: Currency Complacency Amid A Global Dovish Shift - April 26, 2019 A Shifting Landscape For Petrocurrencies - March 22, 2019 Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 There is little data from Switzerland this week: ZEW expectations index fell to -30 in June. USD/CHF has been flat this week. We remain overweight the franc in the long run due to solid Swiss economic fundamentals, including a high savings rate, rising productivity, and current account surplus. It also serves as a perfect hedge to any downside risks, both economic and geopolitical. The long CHF/NZD recommendation in our April 26 weekly report remains valid, though we do not have this trade on. Report Links: What To Do About The Swiss Franc? - May 17, 2019 Beware Of Diminishing Marginal Returns - April 19, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 There is little data from Norway this week: Retail sales contracted by 1.3% in May. USD/NOK has been flat this week. The Norwegian krone remains one of our favorite currencies due to the rising oil prices and widening interest rate differentials. The front section of this bulletin reinforces our bullish petrocurrency view. Report Links: Currency Complacency Amid A Global Dovish Shift - April 26, 2019 A Shifting Landscape For Petrocurrencies - March 22, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Recent data in Sweden have been mostly positive: Producer price inflation fell to 3.5% year-on-year in May. Trade balance increased to 8.3 billion SEK in May. USD/SEK fell by 0.8% this week. As we mentioned before, the Swedish exports could be a very powerful leading indicator of the global economy. In May, the Swedish exports increased to 137 billion SEK from 129 billion SEK in April. Hold on to our long SEK/NZD position. Report Links: Where To Next For The U.S. Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
This morning’s CPI report showed that Canadian core inflation continues to accelerate. The average of the three measures followed by the Bank of Canada moved up to 2.1% in May from 1.9% in April. Underlying inflation is therefore fully consistent with…
Highlights Global financial markets are currently dealing with a fresh round of uncertainty related to U.S.-China trade tensions. Yet while equities and government bond yields have fallen in response to the U.S. imposition of tariffs and escalation of the trade war with China, corporate bond markets in the developed economies have been relatively well-behaved (so far). Credit spreads have only widened modestly, which perhaps should not be surprising given central bankers’ increasingly dovish bias combined with early signs of a cyclical global growth rebound (Chart 1). Feature Chart 1Global Corporates: Shifting To A Friendlier Growth Backdrop? With that in mind, this week we are presenting the latest update of our Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) Chartbook. The CHMs are composite indicators of balance sheet and income statement ratios (using both top-down and bottom-up data) that are designed to assess the financial well-being of the overall non-financial corporate sectors in the major developed economies. A brief overview of the methodology is presented in Appendix 1 on page 15. The main conclusion from the latest readings on our CHMs is that slower economic growth over the past year has resulted in some erosion of overall global credit quality. The deterioration was most pronounced in the more economically fragile regions that have suffered the deepest pullbacks in growth: Europe and Japan. The CHMs are currently giving an overall “neutral” signal in the U.S., although there are some worrying trends developing within the sub-components like interest coverage and short-term liquidity. Meanwhile, the CHMs in the U.K. and Canada are showing modest cyclical deterioration from very strong levels. Broadly speaking, the CHMs support our main global corporate bond market investment recommendations: a tactical aggregate overweight versus global government bonds, with a regional bias favoring the U.S. over Europe, and a quality bias tilted towards U.S. high-yield (HY) over investment grade (IG). Renewed U.S.-China trade hostilities represent a threat to that pro-cyclical fixed income asset allocation, although we expect more aggressive responses from policymakers on both sides (more fiscal and monetary stimulus in China, a more dovish bias from the Fed) to offset any tariff-induced weakness in growth. U.S. Corporate Health Monitors: Cyclically OK, But Longer-Term Problems Are Brewing Our top-down U.S. CHM is sending a neutral message on credit quality, sitting right on the threshold separating “deteriorating health” from “improving health” (Chart 2). The indicator, however, has been trending in a direction showing improving credit metrics over the past year. From a fundamental perspective, the top-down U.S. CHM suggests that the U.S. credit cycle is being extended by the stubborn endurance of the U.S. business cycle. The resilience of the U.S. economy, combined with the positive impact on U.S. profitability from the Trump corporate tax cuts, has put U.S. companies in a cyclically healthier