Commodities & Energy Sector
Highlights The end game for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA), Russia and their respective allies is fairly obvious: Remove enough production from the market to draw down storage and make the oil-supply curve, once again, more inelastic. This would allow these states to use forward guidance and small adjustments in production to influence prices, the sine qua non of petro-states desperate to maintain revenues and diversify away from near-complete dependence on hydrocarbon exports. We think the effort will succeed over the short run. Just how durable this pact will be remains to be seen, given oil is, once again, super-abundant. If production discipline breaks down, all bets are off. Energy: Overweight. We are now solidly positioned for backwardation in oil - long Dec/17 vs. short Dec/18 WTI and Brent; these positions are up 141.6% and 68.4%, respectively. We also are positioned for a rally on drawdowns in inventories as refiners come back from turnarounds over the next few weeks: We are long $50/bbl WTI calls vs. short $55/bbl calls in Jul-Aug-Sep 2017; these positions are up 7.66% on average. Base Metals: Neutral. Workers at Chile's Escondida mine are back on the job, after a 44-day strike. The strike is estimated to have cost BHP Billiton some $1 billion, according to Reuters.1 Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold has rallied by 4.3% since the FOMC raised overnight rates. Our long volatility position - long a Jun/17 put and call spread for $21/oz - is down 30%. Ags/Softs: Underweight. The long-awaited and much-anticipated USDA planting intentions report is due out tomorrow. We remain bearish, expecting an early indication stocks-to-use ratios for grains and beans will remain elevated. Feature Chart of the WeekStorage Was Well On Its Way to Drawing##br## Before the Year-End Production Surge KSA and Russia have to make oil supply more inelastic in order to regain some control over where prices go and, consequently, where their revenues go. Their end game is obvious - i.e., remove the excess oil production that pushed inventories to historically high levels - but their execution has been, at best, halting. Prior to KSA and Russia delivering an historic production-management Agreement at the end of last year, oil markets were well on the way to removing the storage overhang by year-end 2017, as any Econ 101 text would have suggested. Low prices following OPEC's market-share war declaration destroyed supply and lifted demand, which was drawing down stocks. This is easily seen in the Chart of the Week showing inventories beginning to head south in mid-2016. Then came the KSA - Russia Agreement between OPEC and non-OPEC producers to cut output by some 1.8mm b/d. The goal of the deal was to accelerate the drawdown in record high storage levels. Even while the deal was being negotiated, it was apparent some producers in the know were getting a jump on shipping those last barrels out the door before they were obliged to cut. This produced the end-of-year production surge, which swelled global inventories. The year-end surge by OPEC and non-OPEC producers could be expected (Chart 2), but it came at a really bad time for the market, since 1Q17 also was when refiners took units down for maintenance. This is fairly routine, but in some key markets like the U.S. Gulf, the current maintenance season was busier than average, according to the EIA (Chart 3). This left a lot of crude in storage, as product inventories were being drawn. Chart 2Year-End Production Surge ##br##Powered The Storage Build Chart 3Maintenance Season In 1Q17 ##br##Exacerbated The Storage Build Where are we today? Most of the pre-Agreement production and export surge has been absorbed, and inventories in the U.S. are drawing a bit. Floating storage has been drained. But, in an interesting economic twist, OECD storage levels are likely to reach the targeted drawdown of 10% (300mm bbl) by year-end 2017, which is exactly what would have happened absent any action by KSA and Russia at the end of last year. It is difficult to resist reiterating that had nothing been done at the end of last year by KSA and Russia, and the market was left to do its necessary work of removing high-cost production and encouraging increased demand via lower prices, the market would have ended up in the exact same place it now finds itself. Trust But Verify Be that as it may, the really hard work of the KSA - Russia deal now begins. We expect OECD inventories to hit the 10% drawdown target by year end. However, if parties to the deal do not maintain production discipline markets will almost surely take prices lower. This could easily happen if prices start to percolate as we expect in 2Q17, and cash-strapped non-OPEC producers decide to see how far they can push KSA and its Gulf-state allies on their deal. Russia has been slow to deliver on its production commitment, while KSA has over-delivered (Chart 4). The same can be said for their respective allies (Chart 5). We believe markets will remain skittish, until evidence Russia and Iraq also are abiding by the end-2016 Agreement becomes incontrovertible. It is true Russian President Vladimir Putin personally involved himself in this deal, and helped close it on the non-OPEC side, but markets will want proof production actually is falling. Like former U.S. President Ronald Reagan, markets may be willing to trust, but they certainly will want to verify compliance. Chart 4KSA Over-Delivers On Its Cuts, ##br##Russia Is Slow To Deliver Chart 5KSA's Allies Are Delivering, ##br##Russia's Not So Much While not our base case, it is possible Russia and its fellow travelers could decide to risk keeping their production above agreed volumes under the Agreement, in the belief KSA is more in need of keeping prices above $50/bbl or so over the next 18 months, given the Kingdom wants a successful IPO of state-owned Saudi Aramco. Should this occur, markets would correct violently. At the end of the day, such a gamble likely would be ruinous for both, if it provoked KSA to abandon its commitment to keep production below 10mm b/d. Short-term goals - getting OECD storage levels down to five-year averages - would be sacrificed. Importantly, long-term goals we believe are driving KSA and Russia to cooperate in the first place, namely developing a modus operandi for containing U.S. shale-oil output, will become moot, possibly returning the market to the production free-for-all that motivated the KSA - Russia dialogue. The Quest For Relevance Chart 6Odds Favor Backwardated Markets ##br##As the Production Cuts Lead To Physical Deficits Our base case envisions a successful KSA - Russia Agreement in which production discipline is maintained, and the deal produces its desired result - drawing storage down by ~ 300mm bbls. Forward curves then backwardate (Chart 6). This sets the stage for deeper discussions among KSA, Russia and their respective allies re how they can work together going forward to contain U.S. shale-oil production. In effect, the parties to this deal have a choice to make: Either they figure out a way to make room for shale, which has catapulted the U.S. to major-producer status once again, or they leave this to the market. We are fairly confident these discussions already are ongoing, and will be well advanced by year-end. Next week, we will be publishing a theoretical piece on how the KSA - Russia pact could provide a platform that allows these petro-states - which we are taking the liberty of dubbing OPEC 2.0 - to re-gain a modicum of control over the rate at which U.S. shale-oil resources are developed. In earlier research, we advanced a theory that shale rig counts are highly sensitive not only to the level of prices at the front of the curve, but to the curve shape itself. We were able to demonstrate that contango markets - i.e., prices for promptly delivered crude are less than prices for deferred delivery material - favor shale producers, and, all else equal, incentivize them to hedge forward so as to lock in future revenues that maximize the number of rigs they deploy.2 In backwardated markets, the number of rigs a shale operator is able to deploy is lower, all else equal, which means the revenue they can lock in by hedging forward is lower. This limits the rate at which the resource can be developed. Based on these theoretical results, we believe it is in the interest of the OPEC 2.0 states to keep the WTI forward curve in backwardation, so that, at the margin, the number of rigs deployed to the shales is contained. Our research suggests that the deeper the backwardation, the slower rig counts grow. So, if the ideal price level for KSA is, as has been reported in the media, $60/bbl for Brent, then, in the best of all worlds, the Kingdom, Russia and their respective allies target spot prices at this level and use production, storage and forward guidance to backwardate the WTI curve, which is used by shale producers to hedge.3 Such a strategy has numerous risks, particularly if OPEC 2.0 cannot react quickly enough to keep prices from rising above a level that keeps shale-oil producers restricted to their core production areas. This would allow higher-cost shale reserves to be brought on line, which would raise the likelihood of lower prices, and cost OPEC 2.0 market share.4 Such a strategy also would tempt OPEC 2.0 producers to free ride, raising production at the margin to increase their revenues. This also risks lower prices. Nonetheless, we believe such a strategy could benefit both KSA and Russia and their allies, which is why it likely will at least be considered and attempted.5 KSA would be able to IPO Aramco into a relatively stable higher-price market, which would allow it to invest in additional refinery capacity in Asia and elsewhere, and in alternative-energy resources like solar, to free up oil for export. Russia also is better off keeping prices at a level at which its economy can continue to work on diversifying its exposure away from its heavy dependence on oil and gas exports.6 We will present more of our thinking on this next week. In the meantime, we highly recommend BCA clients read Matt Conlan's article in this week's Energy Sector Strategy entitled "Shale Dynamics: Sensitivities Within Modeling A Shale Recovery."7 This is an excellent analysis of shale-oil economics. Bottom Line: We continue to expect crude and products storage to draw as production cuts become apparent and refiners bring units back up off maintenance. This will backwardate WTI and Brent forward curves. Based on our high level of conviction in this outcome, we added a long Brent Dec/17 vs. short Dec/18 Brent position to our recommended trades, along with a similar WTI position. We also are positioned for a rally on drawdowns in inventories as refiners come back from turnarounds over the next few weeks, by being long $50/bbl WTI calls vs. short $55/bbl calls in Jul-Aug-Sep 2017. We continue to expect the U.S. benchmark WTI crude prices to average $55/bbl to 2020 and for WTI prices to trade most of the time between $45/bbl and $65/bbl. For 2018 and beyond, our conviction is lower: The massive capex cuts seen in the industry will place an enormous burden on shale producers and conventional oil producers - chiefly Gulf Arab producers and Russia - to offset natural decline-curve losses and meet increasing demand. For the international benchmark, Brent crude oil, we expect the spread between Brent and WTI prices to average $1.50/bbl (Brent over). Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see "Escondida outcome seen as disaster for BHP as workers return," published by Reuters.com on March 24, 2017. 2 We introduced this line of research in our February 16, 2017, issue of Commodity & Energy Strategy, in an article entitled "North American Oil Pipeline Buildout Complicates Price And Storage Expectations," it is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. We continue to delve into this topic, and will be presenting out latest thinking next week. 3 Please see "Exclusive: Saudi Arabia wants oil prices to rise to around $60 in 2017 - sources," published by Reuters February 28, 2017. Russia's budgeting assumption for 2017 to 2019 is $40/bbl, according to a Bloomberg report from March 24, 2017, entitled "OPEC Be Warned: Russia Prepares for Oil at $40." 4 It is not in KSA's, Russia's or their allies' interests to kill off shale production. The more-than-$1 trillion of capex for projects that would have been developed between 2015 and 2020, and would have translated into some 7mm b/d of oil-equivalent production will not be available to the market beginning later this decade. As we have noted, an enormous burden will be placed on shale production, Gulf OPEC producers and Russia to meet growing demand later this decade. 5 We also would note this would be a boon to long-only commodity index investors, whose returns are driven by roll yields that only exist in backwardated markets. More on that in subsequent research as well. 6 Russia's exports are dominated by oil and gas, while KSA's are dominated by crude oil and, increasingly, refined products. In 2015, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace calculated close to 70% of Russia's economy is dependent on revenue from hydrocarbons - production, trade, investments in non-oil industries funded by oil revenues, and consumption made possible via oil and gas production and sales. We discuss this at length in the September 8, 2016, issue of Commodity & Energy Strategy, in an article entitled "Ignore The KSA - Russia Production Pact, Focus Instead On Their Need For Cash." 7 Please see Energy Sector Strategy Weekly Report entitled "Shale Dynamics: Sensitivities Within Modeling A Shale Recovery," This article was published March 29, 2017, available at nrg.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed In 2017 Summary of Trades Closed in 2016
Highlights EM equity valuations are neutral. Relative to the U.S., EM share prices do offer some value, but this primarily reflects elevated valuations within the S&P 500. According to the cyclically-adjusted P/E ratio, EM stocks are cheap for investors with a long-term time horizon - longer than two to three years. Corporate profits are much more important than equity valuations in driving share prices in the next 12 months. Our outlook for EM EPS is downbeat for the next 12 months. Maintain a defensive posture and an underweight allocation in EM stocks versus DM. A new trade: go long Russian energy stocks / short global energy ones. Feature Chart I-1EM P/E Ratio And EPS There is ongoing debate in the investment community concerning whether emerging markets (EM) equities are or are not cheap, in both absolute terms and relative to developed markets (DM). In this week's report we review various equity valuation indicators and reiterate that EM stocks are neither cheap nor expensive in absolute terms. For example, the average of trailing and forward P/E ratios is slightly above its historical mean (Chart I-1, top panel). Relative to the U.S., EM share prices do offer value, but this reflects elevated valuations within the S&P 500. Despite this, we recommend underweighting EM vs U.S./DM because the cyclical growth dynamics is much better in DM than EM. EM stocks are cheap if one assumes a strong earnings recovery (Chart I-1, bottom panel). If earnings per share (EPS) begin contracting anew, as we expect, then the current rally will be reversed sooner than later. Overall, we continue to recommend a defensive posture for absolute-return investors and maintaining an underweight allocation in EM stocks versus DM for asset allocators. Valuation Perspectives Below we consider several valuation ratios: The equal-sector weighted trailing P/E ratio is 17.7 for EM (Chart I-2). Table I-1 displays equal-sector weighted P/E ratio, price-to-book value ratio and dividend yields for major equity markets globally. This is an apples-to-apples comparison, as it assigns equal weights to each of the 10 MSCI sectors - i.e., it removes sector biases. Chart I-2Equal-Sector Weighted Trailing P/E Ratio Table I-1Equal-Sector Weighted Valuation Ratios Across EM And DM Hence, on a comparable basis, EM equities are only slightly cheaper than DM stocks as is evident in Table I-1. Besides, the composite valuation indicator based on equal-sector weighted trailing and forward P/E, price-to-book value, price-to-cash earnings ratios and dividend yield indicate that EM stocks are fairly valued (Chart I-3). The cyclically-adjusted P/E (CAPE) ratio. The CAPE ratio is a structural valuation measure, i.e. it matters in the long run. Importantly, it assumes that real (inflation-adjusted) EPS will revert to its historical mean or trend. In short, the CAPE ratio tells us what the P/E ratio would be if EPS were to revert to its historical trend. Chart I-4 illustrates the EM CAPE ratio. If EM EPS in inflation-adjusted U.S. dollar terms reaches its historical time trend, one can safely assume that EM stocks are cheap and currently worth buying. In a nutshell, the current CAPE ratio of 15 assumes that EM EPS should rise by about 30% in nominal U.S. dollar terms over an investor's time horizon. Chart I-3EM Equities Valuations Are Neutral Chart I-4EM CAPE Ratio Given that our time horizon is 12 months, the assumption that EM EPS will surge by about 30% in U.S. dollar terms is in our view ambitious. Therefore, we posit that EM share prices do not offer compelling value at all in the next 12 months. If one's investment horizon were two-to-three years or longer, the assumption that EPS will rise by 30% or more in U.S. dollar terms is much more plausible. In this sense we would concur that EM share prices offer decent value from a longer-term perspective. Our methodology of calculating the CAPE ratio for EM varies from the well-known Robert Shiller's CAPE ratio for the U.S.1 However, even when applying our CAPE methodology to U.S. equities, the resulting ratio is not very different from Shiller's CAPE (Chart I-5). Trimmed-mean equity valuation ratios. Chart 6 illustrates 20% trimmed-mean trailing and forward P/E, price-to-book value, price-to-cash earnings ratios and dividend yields for the EM equity universe. A 20% trimmed-mean ratio excludes the top 10% and bottom 10% of industry groups, and then calculates the average. All calculations are based on 50 EM industry group data available from MSCI. Why look at trimmed-mean valuation ratios? Because by removing the top and bottom 10% of industry groups, this measure excludes outliers and provides a better perspective on valuation. A few observations are in order: First, according to the trimmed-mean valuation ratios, EM equities are not cheap. The trimmed-mean ratios are close to their historical mean (Chart I-6). Second, the trimmed-mean ratios are well above their market cap ones. This indicates that there are a few industry groups with large market caps that pull EM multiples lower. In other words, market-cap weighted multiples are skewed to the downside by a few large industry groups. There are reasons why some sectors and countries have low or high equity multiples. It makes sense to exclude them. Finally, the composite valuation indicator based on trimmed-mean trailing and forward P/Es, PBV and price-to-cash earnings ratios and dividend yield demonstrates that EM equity valuations are neutral (Chart I-7). Chart I-5U.S. CAPE Ratios Chart I-6EM Stocks Are Close to Fair Value Chart I-7EM Equities Have Neutral Value Bottom Line: EM equities by and large command a neutral valuation. According to the CAPE ratio, EM equities are cheap for investors with a long-term time horizon, say two-to-three years or longer. Profits Hold The Key Valuations are not a good timing tool. For low equity valuations to be realized, i.e., to produce solid price gains, corporate profits should grow. The reverse is also true: for an overvalued market to decline, company earnings should contract, or at least disappoint. When valuations are neutral - as they currently are for the EM equity benchmark - a recovery in EPS should entail higher share prices, while EPS shrinkage should lead to a selloff. EM EPS will continue to recover in the next three to six months, given the rally in commodities prices in 2016, amelioration in China's business cycle and the technology sector boom in Asia. However, this moderate and short-lived EPS recovery is already priced in. For the market to rally further, EPS will need to expand beyond the next three to six months. Remarkably, there has been little improvement in EM ex-China domestic demand. Besides, the risk to bank loan growth remains to the downside both in China and EM ex-China. Slower loan growth and the need to recognize and provision for potentially large NPLs will pressure banks' profits in many EM countries. Finally, we expect oil and industrial metals prices to decline considerably over the course of this year. If and as this view plays out, energy and materials stocks will fall. Energy and materials share prices correlate not with their past or current profits but rather with underlying commodities prices. One area where we remain bullish is the technology sector. Even though tech share prices are overbought and could correct in absolute terms in the months ahead, they will continue to outperform the benchmark. Bottom Line: Corporate profits are much more important in driving share prices in the next 12 months than equity valuations. Our outlook for EM EPS is downbeat for the next 12 months or so, even though EPS will continue to recover in the next three to six months. Timing Reversal: Watch Credit Quality Spreads Chart I-8Credit Quality Spreads: ##br##A Correction Or Reversal? Following are some of the indicators we are monitoring to gauge a reversal in EM share prices. EM corporate spreads have widened a notch relative to EM sovereign spreads (Chart I-8, top panel). Similarly, Chinese off-shore corporate spreads have widened versus Chinese sovereign spreads (Chart I-8, middle panel). Credit quality spreads - the gap between B- and BAA-grade corporate bonds - have widened slightly in the U.S. (Chart I-8, bottom panel). These moves are still very small, and do not constitute a definite sign of a major trend reversal. Nevertheless, such widening in credit quality spreads is an important development. If they persist, they will certainly sound the alarm for the reflation trade. Interestingly, this is the first time a simultaneous widening in credit quality spreads has occurred since the risk assets rally began in early 2016. Bottom Line: Major equity market selloffs will occur when lower quality credit begins to persistently underperform better quality credit. There have been budding signs of quality spread widening that are worth being monitored. Identifying Relative Value Within the EM equity universe, valuation ratios differ greatly. For example, banks trade at a trailing P/E of 9.7, while consumer