Commodities & Energy Sector
Highlights Global inflation will slow further, allowing central banks to ease policy. Liquidity indicators will have more upside as monetary policy will remain accommodative. Widening fiscal deficits, easing Chinese credit trends and rising U.S. consumer real income levels, all will allow improved liquidity to boost global growth in the second half of 2019. Important indicators are already flashing an increase in global growth. Yields have upside; keep a below-benchmark duration within bond portfolios. Commodity plays will perform well. The 12-month outlook for stocks remains positive, but they will churn over the coming six months. Equities will nonetheless outperform bonds. Favor cyclicals over defensives and international equities over the U.S. Feature Treasury yields are stuck near 2%, yet the S&P 500 is flirting with all-time highs. Investors are worried about global growth, still hoping that central banks will step in. The fears are well-placed: manufacturing has not stabilized, Asian trade is contracting, and the U.S. real estate sector is in the doldrums. Other concerns include the threat of U.S. President Donald Trump re-igniting the trade war and the U.S. corporate sector’s growing debt load. The positive news is that global inflation will remain low for the next 12 months or so. Without prices accelerating upward, global policymakers will continue to ease monetary and fiscal conditions. Consequently, nascent improvements in global liquidity conditions will blossom and growth will rebound in the second half of the year. Increased growth creates a paradox. At current levels, it is bearish for bonds and bullish for commodities. However, stock valuations will be undermined by higher bond yields, especially because earnings should experience additional downside this year. Consequently, the S&P 500 will churn sideways for the coming three to six months before taking off. In the meantime, stocks should outperform bonds. Blessed By Low Inflation The best news for the global economy is that inflation will stay low. Our U.S. Bond Investment Strategy colleagues recently showed that when the private sector does not quickly build large debt loads, rising inflation prompts all the post-war recessions.1 Today, the private sector’s debt vulnerability is limited. Nonfinancial private-sector leverage has only expanded by 2.1 percentage points of GDP since its trough four years ago (Chart I-1). In particular, after a drop from 134% to 106%, the household sector's debt-to-disposable income ratio has flat-lined for the past three years. Meanwhile, household debt-servicing costs as a percentage of after-tax income are at multi-generational lows. Even in the corporate sector, excesses are smaller than they appear. Despite accumulating US$5 trillion in credit since 2009, the nonfinancial corporate sector’s debt-to-asset ratio remains below its historical average of 22.4%. This sector is also generating free cash flows equal to 2.1% of GDP. Prior to recessions, the corporate sector consumed cash instead of generating it.2 Chart I-1No Excessive Debt Built-Up In The U.S. In this context, we are optimists because inflation is set to slow, leaving policymakers around the world a window to maintain generous monetary conditions and support growth. At the global level, we currently see a paucity of inflation. Among advanced economies, average core inflation is only 1.5%. Moreover, only 15% of these nations are experiencing rates of underlying inflation above the critical 2% level (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Global Inflation Will Stay Tame Going forward, risks are skewed toward a deceleration in prices. Inflation is the most lagging economic variable. Thus, the recent global economic slowdown will continue to exert downward pressure on prices. Singapore, a country highly dependent on trade, is an excellent barometer for global cyclical sectors. In the second quarter of 2019, Singapore’s annual GDP growth declined to 0.1%, its lowest level since the Great Financial Crisis. Historically, this has presaged a marked deceleration in global core CPI (Chart I-2, bottom panel). The weakness in global inflation also will translate into lower U.S. underlying inflation. U.S. import prices (excluding oil) are contracting by 1.4% on an annual basis. Despite U.S. tariffs, import prices from China are also shrinking by 1.5%, the deepest retrenchment since the deflationary scare of 2016. This will weigh on the price of U.S. goods. U.S. activity suggests imported disinflation will spill over into overall core CPI. Since 2009, the changes in the ISM manufacturing index and the annual performance of transport stocks relative to utilities have led core inflation (Chart I-3). Based on these relationships, core CPI should slow markedly. Pipeline inflation measures suggest this is a fait accompli. Core crude producer prices are melting, signaling lower inflation excluding food and energy. Chart I-3Deflationary Forces In The U.S. As Well Finally, there is only a slim chance that inflation will exceed 2.5% in the coming year, according to the St. Louis Fed’s Price Pressure Measure (Chart I-4, top panel). Import prices point toward lower goods prices, while core service CPI is quickly slowing and medical care CPI remains close to 2%, which is near record lows (Chart I-4, second panel). Meanwhile, shelter CPI shows little upward momentum (Chart I-4, third panel). Finally, the rebound in productivity growth to 2.4% is also limiting the inflationary impact of rising wages: unit labor costs are contracting at a 0.8% annual rate, despite a 3.1% year-over-year expansion in average hourly earnings (Chart I-4, bottom panel). Chart I-4Details Of U.S. CPI Evidence, therefore, points to inflation slowing down in advanced economies, even in the more robust U.S. Opening The Liquidity Spigots The lack of inflation allows central banks to ease policy in response to the slowdown in global growth. The Fed is set to trim rates by 25 basis points next week and again later this year. The ECB just telegraphed a rate cut and potentially a resumption of its QE program for September. The Reserve Bank of Australia has chopped rates twice this year, and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand, one time. Meanwhile, the People’s Bank of China has slashed the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) by 3.5% in the past 15 months. The Fed’s interest rate cuts are crucial for U.S. growth and emerging market liquidity conditions. Money moved into EM economies as interest rate markets priced in ever-deeper U.S. rate cuts after the Federal Open Market Committee’s dovish pivot this winter. As a result, EM currencies stabilized, allowing EM central banks to ease policy to support their sagging domestic economies. The Bank of India, the Bank of Indonesia, the Bank of Korea, the South African Reserve Bank, the Bank of Russia, Bank Negara Malaysia, and the Turkish Central Bank have all cut rates. Central banks in Brazil and Mexico are expected to follow suit. Global policy easing should solidify an improvement in many global liquidity indicators and thus, support global growth in the next year: M2 growth in the U.S. bottomed last November. Concurrently, the growth of money of zero maturity in excess of credit has improved since late last year. This sends a positive signal for BCA’s Global Nowcast, BCA’s Global LEIs, and global and Asian export prices (Chart I-5). Chart I-5More Excess Money, More Activity Our U.S. Financial Liquidity Index continues to accelerate, corroborating the message about global growth conditions from our excess-money indicator (Chart I-6). Chart I-6Improving Global Liquidity Conditions Emerging Markets’ M1 is turning up, albeit at a depressed level. This improvement will likely morph into a recovery as EM and DM central banks ease policy. EM M1 has excellent leading properties on EM activity and profits. Gold, a traditional reflation gauge, has broken out as real rates remain depressed. Finally, TED spreads, both on a spot and a three-month forward basis, have tumbled to near all-time lows (Chart I-7). Plentiful global liquidity narrows these spreads. Moreover, their tightness indicates that there is minimal stress in the financial system. Also, TED spreads were more elevated and getting wider before previous recessions, during the euro area crisis and even during the 2015-16 slowdown. Chart I-7No Stress In TED Spreads Low inflation allows monetary authorities to nurture an improvement in liquidity, which would raise the odds that the cycle should soon bottom. Global Growth Indicators In addition to a supportive liquidity environment, important developments point toward a meaningful global growth pick in the second half of the year. At first glance, data continues to deteriorate. Aggregate capital goods orders in the U.S., Japan, and Germany are contracting at a 7.3% annual pace, the flash PMI numbers released this week were poor and the U.S. LEI shrunk last month on a sequential basis and only increased 1.6% year-on-year. However, these data points miss crucial undercurrents. Governments normally loosen fiscal policy – as measured by the changes in cyclically-adjusted primary balances – after a recession has begun. This time, governments are already expanding deficits. In the euro area, the fiscal thrust is moving from -0.3% of GDP to 0.4% of GDP, a 0.7% of GDP boost to growth compared to last year. In China, fiscal deficits are deepening. In response to large tax cuts and expanding subsidies to various sectors, Beijing’s official budget hole has grown from 3.7% of GDP in 2017 to 4.9% this year. Broader measures, which include provincial and local governments, and off-balance-sheet entities, recorded a deficit of 11% this year. In Japan, the government is implementing fiscal offsets as large, if not larger, than the upcoming VAT increase. Even in the U.S., fiscal policy will probably ease. The Congressional Budget Office tabulates a fiscal drag of 0.5% of GDP in 2020 because of the 2011 Budget Control Act. However, the national debt was set to hit its ceiling soon. In response, the GOP and the Democrats have agreed to a proposed funding measure that will ultimately boost spending by US$50 billion more than the previously tabulated fiscal retrenchment (Chart I-8). Chinese credit policy is also increasingly supportive of global growth. Adjustments to the RRR normally take approximately 12 months to affect China’s adjusted total social financing (TSF) (Chart I-9, top panel). Changes to the RRR also lead global industrial activity, albeit more loosely, by 18 months (Chart I-9, second panel). This last relationship exists because soon after the TSF expands, Chinese economic agents use the proceeds to invest or spend on durable goods. This process boosts Chinese imports and lifts global economic activity (Chart I-9, bottom panel). Moreover, as we argued last month, we expect China’s reflationary efforts to continue for the rest of the year.3 Chart I-9The Impact Of The Chinese Stimulus Is Only Starting To Be Felt China’s stimulus is showing early signs of working, despite regulatory constraints on the banking sector. Construction and installation spending by Chinese real estate firms troughed in June 2018 and are growing at a 5.4% annual pace. The growth of equipment purchases is a stunning 22%, near its highest yearly rate in three years. Additionally, China’s intake of steel and cement is surging. These developments normally materialize ahead of rebounds in the PMI or the Li-Keqiang index. Even the outlook for China’s auto sales may be improving. Vehicle sales in China fell by 15.8% in May. In June, they remained soft despite heavy discounts by auto manufacturers. However, vehicle inventories are falling, indicating that auto production is