position, even with relatively high leverage. The ratios directly related to corporate profits that go into the top-down CHM – return on capital, profit margins and interest coverage – have all gone up over the past year, generating the bulk of the directional improvement in the top-down CHM. From a fundamental perspective, the top-down U.S. CHM suggests that the U.S. credit cycle is being extended by the stubborn endurance of the U.S. business cycle. In other words, there are no immediate domestic pressures on U.S. corporate finances that should require significantly wider credit spreads to compensate for rising downgrade/default risk. That does not mean that all the news is good, however. The short-term liquidity ratio has fallen sharply and is now at levels last seen in the years leading up to the 2008 Financial Crisis. Similar deteriorations can be seen in the short-term liquidity ratios within the bottom-up versions of our U.S. CHMs for IG corporates (Chart 3) and HY companies (Chart 4). Coming at a time when interest coverage ratios have been steadily declining for IG, and are already at low levels for HY, declining short-term liquidity would leave U.S. corporates highly vulnerable during the next economic downturn. Chart 2Top-Down U.S. CHM: A Neutral Reading Chart 3Bottom-Up U.S. IG CHM: Modest Deterioration With Worrying Trends We see no reason yet to exit our tactical overweight stance on U.S. IG and HY corporates versus both U.S. Treasuries and non-U.S. corporates. For now, however, the message from our bottom-up U.S. CHMs is the same as that from our top-down U.S. CHM, with all hovering near the zero line suggesting no major deterioration in overall credit quality. We see no reason yet to exit our tactical overweight stance on U.S. IG and HY corporates versus both U.S. Treasuries and non-U.S. corporates (Chart 5). Our favored indicators continue to point to a rebound in global growth in the latter half of 2019, and the Fed currently has no desire to push the funds rate into restrictive territory, so the risk/reward over the next six months still favors staying overweight U.S. corporates. The medium-term outlook, however, is far more challenging given the growing body of evidence pointing to the advanced age of the U.S. credit cycle, such as falling interest coverage and liquidity. Chart 4Bottom-Up U.S. HY CHM: A Cyclical Improvement, Nothing More Chart 5U.S. Corporates: Stay Tactically Overweight IG & HY One final point – in Appendix 2 starting on page 17, we present bottom-up CHMs for the main industry sector groupings of companies that go into our overall U.S. IG CHM. Most of the sector CHMs are hovering near the zero line, but two industry groupings stand out as having a rising CHM that is now well within “deteriorating health” territory – Consumer Staples and Utilities. Euro Corporate Health Monitors: Worsened By Weaker Growth The message from our bottom-up CHMs for the euro area shows that there was some damage done to credit quality from last year’s growth slump, evidenced by lower profit margins and interest coverage ratios. Although overall credit quality remains fairly neutral (i.e. the CHMs remain near the zero line). For euro area IG, the gap between domestic and foreign issuers in the euro area corporate bond market continues to widen, with the former now slightly in the “deteriorating health” zone (Chart 6). Profit margins have fallen far more sharply for domestic issuers, reflecting the very rapid slowing of euro area growth over the latter half of 2019. Interest coverage for domestic issuers is also lower than for foreign issuers, while short-term liquidity ratios have weakened for both over the past year. For euro area HY, the signal from the bottom-up CHM is more consistently positive between domestic and foreign issuers (Chart 7). Leverage has declined, but profit-based metrics have worsened for both sets of issuers. Interest/debt coverage and liquidity, however, are far worse for domestic issuers. Chart 6Bottom-Up Euro Area IG CHMs: Weaker Growth Hitting Domestic Issuers Chart 7Bottom-Up Euro Area HY CHMs: Healthier Through Lower Leverage Within the euro area, our bottom-up IG CHMs for Core and Periphery countries have worsened over the past year, from healthy levels, and are now hovering just above the zero line (Chart 8). Interest coverage is considerably stronger for Core issuers, although profitability metrics are remarkably similar. Short-term liquidity ratios have also fallen for both regional groups over the past year. The spread tightening already seen in euro area credit is too extreme relative to the still sluggish pace of economic growth in the region. Despite the lack of a major overall negative signal from the euro area CHMs, we are only maintaining a neutral allocation to euro area corporates, even within our current overweight stance on overall global corporates (Chart 9). The spread tightening already seen in euro area credit is too extreme relative to the still sluggish pace of economic growth in the region. This will inhibit the ability for spreads to tighten further in the event of a pickup in growth, while also leaving spreads vulnerable