staple stocks trade at 24.8. Table I-2 portrays the trailing P/E ratio and its historical mean as well as 12-month forward EPS growth and the forward P/E ratio for each sector - as well as average of trailing and forward P/E ratios. Table I-3 shows the same valuation measures but for EM countries. Table I-2Stock Valuation Snapshot: EM Sectors Table I-3Equity Valuation Snapshot: EM Countries It is difficult to draw any definitive conclusions from these tables. On a general level, a simplistic approach to investing based on trailing and forward P/E ratios would not have produced great outcomes in EM in recent years. When analyzing EM stock valuations, we prefer to use the trailing rather than forward P/E ratio because historically, EM forward EPS have had a very poor record forecasting actual EPS. One of our favorite ways to identify relative value is to compare the PBV ratio and return on equity (RoE) across countries/sectors. Chart I-9 plots RoE on the X-axis and the PBV ratio on the Y axis. Countries and sectors located in the bottom right corner (at the low end of the shaded area) have a low PBV ratio compared to their RoE. In contrast, in the north-west side of the distribution (at the upper end of the shaded zone), these have an elevated PBV ratio, taking into account their RoE. Chart I-9Searching For Relative Value Among countries, Korea, Russia, Hungary, the Czech Republic and China appear cheap, while Mexico, Brazil, South Africa, Colombia, Malaysia and Poland are on the expensive side. Chart I-10EMS's Recommended ##br##Equity Portfolio Performance Concerning equity sectors, utilities and financials/banks are cheap, yet consumer staples and consumer discretionary, health care, telecom and materials appear expensive in relative terms. Our recommended country equity allocation is based on a qualitative assessment of many variables including but not limited to valuation. Chart I-10 displays the performance of our fully invested EM Equity Portfolio Model versus the EM benchmark. Our overweights presently include: Korea, Taiwan, India, China, Thailand, Russia and central Europe. Our underweights are Brazil, Turkey, Indonesia, Malaysia and Peru. We are neutral on Mexico, Chile, Colombia, South Africa and the Philippines. The lists of our country allocation and other equity investment recommendations are presented each week at the end of our reports. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com Bet On Russia's Non-Compliance With OPEC Odds of Russia's compliance with the OPEC agreement to cut oil output by 300k b/d in the next two months are low. This poses downside risk to oil prices. Russia has so far done only 120k b/d cuts. Hence, in the next two months it should reduce its output by 180k b/d which amounts to 1.6% of the nation's oil output. One way to bet on Russia's non-compliance, regardless the direction of oil prices, is to go long Russian energy stocks / short global energy ones (Chart II-1). There are a number of political, economic and financial motives why Russia might care less about lower oil prices than Saudi Arabia in the next 12-18 months or so. As a result, Russia might not cut as much as it is expected by the OPEC agreement. Russia is able to increase oil production due to a cheaper ruble and technology advances. BCA's Energy Sector Strategy team has been highlighting that there have been concerted efforts by Russia's largest producers to employ horizontal drilling and multi-zone hydraulic fracturing in Western Siberia.2 These have stemmed declines from those aging fields and allowed production to rise (Chart II-2). Chart II-1Long Russia Energy / ##br##Short Global Energy Stocks Chart II-2Russian Oil ##br##Production Will Increase Russia will not shy away from being opportunistic and increase its market share when it can ramp up oil production. A rising global oil market share will allow Russian companies to outperform their global peers regardless the direction of oil prices. There are major cyclical divergences between Russian and Saudi economies. Russia's economy is gradually picking up while there is less certainty about Saudi's growth recovery. The reason is that Russia has allowed the ruble to depreciate and act as a shock absorber. Meanwhile, Saudis have stuck to the currency peg. Oil prices are down by 27% from their top in rubles and 55% in Saudi riyals (Chart II-3). This has reflated Russia's fiscal revenues and the economy, while Saudi Arabia is still struggling with the consequences of low oil prices. On the fiscal front, Russia went through a notable fiscal squeeze and its budget deficit is projected to be 3.2% of GDP in 2017 (Chart II-4). In contrast, the Saudi Arabian fiscal deficit in 2016 reached an outstanding 17% of GDP, accounting for the drawdown in reserves by our estimates.3 Chart II-3Ruble's Depreciation ##br##In 2014-15 Made a Difference Chart II-4Fiscal Deficit: Small In ##br##Russia & Large In Saudi More importantly, Russia's federal budget for 2017 was constructed on the oil price assumption of $40/bbl. The 2017 Saudi budget assumes oil price of $50/bbl.4 Therefore, Russia would not mind if oil prices drop toward or slightly below $40 in the second half of this year. Therefore, Saudis care much more about sustaining oil prices at a higher level than Russians do. Finally, Rosneft has already conducted its IPO while Aramco's IPO has not taken place yet. As such, the need for higher oil prices is much greater in Saudi Arabia - to justify a higher value of their oil giant - than in Russia. Bottom Line: Odds are considerable that Russia will not comply with the OPEC deal and this could cause oil prices to selloff more. Regardless of direction of oil prices, we expect the Russian energy sector to outperform their global peers due to Russia's rising market share in the global oil market. Go long Russian energy stocks / short global ones. Stephan Gabillard, Research Analyst stephang@bcaresearch.com 1 For more detailed discussion on our methodology of CAPE, please refer to January 20, 2016 Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report titled "EM Equity Valuations: A CAPE Model", available at ems. bcaresearch.com 2 Please refer to the Energy Sector Strategy Weekly Report titled, "Russian Oil Production: Surpassing Expectation", dated December 14, 2016, available at nrg.bcaresearch.com 3 Please refer to the Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report titled, "Saudi Arabia: Short-Term Gain, Long-Term Pain", dated February 1, 2017, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 4 https://mof.gov.sa/en/budget2017/Documents/The_National_Budget.pdf Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights Chart of the WeekCopper Term Structure, Inventories##br## Are Not Reflecting Scarcity Transitory supply disruptions and financial demand have kept copper prices buoyant, but these influences will wane. A surge in inventories (Chart of the Week), coupled with slower Chinese demand growth as reflationary policies wind down, will prevent a sharp rally in copper prices. A stronger USD also will weigh on base metals in general, copper in particular. Energy: Overweight. We continue to expect oil inventories to draw throughout the rest of this year and next and are positioned for a backwardated forward curve in WTI. We are adding to our long Dec/17 vs. short Dec/18 WTI spread, which, as of our Tuesday mark to market, is up 183.33% since it was elected on Mar 13/17, and going long Dec/17 Brent vs. short Dec/18 Brent position basis tonight's close, as a strategic position. We also are adding a tactical position in WTI, buying $50/bbl calls vs. selling $55/bbl calls for July, August and September delivery basis tonight's close. Base Metals: Neutral. We remain neutral base metals longer term. Transitory supply disruptions in copper markets will subside, while reflationary stimulus in China will wane, keeping a lid on prices near term (see below). Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold rallied 3.7% following the Fed's rate hike last week. We expect this to reverse as the Fed ratchets up its hawkish rhetoric. Our long volatility position in gold - i.e., long a June put spread vs. long a June call spread - is down 27.5%, following the post-FOMC meeting rally. Ags/Softs: Underweight. We remain bearish, and are comfortable on the sidelines going into the month-end planting-intentions report from the USDA. Higher output of corn and beans in South America and a well-supported USD keep us bearish. Feature Actions taken by Chinese policymakers to slow the property market, wind down reflationary policies, and resume the pivot to services- and consumer-led growth will be critical to the evolution of copper demand, hence prices. Near term, we expect transitory supply disruptions in key mines in Chile, Peru and Indonesia will be addressed, and ore output will be restored. A stronger USD will present a headwind to copper demand, and will lower local production costs in Chile, Peru, Indonesia and elsewhere. Supply And Demand Shocks In the short-term (i.e. 2-3, months), copper prices should remain supported by the disruptions at Escondida in Chile, Grasberg in Indonesia, and more recently at Peru's biggest mine, Cerro Verde. Additionally, flooding in Peru is disrupting copper mining and transport operations beyond Cerro Verde, forcing the declaration of force majeure. BHP Billiton's third meeting with union officials at its Escondida mine failed to end to the strike. This is the world's largest mine - producing ~ 1.1mm MT/yr, or 5% of world supply. Escondida hasn't produced any copper since the strike began on Feb 9/17. This has reduced Chilean copper output 12% yoy as of February, and reduced Chile's GDP by ~ 1%. Unions this week showed interest in resuming talks with management, however. A settlement between PT Freeport Indonesia (PT-FI) and the Indonesian government re export permitting for Grasberg output has yet to materialize. PT-FI produced ~ 500k MT last year. As of this week, PT-FI restarted producing around 40% of its capacity. Lastly, strike action at the Cerro Verde mine is set to end today by order of the Peruvian government, but union officials said the strike would resume Friday if no agreement is reached with management. Cerro Verde produced ~ 500k MT of copper last year; the mine currently produces 50% of its capacity, after replacement workers were hired by the company. The lost output of these three mines accounts for ~ 10% of the global copper mine output. These developments clearly represent a transitory, albeit unexpected, supply shock with effects that should start to dissipate as these issues are resolved. It is worthwhile noting that copper is trading lower in the wake of this news, suggesting markets either prepared for labor action ahead of time - building precautionary inventories ahead of the labor-contract negotiations now underway - or that demand growth is slowing. We think a combination of both likely explains the price weakness following the transitory supply disruptions noted above. On the demand side, any optimism about rising copper prices due to an expected $1 trillion fiscal package in the U.S. is misplaced. Indeed, increased U.S. infrastructure spending - a largely unknown demand-side factor in terms of its details and dimensions - does not figure prominently in our assessment of future copper and based metals prices. The U.S contribution to global copper demand, and to base metals consumption in general, remains