poised to pick up. Importantly, real income levels for U.S. consumers are on the rise. Real average hourly earnings are growing by 1.8% year-on-year, the highest in this cycle. This is a dividend from the recent uptick in productivity (Chart I-10). Mounting productivity both puts a lid on inflation and enhances real incomes. Chart I-10Productivity Is The Name Of The Game Additional developments warrant optimism over global growth: The performance of EM carry trades funded in yen is rebounding. Historically, this has been a reliable leading indicator of global industrial activity (Chart I-11, top panel). As carry traders buy EM currencies and sell the yen, they borrow funds from an economy replete with excess liquidity and savings (Japan) and inject them where they are needed to finance investment and consumption (the EM). In the process, they bid up EM currencies and inject liquidity in those countries, supporting growth conditions globally. Chart I-11Positive Signs For Growth The annual performance of the sectors most sensitive to global growth conditions – global semi, industrials and materials stocks – is bottoming relative to the broader market. Normally, this happens ahead of troughs in BCA’s Global Nowcast (Chart I-11, middle panel). European luxury stocks are performing strongly, which also usually precedes rebounds in global economic activity (Chart I-11, bottom panel). Shipping costs are moving up. The Baltic Dry Index, a measure of the cost of shipping commodities, has surged by 270% since February 2019 to its highest level since 2013. Some have argued this gauge overstates the economy’s potential strength. However, the Harpex index, a measure of the cost of shipping containers, has risen by 30% in the same period. This concurrence of moves suggests that the Baltic Dry is probably correct about the direction of growth, but might be overstating the size of the rebound. Our composite momentum indicator for ethylene and propylene – two chemicals that enter into the production of pretty much everything that makes the modern economy work – is forming a bullish price divergence (Chart I-12). The price of these chemicals normally rises when global growth accelerates. Chart I-12Chemical Technicals Point To A Rebound Bottom Line: Global growth should be buoyed by several indicators, specifically a low inflation environment, an easing in both monetary and fiscal policy, a positive outlook for already improving global liquidity conditions, a healthy U.S. consumer, and the lagged impact of China’s stimulus. Investment Implications: Strong Crosscurrents For Stocks Bonds At this juncture, bonds may be the easier asset class to call; a below-benchmark duration is appropriate for fixed-income portfolios. Pessimism towards global growth is most evident in the prices of safe-haven assets. According to the CFTC, asset managers’ net-long positions in all forms of listed Treasurys contracts are hovering near all-time highs. This makes bonds vulnerable to positive economic surprises. The long-term interest rate component of the ZEW survey corroborates this message. Expectations for global long-term interest rates are near record lows. If a recession is avoided, then readings this low offer a powerful contrarian signal for bonds (Chart I-13). Chart I-13Bonds: A Contrarian Bet A potential uptick in growth would confirm this bond-bearish setup. The improvement in Chinese TSF and the strength in European luxury goods makers point towards higher yields (Chart I-14). Bond prices would also suffer if the average price of ethylene and propylene can heed the bullish signal from its momentum oscillator. Moreover, in the post-war era, on average Treasury yields typically bottomed 12 months ahead of inflation. Chart I-14Cyclical Dynamics Point To Higher Yields Given that bonds are expensive, there is a greater likelihood that positioning and cyclical forces will push up yields. Our bond valuation model shows that Treasurys are expensive and various estimates of global term premia have never been this negative. This reflects the belief that policy rates will stay low forever. However, if global growth picks up, then the Fed is highly unlikely to cut rates over the coming 12 months by the 90 basis points currently discounted by the OIS curve. Moreover, stimulating at this point in the cycle increases the risk of generating inflation down the road. Accelerating inflation would ultimately force global central banks to boost rates in the next three to five years by much more than expected, warranting higher term premia around the world. Therefore, we expect inflation expectations and term premia – but not real rates – to drive up yields, at least until global central banks abandon their dovish biases. Commodities Commodities and related assets are attractive. A measure of growth sentiment based on futures positioning in stocks, oil, copper, the Australian dollar and the Canadian dollar relative to bets on Treasury of all maturities and the dollar index shows that investors have not moved into commodity plays (Chart I-15). Moreover, traders who manage money on behalf of clients are also massively short copper, one of the most growth-sensitive commodities (Chart I-16). Chart I-15Investors Are Not Positioned For A Rebound In Growth Chart I-16Copper Is An Attractive Bet For A Growth Rebound The six-month outlook is particularly positive for the Australian dollar. The RBA has already moved aggressively to ease policy and the purging of excesses in the Australian economy is well advanced. Property borrowing for investments has collapsed by 35%, housing activity has contracted by 22%, and building permits have fallen by 20%. However, the Australian labor market remains robust and early indicators of real estate activity in major cities are stabilizing. External forces are also positive for the AUD. Strong steel prices, which have contributed to the rally in iron ore, coupled with quickly growing Australian LNG exports, will boost the terms of trade for the AUD. Moreover, the rebound in Chinese TSF, which we expect to gather momentum, creates another tailwind (Chart I-17, top panel). What’s more, rising ethylene and propylene prices, as well as rallying stock prices of European luxury goods makers, are strong supports for commodity currencies (Chart I-17, second and third panel). Chart I-17The AUD Looks Increasingly Interesting Silver is another attractive play. Last month, we argued that easy global policy would create an important support for gold.4 Since then, silver has broken out of a downward sloping trend line in place since 2016. Unlike gold, silver is still trading near very depressed levels (Chart I-18). Moreover, according to net speculative positions, gold is overbought on a tactical basis and ripe for a pullback, whereas silver is not nearly as popular with speculators. Our optimistic stance on global growth is congruent with an outperformance of silver relative to gold. Silver has more industrial uses than gold and the gold-to-silver ratio generally falls when manufacturing activity perks up. Chart I-18Silver To Shine Brighter Than Gold Equities The window to own stocks remains open. Stocks have more upside on a 9- to 12-month basis, but are set to churn over the coming three to six months. The risk of sharp but temporary corrections is elevated. Stocks rarely enter a bear market if a recession is far away. Stock prices perform well in the 12 months prior to the last half-year before a recession begins (Table I-1). If we expect growth to pick up over the next 6 to 12 months and policy to remain easy, then a recession will not occur before late 2021/early 2022. The improvement in our global liquidity indicators also supports a period of strong equity performance ahead (Chart I-19). Moreover, the 2-year/fed funds rate yield curve is inverted. Since the 1980s, after such inversions, the median 12-month return for the S&P 500 has been 14%. Stripping out recessionary episodes, the median returns would have been 18.6%, 13.1%, and 9.9%, over 12, 6 and 3 months, respectively (Table I-2). Chart I-19Liquidity Will Put A Floor Under Stock Prices Technically, stocks are also on a strong footing. The equal-weight S&P 500 has broken out, indicating robust breadth. Our composite sentiment indicator for U.S. equities is not flagging any euphoria among market participants (Chart I-20). BCA’s Monetary, Technical and Intermediate Indicators show one should own stocks. Chart I-20BCA's Indicators Favor Stocks Nevertheless, important negatives for stocks also exist. The rally in equities has been fueled by hope, as our U.S. Equity Strategy team has highlighted. Since December 2018, the rally has been driven by multiples expansion (Chart I-21). Meanwhile, Section II’s debate shows that Anastasios’s earnings models all point to low earnings growth later this year. The weakness in core crude producer price inflation will weigh on margins and corporate profits (Chart I-22). It will therefore become increasingly difficult to justify widening P/E ratios. Furthermore, the S&P 500 has moved well ahead of the performance implied by earnings estimates revisions (Chart I-23).5 Chart I-21Multiples Inflation Chart I-22Profits Still Face Near-Term Hurdles Chart I-23EPS Revisions And Stock Prices Have Dissociated From a valuation perspective, the S&P’s price-to-book, price-to-sales, or cyclically adjusted P/E ratio, all are demanding by historical standards, but justifiable if Treasurys only offer a 2% yield. This rally based on hope is vulnerable to our expectations of higher yields. Only once earnings rebound, which will pull down multiples in a benign fashion, can stocks resume their uptrend. U.S. stocks will probably churn for the rest of the year. The media made much of the S&P 500 hitting new highs in September last year and this month, but the U.S. benchmark is only 3.5% above its January 2018 peak. U.S. stocks have been very volatile, but have gone nowhere for 18 months; this pattern should hold. We are overweight stocks relative to bonds given that we recommend maintaining a below-benchmark duration for fixed-income portfolios. At 1.9%, the S&P 500 dividend yield is in line with the yield to maturity of 10-year Treasurys, while the wide equity risk premium suggests that stocks are a bargain compared to bonds. Also, the stock-to-bond ratio performs well when global industrial activity rebounds (Chart I-24). Chart I-24If Growth Helps Chemical Prices, It Will Help Stocks Outperform Bonds... Cyclical stocks will likely outperform defensive equities on rebounding global growth. The bullish configuration in the price of chemicals is consistent with a period of outperformance for cyclical equities (Chart I-25). Cyclicals also perform well when yields are moving higher, especially when central banks remain accommodative. A positive view on commodities fits within this pattern. Chart I-25...And Cyclicals Outperform Defensives European stocks are better placed than their U.S. counterparts in the coming six to nine months. European stocks outperform U.S. ones when the Chinese TSF moves up (Chart I-26), reflecting their higher sensitivity to the global business cycle. Additionally, European equities are trading at a large discount. The forward P/E and price-to-book of an equally weighted average of European stocks stand at 14.4 and 2.1 respectively, versus 20.7 and 4.1 for the U.S. Chart I-26Look Into Upgrading Europe At The Expense Of The U.S. Loan volumes will benefit from the large easing in European financial conditions resulting from the 166-basis-point drop in peripheral yields this year, with BTP yields falling to a near three years low following the ECB’s dovish tilt. This will remove some of the negative impact of soft net interest margins on bank profits. European banks could be an attractive trade. Finally, global