to widening pressures if euro area growth continues to languish. Chart 8Bottom-Up Euro Area Regional IG CHMs: Trending In The Wrong Direction Chart 9Euro Area Corporates: Stay Tactically Neutral IG & HY Chart 10Relative Bottom-Up CHMs: Continue To Favor U.S. Over Europe In addition, we are sticking with our preference to favor U.S. corporates – both IG and HY – over euro area equivalents for two important reasons: stronger U.S. growth and better U.S. corporate health. The gap between the combined IG/HY bottom-up CHMs for the U.S. and euro area has been strongly correlated to the difference in credit spreads between euro area and U.S. issuers (Chart 10).1 The latest trends show a narrowing of the gap between the U.S. and euro area CHMs, suggesting relative corporate health favors U.S. names (middle panel). At the same time, the relatively stronger performance of the U.S. economy continues to support U.S. corporate performance versus euro area equivalents (bottom panel). U.K. Corporate Health Monitor: Brexit Uncertainty Is Not Helping Our top-down U.K. CHM remains in the “improving health” zone, although the indicator has been drifting towards “deteriorating health” over the past two years. Almost all of the components of the U.K. CHM have contributed to this worsening trend (Chart 11), with only short-term liquidity remaining in a powerful multi-year uptrend. Most worryingly, the interest and debt coverage ratios remain historically depressed, even as the Bank of England has keep interest rates at extraordinarily low levels for the past several years. The cyclical deterioration in the U.K. CHM components can be traced to the sluggish performance of the U.K. economy and corporate profits. The cyclical deterioration in the U.K. CHM components can be traced to the sluggish performance of the U.K. economy and corporate profits. The persistent uncertainty from Brexit has weighed on business confidence and investment spending by U.K. firms, keeping growth at a below-trend pace. While the immediate deadline of “Brexit Day” came and went back in March, there is still a high degree of uncertainty over the U.K.’s future economic relationship with the European Union. With Prime Minister Theresa May now set to step down, an election will extend the period of politically-driven uncertainty in the U.K. We have maintained a moderate underweight recommendation on U.K. corporates in our model bond portfolio over the past year, despite the lack of an obvious negative signal from our U.K. CHM. Spread widening in 2018 has been followed by spread tightening in 2019 (Chart 12), but the latter has been driven by the global rally in risk assets rather than diminished perceptions of U.K. political risk. Chart 11U.K. Top-Down CHM: Modest Pullback From Healthy Levels Chart 12U.K. Corporates: Stay Modestly Underweight Although there has been some improvement in U.K. economic data of late, leading economic indicators continue to trend lower. In addition, the Bank of England continues to hint that any positive resolution to the Brexit uncertainty could result in a tightening of monetary policy (although that is less of a threat given the synchronized dovish turn by global central bankers over the past few months). Given all the uncertainties, the risk/reward balance continues to favor a modest underweight in U.K. corporates, particularly at current tight spread levels to Gilts. Japan Corporate Health Monitor: A Modest Cyclical Deterioration Our bottom-up Japan CHM has shown a worsening trend over the past year and now sits in the “deteriorating health” zone (Chart 13).2 Interestingly, all of the individual components have contributed to that move in the CHM, and not just the cyclical components (profit margins, return on capital, interest coverage) that reflect the recent slowing of economic growth in Japan. Leverage has increased (albeit from very low levels), while short-term liquidity has also weakened (albeit from very high levels). Strictly looking at the overall level of all the Japan CHM components, the message does not signal a major deterioration in Japanese corporate credit quality. Leverage, defined here as the ratio of total debt to the book value of equity, is still below 100%, well below the 100-140% range seen between 2006 and 2015. The same story applies to the return on capital, which at 5% is still high versus Japan’s history (although very low by global standards). Interest coverage and short-term liquidity both remain high relative to the past decade. The absolute level of Japanese corporate health remains solid, but there has been marginal deterioration from weaker economic growth. On that front, the cyclical momentum in Japan’s economy is not improving. According to the latest Tankan survey, Japanese firms reported that their business outlook was worse than previously expected. Declining confidence has damaged capital spending, as shown by the falling growth of domestic machinery and machine tool orders. Japan’s economy remains highly levered to global growth and export demand and their economy has taken a hit from the slower pace of global trade over the past year. Wage growth has also weakened