limited and has been decreasing in the last decades. U.S. copper demand now represents ~ 7.5% of world copper demand. Therefore, the U.S. market has a relatively small influence on copper prices compared to China, which accounts for close to 50% of global demand (Chart 2A and Chart 2B). Chart 2AU.S. Copper Consumption Pales Relatively To China Chart 2B We believe recent run-up in copper prices mainly was due to financial demand rather than physical demand (Chart 3). This elevated demand from financial investors could elevate price volatility, as any new fundamental information that provokes a sudden change in the copper outlook - e.g., faster restart to once-sidelined production, say, at Glencore's Katanga Mining facilities in the DRC, which are scheduled to be back on line later this year and next - could lead to an exodus of investors out of their long positions. Copper ETF holdings and copper open interest have been elevated in past weeks, and can have a significant effect on the evolution of copper prices (Chart 4).1 Prices have started to trend lower, a development that bears watching, given the still-high speculative holdings of the red metal. Chart 3Speculators Are Exiting Copper, ##br##Even As Supply Disruptions Mount Chart 4China PMI Vs. Copper Net Speculative Positions: ##br##Spec Positioning Matters For The Red Metal Global Copper Fundamentals Keep Us Neutral Looking at the next 6 to 12 months, we see no clear evidence to be bullish copper given supply-demand fundamentals. On the supply side, Australia's Department of Industry, Innovation and Science (DIIS) estimates mine output will be up 3.1% this year to 21mm MT - roughly in line with our estimates - and 4.1% next year to 21.8mm MT. Refined output hit a record high of almost 23.6mm MT last year, and is expected to increase 2.5% next year to 24mm MT. By 2018, the DIIS expects refined output to be up 4%, at 25mm MT. Large production gains were reported by the International Copper Study Group (ICSG) for Peru, where mine output was up 38% at 650k MT last year, offsetting lower mine production in Chile, where output was down 3.8% to 220k MT. Global production estimates by the DIIS for 2016 were in line with ICSG estimates for both mine production and world refined production. The ICSG estimates were released earlier this week. Global demand was up 3% last year at 23.4mm MT, and is expected to increase 2% this year to 24mm MT and 3% next year to 24.6mm MT, based on DIIS's estimates. These estimates also are in line with the ICSG's assessment of global sage. The ICSG estimated global demand last year was up ~ 2%. As is apparent, global supply and demand for copper have been, and will remain, relatively balanced this year and next (Chart 5).2 This will be supported by countervailing fundamentals: Global economic activity is picking up, especially in the manufacturing sectors of major economies, which will be supportive for copper prices (Chart 6); and, running counter to that, A strong USD, coupled with inventories at close to 3-year-high levels, will keep copper prices from escalating dramatically.3 Chart 5Global Copper Market Is Balanced Chart 6Global Growth Synchronization Is Underway China's Reflationary Policies Will Wind Down While reflationary policies launched over the past couple of years will continue to stimulate the Chinese economy in 2017, the fiscal and monetary impulses from them are waning. China's manufacturing sector, fixed-asset investment and the property sector are expected to stay strong during the first half of the year, which will support copper demand (Chart 7). However, this stimulus is winding down, and, following the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party in the autumn, we expect it to decline at a faster pace: These lagged effects of the wind-down of fiscal and monetary stimulus will be apparent - particularly in the property markets. Policymakers likely will reduce and re-direct policy stimulus to support consumer- and services-led growth, and continue to invest in the country's electricity grid, which accounts for about a third of China's copper demand. Net, demand likely will grow, but at a slower pace. Global copper inventories are now at an elevated level, which suggests there is no alarming scarcity in the market. This is corroborated by the contango observed in the copper futures market (Chart of the Week). An important takeaway from last week's People's Congress is that the main objective of Premier Li's work plan is to maintain economic and social stability. This primary objective is now more important than the Communist's Party's growth objective, and can be seen in the lower GDP growth target approved by policymakers (6.5%) going forward. The Chinese fiscal impulse already has started to roll over - government expenditures are now growing at a rate of close to 7.5% versus a peak of 29% in Nov/15 (Chart 8). This poses a risk to the downside for base metals prices, given that much of China's base-metals demand is dependent on government expenditures. Chart 7Fixed Asset Investments Are Resilient Chart 8Expansionary Chinese Fiscal Policy Is Slowing Down Chart 9China Might Have Reached A Sustainable Growth Path That said, recent data from China showing resilient industrial activity and fixed-asset investments despite the roll-over in government expenditures gives hope the economy reached a sustainable growth path and that it will stay buoyant throughout the year (Chart 9). China's Red-Hot Property Market Will Cool China's housing sector has, since the economy's liberalization in the late 1990s, grown into one of the most important drivers of its GDP. Most of the 2002 - 2010 increase in base metal prices - nearly 85% - can be explained by the spectacular growth in the Chinese housing sector.4 Building construction accounts for close to 45% of total copper consumption in China (Chart 10). Within that, residential construction makes up 70% of China's real estate investment, according to Australia's DIIS.5 Globally, China accounts for a third of the copper used in construction, according to the CME Group.6 This equates to ~ 10% of global copper usage. Chart 10Building Construction Is Crucial For Copper Demand In 2016, the Chinese real estate sector experienced extremely high growth, which was mainly fueled by easy access to credit, interest-rate cuts, easing of mortgage rules and an income effect from reflationary policies. This tendency reversed in late 2016 - early 2017, as can be seen in Chart 11. Looking forward, the evolution of the housing market will rely heavily on the policy path taken by the Chinese government. In the second half of 2016, the high level of speculative demand apparent in the property market red-flagged Chinese authorities that a price bubble was developing, producing an inflated debt load that posed a risk to future economic growth. President Xi repeatedly affirmed that China's priority going forward will be to keep the economy stable. This implies keeping the property market stable by nudging investment behavior and expectations to control the supply-side of the market. This is reflected in President Xi statement: "houses are for living in, not for speculating" during the recent Peoples Congress.7 Chinese authorities will maintain loan restrictions and stricter selling conditions implemented late last year, for first- and second-tier cities, where prices increased dramatically. First-tier newly constructed residential building prices were up on average by 18% year-on-year in February 2017, and the National Bureau of Statistics of China's sales price index of residential buildings in 70 large and medium-sized cities was up 11.3% in 2016. For other cities - where home inventories are still elevated and prices are relatively stable - the government could keep its facilitating policies in place, to encourage consumption and to draw down inventories of unsold homes. These developments will introduce downside risk to copper prices, given the importance of Chinese residential construction. Still, the Chinese government cannot allow real estate prices to drop suddenly, or even to slow too much, given that housing remains the main savings vehicle - directly or indirectly - for households. According to Xi and Jin (2015), Chinese citizens save around 70-80% of their wealth via the property market. It is true that financial innovation and the opening of Chinese financial markets should help households save using alternative strategies. However, changing households' savings behavior is not an instantaneous process. Moreover, we believe reflationary policies in other sectors of the economy will remain accommodative during the first half of the year, as headline and core inflation are still at relatively low levels (Chart 12). And, as mentioned previously, we expect continued investment in China's power grid, which will support copper prices this year and next. As the consumer economy grows, we would expect demand for electricity to continue to grow. Chart 11China's Property Market Peaked In 2016 Chart 12Inflation Close To Six-Year Lows Bottom Line: Combining these opposing effects, Chinese demand should remain high enough to maintain copper prices at a relatively stable level in 2017. However, following the 19th Communist Party later this year, we expect reflationary stimulus to wind down and for fiscal and monetary policy to be directed to supporting consumer- and services-led growth, which is less commodity intensive than heavy industrial and investment-led growth. We strongly believe the Communist Government will strengthen its focus on stronger enforcement of environmental regulations, which will introduce new supply-demand dynamics to the copper market. We will be exploring the "greening" of China in subsequent research, and its implications for base metals demand. Hugo Bélanger, Research Assistant Commodity & Energy Strategy hugob@bcaresearch.com Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com 1 We found that year-on-year variations in copper prices and in speculative long open interest exhibit a feedback loop - there is two-way Granger causality between them (i.e., they are endogenously related and each of their lagged values explain variation in the other's current price). The causality is stronger from copper prices to speculative long open interest; however, it also is significant the other way around. This means that in period of high speculative interest in copper - similar to what we experienced following the U.S. presidential election in late 2016 - the open interest variable is actually driving copper prices in the short term. We have also been able to explain copper prices by modeling year-on-year percentage change in the broad U.S trade-weighted index (TWI), Chinese PMI and in speculative long open interest. We find a 1% increase in the yoy speculative long open interest leads to a 0.19% increase in yoy copper prices. The adjusted R2 of the regression is 0.84. 2 The ICSG estimated there was a 50k MT deficit last year, trivial in a 23.4mm MT market. 3 We estimated the long-term relationship between copper prices, china PMI, world copper consumption and the U.S. TWI using a cointegrating regression. Interestingly, we found that, in equilibrium, a 1% increase in the China PMI variable translates to a 1.17% increase in copper prices. This relation can obviously be thrown out of equilibrium following an exogenous shock to the fundamentals of any of the variables in the model. The adjusted R2 of the regression is 0.71. 4 Please see "The Evolution of The Chinese Housing Market and Its Impact on Base Metal Prices," published by the Bank of Canada, March, 2016. It is available at http://www.bankofcanada.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/sdp2016-7.pdf. Using an approach that accounts for the uncertainty around the official data, the lack of consistency in the data and the high level of seasonality and volatility in the data, the authors concluded that the Chinese GDP would have been around 9% lower at the end of 2010 in a scenario in which the housing market did not grow after 2002. Following this, they estimated two vector-error-correction models (VECM), one with the actual level of global activity, and one where the Chinese activity is 9% lower. 5 Please see "China Resources Quarterly" published by Australia's DIIA. It is available at https://industry.gov.au/Office-of-the-Chief Economist/Publications/Documents/crq/China-Resources-Quarterly-Southern-autumn-Northern-spring-2016.pdf 6 Please see "Copper: Supply and Demand Dynamics," published by the CME Group January 27, 2016. 7 Please see "Xi says China must 'unswervingly' crackdown on financial irregularities" published by Reuters. It is available at http://ca.reuters.com/article/businessNews/idCAKBN1671A0 Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed In 2017 Summary of Trades Closed in 2016