auto stocks are trading at their lowest levels relative to the global equity benchmark since the beginning of the 2000s (Chart I-27). Moreover, global auto stocks trade at 44% discount to the broad market on a 12-month forward P/E basis, the largest handicap since 2009. This sector should perform well in the next year based on purged global auto inventories, robust consumer real income, falling interest rates and rebounding global growth. Chart I-27Autos Are A Contrarian Play Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst July 25, 2019 Next Report: August 29, 2019 II. What Goes On Between Those Walls? BCA’s Diverging Views In The Open BCA takes pride in its independence. Strategists publish what they really believe, informed by their framework and analysis. Occasionally, this independence results in strongly diverging views and we currently are in one of those times. Within BCA, two views on the cyclical (six to 12-months) outlook for assets have emerged. One camp expects global growth to rebound in the second half of the year. Along with accelerating growth, they anticipate stock prices and risk assets to remain firm, cyclical equities to outperform defensive ones, safe-haven yields to move up, and the dollar to weaken. Meanwhile, another group foresees a further deterioration in activity or a delayed recovery, additional downside in stocks and risk assets, outperformance of defensives relative to cyclicals, low safe-haven yields, and a generally stronger dollar. For the sake of transparency, we have asked representatives of each camp to make their case in a round-table discussion, allowing our clients to decide for themselves which view is more appealing to them. Global Investment Strategy’s Peter Berezin, U.S. Investment Strategy’s Doug Peta, and Global Fixed Income Strategy’s Rob Robis take the mantle for the bullish camp. U.S. Equity Strategy’s Anastasios Avgeriou, Emerging Market Strategy’s Arthur Budaghyan, and European Investment Strategy’s Dhaval Joshi represent the bearish group.6 The round-table discussion below focuses on the cyclical outlook. For longer investment horizons, most strategists agree that a recession is highly likely by 2022. Moreover, on a long-term basis, valuations in both risk assets and safe-haven bonds are very demanding. In this context, a significant back up in yields could hammer risk assets. The BCA Round Table Mathieu Savary: Yield curve inversions have often been harbingers of recessions. Anastasios, you are amongst those investors troubled by this inversion. Do you not worry that this episode might prove similar to 1998, when the curve only inverted temporarily and did not foreshadow a recession? Moreover, how do you account for the highly variable time lags between the inversion of the yield curve and the occurrence of a recession? Anastasios Avgeriou: The yield curve inverts at or near the peak of the business cycle and it eventually forewarns of upcoming recessions. This past December, parts of the yield curve inverted and now, BCA’s U.S. Equity Strategy service is heeding the signal from this simple indicator, especially given that the SPX has subsequently made all-time highs as our research predicted.2 The yield curve inversion forecasts a Fed rate cut, and it has never been wrong on that front. It served well investors that heeded the message in June of 1998 as the market soon thereafter fell 20% in a heartbeat. If investors got out at the 1998 peak near 1200 and forwent about 350 points of gains until the March 2000 SPX cycle peak, they still benefited if they held tight as the market ultimately troughed near 777 in October 2002 (Chart II-1). Chart II-1 (ANASTASIOS)The 1998 Episode Revisited With regard to timing the previous seven recessions using the yield curve, if we accept that mid-1998 is the starting point of the inversion, it took 33 months before the recession commenced. Last cycle, the recession began 24 months after the inversion. Consequently, December 2020 is the earliest possible onset of recession and September 2021, the latest. Our forecast calls for SPX EPS to fall 20% in 2021 to $140 with the multiple dropping between 13.5x and 16.5x for an SPX end-2020 target range of 1,890-2,310.3 In other words we are not willing to play a 100-200 point advance for a potential 1,000 point drawdown. The risk/reward tradeoff is to the downside, and we choose to sit this one out. Mathieu: Rob, you take a much more sanguine view of the current curve inversion. Why? Rob Robis: While the four most dangerous words in investing are “this time is different,” this time really does appear to be different. Never before have negative term premia on longer-term Treasury yields and a curve inversion coexisted (Chart II-2). Longer-term Treasury yields have therefore been pushed down to extremely low levels by factors beyond just expectations of a lower fed funds rate. The negative Treasury term premium is distorting the economic message of the U.S. yield curve inversion. Chart II-2 (ROB)Negative Term Premium Distorting The Economic Message Of An Inverted Yield Curve Term premia are depressed everywhere, as seen in German, Japanese and other yields, reflecting the intense demand for safe assets like government bonds during a period of heightened uncertainty. Global bond markets may also be discounting a higher probability of the ECB restarting its Asset Purchase Program, as term premia typically fall sharply when central banks embark on quantitative easing. This has global spillovers. Prior to previous recessions, U.S. Treasury curve inversions occurred when the Fed was running an unequivocally tight monetary policy. That is not the case today. The real fed funds rate still is not above the Fed’s estimate of the neutral real rate, a.k.a. “r-star,” which was the necessary ingredient for all previous Treasury curve inversions since 1960 (Chart II-3). Chart II-3 (ROB)Fed Policy Is Not Tight Enough For Sustained Curve Inversion Mathieu: The level of policy accommodation will most likely determine whether Anastasios or Rob is proven right. Peter, you have been steadfastly arguing that policy, in the U.S. at least, remains easy. Can you elaborate why? Peter Berezin: Remember that the neutral rate of interest is the rate that equalizes the level of aggregate demand with the economy’s supply-side potential. Loose fiscal policy and fading deleveraging headwinds are boosting demand in the United States. So is rising wage growth, especially at the bottom of the income distribution. Given that the U.S. does not currently suffer from any major imbalances, I believe that the economy can tolerate higher rates without significant ill-effects. In other words, monetary policy is currently quite easy. Of course, we cannot observe the neutral rate directly. Like a black hole, one can only detect it based on the effect that it has on its surroundings. Housing is by far the most interest rate-sensitive sector of the economy. If history is any guide, the recent decline in mortgage rates will boost housing activity in the remainder of the year (Chart II-4). If that relationship breaks down, as it did during the Great Recession, it would suggest that the neutral rate is quite low. Chart II-4 (PETER)Declining Mortgage Rates Bode Well For Housing Given that mortgage underwriting standards have been quite strong and the homeowner vacancy is presently very low, our guess is that housing will hold up well. We should know better in the next few months. Mathieu: Dhaval, you do not agree. Why do you think global rates are not accommodative? Dhaval Joshi: Actually, I think that global rates are accommodative, but that the global bond yield can rise by just 70 bps before conditions become perilously un-accommodative. Here’s where I disagree with Peter: for me, the danger doesn’t come from economics, it comes from the mathematics of ultra-low bond yields. The unprecedented and experimental panacea of our era has been ‘universal QE’ – which has led to ultra-low bond yields everywhere. But what is not understood is that when bond yields reach and remain close to their lower bound, weird things happen to the financial markets. I refer you to other reports for the details, but in a nutshell, the proximity of the lower bound to yields increases the risk of owning supposedly ‘safe’ bonds to the risk of owning so-called ‘risk-assets’. The result is that the valuation of risk-assets rises exponentially (Chart II-5). Because when the riskiness of the asset-classes converges, investors price risk-assets to deliver the same ultra-low nominal return as bonds.4 Comparisons with previous economic cycles miss the current danger. The post-2000 policy easing distorted the global economy by engineering a credit boom – so the subsequent danger emanated from the most credit-sensitive sectors in the economy such as mortgage lending. In contrast, the post-2008 ‘universal QE’ has severely distorted the valuation relationship between bonds and global risk-assets – so this is where the current danger lies. Higher bond yields can suddenly undermine the valuation support of global risk-assets whose $400 trillion worth dwarfs the global economy by five to one. Where is this tipping point? It is when the global 10-year yield – defined as the average of the U.S., euro area,5 and China – approaches 2.5%. Through the past five years, the inability of this yield to remain above 2.5% confirms the hyper-sensitivity of financial conditions to this tipping point (Chart II-6). Right now, I agree that bond yields are accommodative. But the scope for yields to move higher is quite limited. Chart II-6 (DHAVAL)Since 2015, the Global Long Bond Yield Has Struggled To Surpass 2.5 Percent Mathieu: Monetary policy is important to the outlook, but so is the global manufacturing cycle. The global growth slowdown has been concentrated in the manufacturing sector, tradeable goods in particular. Across advanced economies, the service and consumer sectors have been surprisingly resilient, but this will not last if the industrial sector decelerates further. Arthur, you still do not anticipate any major improvement in global trade and industrial production. Can you elaborate why? Arthur Budaghyan: To properly assess the economic outlook, one needs to understand what has caused the ongoing global trade/manufacturing downturn. One thing we know for certain: It originated in China, not the U.S. Chart II-7illustrates that Korean, Japanese, Taiwanese and Singaporean exports to China have been shrinking at an annual rate of 10%, while their shipments to the U.S. have been growing. China’s aggregate imports have also been contracting. This entails that from the perspective of the rest of the world, China has been and remains in recession. Chart II-7 (ARTHUR)Global Trade Is Down Due To China Not U.S. U.S. manufacturing is the least exposed to China, which is the main reason why it has been the last shoe to drop. Hence, the U.S. has lagged in this downturn, and one should not be looking to the U.S. for clues about a potential global recovery. We need to gauge what will turn Chinese demand around. In this regard, the rising credit and fiscal spending impulse is positive, but it has so far failed to kick start a recovery (Chart II-8). The key reason has been a declining marginal propensity to spend among households and companies. Notably, the marginal propensity to spend of mainland companies leads industrial metals prices by a few months, and it currently continues to point south (Chart II-8, bottom panel). Chart II-8 (ARTHUR)Stimulus Versus Marginal Propensity To Spend The lack of willingness among Chinese consumers and enterprises to spend is due to several factors: (1) the U.S.