after finally seeing some positive momentum in 2018, which is weighing on consumer confidence and spending. Japan’s corporate spread has widened slightly (+5bps) since the beginning of this year (Chart 14), in contrast to the spread tightening seen in other major developed economy corporate bond markets (the Bloomberg Barclays Global Corporates index spread has tightened by -33bps year-to-date). This is a sign that the markets have responded to the slowing growth momentum in Japan with a bit of a wider risk premium. Yet despite that widening, Japanese corporates with small positive yields continue to generate positive excess returns versus Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs) with yields held near zero by the Bank of Japan’s Yield Curve Control policy. Thus, we continue to recommend an overweight stance on Japanese corporates vs JGBs as a buy-and-hold carry trade, even with the softening in our Japan CHM. Chart 13Japan Bottom-Up CHM: Cyclical Deterioration Chart 14Japan Corporates: Stay Overweight Vs JGBs For Carry Canada Corporate Health Monitor: Still In Decent Shape Our top-down and bottom-up Canadian CHMs indicate an improving trend in Canadian corporate health, with both remaining in the “improving health” area over the past few years (Chart 15). The marginal moves have shown some modest deterioration in the cyclically-sensitive components (most notably, return on capital and profit margins for the top-down Canadian CHM). This should not be surprising given how rapidly Canadian economic growth slowed in the final quarter of 2018. There has also been some deterioration in the non-cyclical components. Leverage is high and rising, while the absolute levels of return on capital and debt/interest coverage are historically low. This may be building up risks for the next major Canadian economic downturn, but for now, Canadian companies look in decent shape. With so much of Canada’s economy (and its financial markets) geared to the performance of the energy sector, the recent recovery in global oil prices is a significant boost for the overall Canadian corporate market. Our commodity strategists see additional upside in oil prices over the next six months, which will further underpin the health of Canadian oil companies – and should also help support Canadian corporate bond performance. The Bank of Canada is now taking an extended pause from its rate-hiking cycle, with policy rates well below the central bank’s own estimate of neutral (2.25-3.25%). Accommodative monetary conditions and relatively low Canadian interest rates will continue to make Canadian corporates attractive, in an environment of decent growth and firm corporate health. Chart 15Canada CHMs: Still Healthy, Despite Slower Growth Chart 16Canadian Corporates: Stay Overweight Vs Canadian Govt. Debt We continue recommending an overweight position in Canadian corporate debt relative to Canadian government bonds as a carry trade. Spreads have been in a very stable range since the 2009 recession (Chart 16), ranging between 100-200bps even during periods when our CHMs were indicating worsening corporate health. To break out of that range to the upside, we would need to see a prolonged deterioration of Canadian economic growth or sharp monetary tightening from the Bank of Canada – neither outcome is likely over the next 6-12 months. Robert Robis, CFA, Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, CFA, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Appendix 1: An Overview Of The BCA Corporate Health Monitors The BCA Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) is a composite indicator designed to assess the underlying financial strength of the corporate sector for a country. The Monitor is an average of six financial ratios inspired by those used by credit rating agencies to evaluate individual companies. However, we calculate our ratios using top-down (national accounts) data for profits, interest expense, debt levels, etc. The idea is to treat the entire corporate sector as if it were one big company, and then look at the credit metrics that would be used to assign a credit rating to it. Importantly, only data for the non-financial corporate sector is used in the CHM, as the measures that would be used to measure the underlying health of banks and other financial firms are different than those for the typical company. The six ratios used in the CHM are shown in Table 1 below. To construct the CHM, the individual ratios are standardized, added together, and then shown as a deviation from the medium-term trend. That last part is important, as it introduces more cyclicality into the CHM and allows it to better capture major turning points in corporate well-being. Largely because of this construction, the CHM has a very good track record at heralding trend changes in corporate credit spreads (both for Investment Grade and High-Yield) over many cycles. Table 1Definitions Of Ratios That Go Into The CHMs Top-down CHMs are now available for the U.S., euro area, the U.K. and Canada. The CHM methodology was extended in 2016 to look at corporate health by industry and by credit quality.3 The financial data