Highlights Global fundamentals - supply, demand and inventories - will support oil prices generally, and will remain bullish for the evolution toward backwardated forward curves, even as the Fed's interest-rate normalization policy supports the USD's broad trade-weighted index (TWI). This will cause the oil-USD divergence noted in earlier research to persist.1 Energy: Overweight. We are once again long Dec/17 WTI vs. short Dec/18 WTI, after the resting order placed on March 9/17 was elected on March 13/17 at -$0.12/bbl. Our oil-balances modeling indicates storage will draw throughout the rest of this year and next. Base Metals: Neutral. Spot copper prices remain subdued despite strikes at Peru's Cerro Verde and Chile's Escondida mines. Meanwhile, export-license talks continue in Indonesia at the Grasberg mine. When a market fails to rally on supportive news, it normally is a bearish indicator. An unexpected surge in LME copper stocks partly offset supply-side concerns. Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold will remain weak, as markets discount the timing and size of further rate hikes. We remain long volatility, with our long-put/long-call spread combination in June, recommended on February 23/17, up 29.5%. Ags/Softs: Underweight. Indications of higher output of corn and beans in South America from the USDA, and a well-supported USD keep us bearish. Lower planting intentions - to be reported at month-end - could support corn. Feature Markets got a rare "two-fer" yesterday. The first, a long-anticipated bullish oil inventory report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). The second, a fully priced follow-through on the Fed's recent forward guidance in the form of a 25bp hike in overnight rates, which, while important to oil markets, will continue to be secondary to the fundamental adjustments that will be reflected in subsequent EIA reports. Not unexpectedly, U.S. commercial oil inventories drew hard last week - more than 8mm bbl (including SPR), with crude stocks accounting for 1.1 mm bbl - following weeks of builds, which forced many a long from the market. The balance of the draws will shift to crude within the next month, as U.S. refiners come back off performing routine maintenance. With the year-end surge from OPEC's Gulf producers now fully absorbed, we expect to see a sustained draw in OECD storage this year. This will force inventories toward the five-year average levels sought by OPEC and non-OPEC producers in their production-cutting agreement last year (Chart of the Week). In our balances model, we have global supply up 0.5 mm b/d in 2017 yoy and demand up 1.5 mm b/d on average. For 2018, we have supply up 1.5 mm b/d on average vs. 2017, and demand up 1.6 mm b/d. This will produce the draws in OECD inventories anticipated by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and Russia when they led the negotiations between OPEC and non-OPEC oil-producing states that will produce these supply deficits (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekOil Markets Will Tighten This Year And Next Chart 2OECD Inventories Will Draw Sharply The Fed - And The USD - Still Matter, But Not As Much The 25bp hike in overnight rates was perhaps the most strongly telegraphed messaging from FOMC members in post-GFC history. If nothing else, the Fed is unambiguously signaling its intent to normalize interest-rate policy, which, all else equal, will be supportive of the USD's TWI. We do not believe the Fed is intent on raising real rates, which will somewhat temper the rates normalization policy of the Fed. This will allow the synchronized global growth we now see - along with a synchronized increase in global inflation rates - to continue, and will prevent an overly strong USD from crimping demand ex-U.S. - particularly in the EM markets. Indeed, we continue to expect strong growth in EM oil demand, which we proxy by non-OECD oil consumption (Chart 3). Therefore, while the evolution of the USD will remain important to the evolution of oil prices, we do not expect it to dominate that evolution as it has post-GFC to the end of 1Q16. As can be seen in Chart 4, which shows Brent prices as a function of the USD TWI, this relationship has weakened some, after fundamentals - chiefly supply destruction and demand growth - reacted to the lower prices brought on by the market-share war declared by OPEC in November 2014. Chart 3EM Growth Will Drive Oil Demand Chart 4USD Will Not Dominate Oil-Price Evolution However, we do not expect this relationship to break down entirely: Indeed, it has been remarkably durable since 2000, when oil prices - like the USD - became random-walking economic variables (Chart 5).2 We do think the market is in a transition phase - chiefly from being over-supplied to tighter, given the physical deficits we expect - with price levels capable of following a more stable path with less volatility. This will translate into even greater volatility in the forward curves for oil prices, which we believe will become more backwardated as markets finally get evidence storage is drawing (Charts 6). We continue to expect WTI prices to trade between $45 and $65/bbl, with a central tendency of $55/bbl this year and next. Chart 5Expect The USD To Be Less Determinant ##br##For Oil Prices Chart 6We Continue To Expect Backwardation ##br##In Oil Forwards Back In The Backwardation Trade We are once again long Dec/17 WTI vs. short Dec/18 WTI, after the resting order placed on March 9/17 was elected on March 13/17 at -$0.12/bbl. We are including a stop-loss on this recommendation of -$0.36/bbl (i.e., the Dec/17 vs. Dec/18 spread goes into a -$0.48/bbl contango), given this is a strategic recommendation and we are willing to incur larger losses given our high-conviction view of the evolution of the WTI forward curve. As the above analysis indicates, we strongly expect storage to draw throughout the rest of this year and next. This will produce backwardated markets - prompt-delivery prices exceed deferred-delivery prices - and tighten markets globally. We recently exited the exact same trade on February 23/17, when we entered it at -$0.11/bbl (in contango), and exited at +$0.96/bbl, for a gain of +$1.07/bbl (972.7%). This is evidence of the volatility we continue to expect as the forward curve transitions to a backwardated structure. Bottom Line: The oil market is performing as we expect, with supply cuts in the face of strong demand growth producing a physical deficit. This will lead to a backwardation in the forward curves for WTI and Brent, which we are capitalizing on by re-establishing our long Dec/17 WTI vs. short Dec/18 WTI position. While the USD will continue to exert an influence on oil prices, we continue to believe this will be secondary to the evolution of prices. Fundamentals will drive price discovery going forward. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Days Of Oil Future's Past: Mean-Reversion," dated March 2, 2017, and "Fed's Pre-Emptive Hike Will Hit Gold, Not Oil," dated March 9, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see "Days Of Oil Future's Past: Mean-Reversion," published March 2, 2017, referenced above. In that article we examine the evolution of oil prices from a mean-reverting series to a difference-stationary series. We considered the possibility the KSA - Russia production agreement could deepen, allowing these states to exert more control over the evolution of prices. This is not foregone, by any means, but it is useful to consider the implications of supply contracting as a result of their detente, and the return of a more inelastic supply curve. In such a market, small adjustments to the supply side can have profound effects on prices - assuming demand remains inelastic - and allow these states to regain a measure of control over oil market fundamentals. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed In 2017 Summary of Trades Closed in 2016
Highlights The global economy has turned the cap and is on a sustainable uptrend. Yet, the AUD and CAD have over-discounted the improvements and are at risk of suffering a disappointment if global manufacturing activity remains firm but does not accelerate much. Moreover, the Australian and Canadian domestic economies remain too weak to justify rates moving in line with the Fed. Rate differentials will continue to weigh on both currencies. While the CAD is cheaper than the AUD and warrants an overweight position versus the Aussie, we are adding it to our short commodity currency basket trade. The ECB will not ease further, but it will not tighten this year either. Feature Since their February highs, the Australian and Canadian dollars have declined by 2.7% and 3.6% respectively. In May 2016, we wrote that commodity currencies could continue to perform well, but that ultimately, this strong performance would only prove transitory and that the AUD and the CAD would once again resume their downtrends.1 Is this recent weakness the beginning of a more pronounced selloff? We believe the answer is yes. How Great Is The Global Backdrop? Much ink has been spilled regarding the improvement in the global industrial sector. Global PMIs have perked up the world over, semi-conductor prices have been booming, metal prices have been on a tear, and Chinese excavator sales have been growing at a 150% annual rate (Chart I-1). It would seem that the world economy is out of the woods. This is true, but asset markets are not backward looking, they are forward looking. The improvement in global economic conditions that we have witnessed has driven the impressive rally in stocks, EM assets, commodity, and commodity currencies in 2016. But what matters for future asset markets' performance, and especially growth sensitive currencies like the AUD and the CAD, is future global growth. Where do we stand on that front? We do not expect an economic relapse like in 2015 and early 2016. Some key elements have changed in the global economy, suggesting it is not as hampered by deflationary forces as it once was: DM industrial capacity utilization has improved (Chart I-2). Also our U.S. composite capacity utilization indicator that incorporates both the manufacturing and service sectors has now moved into "no slack" territory. This suggests that deflationary forces that have so negatively affected the DM economy in 2015 and 2016 are becoming tamer. Chart I-1Signs Of An Economic Rebound Chart I-2Improving Global Capacity Utilization Commodity markets are much more balanced than in 2015-2016. Not only has excess capacity in the Chinese steel and coal sector been drained, but the oil market has moved from being defined by excess supply to a surplus of demand (Chart I-3). This suggests that commodities are unlikely to be the same deflationary anchors they were in the past two years. The global contraction in profits is over. Profits are a nominal concept, and in 2015 and 2016, U.S. nominal growth hovered around 2.5%, in line with the levels registered in the 1980, 1990, and 2001 recessions (Chart I-4). As a residual claim on corporate revenues, profits display elevated operating leverage. Thus, nominal GDP growth moving from 2.5% to 4% on the back of lessened deflationary forces will continue to support profits. Chart I-3Oil: From Excess Supply To Excess Demand Chart I-4Last Year Was A Nominal Recession This also means that the rise in capex intentions that began to materialize last summer is likely to genuinely support capex growth and the overall business cycle in the coming quarters, especially in the U.S. (Chart I-5). Additionally, the inventory cycle that has weighed on EM and DM economies is now over (Chart I-6). While growth is likely to be fine based on these factors, for the AUD and CAD to move higher, growth needs to accelerate further. The problem is that based on our Nowcast for global manufacturing activity, things are as good as they get now (Chart I-7). Chart I-5Improving DM ##br##Capex Outlook Chart I-6Inventories: From ##br##Drag To Boost Chart I-7If Global Industrial Activity Doesn't ##br##Improve, CAD and AUD Are Toast In China, which stands at the crux of the global manufacturing cycle, we see the following factors hampering further improvements: The Chinese fiscal impulse has rolled over. Fiscal stimulus does impact the economy with some lags. The peak in the Chinese boost was reached in November 2015, with government expenditures growing at a 24% annual rate, but today, they are growing at a 4% rate. The deleterious effect on growth of this tightening may soon be felt. Chinese liquidity conditions have deteriorated. Interbank borrowing rates are already rising (Chart I-8), and the PBoC has drained an additional RMB 90 billion out of the banking system this week alone. These dynamics could be aimed at cooling down the real estate bubble in the country. Falling activity in that sector would represent a significant drag on the industrial and commodity sectors globally. Chart I-8Tightening Chinese Liquidity Conditions Chart I-9The NZD Weakness Should Be A Bad Omen The fall in Chinese real rates may have reached its paroxysm in February. Commodity price inflation may have hit its peak last month, suggesting the same for Chinese producer prices. A slowing PPI inflation will raise real borrowing costs in that economy and further tighten monetary conditions. Corroborating these risks, Kiwi equities, a traditional bellwether of global growth continue to buckle down. In fact, the New Zealand dollar is offering the same insight. Being the G10 currency most sensitive to the combined effect of wider EM borrowing spreads and commodity prices, its recent fall may presage some problems in these spaces (Chart I-9). To be clear, we are not expecting a wholesale collapse in growth. Far from it, but an absence of acceleration or a mild deceleration, could have troubling effects on commodities. The case of oil this week is very telling. Inventories have been going up, but the frailty of the oil market was mostly a reflection of the extraordinary bullish positioning of investors (Chart I-10, left panel). The same is true for copper, investors are very long and thus, vulnerable to mild growth disappointments (Chart I-10, right panel). Chart I-10AInvestors Are Bullish Industrial Commodities Chart I-10BInvestors Are Bullish Industrial Commodities Oil is not the only commodity experiencing a large accumulation in inventories. China, the key consumer of metals, is now overloaded with large inventories of both iron ore and copper (Chart I-11). This combination of high bullishness and rising inventories represents a risk for metals, especially if the positive growth impulse in China slows somewhat from here. Chart I-11China Has ##br##Hoarded Metals Chart I-12Can Growth And Reflation Surprises Increase##br## As Policy Becomes Less Easy? Adding to these risks is the Fed. The Fed is on the path to increase rates a bit more aggressively than was recently anticipated by markets. U.S. real rates are responding in kind, and key gauges like junk bonds, gold, or silver are also highlighting that global liquidity conditions may begin to deteriorate at the margin. While this tightening is not a catastrophe, it is still happening in an environment of elevated global leverage and potentially decelerating growth. This is not the death knell for risk assets, but it does represent a risk for the asset classes that are not pricing in any potential rollover in the elevated level of global surprises and reflation (Chart I-12). Commodity currencies are not ready for this reality. To begin with, positioning on the key commodity currencies has rebounded substantially, and risk reversals on these currencies as well as EM currencies are at levels indicative of maximum bullishness amongst investors. Also, the Australian dollar is expensive relative to its fundamentals, including the terms of trade. This makes the Aussie very vulnerable to small shocks to metal or coal prices (Chart 13, left panel). The CAD is not as pricey as the AUD, but nonetheless, it has lost its previous valuation cushion (Chart I-13, right panel). It also faces its own set of risks. Chart I-13ANo Valuation Cushion In CAD And AUD Chart I-13BNo Valuation Cushion In CAD And AUD This set of circumstance highlights that the room for disappointment in these currencies is now large. Bottom Line: While 2016 was a dream come true for investors in commodity currencies, 2017 may prove to be a tougher environment. Global growth is not about to plunge, but for commodity currencies to rally more, global manufacturing activity needs to accelerate further. Here the hurdle is harder to beat. Not only is the Chinese reflationary impulse slowing exactly as the global manufacturing sector hits exceptional levels of strength, but the Fed is also marginally tightening its stance. This means that expensive currencies like the BRL and AUD, as well as the cheaper but still vulnerable CAD could suffer some downside if industrial growth temporarily flattens, an event we judge more likely than not. Domestic Considerations Chart I-14We Build Houses In Canada When it comes to the AUD and the CAD, global risk is skewed to the downside, but what about domestic considerations? Here again, signs are not as great as one might hope. When it comes to Canada, the capacity to withstand higher rates is limited. The elephant in the room is the risk posed by the U.S. border adjustment tax. BCA thinks that this tax could be implemented in a diluted form, one were apparels, food, energy, etc. are exempt from the deal. However, the industries representing the American "rust-belt" are likely to be fully covered. This means that machinery and cars in particular could be the key targets of the BAT. This is a huge problem for Canada. Take the car industry as an example. Canada exports C$80 billion in vehicles and parts to the U.S., or 15% of its merchandise exports, nearly 4% of GDP. The potential hit from this tax on the country could be large. Also, the Canadian economy is even more levered to house prices that the Australian one. As Chart I-14 illustrates, the share of residential investment in Canada is much higher than in Australia, despite the slower growth of the population in Canada than in the Australia. Additionally, Canadian consumption is much more geared to housing than in Australia. Canadian households are experiencing slower nominal and real wage gains than their Australian counterparts. Yet their consumption per head growth is similar to that of Australia, and their confidence is substantially higher, reflecting a stronger wealth effect in Canada than in Australia (Chart I-15). Furthermore, despite the rebound in commodity prices and profits in 2016, Canadian and Australian credit growth have been slowing sharply (Chart 16, top two panels); however, Canada suffers from a higher level of debt service payment than Australia, despite the fact that the Canadian household debt to disposable income is 170% versus 185% in Australia (Chart I-16, bottom panel). These factors amplify the negative potential of higher interest rates in Canada relative to Australia. But Australia also suffers from its own ills. Total hours worked continue to deteriorate in that country and job growth is even more heavily geared to the part-time sector than in Canada. Additionally, while Canada will benefit from a small amount of fiscal expansion in the coming years, Australia is tabled to experience a large degree of fiscal austerity (Chart I-17). In this context, it will be difficult for the Australian labor market to outperform that of Canada. Chart I-15Canadian Households Are ##br##More Levered To Housing Chart I-16Slowing Credit Growth In ##br##Canada And Australia Finally, while the Canadian core CPI is elevated at 2.1%, this largely reflects pass-through from the previous collapse in the CAD, and this is expected to dissipate as wage growth remains tepid at 1.2%. But the Australian situation is even more troubling. Australia has been incapable of generating much inflation, and the fall in hours worked suggests that the labor market may be easing, not tightening. With the 10% increase in the AUD from its trough in 2016, inflation is unlikely to rise enough to prompt the RBA to become much more hawkish in the coming months. Thus, we think that both Canadian and Australian rates will continue to lag U.S. ones, putting more downward pressures on the CAD and the AUD versus the USD, despite the recent improvement in trade balances in both nations. (Chart I-18). Moreover, even if the decline in Australian interest rate differentials relative to the U.S. were to be less pronounced than in Canada, the AUD is much more misaligned with differentials than the CAD, adding to the Aussie's vulnerability. Chart I-17Fiscal Policy: Canada Eases, ##br##Australia Tightens Chart I-18Rate Differentials Will Continue##br## To Help The USD Bottom Line: Domestic conditions remains challenging for Australia and Canada. In both nations, debt service payments are already elevated, suggesting it will be hard for the central bank to increase rates without prompting accidents. While Australia seems less geared to the housing sector than Canada, its labor market dynamics are poorer, it faces a more austere fiscal policy, and it has trouble generating any inflation. We expect rate differentials to continue to move against both the CAD and the AUD versus the USD. Investment Conclusions At this point, the CAD and AUD are essentially entering an ugly contest. For both of these currencies, the global backdrop could prove to be more difficult in 2017 than in 2016. Moreover, both these currencies are handicapped by fundamental domestic issues that will further prevent rates to rise vis-à-vis the U.S. As such, we are now adding the CAD to our short commodity currency basket trade against the USD. AUD/USD may move toward 0.65-0.60 and USD/CAD may rally toward 1.40-1.45. Comparatively, both the AUD and CAD suffer from different but equally important handicaps. The only thing that would put the CAD at the nicer end of the ugly contest are its valuations. Our PPP model augmented for productivity differentials continues to show that the CAD is cheap against the AUD, corroborating the message of our long-term fair value models (Chart I-19). Also, as we highlighted above, CAD is more in line with its IRP-implied fair value than the AUD. We therefore recommend investors overweight the CAD vis-à-vis the AUD. A Few Words On The ECB Yesterday, Draghi struck a cautious tone in Frankfurt. While he acknowledged that deflationary risks in the euro area have decreased relative to where they stood last year, the governing council still thinks downside risks, even if of a foreign origin, slightly overshadow upside risks to its forecast. While the ECB feels that there is less of a need to implement additional support to the economy in the future, it judges the current accommodative setting to still be warranted. We agree. It is true that headline inflation in Europe has moved to 2%, but core inflation, which strips the very important base effect in energy prices that has lifted HICP, remains flat at low levels. Moreover, wage growth in the euro area remains tepid, confirming the lack of persistent domestic inflationary pressures in Europe (Chart I-20). Thus, the ECB elected to maintain asset purchases to the end of December at EUR60 billion per months. Rates are also unlikely to rise until after the end of the purchase program. In this environment, while the trade-weighted euro may move higher, the cyclical outlook continue to be negative for EUR/USD as monetary policy divergences between the U.S. and Europe will grow as time passes. On a 3-month basis, if we are correct that global growth may not accelerate further, the potential for a correction in EM and commodity plays could provide a temporary fillip to the euro. As markets currently priced in less rate hikes from the ECB than the Fed, the scope for pricing out the anticipated rate hikes is lower in Europe than in the U.S. if risk assets experience a correction within a bull market. This means that DXY may weaken or stay flat even if the trade-weighted dollar rises during that time frame. Chart I-19AUD / CAD Is Expensive Chart I-20The ECB's Dilemma Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Pyrrhic Victories" dated April 29, 2016 available at fes.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 The U.S. economy continues to show resilience with the ADP employment change crushing expectations by 108,000. Although the USD did not react proportionately to this specific news, this is only a firmer signal of the confirmation for a rate hike next week. With the market pricing in almost a 100% probability of a hike, the Fed is unlikely to disappoint. What matters now is the messaging around the hike. In this regard, Trump's aggressive fiscal stance and the economy's consistent resilience is making a good case for the Fed to remain supportive of its forecasts. On a technical basis, the MACD line for the DXY is above the signal line, while also being in positive territory. Momentum is therefore pointing to a strong upward trend for the dollar in the short term. Report Links: Et Tu, Janet? - March 3, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Risks To The Cyclical Dollar View - February 3, 2017 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 The ECB left its policy rates and asset purchase program unchanged. Although President Draghi acknowledged the euro area's resilience as risks have become "less pronounced", he also noted that risks still "remain tilted to the downside". In the press release, the Governing Council continued to highlight that they continue to expect "the key ECB interest rates to remain at present or lower levels for an extended period of time, and well past the horizon of the net asset purchases". The message is therefore mixed. Growth is expected to remain resilient in the euro area, but significant domestic slack and global factors have forced the ECB to remain cautious. Cyclical risks to the euro are more to the downside than to the upside in the current environment. Report Links: Et Tu, Janet? - March 3, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 The French Revolution - February 3, 2017 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent Japanese data has been mixed: Machine tool orders yearly growth came in at 9.1%, the highest level since the third quarter of 2015. Labor cash earnings yearly growth came above expectations at 0.5%. However GDP growth was disappointing, coming in at 1.2% against expectations of 1.6%. We continue to be bearish on the yen on a cyclical basis. Although there has been some improvement, economic data has still been too tepid for the Bank of Japan to even consider rolling back some of its most radical policies. After all, the BoJ has established that they now have a price level target instead of an inflation target, which means that inflation would have to overshoot 2% for a significant period of time in order to switch from their easing bias. Report Links: Et Tu, Janet? - March 3, 2017 JPY: Climbing To The Springboard Before The Dive - February 24, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 After the vote in the House of Lords, Theresa May has been dealt yet another blow to her Brexit hopes as the upper house of the U.K. voted for giving parliament veto power over the final exit deal of Britain from the European Union. This news have been positive for the pound at the margin, as the perception of softer Brexit increases. The prime minister will now appeal this decision to the House of Commons. If she is defeated here, the pound could rally significantly. On the economic side, recent data has been disappointing: Market Services PMI not only went down from the previous month but also underperformed expectations, coming in at 53.3. Halifax house prices yearly growth came in at 5.1%, underperforming expectations. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 The Pound Falls To The Conquering Dollar - October 14, 2016 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 As expected, the RBA left its cash rate unchanged at 1.5%. The currency was little changed from this announcement. However, following last week's depreciation, the AUD followed through with further depreciation on Wednesday due to a strengthening greenback. This affected the AUD twofold: the appreciating dollar added pressure on the AUD, and on commodity prices which further exacerbated the AUD's decline - copper prices are down more than 4% and iron ore futures are down almost 3%. Risks are to the downside for the AUD: declining copper and iron ore prices foretell that the AUD's decline may continue; China's regulation on coal imports and energy production will further damage Australia's export market. On a shorter-term basis, the MACD line is below the signal line and indicates negative momentum. Additionally, the MACD line has breached negative territory, adding further downward momentum. Report Links: Et Tu, Janet? - March 3, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Risks To The Cyclical Dollar View - February 3, 2017 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 The kiwi continues to fall, and has now lost all of the gains from earlier this year. The outlook for the NZD against other commodity currencies is puzzling: on the one hand the NZD is very sensitive to emerging market spreads, which means that it would be the primary victim of the dollar bull market, as a rising dollar drains liquidity from EM and hurts fixed income instruments in these countries. On the other hand, domestic factors provide a tailwind for the NZD as strong inflationary pressures are emerging in the kiwi economy and New Zealand continues to be the star performer amongst its commodity peers. Overall, we are inclined to be tactically more bullish on the NZD against the AUD, as the NZD/USD has reached oversold levels, while AUD/USD has been firmer amidst the rally in the U.S. dollar. Report Links: Et Tu, Janet? - March 3, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Risks To The Cyclical Dollar View - February 3, 2017 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Following up from last week's depreciation is an even weaker CAD this week. USD/CAD appreciated greatly amidst a large decline in oil prices after crude oil stocks increased by around 7 mn bbl more than the previous change and the consensus amount. This trend is likely to continue as rig counts continue to increase. A rising USD is likely to exacerbate the decline in the CAD as it will continue to weigh on oil prices. We have previously noted that the CAD will stay very affected by U.S. trade relations and rate differentials. This trend is likely to continue. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 When You Come To A Fork In The Road, Take It - November 4, 2016 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland has been encouraging: Unemployment continues to be very low at 3.3%. Headline inflation came in at 0.5%. At this level inflation now stands at its highest since 2011. Although these developments are positive, the SNB will continue to aggressively intervene in the currency and prevent further appreciation. The SNB has been keen on keeping their unofficial floor of 1.065 in EUR/CHF, even on the face of risk-off flows coming into Switzerland due to the European election cycle. In fact, the SNB reserves surged at the highest pace since December 2014, which indicates that the central bank has been having its hands full. For now the SNB will continue with this policy, however, we will continue to monitor Swiss data to assess whether a change in policy by the SNB is possible. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 Long-Term FX Valuation Models: Updates And New Coverages - September 30, 2016 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 USD/NOK rallied sharply following the 5% plunge in oil prices, as the rise in inventories came at almost 7 million barrels above expectations. The risk profile for the NOK is the opposite of the NZD. External factors should help the Norwegian economy vis-à-vis other commodity currencies, as oil should outperform industrial metals given that it has a lower beta to China and Emerging markets. On the other hand, the domestic situation has deteriorated. Nominal GDP is contracting, the output gap stands around -2% of potential GDP, and the credit impulse continues to be negative. Meanwhile, inflation is starting to recede, as the effect of the depreciation of the NOK on 2015 is dissipating. All of these factors should support a dovish bias from the Norges Bank, hurting the NOK going forward. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 The Pound Falls To The Conquering Dollar - October 14, 2016 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 The krona will resume its cyclical downward trend as the USD continues to climb, being one of the currencies with the highest betas to the dollar. Our bullish case for the krona is weakened by the Riksbank's extremely cautious tone which, so to speak, stopped the krona in its tracks. EUR/SEK stopped its depreciation abruptly in the beginning of February and has since appreciated. Momentum, however, does seem to be slowing down for this cross as the Swedish economy remains inherently resilient. As a large proportion of Sweden's exports to the euro area are re-exported to EM, additional risks may emanate from China as any potential slowdown in the world's second largest economy could provide a risk to Sweden's industrial sector. This could add deflationary pressures to the economy, which can solidify the Riksbank's dovish stance even further. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Value Models - February 17, 2017 Outlook: 2017's Greatest Hits - December 16, 2016 One Trade To Rule Them All - November 18, 2016 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights The Fed's evident desire to lift its policy rate next week - presumably to get out ahead of inflation that has yet to show up in its preferred gauge - will weigh on gold. Oil ... not so much. This is because fundamentals once again are asserting themselves in the evolution of oil prices, something that has been evident even before markets balanced last year. Gold, meanwhile, remains exquisitely sensitive to Fed policy expectations and their effects on the USD and real rates, as with other currencies. Energy: Overweight. We are looking to re-establish our long WTI Dec/17 vs. short Dec/18 spread if it trades in contango again, i.e., if Dec/17 is less than Dec/18. We believe the combination of OPEC and non-OPEC adherence to their production Agreement will remain high, and demand likely will remain stout. Base Metals: Neutral. Spot copper is down ~ $0.10/lb on COMEX over the past week. We expect transitory supply issues in Chile and Indonesia to be resolved, and reflationary stimulus in China to wane going into the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party in the autumn, and, with it, copper demand. We remain neutral. Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold is weakening as the Fed's March meeting approaches next week, given the overwhelming expectation for a 25bp rate hike. We remain long volatility, expecting fiscal-policy uncertainty in the U.S. to be resolved over the next few months, and Fed policy drivers to become more focused. Ags/Softs: Underweight. We are not expecting significant changes in the USDA's estimates of stocks globally, and therefore remain underweight. Feature The choreographed messaging of voting and non-voting FOMC members asserting the need for a policy-rate hike over the past two weeks succeeded in pushing markets' expectations for such action to 88.6% as of Tuesday's close, up from 44.6% at the end of February. This despite the fact that the Fed's preferred inflation gauge - core PCE - has yet to show any sign of pushing up and thru the Fed's target of 2% growth yoy (Chart of the Week). Nor, for that matter, has core PCE shown any tendency to remain above 2% yoy growth over the past two decades (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekThe Fed's Preferred Inflation ##br##Gauge Still Quiescent Chart 2Core PCE Has Been ##br##Quiescent For Decades Between mid-December 2016 and the end of last month, gold prices rallied ~11.3% largely on the expectation the Fed would not raise rates until at least June, and, even then, would be constrained by uncertainty over what Congress and the Trump Administration would offer up in terms of fiscal policy later this year. Now, with the Fed succeeding in raising the market's expectation of a March rate hike, gold markets are left to re-calibrate the number of hikes to expect this year, and the likely implications for the USD and real rates. We believe the Fed will execute three rate hikes this year, but this will be highly dependent on how markets react to the now fully priced-in hike markets expect next week. Synchronized Growth, Inflation And Feedback Loops It is likely the Fed feels confident accelerating its rates normalization because, for the first time since the Global Financial crisis, we are getting a globally synchronized recovery in GDP. All else equal, this will give the U.S. central bank a bit of headroom to experiment with an earlier-than-expected rate hike. This synchronized growth also will provide a positive backdrop for commodity demand this year and next (Chart 3). The possibility of highly stimulative - or even just moderately stimulative - fiscal policy in the U.S. at a time when the economy is apparently at or close to full employment, will be positive for aggregate demand, and could be inflationary if its principal result is to lift real wages in the U.S. In addition to synchronized growth, we also are seeing evidence of synchronized inflation in the largest economies in the world (Chart 4). Chart 3Synchronized Global Growth ##br##Could Embolden The Fed Chart 4Synchronized Inflation Globally ##br##Likely Caught The Fed's Attention This synchronized growth and inflation is, we believe, important to the Fed, in that its effects constitute something of a global feedback loop. As we have noted in earlier research, the Fed is much more sensitive to how its policy actions affect other economies, given the deepening of global supply chains over the past two decades or so. Equally, policymakers are well aware the evolution of monetary policy and economic growth in other economies affects the U.S. growth and policy variables important to the Fed.1 Absent a policy shock in the U.S., Europe or China, the backdrop for EM growth should remain positive for at least 2017, even with reflationary stimulus waning in China, a left-tail risk to commodity prices that we identified in last week's publication.2 We expect the Fed's policy normalization to be tempered by continued monetary accommodation globally, which will be supportive of growth at the margin. This will keep global oil demand growth on track to average 1.50 - 1.60mm b/d this year and next, and, importantly for inflation and inflation expectations, keep EM oil demand growing. The income elasticity of per-capita oil consumption in EM economies typically is ~ 1.0, meaning a 1% increase in EM incomes is associated with a 1% increase in EM oil demand.3 EM growth accounts for close to 85% of the growth we expect in global oil demand this year. This is important, given EM oil demand, which we proxy with the U.S. EIA's non-OECD oil consumption time series, to be a common factor that explains the evolution of the CPI series shown above (Chart 5). EM oil demand is able to explain the synchronization of inflation in the three largest economies in the world is because incremental growth is occurring in the EM economies, and this is driving global growth. We continue to expect high compliance in the OPEC - non-OPEC production deal negotiated by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and Russia at the end of last year, which will, against the backdrop of continued global growth, cause inventories to fall and for markets to backwardate. We believe last week's increase in U.S. crude oil inventories to be the last big build, and expect the decline to begin later this month. On average vessels leaving the Persian Gulf destined for the U.S. have a 45- to 50-day sailing period depending on multiple factors such route, weather and sea conditions. Therefore, the recent increase in U.S. crude oil inventories can be linked to the arrival of the final fleet of vessels in concert with the pre-OPEC agreement production surge undertaken by the GCC. Evidence of this phenomenon is apparent in the ~500k b/d increase in U.S. crude oil imports (374k b/d coming from Iraq) over the prior week. We expect OECD oil stocks to start declining this month and fall some 300mm bbl before the end of 2017. This supply-demand dynamic will continue to dominate financial-market influences on oil prices, as we argued in last week's publication (Chart 6).4 Gold, on the other hand, will continue to take its cue from Fed policy and policy expectations, particularly as regards expectations for the USD, which should strengthen at the margin, given the Fed's new-found hawkishness, and real rates, which also should strengthen (Chart 7). Chart 5EM Oil Demand Continues##br## To Drive Inflation Chart 6IF KSA And Russia Can ##br##Coordinate Production... Chart 7Gold Will Continue To Take##br## Its Cue From Fed Policy Bottom Line: Oil prices will continue to be dominated by supply-demand-inventory fundamentals, with monetary policy effects on the evolution of prices taking a secondary role. Gold prices will continue to take their cue from Fed policy and policy expectations. We look to re-establish our long Dec/17 WTI vs. short Dec/18 WTI spread if it trades thru flat (i.e., $0.00/bbl). Given our gold view, we remain long volatility via the put spreads and call spreads we recommended February 23 - i.e., long Jun/17 $1,200/oz puts vs. short $1,150/oz puts, and long $1,275/oz calls vs. short $1,325/oz calls. The position was up 15% as of Tuesday's close. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Reports "Global Inflation and Commodity Markets," dated August 11, 2016, and "Memo To The Fed: EM Oil, Metals Demand Key To U.S. Inflation," dated August 4, 2016, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report "Gold's Known Unknowns, And Fat Tails," dated February 23, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 3 Oil consumption frequently is employed to approximate EM income growth, given the income elasticity of demand for oil is ~ 1.0, meaning a 1% increase in income (GDP) produces an increase in demand for oil of approximately 1.0%. The OECD notes, "Non-OECD countries are found to have a higher income elasticity of oil demand than OECD countries. On average across countries, a one per cent rise in real GDP pushes up oil demand by half a per cent in OECD countries over the medium to long run, whereas the figure is closer to unity for most non-OECD countries." Please see "The Price of Oil - Will It Start Rising Again?" OECD Economics Department Working Paper No. 1031, p. 6 (2013). 4 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report "Days Of Oil Future's Past: Mean Reversion," dated March 2, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed In 2017 Summary of Trades Closed in
Energy services shares have pulled back as oil prices have marked time over the last few weeks, but in the background, the conditions to sustain a rally are falling into place. The growth in total OECD oil stocks has rolled over decisively, and a continued supply/demand rebalancing should occur given that world oil production growth has slipped to nil courtesy of OPEC output cuts. The bond market has increased confidence that oil prices will not tumble anew, as reflected in the sharp narrowing in energy corporate bond spreads. Many companies have used the recovery in oil prices to refinance and bolster balance sheets, underscoring that the financial means to boost exploration exist. With energy services pricing power trying to make an early exit from deflation on only a small boost to the global rig count, there is scope for the attractively valued S&P oil & gas field services index to surprise on the upside. We have this at high-conviction overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the S&P oil & gas field services index are: BLBG: S5ENRE - SLB, HAL, BHI, NOV, FTI, HP, RIG.