-China confrontation; (2) high levels of indebtedness among both enterprises and households (Chart II-9); (3) ongoing regulatory scrutiny over banks and shadow banking as well as local government debt; and (4) a lack of outright government subsidies for purchases of autos and housing. Chart II-9 (ARTHUR)Chinese Households Are Leveraged Than U.S. Ones On the whole, the falling marginal propensity to spend will all but ensure that any recovery in mainland household and corporate spending is delayed. Mathieu: Meanwhile, Peter, you have a much more optimistic stance. Why do you differ so profoundly with Arthur’s view? Peter: China’s deleveraging campaign began more than a year before global manufacturing peaked. I have no doubt that slower Chinese credit growth weighed on global capex, but we should not lose sight of the fact there are natural ebbs and flows at work. Most manufactured goods retain some value for a while after they are purchased. If spending on, say, consumer durable goods or business equipment rises to a high level for an extended period, a glut will form, requiring a period of lower production. These demand cycles typically last about three years; roughly 18 months on the way up, 18 months on the way down (Chart II-10). The last downleg in the global manufacturing cycle began in early 2018, so if history is any guide, we are nearing a trough. The fact that U.S. manufacturing output rose in both May and June, followed by this week’s sharp rebound in the July Philly Fed Manufacturing survey, supports this view. Chart II-10 (PETER)The Global Manufacturing Cycle Has Likely Reached A Bottom Of course, extraneous forces could complicate matters. If trade tensions ratchet higher, this would weaken my bullish thesis. Nevertheless, with China stimulating its economy again, it would probably take a severe trade war to push the global economy into recession. Mathieu: Dhaval, you are not as negative as Arthur, but nonetheless expect a slowdown in the second half of the year. What is your rationale? Dhaval: To be clear, I am not forecasting a recession or major downturn – unless, as per my previous answer, the global 10-year bond yield approaches 2.5% and triggers a severe dislocation in global risk-assets. In fact, many people get the relationship between recession and financial market dislocation back-to-front: they think that the recession causes the financial market dislocation when, in most cases, the financial market dislocation causes the recession! Nevertheless, I do believe that European and global growth is entering a regular down-oscillation based on the following compelling evidence: 1. From a low last summer, quarter-on-quarter GDP growth rates in the developed economies have already rebounded to the upper end of multi-year ranges. 2. Short-term credit impulses in Europe, the U.S., and China are entering down-oscillations (Chart II-11). Chart II-11 (DHAVAL)Short-Term Impulses Rebounded... But Are Now Rolling Over 3. The best current activity indicators, specifically the ZEW economic sentiment indicators, have rolled over. 4. The outperformance of industrials – the equity sector most exposed to global growth – has also rolled over. Why expect a down-oscillation? Because it is the rate of decline in the bond yield that drove the rebound in growth after its low last summer. Furthermore, it is impossible for the rate of decline in the bond yield to keep increasing, or even stay where it is. Counterintuitively, if bond yields decline, but at a reduced pace, the effect is to slow economic growth. Mathieu: A positive and a negative view of the world logically result in bifurcated outlooks for interest rates and the dollar. Rob, how do you see U.S., German, and Japanese yields evolving over the coming 12 months? Rob: If global growth rebounds, U.S. Treasury yields will have far more upside than Bund or JGB yields. Inflation expectations should recover faster in the U.S., with the Fed taking inflationary risks by cutting rates with a 3.7% unemployment rate and core CPI inflation at 2.1%. The Fed is also likely to disappoint by delivering fewer rate cuts than are currently discounted by markets (90bps over the next 12 months). Treasury yields can therefore increase more than German and Japanese yields, with the ECB and BoJ more likely to deliver the modest rate cuts currently discounted in their yield curves (Chart II-12). Chart II-12 (ROB)U.S. Treasuries Will Underperform Bunds & JGBs Japanese yields will remain mired at or below zero over the next 6-12 months, as wage growth and core inflation remain too anemic for the BoJ to alter its 0% target on 10-year JGB yields. German yields have a bit more potential to rise if European growth begins to recover, but will lag any move higher in Treasury yields. That means that the Treasury-Bund and Treasury-JGB spreads will move higher over the next year. Negative German and Japanese yields may look completely unappetizing compared to +2% U.S. Treasury yields, but this handicap vanishes when all three yields are expressed in U.S. dollar terms. Hedging a 10-year German Bund or JGB into higher-yielding U.S. dollars creates yields that are 50-60bps higher than a 10-year U.S. Treasury. It is abundantly clear that German and Japanese bonds will outperform Treasuries over the next year if global growth recovers. Mathieu: Peter, your positive view on global growth means that the Fed will cut rates less than what is currently priced into the OIS curve. So why do you expect the dollar to weaken in the second half of 2019? Peter: What the Fed does affects interest rate differentials, but just as important is what other central banks do. The ECB is not going to raise rates over the next 12 months. However, if euro area growth surprises on the upside later this year, investors will begin to question the need for the ECB to keep policy rates in negative territory until mid-2024. The market’s expectation of where policy rates will be five years out tends to correlate well with today’s exchange rate. By that measure, there is scope for interest rate differentials to narrow against the U.S. dollar (Chart II-13). Chart II-13A (PETER)Interest Rate Expectations Against The U.S. Should Narrow (II) Chart II-13B (PETER)Interest Rate Expectations Against The U.S. Should Narrow (I) Keep in mind that the U.S. dollar is a countercyclical currency, meaning that it moves in the opposite direction of global growth (Chart II-14). This countercyclicality stems from the fact that the U.S. economy is more geared towards services than manufacturing compared with the rest of the world. Chart II-14 (PETER)The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency As such, when global growth accelerates, capital tends to flow from the U.S. to the rest of the world, translating into more demand for foreign currency and less demand for dollars. If global growth picks up in the remainder of the year, as I expect, the dollar will weaken. Mathieu: Arthur, as you are significantly more negative on growth than either Rob or Peter, how do you see the dollar and global yields evolving over the coming six to 12 months? Arthur: I am positive on the trade-weighted U.S. dollar for the following reasons: The U.S. dollar is a countercyclical currency – it exhibits a negative correlation with the global business cycle. Persistent weakness in the global economy emanating from China/EM is positive for the dollar because the U.S. economy is the major economic block least exposed to a China/EM slowdown. Meanwhile, the greenback is only loosely correlated with U.S. interest rates. Thereby, the argument that lower U.S. rates will drive the value of the U.S. currency much lower is overemphasized. The Federal Reserve will cut rates by more than what is currently priced into the market only in a scenario of a complete collapse in global growth. Yet this scenario would be dollar bullish. In this case, the dollar’s strong inverse relationship with global growth will outweigh its weak positive relationship with interest rates. Contrary to consensus views, the U.S. dollar is not very expensive. According to unit labor costs based on the real effective exchange rate – the best currency valuation measure – the greenback is only one standard deviation above its fair value. Often, financial markets tend to overshoot to 1.5 or 2 standard deviations below or above their historical mean before reversing their trend. One of the oft-cited headwinds facing the dollar is positioning, yet there is a major discrepancy between positioning in DM and EM currencies versus the U.S. dollar. In aggregate, investors – asset managers and leveraged funds – have neutral exposure to DM currencies, but they are very long liquid EM exchange rates such as the BRL, MXN, ZAR and RUB versus the greenback. The dollar strength will occur mostly versus EM and commodities currencies. In other words, the euro, other European currencies and the yen will outperform EM exchange rates. I have less conviction on global bond yields. While global growth will disappoint, yields have already fallen a lot and the U.S. economy is currently not weak enough to justify around 90 basis points of rate cuts over the next 12 months. Mathieu: Before we move on to investment recommendations, Anastasios, you have done a lot of interesting work on the outlook for U.S. profits. What is the message of your analysis? Anastasios: While markets cheered the trade truce following the recent G-20 meeting, no tariff rollback was agreed. Since the tariff rate on $200bn of Chinese imports went up from 10% to 25% on May 10, odds are high that manufacturing will remain in the doldrums. This will likely continue to weigh on profits for the remainder of the year. Profit growth should weaken further in the coming six months. Periods of falling manufacturing PMIs result in larger negative earnings growth surprises as market forecasters rarely anticipate the full breadth and depth of slowdowns. Absent profit growth, equity markets lack the necessary ‘oxygen’ for a durable high-quality rally. Until global growth momentum turns, investors should fade rallies. Our four-factor SPX EPS growth model is flirting with the contraction zone. In addition, our corporate pricing power proxy and Goldman Sachs’ Current Activity Indicator both send a distress signal for SPX profits (Chart II-15). Chart II-15 (ANASTASIOS)Gravitational Pull Already, more than half of the S&P 500 GICS1 sectors’ profits are estimated to have contracted in Q2, and three sectors could see declining revenues on a year-over-year basis, according to I/B/E/S data. Q3 depicts an equally grim profit picture that will also spill over to Q4. Adding it all up, profits will underwhelm into year-end. Mathieu: Doug, you do not share Anastasios’s anxiety. What offsets do you foresee? Moreover, you are not concerned by the U.S. corporate balance sheets. Can you share why? Doug Peta: As it relates to earnings, we foresee offsets from a revival in the rest of the world. Increasingly accommodative global monetary policy and reviving Chinese growth will give global ex-U.S. economies a boost. That inflection may go largely unnoticed in U.S. GDP, but it will help the S&P 500, as U.S.