of a broad set of individual U.S. and euro area companies was used to construct individual “bottom-up” CHMs using the same procedure as the more familiar top-down CHM. Some of the ratios differ from those used in the top-down CHM (see Table 1), largely due to definitional differences in data presented in national income accounts versus those from actual individual company financial statements. The bottom-up CHMs analyze the health of individual sectors, and can be aggregated up into broad CHMs for Investment Grade and High-Yield groupings to compare with credit spreads. In 2018, we introduced bottom-up CHMs for Japan and Canada. With the country expansion of our CHM universe, we now have coverage for 92% of the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Corporate Bond Index (Appendix Chart 1). Appendix 2: U.S. Bottom-Up CHMs For Selected Sectors Footnotes 1 We only use the CHMs for euro area domestic issuers in this aggregate bottom-up CHM, as this is most reflective of uniquely European corporate credits. This also eliminates double-counting from U.S. companies that issue in the euro area market that are part of our U.S. CHMs. 2 We do not currently have a top-down CHM for Japan given the lack of consistent government data sources for all the necessary components. 3 Please see Section II of The Bank Credit Analyst, “U.S. Corporate Health Gets A Failing Grade”, dated February 2016, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
The BoC places a lot of weight on the Business Outlook Survey (BoS) in determining its economic forecasts, and in setting monetary policy. Thus, it is no surprise that in the official statement following the April 24 monetary policy meeting, the BoC…
The problem for the BoC is that its policy rate of 1.75% remains well below its own estimated neutral range, which is now 2.25%-3.25%. A similar message comes when looking at the neutral real rate (“r-star”) estimate for Canada produced by the New York Fed,…
Highlights U.S.: The Fed remains decidedly neutral, despite market expectations (and White House pressure) for lower U.S. interest rates. Treasury yields are mispriced and should grind higher over the next 6-12 months, led first by inflation expectations and later by a more hawkish Fed. Canada: The Bank of Canada’s latest reports and commentary indicate that monetary policy will stay on hold over at least the balance of 2019. Bond markets are already priced for that outcome. Maintain a neutral stance on Canadian government bonds in global hedged fixed income portfolios. Sweden: The Riksbank’s recent dovish turn, calling for a flatter trajectory for interest rates and extending asset purchases, will keep Swedish bond yields lower for longer. Thus, we are closing our recommended tactical trades in Sweden that were positioned for rate hikes. Feature Global bond yields remain stuck in a range, seeking a new directional narrative. The downside is limited by green shoots of improving global growth (mostly from China stimulus), some commodity price reflation through higher oil prices and robust returns in most risk asset markets (i.e. an easing of financial conditions). At the same time, the upside for yields is capped by dovish forward guidance from data-dependent central banks who see below-trend economic growth and below-target inflation in the rearview mirror. Chart of the WeekForward MIS-guidance We expect these opposing forces to be resolved through faster global growth and higher realized inflation over the next 6-12 months. Major central banks will not need to turn even more dovish and begin a monetary policy easing cycle to boost growth, despite current market pricing suggesting otherwise. Global bond yields will grind upward, first through higher inflation expectations and, later, from a shift away from discounting rate cuts and, in some countries, pricing in rate hikes. The pressure for higher yields will be strongest in the U.S., where the Treasury market now discounts that the current 2.5% fed funds rate will be the cyclical peak, below the median FOMC projection, even as inflation expectations have been moving higher (Chart of the Week). We continue to recommend pro-growth, pro-risk allocations in global fixed income markets: below-benchmark overall duration exposure, favoring global corporates over government bonds, focusing government bond exposure to countries where policymakers will be relatively less hawkish (Japan, U.K., Australia, Canada, New Zealand), and positioning for faster inflation expectations and bearish steepening of yield curves (most notably in the U.S. and core Europe). May FOMC Meeting: Sorry, Mr. President The Fed kept rates unchanged at last week’s FOMC meeting, dashing market hopes of a potential shift in language toward a future rate cut. The official statement acknowledged that U.S. inflation was running below the 2% target, but Fed Chair Jerome Powell later described that inflation shortfall as “transitory” and expected to reverse. Treasury yields got whipsawed by the mixed messaging, with the 2-year yield falling -6bps after the statement but then climbing +11bps during Powell’s press conference. Powell standing his ground so firmly was a sharp rebuke to U.S. money markets, which remain priced for rate cuts over the next year. It was also a strong sign of the Fed maintaining its political independence in the face of U.S. President Trump calling for aggressive rate cuts. From a growth perspective, the Fed is right to not panic. The employment backdrop remains solid, with the U.S. unemployment rate hitting a 50-year low in April of 3.6%. While cyclical growth indicators like the ISM Manufacturing index have trended lower, the headline index remains above the expansionary 50 level (Chart 2). The rally in U.S. equity and credit markets seen so far in 2019 has eased financial conditions, signaling an imminent rebound in the U.S. leading economic indicator (second panel). Furthermore, core measures of retail sales and capital goods orders have begun to reaccelerate after the Q1 slump impacted by the U.S. government shutdown. From a growth perspective, the Fed is right to not panic. On the inflation side, the story is more nuanced. Higher oil prices will boost headline inflation measures over the next six months. At the same time, the lagged impact of the surprising pickup in U.S. productivity growth (+2.4% year-over-year in Q1) will help dampen core inflation rates (Chart 3) via lower unit labor costs (flat year-over-year in Q1). Further complicating the issue for the Fed is the impact of lower inflation in the components that Fed Chair Powell deemed “transitory”, such as airfares, apparel and, most interestingly, the cost of financial services. Chart 2A Blossoming U.S. ##br##Rebound Chart 3Blame Equities For The Cooling Of ##br##U.S. Core Inflation The broad Financial Services and Inflation grouping, which includes market-related costs such as wealth management fees, now represents 9% of the overall U.S. core PCE deflator. The inflation rate of the Financial Services index is highly correlated to the performance of U.S. equity markets (Chart 4). This makes sense, as the costs of professional portfolio management are often tied to the size of assets under management. At a minimum, the market should be priced for the same neutral (unchanged) stance that the Fed is currently signaling, which is appropriate given signs of U.S. growth perking up. Chart 4Faster Productivity Means The Fed Can Be Patient In 2018, prior to the year-end correction in U.S. equity markets, the contribution to core PCE inflation from the Financial Services category was a steady 0.5-0.6 percentage points. After the market rout, that contribution has fallen to 0.2 percentage points, accounting for nearly all of the 40bp decline in core PCE inflation since U.S. equities peaked last September. With equity markets having now regained all the late-2018 losses, Financial Services inflation should boost core PCE inflation by at least 20-30bps by year-end – and perhaps more if stocks continue to appreciate, per the BCA House View. With our Fed Monitor now sitting just above the zero line, indicating no pressure on the Fed to hike rates, the -30bps of rate cuts now discounted over the next year is too aggressive (Chart 5). At a minimum, the market should be priced for the same neutral (unchanged) stance that the Fed is currently signaling, which is appropriate given signs of U.S. growth perking up. The Fed will remain cautious on returning to a more hawkish stance until actual U.S. inflation turns higher, which will take some time given the competing forces of falling unit labor costs and fading “transitory” disinflationary effects. Chart 5Stay Underweight USTs & Below-Benchmark UST Duration We think the 2017 experience will be useful to think about in the coming months. Then, the Fed paused its rate hiking cycle for a few months, primarily due to softer inflation readings related to unusual forces temporarily dampening core inflation (most notably, a one-time collapse in wireless phone prices related to a change in how those costs were measured). Once those “transitory” forces faded out of the data, the Fed resumed lifting the funds rate. It will likely take longer in 2019 before the Fed would feel confident enough to begin raising rates again, especially with the funds rate now much closer to neutral than two years ago. Nonetheless, we expect a similar story of rebounding inflation driving Treasury yields higher to unfold over the latter half of this year. A moderate below-benchmark U.S. duration stance, favoring shorter maturities, combined with a long position in inflation-protected TIPS over nominal Treasuries, remains appropriate. Bottom Line: The Fed remains decidedly neutral, despite market expectations (and White House pressure) for lower U.S. interest rates. Treasury yields are mispriced and should grind higher over the next 6-12 months, led first by inflation expectations and later by a more hawkish Fed. Canada Update: Stay Neutral Back in March, we upgraded our recommended Canadian government bond exposure to neutral after spending a long time at underweight.1 The rationale for our move was that the stunning loss of momentum in the Canadian economy at the end of 2018 would force the Bank of Canada (BoC) to not only stop raising