-based multinationals’ earnings benefit from increased overseas demand and a weaker dollar. When it comes to corporate balance sheets, shifting some of the funding burden to debt from equity when interest rates are at generational lows is a no-brainer. Even so, non-financial corporates have not added all that much leverage (Chart II-16). Low interest rates, wide profit margins and conservative capex have left them with ample free cash flow to service their obligations (Chart II-17). Chart II-16 (DOUG)Corporations Have Not Added Much Leverage ... Chart II-17 (DOUG)...Though They Have Ample Cash Flow To Service It Every single viable corporate entity with an effective federal tax rate above 21% became a better credit when the top marginal rate was cut from 35% to 21%. Every such corporation now has more net income with which to service debt, and will have that income unless the tax code is revised. You can’t see it in EBITDA multiples, but it will show up in reduced defaults. Mathieu: The last, and most important question. What are each of your main investment recommendations to capitalize on the economic trends you anticipate over the coming 6-12 months? Let’s start with the pessimists: Arthur: First, the rally in global cyclicals and China plays since December has been premature and is at risk of unwinding as global growth and cyclical profits disappoint. Historical evidence suggests that global share prices have not led but have actually been coincident with the global manufacturing PMI (Chart II-18). The recent divergence is unprecedented. Chart II-18 (ARTHUR)Global Stocks Historically Did Not Lead PMIs Second, EM risk assets and currencies remain vulnerable. EM and Chinese earnings per share are shrinking. The leading indicators signal that the rate of contraction will deepen, at least the end of this year (Chart II-19). Asset allocators should continue underweighting EM versus DM equities. Chart II-19 (ARTHUR)China And EM Profits Are Contracting Finally, my strongest-conviction, market-neutral trade is to short EM or Chinese banks and go long U.S. banks. The latter are much healthier than EM/Chinese ones, as we discussed in our recent report.6 Anastasios: The U.S. Equity Strategy team is shifting away from a cyclical and toward a more defensive portfolio bent. Our highest conviction view is to overweight mega caps versus small caps. Small caps are saddled with debt and are suffering a margin squeeze. Moreover, approximately 600 constituents of the Russell 2000 have no forward profits. Only one S&P 500 company has negative forward EPS. Given that both the S&P and the Russell omit these figures from the forward P/E calculation, this is masking the small cap expensiveness. When adjusted for this discrepancy, small caps are trading at a hefty premium versus large caps (Chart II-20). Chart II-20 (ANASTASIOS)Continue To Avoid Small Caps We have also upgraded the S&P managed health care and the S&P hypermarkets groups. If the economic slowdown persists into early 2020, both of these defensive subgroups will fare well. In mid-April, we lifted the S&P managed health care group to an above benchmark allocation and posited that the selloff in this group was overdone as the odds of “Medicare For All” becoming law were slim. Moreover, a tight labor market along with melting medical cost inflation would boost the industry’s margins and profits (Chart II-21). Chart II-21 (ANASTASIOS)Buy Hypermarkets This week, we upgraded the defensive S&P hypermarkets index to overweight arguing that the souring macro landscape coupled with a firming industry demand outlook will support relative share prices (Chart II-22). Chart II-22 (ANASTASIOS)Stick With Managed Health Care Dhaval: To be fair, I am not a pessimist. Provided the global bond yield stays well below 2.5 percent, the support to risk-asset valuations will prevent a major dislocation. But in a growth down-oscillation, the big game in town will be sector rotation into pro-defensive investment plays, especially into those defensives that have underperformed (Chart II-23). Chart II-23 (DHAVAL)Switch Out Of Growth-Sensitives Into Healthcare On this basis: Overweight Healthcare versus Industrials. Overweight the Eurostoxx 50 versus the Shanghai Composite and the Nikkei 225. Overweight U.S. T-bonds versus German bunds. Overweight the JPY in a portfolio of G10 currencies. Mathieu: And now, the optimists: Doug: So What? is the overriding question that guides all of BCA’s research: What is the practical investment application of this macro observation? But Why Now? is a critical corollary for anyone allocating investment capital: Why is the imbalance you’ve observed about to become a problem? As Herbert Stein said, “If something cannot go on forever, it will stop.” Imbalances matter, but Dornbusch’s Law counsels patience in repositioning portfolios on their account: “Crises take longer to arrive than you can possibly imagine, but when they do come, they happen faster than you can possibly imagine.” Look at Chart II-24, which shows a vast white sky (bull markets) with intermittent clusters of gray (recessions) and light red (bear markets) clouds. Market inflections are severe, but uncommon. When the default condition of an economy is to grow, and equity prices to rise, it is not enough for an investor to identify an imbalance, s/he also has to identify why it’s on the cusp of reversing. Right now, as it relates to the U.S., there aren’t meaningful imbalances in either markets or the real economy. Chart II-24 (DOUG)Recessions And Bear Markets Travel Together Even if we had perfect knowledge that a recession would arrive in 18 months, now would be way too early to sell. The S&P 500 has historically peaked an average of six months before the onset of a recession, and it has delivered juicy returns in the year preceding that peak (Table II-1). Bull markets tend to sprint to the finish line (Chart II-25). If this one is like its predecessors, an investor risks significant relative underperformance if s/he fails to participate in its go-go latter stages. We are bullish on the outlook for the next six to twelve months, and recommend overweighting equities and spread product in balanced U.S. portfolios while significantly underweighting Treasuries. Peter: I agree with Doug. Equity bear markets seldom occur outside of recessions and recessions rarely occur when monetary policy is accommodative. Policy is currently easy, and will get even more stimulative if the Fed and several other central banks cut rates. Global equities are not super cheap, but they are not particularly expensive either. They currently trade at about 15-times forward earnings. Given the ultra-low level of global bond yields, this generates an equity risk premium (ERP) that is well above its historical average (Chart II-26). One should favor stocks over bonds when the ERP is high. Chart II-26A (PETER)Equity Risk Premia Remain Elevated (II) Chart II-26B (PETER)Equity Risk Premia Remain Elevated (I) The ERP is especially elevated outside the United States. This is partly because non-U.S. stocks trade at a meager 13-times forward earnings, but it also reflects the fact that bond yields are lower overseas. As global growth accelerates, the dollar will weaken. Equity sectors and regions with a more cyclical bent will benefit (Chart II-27). We expect to upgrade EM and European stocks later this summer. Chart II-27 (PETER)EM And Euro Area Equities Outperform When Global Growth Improves A softer dollar will also benefit gold. Bullion will get a further boost early next decade when inflation begins to accelerate. We went long gold on April 17, 2019 and continue to believe in this trade. Rob: For fixed income investors, the most obvious way to play a combination of monetary easing and recovering global growth is to overweight corporate debt versus government bonds (Chart II-28). Chart II-28 (ROB)Best Bond Bets: Overweight Global Corporates & Inflation-Linked Bonds Within the U.S., corporate bond valuations look more attractive in high-yield over investment grade. Assuming a benign outlook for default risk in a reaccelerating U.S. economy, with the Fed easing, going for the carry in high-yield looks interesting. Emerging market credit should also do well if we see a bit of U.S. dollar weakness and additional stimulus measures in China. European corporates, however, may end up being the big winner if the ECB chooses to restart its Asset Purchase Program and ramps up its buying of European company debt. There are fewer restrictions for the ECB to buy corporates compared to the self-imposed limits on government bond purchases. The ECB would be entering a political minefield if it chose to buy more Italian debt and less German debt, but nobody would mind if the ECB helped finance European companies by buying their bonds. If one expects reflation to be successful, a below-benchmark stance on portfolio duration also makes sense given the current depressed level of government bond yields worldwide. Yields are more likely to grind upward than spike higher, and will be led first by increasing inflation expectations. Inflation-linked bonds should feature prominently in fixed income portfolios, especially in the U.S. where TIPS will outperform nominal yielding Treasuries. Mathieu: Thank you very much to all of you. Below is a comparative summary of the main arguments and investment recommendations of each camp. Anastasios Avgeriou U.S. Equity Strategist Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist Doug Peta Chief U.S. Investment Strategist Robert Robis Chief Fixed Income Strategist Mathieu Savary The Bank Credit Analyst Summary Of Views And Recommendations The Bulls… …And The Bears III. Indicators And Reference Charts The S&P 500 has limited cyclical downside for now, however, the short-term outlook is more troublesome. U.S. stocks are hovering near all-time highs, but they are not showing much conviction. Positive catalysts have moved into the rearview mirror now that a flurry of central banks have also cut rates, that it is certain that the Fed will cut rates next week, and that the ECB will follow in September. A volatile churning pattern will likely prevail over the coming three months. Our Revealed Preference Indicator (RPI) points to short-term risks. The RPI combines the idea of market momentum with valuation and policy measures. It provides a powerful bullish signal if positive market momentum lines up with constructive readings from the policy and valuation measures. Conversely, if strong market momentum is not supported by valuation and policy, investors should lean against the market trend. A pick-up in global growth is needed to help earnings, which would cheapen valuations enough to clear the short-term clouds hanging over the stock market. The cyclical outlook is brighter than the tactical one. Our Willingness-to-Pay (WTP) indicator for the U.S. and Japan continues to improve. However, it is slightly deteriorating in Europe. The WTP indicator tracks flows, and thus provide information on what investors are actually doing, as opposed to sentiment indexes that track how investors are feeling. In aggregate, the WTP currently suggests that investors are still inclined to add to their stock holdings. Hence, we expect global investors will continue to buy the dips, creating a floor under stock prices in the process. Our Monetary Indicator continues to move deeper into stimulative territory, supporting our cyclically constructive equity view. Global central banks are easing policy in unison, creating very accommodative liquidity conditions. The BCA Composite Valuation Indicator, an amalgamation of 11 measures, is in overvalued territory. However, it is not elevated enough to negate the positive message from our Monetary Indicator, especially as our Composite Technical Indicator continues to move further above its 9-month moving average. These dynamics confirm that equities have more cyclical upside and that dips should be bought. According to our model, 10-year Treasurys are now as expensive as at any point over the past five years. Moreover, our technical indicator is increasingly overbought while the CRB Raw Industrials is oversold, a combination that often heralds the end of bond rallies. Various rate-of-change measures for bond prices are flashing extremely overbought conditions as well. Additionally, duration surveys, positioning data, and sentiment measures are all showing that investors expect nothing but low yields. Considering this technical backdrop, BCA’s economic view implies that yields are likely to have bottomed earlier this month. On a PPP basis, the U.S. dollar remains very expensive. Additionally, our Composite Technical Indicator has formed a negative divergence with prices. The dollar’s recent strength could set it up for a substantial decline. If the dollar’s Technical Indicator falls below zero, the momentum-continuation behavior of the greenback will kick in. The USD would suffer markedly were this to happen. Monitor these developments closely. EQUITIES: Chart III-1U.S. Equity Indicators Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk Chart III-3U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators Chart III-4Revealed Preference Indicator Chart III-5U.S. Stock Market Valuation Chart III-6U.S. Earnings Chart III-7Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Chart III-8Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance FIXED INCOME: Chart III-9U.S. Treasurys And Valuations Chart III-10Yield Curve Slopes Chart III-11Selected U.S. Bond Yields Chart III-1210-Year Treasury Yield Components Chart III-13U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor Chart III-14Global Bonds: Developed Markets Chart III-15Global Bonds: Emerging Markets CURRENCIES: Chart III-16U.S. Dollar And PPP Chart III-17U.S. Dollar And Indicator Chart III-18U.S. Dollar Fundamentals Chart III-19Japanese Yen Technicals Chart III-20Euro Technicals Chart III-21Euro/Yen Technicals Chart III-22Euro/Pound Technicals COMMODITIES: Chart III-23Broad Commodity Indicators Chart III-24Commodity Prices Chart III-25Commodity Prices Chart III-26Commodity Sentiment Chart III-27Speculative Positioning ECONOMY: Chart III-28U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop Chart III-29U.S. Macro Snapshot Chart III-30U.S. Growth Outlook Chart III-31U.S. Cyclical Spending Chart III-32U.S. Labor Market Chart III-33U.S. Consumption Chart III-34U.S. Housing Chart III-35U.S. Debt And Deleveraging Chart III-36U.S. Financial Conditions Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Chart III-38Global Economic Snapshot: China Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst Footnotes 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “The Risk From U.S. Corporate Debt: Theory And Evidence,” dated April 23, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 The biggest concern with debt sustainability is the distribution of the debt. Aggregate ratios are currently flattered by the low debt loads and high cash holdings as well as cash generation power of the tech sector. Nonetheless, the low level of aggregate debt accumulation by the entire private sector, including households, points to a limited cyclical vulnerability to the economy created by leverage. However, this also means that a more-severe-than-usual default wave is likely to materialize outside the tech sector once a recession emerges. 3 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report “July 2019,” dated June 27, 2019, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report “July 2019,” dated June 27, 2019, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Divorced From Reality,” dated July 15, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com 6 To be fair to each individual involved, this is simplifying their views. Even within each camp, the negativity or positivity ranges on a spectrum, as you will be able to tell from the debate itself. 7 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Signal Vs. Noise,” dated December 17, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “A Recession Thought Experiment,” dated June 10, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see the European Investment Strategy Weekly Report “Risk: The Great Misunderstanding Of Finance,” October 25, 2018 available at eis.bcaresearch.com. 10 France is a good proxy for the euro area. 11 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, “On Chinese Banks And Brazil,” available at ems.bcaresearch.com. EQUITIES:FIXED INCOME:CURRENCIES:COMMODITIES:ECONOMY:
Last Thursday we were stopped out from our tactical S&P semi equipment underweight position as it hit our -7% stop loss (bottom panel). We are obeying the stop loss and are returning this index to a neutral weighting as better than expected profits from both ASML and TSMC lifted all chip-related equities. In marked contrast, our long global gold miners/short S&P oil & gas exploration & production trade initiated just last week has gone parabolic, spiking to 17% (top panel). While our thesis has not changed in this high beta tactical pair trade, from a risk management perspective, we are moving our stop loss from -10% to +12% in order to protect profits. Bottom Line: Stick with the counter-cyclical long global gold miners/short S&P oil & gas exploration & production trade via the long GDX:US/short XOP:US exchange traded funds. For additional details on the rationale behind this trade, please refer to last Monday’s Weekly Report.
U.S. shale oil is filling a market need for light-sweet crude and condensate, and is attracting investment to meet this need. It does compete with light-sweet OPEC production ex Persian Gulf, but investment in these countries has proven to be difficult to…
On the supply side, we continue to expect OPEC 2.0’s production strategy to be driven by its primary goal – i.e., reducing global oil inventories. This means the coalition will continue to exercise production restraint: We expect OPEC 2.0 to reduce output by…
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
Oil price volatility will remain elevated, as markets transition from a pronounced demand slowdown in 1H19, which is apparent in actual consumption data, to stronger growth. We expect global fiscal and monetary accommodation will arrest and reverse this slowdown in 2H19, and spur oil demand growth in 2020. Consistent with BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy, we are not expecting a resolution to the Sino – U.S. trade war that boosts demand; however, we could see a limited deal by 2H20 that partially addresses tariff barriers and boosts trade in the short run.1 In line with the EIA’s and IEA’s weaker 1H19 oil-consumption assessments, we now expect global demand to grow 1.25mm b/d this year, and 1.50mm b/d next year. These expectations are down 100k b/d and 50k b/d, respectively, from our June estimates. Chart of the WeekOPEC 2.0’s Storage Strategy Continues To Drive Production Supply – demand factors combine to push our 2019 Brent forecast to $70/bbl from $73/bbl last month. We are holding our 2020 Brent forecast at $75/bbl. On the supply side, we continue to expect OPEC 2.0’s production strategy to be driven by its primary goal – reducing global oil inventories – which means it will maintain production discipline this year and possibly into 1Q20 (Chart of the Week). We also expect capital discipline in the U.S. to restrain shale-oil production. Lastly, news flows around U.S. – Iran tensions continue to oscillate between hopeful resolution and a hardening of positions, which fuels price volatility. At the end of the day, we expect any increase in Iranian exports resulting from an easing of U.S.-GCC-Iran tensions to be accommodated by OPEC 2.0, as it was prior to the re-imposition of U.S. export sanctions.2 These supply – demand factors combine to push our 2019 Brent forecast to $70/bbl from $73/bbl last month. We are holding our 2020 Brent forecast at $75/bbl. We continue to expect WTI to trade $7/bbl below Brent this year, and $5/bbl lower next year (Chart 2). Chart 2Demand Slowdown In 1H19 Pushes Brent Forecast Lower Highlights Energy: Overweight. Given our expectation for tighter markets, we are getting long 1Q20 Brent vs. short 1Q21 Brent at tonight’s close, expecting steeper backwardation in the benchmark forward curve as global inventories draw in 2H19. Base Metals: Neutral. At $52.50/MT, Fastmarkets MB’s spot copper TC/RC Asia – Pacific index remains depressed, suggesting smelters will have to continue to discount their services due to tight physical supplies. Expecting tighter markets, we are getting long Dec19 $3.00/lb COMEX call spreads, vs. short Dec19 $3.30/lb COMEX calls at tonight’s close. Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold prices are largely being driven by U.S. real interest rates and the broad trade weighted USD, which we will explore in detail next week in a Special Report written with our colleagues in BCA’s Foreign Exchange Strategy. Given our expectation for Fed accommodation this year, we remain long gold. Ags/Softs: Underweight. The USDA lifted expected ending stocks for corn in its latest WASDE released last week. The department expects supply growth to outstrip use, which will raise stocks 335mm bushels to 2.0 billion. Feature Last week, we had the good fortune to visit U.S. clients in “The Great State,” otherwise known as Texas. It was a fortuitous swing through the Promised Land, because we had the opportunity to gain insight on a wide range of topics impacting commodity markets, particularly oil and gold, which are responding to many of the same factors driving markets for risky assets generally. Demand for industrial commodities in particular should pick up this year and next. More than a few of our discussions centered on global aggregate demand for real and financial assets. Prior to the Osaka G20 meeting last month, it looked like the odds of a global recession were increasing. Markets were contending with tightening financial conditions in the wake of the Fed’s December 2018 rate hike, the fourth such hike last year; escalating Sino - U.S. trade tensions, which were depressing capex and demand for industrial commodities; and slowing growth generally ex U.S. (Chart 3). Positioning as if the Fed was too late in reversing the policies that led to tighter financial conditions in 2H18 and earlier this year, and in a manner consistent with a deepening of the Sino - U.S. trade war was not unreasonable. That said, a client at one of the Lone Star state's larger investment managers observed that the powerful rallies in markets for risky assets following Fed accommodative signaling beginning earlier this year strongly suggest the markets’ verdict — at least for the moment — is the Fed acted in time to arrest the risk of a global recession this year. Chart 3Global Growth Slowdown Likely Drove Policy Responses Chart 4BCA's GIA Index Signaling Industrial Commodity Rebound Added to this is the fact that the U.S. central bank is being supported by other systematically important central banks (specifically the PBOC, BOJ, and ECB), and that fiscal stimulus is being deployed globally. Against this backdrop, it is difficult to remain bearish re global aggregate demand going forward, which is to say demand for industrial commodities in particular should pick up this year and next. Indeed, this is starting to show up in our Global Industrial Activity (GIA) Index, which is heavily weighted toward EM industrial commodity demand (Chart 4).3 Oil Demand Will Roar Back In 2H19 Our updated 2019 demand estimates align with the EIA’s and IEA’s depressed 1H19 oil-consumption assessments: We now expect global consumption to grow 1.25mm b/d this year, down 100k b/d vs. our previous estimate. Next year, however, we expect demand to be up 1.50mm b/d in the wake of global stimulus, which is only 50k b/d below our June estimate.4 The IEA’s assessment of 1H19 demand weakness is particularly striking. In its latest forecast, the agency noted that in 2Q19, they show a global surplus of 500k b/d (i.e., supply exceeded demand), where previously they expected a 500k b/d deficit. This million-barrel swing – if it is confirmed when data are later revised with more accurate reporting – suggests the global economy did come close to entering recession earlier this year. We are not as bearish as the IEA, but we do incorporate the severity of the trend they highlight in our forecast. We expect 1H19 global demand grew 520k b/d y/y. In 2H19, like the IEA, we expect demand to come roaring back. We expect consumption to grow at a rate of slightly over 2mm b/d, whereas the IEA’s expecting a 1.8mm b/d rate (Table 1). We believe this momentum will be maintained into 1H20, with growth expected to come in at just over 1.8mm b/d, followed by a more subdued 1.35mm b/d growth rate in 2H20.5 Table 1BCA Global Oil Supply - Demand Balances (MMb/d, Base Case Balances) It is important to note here that monetary stimulus hits the economy after “long and variable lags,” in the phrasing of Nobel laureate Milton Freidman. Therefore, we will be closely monitoring our demand estimates for signs the coordinated stimulus being deployed by central banks globally actually is translating into higher industrial commodity demand.6 It also is worthwhile pointing out there is a non-trivial risk – i.e., greater than Russian-roulette odds of 1:6 – the Sino – U.S. trade war metastasizes into a global trade war as positions on both sides harden. This could usher in a new Cold War, and see global supply chains broken and reconstituted within trading blocks. The transition to such a realignment of global trade no doubt would be volatile, but, at the end of the day likely would support commodity demand as supply chains are re-built. OPEC 2.0 Remains Sensitive To EM Demand On the supply side, we continue to expect OPEC 2.0’s production strategy to be driven by its primary goal – i.e., reducing global oil inventories. This means the coalition will continue to exercise production restraint: We expect OPEC 2.0 to reduce output by 540k b/d this year per this strategy. In addition to its inventory goals, we believe OPEC 2.0 also does not want to see Brent price go through $85/bbl. This is because many EM states removed fuel subsidies following the oil-price collapse of 2014 – 2016, and the demand-destruction effects of higher prices would be realized in fairly short order above $85/bbl.7 We view this as a binding constraint – prices above the $80 - $85/bbl range will destroy EM demand, which makes them counterproductive for OPEC 2.0. As a result, next year, we expect the producer coalition to gradually raise output by 800k b/d over the January – August 2020 period, to restrain prices below $80/bbl (Chart 5). It is worthwhile mentioning, since it came up repeatedly in conversations during our Texas swing, we do not share the view OPEC 2.0’s production restraint allows U.S. shale producers to increase production and steal market share from OPEC 2.0. This restraint does play a pivotal role in our balances estimates, and is part of the equation propelling prices higher in our modeling. It is a necessary condition for U.S. shale output to grow, but it is not sufficient. U.S. shale oil is filling a market need for light-sweet crude and condensate, and is attracting investment to meet this need. It does compete with light-sweet OPEC production ex Persian Gulf, but investment in these provinces has proven to be difficult to sustain and commit to over the long haul for a variety of reasons, many of which spring from the lack of rule of law, corruption, and hostile operating environments. Shale oil production, in addition to presenting an opportunity to tap into an abundant resource, allows E&Ps to operate in a low-risk political and geological environment, where contracts are enforced by a disinterested judiciary. In terms of its importance, these factors cannot be overestimated. More importantly, the medium and heavier crudes produced and marketed by KSA and Russia are not in direct competition with U.S. shale oil, which means OPEC 2.0’s leadership is not directly fighting for market share with this output. However, there are constraints to shale-oil production, coming mostly from capital markets. We are modeling slower U.S. onshore production growth this year and next, arising from capital constraints on shale-oil producers. Our recent Special Report on the financial performance of E&P companies and the Majors highlighted the importance they attach to prioritizing investors’ interests, which is clearly visible in the financial metrics of these companies.8 Chart 5OPEC 2.0 Will Raise Supply In 2020 To Keep Brent Prices Below /bbl Chart 6Capital Discipline Will Reduce U.S. Onshore Output In 2020 Consistent with our investor-driven framework for modeling U.S. output, we reduced our expectation for U.S. onshore supply growth by 160k b/d for next year (Chart 6). As a result, we now expect U.S. onshore production to grow by 1.2mm b/d to ~ 10.0mm b/d this year and by 900k b/d to ~ 10.8mm b/d next year – mostly from shales. We expect U.S. offshore production to increase 170k b/d this year and 130k b/d next year, to 1.9mm b/d in 2019 and 2.0mm b/d in 2020. Expect Tighter Balances, Steeper Backwardation The fundamental supply – demand expectations above combine to push our 2019 Brent forecast to $70/bbl from $73/bbl last month. We are holding our 2020 Brent forecast at $75/bbl. We continue to expect WTI to trade $7/bbl below Brent this year, and $5/bbl lower next year (Chart 7). As can be seen in the Chart of the Week, our balances estimates indicate inventory draws will resume this year, which will lead to a steeper backwardation in benchmark crude streams (Chart 8). Given this expectation, we are getting long 1Q20 Brent vs. short 1Q21 Brent at tonight’s close, expecting steeper backwardation in the benchmark forward curve as global inventories draw in 2H19. Bottom Line: Oil price volatility will remain elevated, as markets transition from the profound demand slowdown reported for 1H19 to a higher-growth footing (Chart 9). We expect Brent crude to average $70 and $75/bbl this year and next, with WTI trading $7 and $5/bbl lower, respectively. On the back of our expectation balances will tighten, we are getting long 1Q20 Brent vs. short 1Q21 Brent at tonight’s close. Chart 7Balances Will Tighten In 2H19, Following 1H19 Weakness Chart 8Backwardations Will Steepen, As Inventories Draw Chart 9Volatility Will Remain Elevated We are not sounding an all-clear on aggregate demand in the wake of the fiscal and monetary stimulus being deployed globally. The odds the Sino – U.S. trade war expands to encompass global markets are not trivial (we make them greater than 1:6 in our estimation), and this could keep demand and demand expectations uncertain for an indefinite period. Evidence of this will be visible in the options markets, which will price to higher implied volatilities for a longer period of time. Robert P. Ryan, Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger, Senior Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy HugoB@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see The Polybius Solution published by BCA Research’s Geopolitical Strategy July 5, 2019. It is available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 OPEC 2.0 is the producer coalition led by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and Russia. It was founded in 2016 to manage oil production, so as to reduce global inventory levels, which were bloated by a market-share war launched by the original OPEC cartel in 2014. In the political-economy framework driving our analysis, OPEC 2.0 treats U.S. and Chinese policy as exogenous factors, and maintains sufficient flexibility to respond to whatever these states do. We develop our paradigm for this in The New Political Economy Of Oil, published by BCA Research’s Commodity & Energy Strategy February 21, 2019. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see “Oil, Copper Demand Worries Are Overdone,” where we introduce and discuss the GIA index, published February 14, 2019, in BCA Research’s Commodity & Energy Strategy. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 4 The EIA has lowered its growth estimates for oil consumption six consecutive times this year, with the publication of this month’s forecast. This is the third time we’ve lowered our forecast. 5 Global oil demand is extremely difficult to estimate. It is an estimate subject to large revisions, as we discussed last year: From 2010 to 2016, “On average, the EIA has increased net demand (increases in estimated demand in excess of the increase in estimated supply) by about 470,000 b/d, with the lowest retroactive increase of net demand being 260,000 b/d (2012).” Copies of this research are available upon request. 6 Please see The Lag in Effect of Monetary Policy, by Milton Friedman (1961). Journal of Political Economy, University of Chicago Press, vol. 69, pages 447-466. 7 Please see With the Benefit of Hindsight: The Impact of the 2014-16 Oil Price Collapse, published January 13, 2018, by the World Bank for a discussion of subsidy removal by EM states. 8 Please see Shale-Oil E&Ps Turning A Corner?, published June 13, and U.S. Shales, GOM Production Reinforce Our Robust Production Forecasts, published July 11, 2019. These are available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades TRADE RECOMMENDATION PERFORMANCE IN 2019 Q2 Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2019 Summary of Closed Trades
One way to benefit from the global growth soft-patch is to go long global gold miners/short S&P oil & gas E&P stocks on a tactical three-to-six month basis. Since our Monday inception three days ago, this pair trade is already up 9%. The relative moves in the underlying commodities that serve as pricing power proxies are the key drivers of this share price ratio (top panel). Given the massive currency debasement potential that has gripped Central Banks the world over, such a flush liquidity backdrop will boost the allure of the shiny metal more so than crude oil. Meanwhile, global manufacturing PMIs are foreshadowing recession and our diffusion index has plummeted to the lowest level since 2011 (diffusion shown inverted, middle panel). In the U.S. specifically there is a growth-to-liquidity handoff and the ISM manufacturing survey’s new order versus prices paid subcomponents confirms that global gold miners have the upper hand compared with E&P equities (bottom panel). Bottom Line: We initiated a tactical long global gold miners/short S&P oil & gas E&P pair trade on a three-to-six month time horizon with a stop at the -10% mark. The ticker symbols for the stocks in these indexes are: GDX:US and BLBG – S5OILP – COP, EOG, APC, PXD, CXO, FANG, HES, DVN, MRO, NBL, COG, APA, XEC, respectively. Please refer to this Monday’s Weekly Report for additional details.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Recession odds continue to tick higher, according to the NY Fed’s probability of recession model, at a time when global growth is waning, U.S. profit growth is contracting and the non-financial ex-tech corporate balance sheet is degrading rapidly. On a cyclical 3-12 month time horizon we remain cautious on the broad equity market. This is U.S. Equity Strategy’s view, which stands in contrast to the more sanguine equity BCA House View. The souring macro backdrop coupled with a firming industry demand outlook signal that more gains are in store for hypermarket stocks. The global growth slowdown, declining real bond yields, missing inflation, rising policy uncertainty and a favorable relative demand backdrop suggest that there is an exploitable tactical trading opportunity in a long global gold miners/short S&P oil & gas E&P pair trade. Recent Changes Upgrade the S&P hypermarkets index to overweight, today. Initiate a long global gold miners/short S&P oil & gas exploration & production (E&P) pair trade, today Table 1 Feature Obsession with the Fed easing continues to trump all else, with the SPX piercing through the 3,000 mark to fresh all-time highs last week. However, it is unrealistic for the Fed to do all the heavy lifting for the equity market as we have argued recently (see Chart 3 from June 24),1 at a time when profit cracks are spreading rapidly. This should be cause for some trepidation. Since the Christmas Eve lows essentially all of the 26% return in equities is explained by valuation expansion. The forward P/E has recovered from 13.5 to nearly 17.2 (Chart 1). There is limited scope for further expansion as four interest rate cuts in the coming 12 months are already priced in lofty valuations. Now profits will have to do the heavy lifting. But on the eve of earnings season, more than half of the S&P 500 GICS1 sectors are forecast to have contracted profits last quarter, and three sectors could not lift revenue versus year ago comps, according to I/B/E/S data. Looking further out, there is a plethora of indicators that we highlighted last week that suggest that a profit recession is looming.2 Our sense is that once the euphoria around the looming Fed easing cycle settles, there will be a massive clash between perception and reality (Chart 2) that will likely propagate as a surge in volatility. Chart 1Multiple Expansion Explains All Of The SPX’s Return Chart 2Unsustainable Divergence This addiction to low rates has come at a great cost to the non-financial corporate sector. As a reminder, this segment of the economy is where the excesses are in the current cycle as we have been highlighting in recent research.3 Using stock market related data for the non-financial ex-tech universe, net debt has increased by 70% to $4.2tn over the past five years, but cash flow has only grown 18% to $1.7tn. As a result, net debt-to-EBITDA has spiked from 1.7 to 2.5, an all-time high (Chart 3). While stocks are at all-time highs (top panel, Chart 3), the debt-saddled non-financials ex-tech universe will likely exert substantial downward pressure to these equities in the coming months (Chart 4). Chart 3Balance Sheet Degrading Chart 4Something’s Got To Give Moving on to the labor market, we recently noticed an interesting behavior between the unemployment rate and wage inflation since the early-1990s recession: a repulsive magnet-type property exists where like magnetic poles repel each other (middle panel, Chart 5). In other words, every time the falling unemployment rate has kissed off accelerating wage growth, a steep reversal ensued at the onset of recession during the previous three cycles. A repeat may be already taking place, as average hourly earnings (AHE) growth has been stuck in the mud since peaking in December 2018. Importantly, the AHE impulse is quickly losing steam and every time the Fed embarks on an aggressive easing cycle it typically marks the end of wage inflation (bottom panel, Chart 5). Chart 5Beware Of Repulsion Chart 6Waiting For Growth Meanwhile, BCA’s global manufacturing PMI diffusion index has cratered to below 40% (middle panel, Chart 6). Neither the G7 nor the EM aggregate PMIs are above the boom/bust line (top panel, Chart 6). Our breakdown of the Leading Economic Indicators into G7 and EM14 also signals that global growth is hard to come by, albeit EMs are showing some early signs of a trough (bottom panel, Chart 6). As the early-May announced increase in Chinese tariffs begin to take a toll, we doubt global growth can have a sustainable recovery for the rest of 2019, despite Chinese credit growth picking up. Now, even Japan and Korea are fighting it out and are erecting barriers to trade, dealing a further blow to these economically hyper-sensitive export-oriented economies. Netting it all out, the odds of recession by mid-2020 continue to tick higher according to the NY Fed’s model (NY Fed’s probability of recession shown inverted, top panel, Chart 5) at a time when global growth is waning, U.S. profit growth is contracting and the non-financial ex-tech corporate balance sheet is degrading rapidly. On a cyclical 3-12 month time horizon we remain cautious on the broad equity market. This is U.S. Equity Strategy’s view, which stands in contrast to the more sanguine equity BCA House View. This week we are upgrading a consumer staples subgroup to overweight and initiating an intra-commodity market neutral trade. Time To Buy The Hype The tide is shifting and we are upgrading the S&P hypermarkets index to an above benchmark allocation. While valuations are stretched, trading at a 50% premium to the overall market on a 12-month forward P/E basis (not shown), our thesis is that these Big Box retailers will grow into their pricey valuations in the coming months. The macro landscape is aligned perfectly with these defensive retailers. Consumer confidence has been falling all year long and now cracks are spreading to the labor market (confidence shown inverted, top panel, Chart 7). ADP small business payrolls declined for the second month in a row. Similarly, the NFIB survey shows that small business hiring plans are cooling (hiring plans shown inverted, middle panel, Chart 7). As a reminder, 2/3 of all new hiring typically occurs in the small and medium enterprise space. In the residential real estate market, the drop in interest rates that is now in its eighth month has yet to be felt, and house price inflation has ground to a halt. Historically, Costco membership growth has been inversely correlated with house prices (house price inflation shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 7). Chart 7Deteriorating Macro Backdrop … Chart 8…Is A Boon To Hypermarkets… Chart 8 shows three additional macro variables that signal brighter times ahead for the relative share price ratio. The drubbing in the 10-year U.S. treasury yield reflects a souring macro backdrop, melting inflation and a steep fall in U.S. economic data surprises. The ISM manufacturing index that continues to decelerate and is now closing in on the boom/bust line corroborates the bond market’s grim message. Tack on the Fed’s expected four cuts in the coming 12 months, and factors are falling into place for a durable rally in relative share prices. This disinflationary backdrop along with the Fed’s looming easing interest rate cycle have put a solid bid under gold prices. Hypermarket equities and bullion traditionally move in lockstep, and the current message is to expect more gains in the former (top panel, Chart 9). On the trade front specifically, these Big Box retailers do source consumer goods from China, but up to now these imports have been nearly immune to the U.S./China trade dispute as prices have been deflating (import prices shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 9). However, this does pose a risk going forward and we will be closely monitoring it for two reasons: First, because downward pressures may intensify on the greenback and second, President Trump may impose additional tariffs, both of which are negative for industry pricing power. Chart 9Profit Margins… Chart 10…Will Likely Expand Meanwhile, industry demand is on the rise and will likely offset the potential trade and U.S. dollar induced margin pressures. Hypermarket retail sales are climbing at a healthy clip outpacing overall retail sales (bottom panel, Chart 10). Already non-discretionary retail sales are outshining discretionary ones, which is a precursor to recession at a time when overall consumer outlays have sunk below 1% (real PCE growth shown inverted, top panel, Chart 10). The implication is that hypermarkets will continue to garner a larger slice of consumer outlays as the going gets tough. In sum, the souring macro backdrop coupled with a firming industry demand outlook signal that more gains are in store for hypermarket stocks. Bottom Line: Boost the S&P hypermarkets index to overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG – S5HYPC – WMT, COST. Initiate A Long Global Gold Miners/Short S&P Oil & Gas E&P Pair Trade One way to benefit from the global growth soft-patch and looming global liquidity injection is to go long global gold miners/short S&P oil & gas E&P stocks on a tactical three-to-six month basis. While this market neutral and intra-commodity pair trade has already enjoyed an impressive run, there is more upside owing to a favorable macro backdrop. The key determinant of this share price ratio is the relative move in the underlying commodities that serve as pricing power proxies (top panel, Chart 11). Given the massive currency debasement potential that has gripped Central Banks the world over, such a flush liquidity backdrop will boost the allure of the shiny metal more so than crude oil. Global manufacturing PMIs are foreshadowing recession and our diffusion index has plummeted to the lowest level since 2011 (diffusion shown inverted, middle panel, Chart 11). In the U.S. specifically there is a growth-to-liquidity handoff and the ISM manufacturing survey’s new order versus prices paid subcomponents confirms that global gold miners have the upper hand compared with E&P equities (bottom panel, Chart 11). Chart 11Global Soft-Patch… Chart 12…Disinflation… As a result of this growth scare that can easily morph into recession especially if the U.S./China trade war continues into next year, inflation is nowhere to be found. Unit labor costs are slumping (top panel, Chart 12), the NY Fed’s Underlying Inflation Gauge has rolled over decisively (not shown),4 and the GDP deflator is slipping (middle panel, Chart 12). Parts of the yield curve first inverted in early-December and the 10-year/fed funds rate slope is still inverted, signaling that gold miners will continue to outperform oil producers (yield curve shown on inverted scale, bottom panel, Chart 13). The near 100bps dive in real interest rates since late-December ties everything together and is a boon to bullion (and gold producers) that yields nothing (TIPS yield shown inverted, top panel, Chart 13). Meanwhile, bond volatility has spiked of late and the bottom panel of Chart 14 shows that historically the MOVE index has been joined at the hip with relative share prices. Chart 13…Melting Real Yields And… Chart 14…The Spike In Bond Vol, All Favor Gold Miners Over Oil Producers On the relative demand front, we peer over to China to take a pulse of the marginal moves in these commodity markets. China (and Russia) has been aggressively shifting their currency reserves into gold, and bullion holdings are rising both in volume terms and as a percentage of total FX reserves. In marked contrast, oil demand is feeble and Chinese apparent diesel consumption that is closely correlated with infrastructure and manufacturing activity has tumbled. Taken together, the message is to expect additional gain in relative share prices (middle & bottom panels, Chart 15). Adding it all up, the global growth slowdown, declining real bond yields, missing inflation, rising policy uncertainty and a favorable relative demand backdrop suggest that there is an exploitable tactical trading opportunity in a long global gold miners/short S&P oil & gas E&P pair trade. Bottom Line: Initiate a tactical long global gold miners/short S&P oil & gas E&P pair trade on a three-to-six month time horizon with a stop at the -10% mark. The ticker symbols for the stocks in these indexes are: GDX:US and BLBG – S5OILP – COP, EOG, APC, PXD, CXO, FANG, HES, DVN, MRO, NBL, COG, APA, XEC, respectively. Chart 15Upbeat Relative Demand Backdrop Anastasios Avgeriou, U.S. Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Cracks Forming” dated June 24, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Beware Profit Recession” dated July 8, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “A Recession Thought Experiment” dated June 10, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 https://www.newyorkfed.org/research/policy/underlying-inflation-gauge Current Recommendations Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps
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