rates, but stay on hold for longer than expected. After our upgrade, we noted that we would consider additional changes to our Canadian allocation after the releases of the latest BoC Business Outlook Survey (BoS) and the updated economic projections at the April 24 monetary policy meeting. None of those events makes us want to move away from the current neutral recommendation. The problem for the BoC is that its policy rate of 1.75% remains well below its own estimated neutral range, which is now 2.25%-3.25% (Chart 6). A similar message comes when looking at the neutral real rate (“r-star”) estimate for Canada produced by the New York Fed, with an r-star of 1.5% versus a current real policy rate around 0%.2 This suggests that Canadian monetary policy remains accommodative and that the BoC should be looking for opportunities to continue moving interest rates toward “neutral” when the economy is accelerating. Yet our own BoC Monitor suggests that an unchanged policy stance is currently appropriate, while -11bps of rate cuts are now discounted in the Canadian Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve. In other words, the BoC is torn between a fundamental interest rate framework that says the hiking cycle is not done yet, and a sluggish economy that demands a dovish bias. The BoC is torn between a fundamental interest rate framework that says the hiking cycle is not done yet, and a sluggish economy that demands a dovish bias. In the press conference following the April 24 BoC policy meeting, BoC Governor Steve Poloz noted that any reference to the need for interest rates to return to the BoC’s neutral range was deliberately omitted from the official policy statement. This is a clear signal that the central bank has shifted its focus from “normalizing” rates to preventing a deeper downturn in Canadian growth. The latest BoS showed that business confidence, expected sales and future investment intentions all fell sharply in the first quarter of 2019 (Chart 7). There was a huge drop in the number of firms reporting capacity pressures and labor shortages, with more firms now expecting their prices to fall than rise over the next year. The main headwinds to the diminished outlook for future sales were related to “a more uncertain outlook in the Western Canadian energy sector, continued weakness in housing-related activity in some regions, and tangible impacts from global trade tensions”.3 Chart 6A Long Way From BoC ##br##Rate Cuts Chart 7Negative Messages From The BoC Business Outlook Survey The BoC places a lot of weight on the BoS in determining its economic forecasts, and in setting monetary policy. Thus, it is no surprise that in the official statement following the April 24 monetary policy meeting, the BoC Governing Council noted that they were “monitoring developments in household spending, oil markets and global trade policy to gauge the extent to which the factors weighing on growth and the inflation outlook were dissipating”.4 Those were the same three concerns of businesses highlighted in the BoS, assuming that “weakness in the Canadian housing market” is related to “developments in household spending” – a logical link given the high level of Canadian household and mortgage debt. Looking at those three factors, there is nothing suggesting that the BoC needs to adjust policy anytime soon (Chart 8). Oil prices are rising, but household spending remains weak and global trade uncertainties have not completely diminished and Canadian export growth has stagnated. Given the mixed picture from the economic data, the BoC will likely remain on hold until there is a clear signal from the data. From a bond investment strategy perspective, staying at neutral also makes sense. A move to overweight Canadian bonds would require an even deeper economic downturn into recessionary territory that would push Canadian unemployment higher (Chart 9). Downgrading back to underweight, however, would require signs of a sustainable rebound in Canadian domestic demand and stronger global growth that would boost Canadian exports – an outcome that would not be visible in the data until at least the third quarter of 2019. Chart 8Watch What The BoC ##br##Is Watching Chart 9A Neutral Weight On Canada Is Still Justified One final point on staying neutral on Canada comes from looking at cross-country spread levels between government bonds in Canada and other major developed economies. The spread levels look historically wide versus sovereign debt from Germany, the U.K., and Australia; wide versus recent history in Japan; but very narrow versus the U.S. (Chart 9). Those spreads are shown without hedging out the currency risk of going long Canadian bonds – and, by association, the Canadian dollar. Once the currency risk is hedged out of those cross-country spreads using 3-month currency forwards, the spread differentials are all far less interesting both in absolute terms and relative to history (Chart 10 & 11). Chart 10Big Differences In Canadian Bond Spreads Vs Other Major DM... Chart 11… But Those Spreads Disappear Once The C$ Exposure Is Hedged So even on an individual country basis, there is no compelling case to be anything but neutral Canadian government bonds versus global currency-hedged benchmarks – which is how we present all our fixed income recommendations in Global Fixed Income Strategy. Bottom Line: The Bank of Canada’s latest reports and commentary indicate that monetary policy will stay on hold over at least the balance of 2019. Bond markets are already priced for that outcome. Maintain a neutral stance on Canadian government bonds in global hedged fixed income portfolios. Sweden Trade Update – Time To Retreat & Regroup Exactly one year ago (May 8, 2018), we initiated trades in our Tactical Overlay portfolio to position for tighter monetary policy, and higher bond yields, in Sweden.5 Specifically, we have been recommending shorting 2-year Swedish government bonds versus German equivalents (hedging the currency exposure back into krona), while also selling 2-year Swedish bonds and buying 10-year Swedish debt in a yield curve flattening trade. The positions were chosen to benefit from an expected bearish repricing of the short-end of the Swedish curve. At this time last year, the positive upward momentum of Swedish growth and inflation had reached a point where the Riksbank was clearly – and credibly – signaling that the long process of normalizing its highly accommodative crisis-era monetary policies would begin. That meant lifting policy rates away from negative territory, as well as shutting down the bond-buying quantitative easing (QE) program. One year later, the economic backdrop has done a 180-degree turn against our original thesis (Chart 12): Swedish growth has slowed, with both the manufacturing PMI and leading economic indicator at the lowest levels since 2013. Unemployment has increased and nominal wage growth has rolled over. Headline CPIF inflation has fallen back below the Riksbank 2% target, while core CPIF inflation remains stuck near 1.5%. The Riksbank changed its forward guidance at last month’s monetary policy meeting, signaling that the benchmark interest rate will remain at -0.25% for “somewhat longer” than was indicated as recently as February (when a rate hike around the end of 2019 or in early 2020 was signaled). The Riksbank also pledged to maintain the size of its QE bond purchases from July 2019 to December 2020, a dovish surprise. Swedish money markets are still discounting 13bps of rate hikes over the next twelve months. Yet our Riksbank Monitor, on the other hand, is now indicating a need for rate cuts, driven by both softer inflation and weaker growth. The minutes from last month’s policy meeting revealed that the forward guidance was adjusted simply because headline inflation had temporarily dipped back below the 2% Riksbank target. The implication is that a return to 2% inflation would prompt the Riksbank to hike. Swedish money markets are still discounting 13bps of rate hikes over the next twelve months. Yet our Riksbank Monitor, on the other hand, is now indicating a need for rate cuts, driven by both softer inflation and weaker growth. A useful rule for investment risk management is: when the underlying rationale for a position is clearly not unfolding as expected, the best thing to do is simply close that position and look for new opportunities better aligned to the current reality. Chart 12No More Pressure On Riksbank ##br##To Hike Chart 13Time To Exit Our Recommended "Hawkish" Trades In Sweden With that in mind, we are choosing to close our tactical trades in Sweden (Chart 13). The 2-year Sweden-Germany spread trade generated a loss of -52bps (including the return from hedging the euro exposure in Germany back into Swedish krona). We were more fortunate with the curve flattening trade, which generated a return of +61bps as the Swedish curve bullishly flattened through falling 10-year yields rather than bearishly flattening through rising 2-year yields (our original expectation). Thus, we are closing out our Sweden trades at a small net gain of +9bps. We will do a deeper analysis on Sweden in an upcoming Global Fixed Income Strategy report to search for new potential trade ideas. Bottom Line: The Riksbank’s recent dovish turn, calling for a flatter trajectory for interest rates and extending asset purchases, will keep Swedish bond yields lower for longer. Thus, we are closing our recommended tactical trades in Sweden that were positioned for a faster path of rate hikes. Robert Robis, CFA, Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, CFA, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, “March Calmness”, dated March 19, 2019, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2 The NY Fed’s estimates for non-U.S. r-star rates for the euro area, Canada, and the U.K. can be found on the NY Fed website. https://www.newyorkfed.org/research/policy/rstar 3https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2019/04/business-outlook-survey-spring-2019/ 4https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2019/04/fad-press-release-2019-04-24/ 5 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, “Sweden: The Riksbank Cannot Kick The Can Down The Road Anymore”, dated May 8, 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns