Developed Countries
BCA Research’s Global Investment Strategy service concludes that the subdued pace of bank lending will mitigate inflationary pressures in the near term. Money growth has exploded in the US and to a lesser degree, in the other major developed economies. Not…
Underweight Our underweight in the S&P communications equipment index is slightly in the green, and today we reiterate our below benchmark allocation in this niche tech sub-sector. The key reason for concern is industry pricing power. While the US economy is inflating on nearly every metric, communications equipment manufacturers are struggling to keep up, and their relative pricing power is sinking like a stone (second panel). In fact, year-over-year (y/y) growth for CSCO’s enterprise orders is at the 0% mark. Keep in mind that Q1/2020 is the earliest quarter that the pandemic started to wreak havoc, yet CSCO couldn’t even show a positive y/y number, despite soaring CEO capex intensions (bottom panel)! Thus, we view this tech sub-group as a value trap rather than an opportunity and we think there are valid reasons why the market is currently valuing this index at a 20% discount to the broad market on a forward P/E basis to the broad market (third panel). Bottom Line: We reiterate our underweight stance in the S&P communications equipment index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5COMM – CSCO, JNPR, MSI, ANET, FFIV.
Weekly Performance Update For the week ending Thu May 27, 2021 The Market Monitor displays the trailing 1-quarter performance of strategies based around the BCA Score. For each region, we construct an equal-weighted, monthly rebalanced portfolio consisting of the top 3 stocks per sector and compare it with the regional benchmark. For each portfolio, we show the weekly performance of individual holdings in the Top Contributors/Detractors table. In addition, the Top Prospects table shows the holdings that currently have the highest BCA Score within the portfolio. For more details, click the region headers below to be redirected to the full historical backtest for the strategy. BCA US Portfolio Total Weekly Return BCA US Portfolio S&P500 TRI 0.20% 1.03% Top Contributors AMKR:US AN:US HCA:US WY:US PCH:US Weekly Return 14 bps 13 bps 11 bps 9 bps 9 bps Top Detractors TX:US WES:US HE:US UTHR:US KOF:US Weekly Return -13 bps -13 bps -9 bps -8 bps -8 bps Top Prospects TX:US ESGR:US SCCO:US MPLX:US UHAL:US BCA Score 99.45% 95.61% 95.20% 94.61% 94.57% BCA Canada Portfolio Total Weekly Return BCA Canada Portfolio S&P/TSX TRI 1.10% 1.23% Top Contributors AUP:CA LNR:CA WEED:CA PBL:CA NXE:CA Weekly Return 35 bps 21 bps 17 bps 14 bps 13 bps Top Detractors FTT:CA CSU:CA DIR.UN:CA GIB.A:CA EMP.A:CA Weekly Return -17 bps -8 bps -7 bps -7 bps -7 bps Top Prospects CS:CA IFP:CA CFP:CA RUS:CA LNF:CA BCA Score 99.88% 99.63% 99.18% 97.79% 97.27% BCA UK Portfolio Total Weekly Return BCA UK Portfolio FTSE 100 TRI -0.37% 0.04% Top Contributors SPI:GB GLTR:GB IPO:GB BAKK:GB CVSG:GB Weekly Return 83 bps 10 bps 10 bps 9 bps 7 bps Top Detractors DEC:GB FDEV:GB VCP:GB NFC:GB SVST:GB Weekly Return -33 bps -32 bps -25 bps -14 bps -12 bps Top Prospects SVST:GB TUNE:GB NLMK:GB BPCR:GB GLTR:GB BCA Score 99.46% 97.73% 97.39% 95.76% 94.98% BCA Eurozone Portfolio Total Weekly Return BCA EMU Portfolio MSCI EMU TRI 1.39% 1.18% Top Contributors ALTA:FR SES:IT FTK:DE POST:AT EURN:BE Weekly Return 24 bps 17 bps 17 bps 14 bps 14 bps Top Detractors SOL:IT TESB:BE CNV:FR SOLV:BE SO:FR Weekly Return -11 bps -7 bps -7 bps -6 bps -6 bps Top Prospects SOLV:BE STR:AT FSKRS:FI POST:AT SOL:IT BCA Score 99.15% 97.97% 97.56% 97.45% 96.59% BCA Japan Portfolio Total Weekly Return BCA Japan Portfolio TOPIX TRI -2.13% 0.80% Top Contributors 4966:JP 8595:JP 6877:JP 4326:JP 4781:JP Weekly Return 24 bps 11 bps 8 bps 7 bps 4 bps Top Detractors 7545:JP 9729:JP 8795:JP 9543:JP 8131:JP Weekly Return -23 bps -22 bps -21 bps -20 bps -18 bps Top Prospects 6960:JP 4966:JP 8133:JP 3291:JP 9436:JP BCA Score 99.19% 99.13% 98.74% 98.18% 97.33% BCA Hong Kong Portfolio Total Weekly Return BCA Hong Kong Portfolio Hang Seng TRI 2.60% 2.62% Top Contributors 867:HK 116:HK 1830:HK 3798:HK 327:HK Weekly Return 43 bps 31 bps 26 bps 25 bps 22 bps Top Detractors 2798:HK 1816:HK 719:HK 1866:HK 2232:HK Weekly Return -17 bps -5 bps -4 bps -4 bps -3 bps Top Prospects 990:HK 1606:HK 323:HK 316:HK 2232:HK BCA Score 99.73% 99.33% 99.01% 98.76% 96.69% BCA Australia Portfolio Total Weekly Return BCA Australia Portfolio S&P/ASX All Ord. TRI 1.62% 1.27% Top Contributors DDR:AU CDA:AU RIC:AU BSE:AU ADH:AU Weekly Return 43 bps 31 bps 30 bps 24 bps 20 bps Top Detractors MGX:AU CAJ:AU RBL:AU CVW:AU HT1:AU Weekly Return -24 bps -17 bps -16 bps -13 bps -9 bps Top Prospects GRR:AU MGX:AU BSE:AU PSQ:AU PL8:AU BCA Score 99.31% 98.55% 97.86% 97.63% 96.16%
Highlights Our long-term FX REER models suggest the dollar remains overvalued, especially against the Chinese yuan. The cheapest currencies are the yen and the Russian ruble. The Scandinavian currencies are surprisingly expensive, according to these models. This has been due to falling relative productivity. Other notable expensive currencies are the Hong Kong dollar and Saudi riyal. That said, we do not expect the peg in the former to break anytime soon. Our limit-sell on the yen was triggered at 109. Place stops at 112. We are looking to buy a basket of petrocurrencies that include the COP and RUB. These have significantly lagged the rise in oil prices. Feature This week’s report focuses on our long-term fair value models. But a few words first on currency developments. In our view, currency markets are likely to remain driven by five important trends in the coming months. A rotation of growth from the US to other parts of the world (dollar bearish): This has been the dominant theme that has played out since the peak in the DXY index in March. The manufacturing sector in other countries first caught up to the buoyancy we saw in the US, and their service sectors are now recovering as the world vaccinates its population and reopens. In the developed world, Japan, which has been a laggard, could witness a bout of positive surprises. Market focus on inflation, and the potential of an overshoot (dollar bearish): Most market participants have been paying close attention to the inflation overshoot in the US, and whether it is transitory. Currency markets however, specifically the dollar, have been paying close attention to the inflation differential between the US and other countries, and what that means for relative real rates. A rising inflation differential between the US and its trading partners has been negative for the dollar (Chart I-1). We have noted that the US will continue to provide relative upside surprises in inflation as the US output gap closes ahead of other countries. This has been in part due to the most generous fiscal stimulus in the developed world. Chart I-1The Dollar And Relative Inflation Move Opposite Ways A Federal Reserve that stays ultra-accommodative (dollar bearish): Most market participants are again focused on the Fed tapering and what that will mean for asset markets. The reality is that the Fed has started to lag many other central banks, like the Bank of Canada, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and the Bank of England in tapering asset purchases. This could suggest it would also lag in the speed and magnitude of lifting policy rates in the medium term. This will keep US real rates depressed relative to many of its trading partners. A risk event (dollar bullish): We have been highlighting that a risk event, like a market reset, is a strong positive for the dollar, given the negative correlation with risk assets (Chart I-2). A dollar that remains expensive (dollar bearish): Our medium-term (12-18 month) target for the DXY index is 80. This will bring the currency towards fair value, according to our purchasing power parity models. As we highlighted last week, the trade balance in the US continues to deteriorate, which is one of the symptoms of an overvalued currency. Chart I-2The Dollar And Risk Assets Move Opposite Ways Despite our bearish dollar view, it is important not to overstay our welcome. This week, we are updating our long-term models, another technical tool we use to help us navigate FX markets. These models are mostly driven by relative productivity, but we have also fine-tuned the models for each currency to account for other factors such as terms-of-trade shocks, real rate differentials and proxies for global risk aversion. These models cover 22 currencies, incorporating both G10 and emerging FX markets. The dollar remains expensive according to these models (Chart I-3). Chart I-3The US Dollar Remains Expensive It is important to note that these models are very poor timing tools and are not designed to generate short- or medium-term forecasts. Instead, they reflect imbalances in the current equilibrium fair value of a currency. For example, a currency might be flagged as overvalued now, but a productivity boom in the next few years could allow the currency fair value to gravitate higher. So will a commodity boom. From a technical perspective, these models are like the ones we published in our last report, but with a very important change – the weights assigned in calculating relative productivity are based on dynamic trade weights. This has allowed China (which has much better productivity growth) to impact the currency fair values significantly. For all countries, the variables are highly statistically significant and are of the right signs. Finally, as housekeeping, we were triggered into a short USD/JPY position this week as our limit-sell at 109 was touched. The yen is one of the cheapest currencies according to these models. It will also benefit from all of the five key drivers for currency markets we listed above, especially real rates that are likely to stay very favorable in Japan, compared to the US (Chart I-4). Chart I-4Less Inflationary Pressures In Any Japanese Economic Rebound The US Dollar Chart I-5 The dollar is expensive by 7% according to the long-term fair value model. This is despite the 13% drop in the US dollar DXY index since the March 2020 highs. In hindsight, strong reversals in the dollar occur when the currency is about two-standard deviations above the mean, which occurred with last year’s rally. Our bias is that the dollar has entered a multi-year downtrend, which will only be supercharged by expensive valuations. The big driver for the uptrend that started in 2011 was positive real interest rate differentials. As US real rates continue to rollover, relative to its G10 counterparts, this will lower the greenback’s fair value. The Euro Chart I-6 The euro is slightly cheap according to our fundamental models. More importantly, the euro’s fair value has been rising in recent quarters. This has been driven by a nascent improvement in the trade balance (and current account balance), following the Covid-19 crisis. Historically, when the euro has hit its fair value bands, it has tended to mean revert. Therefore, this model does a better job of catching intermediate turns in the euro, compared to the US dollar model. Our bias is that the long-term fair value for the euro sits near 1.35, something that should continue to be reflected in future model updates. The Yen Chart I-7 The fair value of the yen has been relatively flat over the last few years. Given that the real exchange rate has not fluctuated much either, the yen has been chronically undervalued by about one standard deviation below the mean. The yen is cheap by most measures of relative prices. We believe the yen sits at a beautiful juncture. A pickup in economic activity will keep the fair value rising, from an improvement in the current account. Meanwhile, any deterioration in economic data will lead to higher risk aversion and a higher fair value (the yen is a risk-off currency). We are short USD/JPY as of 109 this week. The British Pound Chart I-8 This model shows that the pound is fairly valued, while cable remains cheap by most of our other models. That said, at fair value, the pound can still overshoot to at least 1.5 standard deviation above/below the mean, as it has in prior episodes. The key reason the pound is not cheap in this model is due to a deterioration in the UK’s productivity growth, relative to its trading partners. In this iteration of the model, China’s larger share of British trade has exacerbated the downtrend in the fair value. However, a turnaround seems underway, as the UK puts the Brexit woes behind it (and Scottish independence is not an immediate concern). The Canadian Dollar Chart I-9 The loonie has overshot its fair value. More importantly, the fair value for the Canadian dollar has been falling since the peak of the commodity cycle in 2011. If we are indeed entering a new commodity super-cycle, then the model should begin to turn around, and assign a higher fair value to the loonie. However, Canada’s terms of trade will face strong headwinds as we move away from fossil fuels, especially oil. As such, the productivity gains in other sectors (such as metals) that will benefit from new green investments will need to be sufficiently high to offset falling productivity in crude oil. The Australian Dollar Chart I-10 The Australian dollar has been rising along with the improvement in its fair value. The rising fair value has been due to the exceptional rise in commodity prices (iron ore and coal) that have boosted the current account. However, like the Canadian dollar, the fair value of the Aussie has also been dropping in recent years on the back of previously depressed commodity prices. Given the growing importance of liquified natural gas in Australia’s export mix, we believe terms of trade will remain a tailwind for the Aussie over the longer term. The New Zealand Dollar Chart I-11 The kiwi is slightly more expensive than its antipodean neighbor. But like other commodity currencies, its fair value has fallen in recent years. The catalyst has been the drop in commodity prices and the fall in relative real rates. More recently, the fair value of the kiwi has taken a positive turn as real rates improve, and risk aversion recedes. With the RBNZ striking a hawkish tone, this remains positive for the kiwi for now, but could adversely impact financial conditions later. The Swiss Franc Chart I-12 On a fundamental basis, the Swiss franc is as cheap as the yen, with our models showing it as about one standard deviation undervalued. The biggest driver for the rise in the fair value of the franc has been the structural trade surplus, driven by rising productivity. The Swiss franc is traditionally a defensive currency. As such, the fair value has taken a small hit due to the fall in the gold-to-oil ratio, a proxy for risk aversion. Should the market experience some turbulence in the coming months, the franc will benefit. The Swedish Krona Chart I-13 The Swedish krona is showing up as expensive in our models, together with the Norwegian krone. Paradoxically, on a PPP basis, the Swedish krona is one of the cheapest currencies in our universe. The key model inputs for the Swedish krona are interest rate differentials and relative productivity trends. With the rise of China as a trading partner, the productivity differential for Sweden has fallen even more steeply in this iteration of the model. It also means that the currency is no longer massively undershooting fair value, as had been the case in previous iterations. The Norwegian Krone Chart I-14 Like the Swedish krona, the Norwegian krone is showing up as expensive in our models. However, it is one of the cheapest currencies on a PPP basis, which presents a paradox. We will be looking at the Norwegian economy in-depth next week, to help explain this paradox. A more immediate explanation is that the trade balance for Norway has been nosediving in recent years, which helps explain why the model judges the currency as becoming incrementally expensive. With the rise of China as a trading partner, the productivity differential for Norway has also fallen. The Chinese Yuan Chart I-15 The Chinese yuan is currently at about one standard deviation below fair value. Since the history of our model, the fair value of the yuan has been mostly rising. This is driven by rising relative productivity in China. Concurrently, real interest rates in China have also shot up, which has led to a strong rally in the Chinese RMB. We expect the RMB to keep appreciating in the coming years, as the fair value keeps rising. The Brazilian Real Chart I-16 The Brazilian real is slightly above fair value, according to our fundamental models. Meanwhile, the fair value has been falling since 2011, in line with other commodity currencies. However, if we are indeed in a new commodity super cycle, the fair value of the real should start to rise. The Mexican Peso Chart I-17 The Mexican Peso is trading a nudge above fair value, but the fair value has been rising since 2019. This means going forward, we could see a rising peso, coinciding with a rapid rise in its fair value. The peso is highly cyclical, so two key drivers have been working in favor of the currency. First, a falling in risk aversion (proxied by a decline in the gold-to-oil ratio) has been positive. Meanwhile, the cumulative current account will also continue to improve should global growth remain strong in the near term, especially US growth. The Chilean Peso Chart I-18 The Chilean peso is currently at fair value, according to our fair value model. The fair value of the Chilean peso has been falling in recent years, but this decline was even sharper when Chinese productivity gains were given a greater weight in the modelling exercise. Going forward, Chilean exports of copper will be in a structural uptrend, due to the green technology revolution. As such, the fair value of the peso should begin to gradually rise. The Colombian Peso Chart I-19 The Colombian peso is cheap, and so constitutes an attractive play if oil prices remain strong in the medium term. The reason is that it has one of the strongest correlations to oil prices among commodity currencies. That said, structurally, the fair value of the Colombian peso has been falling, like many other petrocurrencies. The South African Rand Chart I-20 The South African rand is now trading slightly below its fair value, a positive contrast to the BRL which is slightly expensive. Meanwhile, the fair value of the rand is gradually picking up, after a structural decline over the last decade. The correlation between precious metal prices and the South African rand is picking up again, as the current account moves back into surplus. We are positive gold (and silver) as inflation hedges. Meanwhile, platinum and palladium will continue to benefit from a push towards better environmental standards among traditional autos. The Russian Ruble Chart I-21 The Russian ruble is now sitting around one standard deviation below its fair value. We are constructive on oil, which will boost the fair value of petrocurrencies, including the Russian ruble. Meanwhile, real interest rates are at relatively high levels in Russia, even though this does not have significant explanatory power. Given cheap valuations, we are looking to buy a petrocurrency basket, including the RUB and the COP. The Korean Won Chart I-22 The Korean won has underperformed this year, and has been trading at a negligible divergence from its fair value over the last few years. The fair value of the Korean won has also been flat over the years. This suggests that Korean productivity growth has kept pace with its trading partners. Going forward, it also suggests the next move in the Korean won is likely to be driven by the trend in the currencies of its trading partners, especially China and the US. The Philippine Peso Chart I-23 The Philippine peso is expensive by about one standard deviation. This has been partly due to a decline in the fair value of the peso, a process that began in 2015. The Philippine peso is one of the few currencies whose REER tends to have well-defined and long cycles that last 5-8 years. It will be important to watch if the recent appreciation in the currency has more room to run, given expensive valuation. The Singapore Dollar Chart I-24 The Singaporean dollar is another currency whose REER tends to have long cycles, probably a feature of the managed float. The Singaporean dollar is a defensive currency, and so the appreciation in other emerging market currencies has brought relative valuations back towards fair value. The Hong Kong Dollar Chart I-25 The REER of HKD has been rising in recent years, meaning inflation in Hong Kong SAR has been outpacing that elsewhere. This has made the HKD expensive, according to our models. However, the fair value has started to fall suggesting productivity gains in the city state have also been lagging, probably a result of political unrest. That said, we expect the peg to remain in place for some time, as we highlighted in a previous special report. The Saudi Riyal Chart I-26 The fair value of the Saudi Riyal has been falling for quite a while on declining relative productivity. This has made the Riyal incrementally expensive. However, oil prices are currently elevated, which means it might take much more stretched valuations to begin to cause greater tensions for the peg. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Highlights President Biden has called for the US intelligence community to investigate the origins of COVID-19 and one of Biden’s top diplomats has stated the obvious: the era of “engagement” with China is over. This clinches our long-held view that any Democratic president would be a hawk like President Trump. The US-China conflict – and global geopolitical risk – will revive and undermine global risk appetite. China faces a confluence of geopolitical and macroeconomic challenges, suggesting that its equity underperformance will continue. Domestic Chinese investors should stay long government bonds. Foreign investors should sell into the bond rally to reduce exposure to any future sanctions. The impending agreement of a global minimum corporate tax rate has limited concrete implications that are not already known but it symbolizes the return of Big Government in the western world. Our updated GeoRisk Indicators are available in the Appendix, as well as our monthly geopolitical calendar. Feature In our quarterly webcast, “Geopolitics And Bull Markets,” we argued that geopolitical themes matter to investors when they have a demonstrable relationship with the macroeconomic backdrop. When geopolitics and macro are synchronized, a simple yet powerful investment thesis can be discerned. The US war on terror, Russia’s resurgence, the EU debt crisis, and Brexit each provided cases in which a geopolitically informed macro view was both accessible and actionable at an early stage. Investors generally did well if they sold the relevant country’s currency and disfavored its equities on a relative basis. Chart 1China's Decade Of Troubles Of course, the market takeaway is not always so clear. When geopolitics and macroeconomics are desynchronized, the trick is to determine which framework will prevail over the financial markets and for how long. Sometimes the market moves to its own rhythm. The goal is not to trade on geopolitics but rather to invest with geopolitics. One of our key views for this year – headwinds for China – is an example of synchronization. Two weeks ago we discussed China’s macroeconomic challenge. In this report we discuss China’s foreign policy challenge: geopolitical pressure from the US and its allies. In particular we address President Biden’s call for a deeper intelligence dive into the origins of COVID-19. The takeaway is negative for China’s currency and risk assets. The Great Recession dealt a painful blow to the Chinese version of the East Asian economic miracle. By 2015, China’s financial turmoil and currency devaluation should have convinced even bullish investors to keep their distance from Chinese stocks and the renminbi. If investors stuck with this bearish view despite the post-2016 rally, on fear of trade war, they were rewarded in 2018-19. Only with China’s containment of COVID-19 and large economic stimulus in 2020 has CNY-USD threatened to break out (Chart 1). We expect the renminbi to weaken anew, especially once the Fed begins to taper asset purchases. Our cyclical view is still bullish but US-China relations are unstable so we remain tactically defensive. Forget Biden’s China Review, He’s A Hawk Chinese financial markets face a host of challenges this year, despite the positive factors for China’s manufacturing sector amid the global recovery. At home these challenges consist of a structural economic slowdown, a withdrawal of policy stimulus, bearish sentiment among households, and an ongoing government crackdown on systemic risk. Abroad the Democratic Party’s return to power in Washington means that the US will bring more allies to bear in its attempt to curb China’s rise. This combination of factors presents a headwind for Chinese equities and a tailwind for government bonds (Chart 2). This is true at least until the government should hit its pain threshold and re-stimulate. Chart 2Global Investors Still Wary New stimulus may not occur in 2022. The Communist Party’s leadership rotation merely requires economic stability, not rapid growth. While the central government has a record of stimulating when its pain threshold is hit, even under the economically hawkish President Xi Jinping, a financial market riot is usually part of this threshold. This implies near-term downside, particularly for global commodities and metals, which are also facing a Chinese regulatory backlash to deter speculation. In this context, President Biden’s call for a deeper US intelligence investigation into the origin of COVID-19 is an important confirming signal of the US’s hawkish turn toward China. Biden gave 90 days for the intelligence community to report back to him. We will not enter into the debate about COVID-19’s origins. From a geopolitical point of view it is a moot point. The facts of the virus origin may never be established. According to Biden’s statement, at least one US intelligence agency believes the “lab leak theory” is the most likely source of the virus (while two other agencies decided in favor of animal-to-human transmission). Meanwhile Chinese government spokespeople continue to push the theory that the virus originated at the US’s Fort Detrick in Maryland or at a US-affiliated global research center. What is certain is that the first major outbreak of a highly contagious disease occurred in Wuhan. Both sides are demanding greater transparency and will reject each other’s claims based on a lack of transparency. If the US intelligence report concludes that COVID originated from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, the Chinese government and media will reject the report. If the report exonerates the Wuhan laboratory, at least half of the US public will disbelieve it and it will not deter Biden from drawing a hard line on more macro-relevant policy disputes with China. The US’s hawkish bipartisan consensus on China took shape before COVID. Biden’s decision to order the fresh report introduces skepticism regarding the World Health Organization’s narrative, which was until now the mainstream media’s narrative. Previously this skepticism was ghettoized in US public discourse: indeed, until Biden’s announcement on May 26, the social media company Facebook suppressed claims that the virus came from a lab accident or human failure. Thus Biden’s action will ensure that a large swathe of the American public will always tend to support this theory regardless of the next report’s findings. At the same time Biden discontinued a State Department effort to prove the lab leak theory, which shows that it is not a foregone conclusion what his administration will decide. The good news is that even if the report concluded in favor of the lab leak, the Biden administration would remain highly unlikely to demand that China pay “reparations,” like the Trump administration demanded in 2020. This demand, if actualized, would be explosive. The bad news is that a future nationalist administration could conceivably use the investigation as a basis to demand reparations. Nationalism is a force to be reckoned with in both countries and the dispute over COVID’s origin will exacerbate it. Traditionally the presidents of both countries would tamp down nationalism or attempt to keep it harnessed. But in the post-Xi, post-Trump era it is harder to control. The death toll of COVID-19 will be a permanent source of popular grievance around the world and a wedge between the US and China (Chart 3). China’s international image suffered dramatically in 2020. So far in 2021 China has not regained any diplomatic ground. Chart 3Death Toll Of COVID-19 The US is repairing its image via a return to multilateralism while the Europeans have put their Comprehensive Agreement on Investment with China on hold due to a spat over sanctions arising from western accusations of genocide (a subject on which China pointedly answered that it did not need to be lectured by Europeans). Notably Biden’s Department of State also endorsed its predecessor’s accusation of genocide in Xinjiang. Any authoritative US intelligence review that solidifies doubts about the WHO’s initial investigation – even if it should not affirm the lab leak theory – would give Biden more ammunition in global opinion to form a democratic alliance to pressure China (for example, in Europe). An important factor that enables the US to remain hawkish on China is fiscal stimulus. While stimulus helps bring about economic recovery, it also lowers the bar to political confrontation (Chart 4). Countries with supercharged domestic demand do not have as much to fear from punitive trade measures. The Biden administration has not taken new punitive measures against China but it is clearly not worried about Chinese retaliation. Chart 4Large Fiscal Stimulus Lowers The Bar To Geopolitical Conflict China’s stimulus is underrated in this chart (which excludes non-fiscal measures) but it is still true that China’s policy has been somewhat restrained and it will need to stimulate its economy again in response to any new punitive measures or any global loss of confidence. At least China is limited in its ability to tighten policy due to the threat of US pressure and western trade protectionism. Simultaneous with Biden’s announcement on COVID-19, his administration’s coordinator for Indo-Pacific affairs, Kurt Campbell, proclaimed in a speech that the era of “engagement” with China is officially over and the new paradigm is one of “competition.” By now Campbell is stating the obvious. But this tone is a change both from his tone while serving in President Obama’s Department of State and from his article in Foreign Affairs last year (when he was basically auditioning for his current role in the Biden administration).1 Campbell even said in his latest remarks that the Trump administration was right about the “direction” of China policy (though not the “execution”), which is candid. Campbell was speaking at Stanford University but his comments were obviously aimed for broader consumption. Investors no longer need to wait for the outcome of the Biden administration’s comprehensive review of policy toward China. The answer is known: the Biden administration’s hawkishness is confirmed. The Department of Defense report on China policy, due in June, is very unlikely to strike a more dovish posture than the president’s health policy. Now investors must worry about how rapidly tensions will escalate and put a drag on global sentiment. Bottom Line: US-China relations are unstable and pose an immediate threat to global risk appetite. The fundamental geopolitical assessment of US-China relations has been confirmed yet again. The US is seeking to constrain China’s rise because China is the only country capable of rivaling the US for supremacy in Asia and the world. Meanwhile China is rejecting liberalization in favor of economic self-sufficiency and maintaining an offensive foreign policy as it is wary of US containment and interference. Presidents Biden and Xi Jinping are still capable of stabilizing relations in the medium term but they are unlikely to substantially de-escalate tensions. And at the moment tensions are escalating. China’s Reaction: The Example Of Australia How will China respond to Biden’s new inquiry into COVID’s origins? Obviously Beijing will react negatively but we would not expect anything concrete to occur until the result of the inquiry is released in 90 days. China will be more constrained in its response to the US than it has been with Australia, which called for an international inquiry early last year, as the US is a superior power. Australia was the first to ban Chinese telecom company Huawei from its 5G network (back in 2018) and it was the first to call for a COVID probe. Relations between China and Australia have deteriorated steadily since then, but macro trends have clearly driven the Aussie dollar. The AUD-JPY exchange rate is a good measure for global risk appetite and it is wavering in recent weeks (Chart 5). Chart 5Australian Dollar Follows Macro Trends, Rallies Amid China Trade Spat Tensions have also escalated due to China’s dependency on Australian commodity exports at a time of spiking commodity prices. This is a recurring theme going back to the Stern Hu affair. The COVID spat led China to impose a series of sanctions against Australian beef, barley, wine, and coal. But because China cannot replace Australian resources (at least, not in the short term), its punitive measures are limited. It faces rising producer prices as a result of its trade restrictions (Chart 6). This dependency is a bigger problem for China today than it was in previous cycles so China will try to diversify. Chart 6Constraints On China's Tarrifs On Australia By contrast, China is not likely to impose sanctions on the US in response to Biden’s investigation, unless Biden attacks first. China’s imports from the US are booming and its currency is appreciating sharply. Despite Beijing’s efforts to keep the Phase One trade deal from collapsing, Biden is maintaining Trump’s tariffs and the US-China trade divorce is proceeding (Chart 7). Bilateral tariff rates are still 16-17 percentage points higher than they were in 2018, with US tariffs on China at 19% (versus 3% on the rest of the world) while Chinese tariffs on the US stand at 21% (versus 6% on the rest of the world). The Biden administration timed this week’s hawkish statements to coincide with the first meeting of US trade negotiators with China, which was a more civil affair. Both countries acknowledged that the relationship is important and trade needs to be continued. However, US Trade Representative Katherine Tai’s comments were not overly optimistic (she told Reuters that the relationship is “very, very challenging”). She has also been explicit about maintaining policy continuity with the Trump administration. We highly doubt that China’s share of US imports will ever surpass its pre-Trump peaks. The Biden administration has also refrained so far from loosening export controls on high-tech trade with China. This has caused a bull market in Taiwan while causing problems for Chinese semiconductor stocks’ relative performance (Chart 8). If Biden’s policy review does not lead to any relaxation of export controls on commercial items then it will mark a further escalation in tensions. Chart 7US Tarrifs Reduce China In Trade Deficit Bottom Line: Until Presidents Biden and Xi stabilize relations at the top, the trade negotiations over implementing the Phase One trade deal – and any new Phase Two talks – cannot bring major positive surprises for financial markets. Chart 8US Export Controls Amid Chip Shortage Congress Is More Hawkish Than Biden Biden’s ability to reduce frictions with China, should he seek to, will also be limited by Congress and public opinion. With the US deeply politically divided, and polarization at historically high levels, China has emerged as one of the few areas of agreement. The hawkish consensus is symbolized by new legislation such as the Strategic Competition Act, which is making its way through the Senate rapidly. Congress is also trying to boost US competitiveness through bills such as the Endless Frontier Act. These bills would subject China to scrutiny and potential punitive measures over a broad range of issues but most of all they would ignite US industrial policy , STEM education, and R&D, and diversify the US’s supply chains. We would highlight three key points with regard to the global impact of this legislation: Global supply chains are shifting regardless: This trend is fairly well established in tech, defense, and pharmaceuticals. It will continue unless we see a major policy reversal from China to try to court western powers and reduce frictions. The EU and India are less enthusiastic than the US and Australia about removing China from supply chains but they are not opposed. The EU Commission has recommended new defensive economic measures that cover supply chains in batteries, cloud services, hydrogen energy, pharmaceuticals, materials, and semiconductors. As mentioned, the EU is also hesitating to ratify the Comprehensive Agreement on Investment with China. Hence the EU is moving in the US’s direction independently of proposed US laws. After all, China’s rise up the tech value chain (and its decision to stop cutting back the size of its manufacturing sector) ultimately threatens the EU’s comparative advantage. The EU is also aligned with the US on democratic values and network security. India has taken a harder stance on China than usual, which marks an important break with the past. India’s decision to exclude Huawei from its 5G network is not final but it is likely to be at least partially implemented. A working group of democracies is forming regardless. The Strategic Competition Act calls for the creation of a working group of democracies but the truth is that this is already happening through more effective forums like the G7 and bilateral summits. Just as the implementation of the act would will ultimately depend on President Biden, so the willingness of other countries to adopt the recommendations of the working group would depend on their own executives. Allies have leeway as Biden will not use punitive measures against them: Any policy change from the EU, UK, India, and Australia will be independent of the US Congress passing the Strategic Competition Act. These countries will be self-directed. The US would have to devote diplomatic energy to maintaining a sustained effort by these states to counter China in the face of economic costs. This will be limited by the fact that the Biden administration will be very reluctant to impose punitive measures on allies to insist on their cooperation. The allies will set the pace of pressure on China rather than the United States. This gives the EU an important position, particularly Germany. And yet the trends in Germany suggest that the government will be more hawkish on China after the federal elections in September. Bottom Line: The Biden administration is unlikely to use punitive measures against allies so new US laws are less important than overall US diplomacy with each of the allies. Some allies will be less compliant with US policies given their need for trade with China. But so far there appears to be a common position taking shape even with the EU that is prejudicial to China’s involvement in key sectors of emerging technologies. If China does not respond by reducing its foreign policy assertiveness, then China’s economic growth will suffer. That drag would have to be offset by new supply chain construction in Southeast Asia and other countries. Investment Takeaways The foregoing highlights the international risks facing China even at a time when its trend growth is slowing (Chart 9) and its ongoing struggle with domestic financial imbalances is intensifying. China’s debt-service costs have risen sharply and Beijing is putting pressure on corporations and local governments to straighten out their finances (Chart 10), resulting in a wave of defaults. This backdrop is worrisome for investors until policymakers reassure them that government support will continue. Chart 9China's Growth Potential Slowing Chart 10China's Leaders Struggle With Debt China’s domestic stability is a key indicator of whether geopolitical risks could spiral out of control. In particular we think aggressive action in the Taiwan Strait is likely to be delayed as long as the Chinese economy and regime are stable. China has rattled sabers over the strait this year in a warning to the United States not to cross its red line (Chart 11). It is not yet clear how Biden’s policy continuity with the Trump administration will affect cross-strait stability. We see no basis yet for changing our view that there is a 60% chance of a market-negative geopolitical incident in 2021-22 and a 5% chance of full-scale war in the short run. Chart 11China PLA Flights Over Taiwan Strait Putting all of the above together, we see substantial support for two key market-relevant geopolitical risks: Chinese domestic politics (including policy tightening) and persistent US-China tensions (including but not limited to the Taiwan Strait). We remain tactically defensive, a stance supported by several recent turns in global markets: The global stock-to-bond ratio has rolled over. China is a negative factor for global risk appetite (Chart 12). Global cyclical equities are no longer outperforming defensives. There is a stark divergence between Chinese cyclicals and global cyclicals stemming from the painful transition in China’s bloated industrial economy (Chart 13). Global large caps are catching a bid relative to small caps (Chart 14). Chart 12Global Stock-To-Bond Ratio Rolled Over Chart 13Global Cyclicals-To-Defensives Pause Chart 14Global Large Caps Catch A Bid Versus Small Caps Cyclically the global economic recovery should continue as the pandemic wanes. China will eventually relax policy to prevent too abrupt of a slowdown. Therefore our strategic portfolio reflects our high-conviction view that the current global economic expansion will continue even as it faces hurdles from the secular rise in geopolitical risk, especially US-China cold war. Measurable geopolitical risk and policy uncertainty are likely to rebound sooner rather than later, with a negative impact on high-beta risk assets. Matt Gertken Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Coda: Global Minimum Tax Symbolizes Return Of Big Government On Thursday, the US Treasury Department released a proposal to set the global minimum corporate tax rate at 15%. The plan is to stop what Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has referred to as a global “race to the bottom” and create the basis for a rehabilitation of government budgets damaged by pandemic-era stimulus. Although the newly proposed 15% rate is significantly below President Biden’s bid to raise the US Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income (GILTI) rate to 21% from 10.5%, it is the same rate as his proposed minimum tax on corporate book income. Biden is also raising the headline corporate tax rate from 21% to around 25% (or at highest 28%). Negotiators at the OECD were initially discussing a 12.5% global minimum rate. The finance ministers of both France and Germany – where the corporate income tax rates are 32.0% and 29.9%, respectively – both responded positively to the announcement. However, Ireland, which uses low corporate taxes as an economic development strategy, is obviously more comfortable with a minimum closer to its own 12.5% rate. Discussions are likely to occur when G7 finance ministers meet on June 4-5. Countries are hoping to establish a broad outline for the proposal by the G20 meeting in early July. It is highly likely that the OECD will come to an agreement. However, it is not a truly “global” minimum as there will still be tax havens. Compliance and enforcement will vary across countries. A close look at the domestic political capital of the relevant countries shows that while many countries have the raw parliamentary majorities necessary to raise taxes, most countries have substantial conservative contingents capable of preventing stiff corporate tax hikes (Table 1, in the Appendix). Our Geopolitical strategists highlight that the Biden administration’s compromise on the minimum rate reflects its pragmatism as well as emphasis on multilateralism. Any global deal will be non-binding but the two most important low-tax players are already committed to raising corporate rates well above this level: Biden’s plan is noted above, while the UK’s budget for March includes a jump in the business rate to 25% in April 2023 from the current 19%. Ireland and Hungary are the only outliers but they may eventually be forced to yield to such a large coalition of bigger economies (Chart 15). Chart 15Global Minimum Corporate Tax Impact Is Symbolic Rather Than Concrete Thus a nominal minimum corporate tax rate is likely to be forged but it will not be truly global and it will not change the corporate rate for most countries. The reality of what companies pay will also depend on loopholes, tax havens, and the effective tax rate. Bottom Line: On a structural horizon, the global minimum corporate tax is significant for showing a paradigm shift in global macro policy: western governments are starting to raise taxes and revenue after decades of cutting taxes. The experiment with limited government has ended and Big Government is making a comeback. On a cyclical horizon, the US concession on global minimum tax is that the Biden administration aims to be pragmatic and “get things done.” Biden is also working with Republicans to pass bills covering some bipartisan aspects of his domestic agenda, such as trade, manufacturing, and China. The takeaway from a global point of view is that Biden may prove to be a compromiser rather than an ideologue, unlike his predecessors. Matt Gertken Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Roukaya Ibrahim Vice President Daily Insights RoukayaI@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Kurt M. Campbell and Jake Sullivan, "Competition Without Catastrophe," Foreign Affairs, September/October 2019, foreignaffairs.com. Section II: Appendix Table 1OECD: Which Countries Are Willing And Able To Raise Corporate Tax Rates? GeoRisk Indicator China Russia UK Germany France Italy Canada Spain Taiwan – Province Of China Korea Turkey Brazil Australia Section III: Geopolitical Calendar
On the surface, the April US Durable Goods Report is a disappointment. The headline number declined by 1.3% m/m following a revised 1.3% m/m rise in durable goods orders in March, missing expectations of 0.8% m/m rise. April’s decline is the first monthly…
Highlights China's high-profile jawboning draws attention to tightness in metals markets, and raises the odds the State Reserve Board (SRB) will release some of its massive copper and aluminum stockpiles in the near future. Over the medium- to long-term, the lack of major new greenfield capex raises red flags for the IEA's ambitious low-carbon pathway released last week, which foresees the need for a dramatic increase in renewable energy output and a halt in future oil and gas investment to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050. Copper demand is expected to exceed mined supply by 2028, according to an analysis by S&P, which, in line with our view, also sees refined-copper consumption exceeding production this year (Chart of the Week). A constitution re-write in Chile and elections in Peru threaten to usher in higher taxes and royalties on mining in these metals producers, placing future capex at risk. Chile's state-owned Codelco, the largest copper producer in the world, fears a bill to limit mining near glaciers could put as much as 40% of its copper production at risk. We remain bullish copper and look to get long on politically induced sell-offs as the USD weakens. Feature Politicians are inserting themselves in the metals markets' supply-demand evolutions to a greater degree than in the past, which is complicating the short- and medium-term analysis of prices. This adds to an already-difficult process of assessing markets, given the opacity of metals fundamentals – particularly inventories, which are notoriously difficult to assess. Chinese Communist Party (CCP) jawboning of market participants in iron ore, steel, copper and aluminum markets over the past two weeks has weakened prices, but, with the exception of steel rebar futures in Shanghai – down ~ 17% from recent highs, and now trading at ~ 4911 RMB/MT – the other markets remain close to records. Benchmark 62% Fe iron ore at the port of Tianjin was trading ~ 4% lower at $211/MT, while copper and aluminum were trading ~ 5.5% and 6.5% off their recent records at $4.535/lb and $2,350/MT, respectively. In addition to copper, aluminum markets are particularly tight (Chart 2). Jawboning aside, if fundamentals continue to keep prices elevated – or if we see a new leg up – China's high-profile jawboning could presage a release by the State Reserve Board (SRB) of some of its massive copper and aluminum stockpiles in the near term. In the case of copper, market guesses on the size of this stockpile are ~ 2mm to 2.7mm MT. On the aluminum side, Bloomberg reported CCP officials were considering the release of 500k MT to quell the market's demand for the metal. Chart of the WeekContinue Tightening In Copper Expected Chart 2Aluminum Remains Tight Brownfield Development Not Sufficient Our balances assessments continue to indicate key base metals markets are tight and will remain so over the short term (2-3 years). Economies ex-China are entering their post-COVID-19 recovery phase. This will be followed by higher demand from renewable generation and grid build-outs that will put them in direct competition with China for scarce metals supplies for decades to come. Markets will continue to tighten. In the bellwether copper market, we expect this tightness to remain a persistent feature of the market over the medium term – 3 to 5 years out – given the dearth of new supply coming to market. Copper prices are highly correlated with the other base metals (Chart 3) – the coefficient of correlation with the other base metals making up the LME's metals index is ~ 0.86 post-GFC – and provide a useful indicator of systematic trends in these markets. Chart 3Copper Correlation With LME Index Ex-Copper Copper ore quality has been falling for years, as miners focused on brownfield development to extend the life of mines (Chart 4). In Chart 5, we show the ratio of capex (in billion USD) to ore quality increases when capex growth is expanding faster than ore quality, and decreases when capex weakens and/or ore quality degradation is increasing. Chart 4Copper Capex, Ore Quality Declines Chart 5Capex-to-Ore-Quality Decline Set Market Up For Higher Prices Falling prices over the 2012-19 interval coincide with copper ore quality remaining on a downward trend, likely the result of previous higher prices that set off the capex boom pre-GFC. The lower prices favored brownfield over greenfield development. Goehring and Rozencwajg found in their analysis of 24 mines, about 80% of gross new reserves booked between 2001-2014 were due not to new mine discoveries but to companies reclassifying what was once considered to be waste-rock into minable reserves, lowering the cut-off grade for development.1 This is consistent with the most recent datapoints in Chart 5, due to falling ore grade values, as companies inject less capex into their operations and use it to expand on brownfield projects. Higher prices will be needed to incentivize more greenfield projects. A new report from S&P Global Market Intelligence shows copper reserves in the ground are falling along with new discoveries.2 According to the S&P analysts, copper demand is expected to exceed mined supply by 2028, which, in line with our view, sees refined-copper consumption exceeding production this year. Renewables Push At Risk Just last week, the IEA produced an ambitious and narrow path for governments to collectively reach a net-zero emissions (NZE) goal by 2050.3 Among its many recommendations, the IEA singled out the overhaul of the global electric grid, which will be required to accommodate the massive renewable-generation buildout the agency forecasts will be needed to achieve its NZE goals. The IEA forecasts annual investment in transmission and distribution grids will need to increase from $260 billion to $820 billion p.a. by 2030. This is easier said than done. Consider the build-out of China's grid, which is the largest grid in the world. To become carbon neutral by 2060, per its stated goals, investment in China’s grid and associated infrastructure is expected to approach ~ $900 billion, maybe more, over the next 5 years.4 The world’s largest fossil-fuel importer is looking to pivot away from coal and plans to more than double solar and wind power capacity to 1200 GW by 2030. Weening China off coal and rebuilding its grid to achieve these goals will be a herculean lift. It comes as no surprise that IEA member states have pushed back on the agency's NZE-by-2050 plan. This primarily is because of its requirement to completely halt fossil-fuel exploration and spending on new projects. Japan and Australia have pushed back against this plan, citing energy security concerns. Officials from both countries have stated that they will continue developing fossil fuel projects, as a back-up to renewables. Japan has been falling behind on renewable electricity generation (Chart 6). Expensive renewables and the unpopularity of nuclear fuel could make it harder for the world’s fifth largest fossil fuels consumer to move away from fossil fuels. Around the same time the IEA released its report, Australia committed $464 million to build a new gas-fired power station as a backup to renewables. Chart 6Japan Will Continue Building Fossil-Fuel Back-Up Generation Just days after the IEA report was published, the G7 nations agreed to stop overseas coal financing. This could have devastating effects for emerging and developing nations‘ electricity grids which are highly dependent on coal. In 2020 70% and 60% of India and China’s electricity respectively were produced by coal (Chart 7).5 Chart 7EM Economies Remain Reliant On Coal-Fired Generation Near-Term Copper Supply Risks Rise Even though inventories appear to be rebuilding, mounting political risks keep us bullish copper (Chart 8). Lawmakers in Chile and Peru are in the process of re-writing their constitutions to, among other things, raise royalties and taxes on mining activities in their respective countries. This could usher in higher taxes and royalties on mining for these metals producers, placing future capex at risk. In addition, Chile's state-owned Codelco, the largest copper producer in the world, fears a bill to limit mining near glaciers could put as much as 40% of its copper production at risk.6 None of these events is certain to occur. Peruvian elections, for one thing, are too close to call at this point, and Chile has a history of pro-business government. However, these are non-trivial odds – i.e., greater than Russian roulette odds of 1:6 – and if any or all of these outcomes are realized, higher costs in copper and lithium prices would result, and miners would have to pass those costs on to buyers. Bottom Line: We remain bullish base metals, especially copper. Another leg up in copper would pull base metals higher with it. We would look to get long on politically induced sell-offs, particularly with the USD weakening, as expected Chart 8Global Copper Inventories Rebuilding But Still Down Y/Y Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish Next Tuesday's OPEC 2.0 meeting appears to be a fairly staid affair, with little of the drama attending previous gatherings. Russian minister Novak observed the coalition would be jointly "calculating the balances" when it meets, taking into account the likely official return of Iran as an exporter, according to reuters.com. We expect a mid-year deal on allowing Iran to return to resume exports under the nuclear deal abrogated by the Trump administration in 2019, and reckon Iran has ~ 1.5mm b/d of production it can bring back on line, which likely would return its crude oil production to something above 3.8mm b/d by year-end. We are maintaining our forecast for Brent to average $64.45/bbl in 2H21; $75 and $78/bbl, in 2022 and 2023, respectively. By end 2023, prices trade to $80/bbl. Our forecast is premised on a wider global recovery going into 2H21, and continued production discipline from OPEC 2.0 (Chart 9). Base Metals: Bullish Our stop-losses was elected on our long Dec21 copper position on May 21, which means we closed the position with 48.2% return. The stop loss on our long 2022 vs short 2023 COMEX copper futures backwardation recommendation also was elected on May 20, leaving us with a return of 305%. We will be looking for an opportunity to re-establish these positions. Precious Metals: Bullish We expect the collapse in bitcoin prices, the US Fed’s decision to not raise interest rates, and a weakening US dollar to keep gold prices well bid (Chart 10). China’s ban on cryptocurrency services and Musk’s acknowledgment of the energy intensity of Bitcoin mining sent Bitcoin prices crashing. The Fed’s decision to keep interest rates constant, despite rising inflation and inflation expectations will reduce the opportunity cost of holding gold. According to our colleagues at USBS, the Fed will make its first interest rate hike only after the US economy has reached "maximum employment". The Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey reported that job openings rose nearly 8% in March to 8.1 million jobs, however, overall hiring was little changed, rising by less than 4% to 6 million. As prices in the US rise and the dollar depreciates, gold will be favored as a store of value. On the back of these factors, we expect gold to hit $2,000/oz. Ags/Softs: Neutral Corn futures were trading close to 20% below recent highs earlier in the week at ~ $6.27/bu, on the back of much faster-than-expected plantings. Chart 9 Chart 10 Footnotes 1 Please refer to Goehring & Rozencwajg’s Q1 2021 market commentary. 2 Please see Copper cupboard remains bare as discoveries dwindle — S&P study published by mining.com 20 May 2021. 3 Please see Net Zero by 2050 – A Roadmap for the Global Energy Sector, published by the IEA. 4 Please see China’s climate goal: Overhauling its electricity grid, published by Aljazeera. 5 We discuss this in detail in Surging Metals Prices And The Case For Carbon-Capture published 13 May 2021, and Renewables ESG Risks Grow With Demand, which was published 29 April 2021. Both are available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see A game of chicken is clouding tax debate in top copper nation, Fujimori looks to speed up projects to tap copper riches in Peru and Codelco says 40% of its copper output at risk if glacier bill passes published by mining.com 24, 23 and 20 May 2021, respectively. Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2021 Summary of Closed Trades
Underweight As a follow up to yesterday’s Sector Insight report where we reiterated our S&P financials downgrade, today we cover banks that were used as the vehicle to trim financials to a neutral allocation. Housing starts and permits came off the boil last week and failed to live up to economists’ upbeat expectations. Lumber is getting clobbered and entered a bear market having first surged to five standard deviations above its five decade mean. Moreover, the latest news from the University of Michigan survey of consumers’ sentiment on buying conditions for houses made for grim reading signaling that a key bank loan category, mortgage credit, is in for a rough summer/fall season (top panel). Tack on the nosedive in mortgage applications for purchasing a new home courtesy of rising mortgage rates, albeit from a low base, and factors are falling into place for a housing-catalyzed underperformance phase in banks (bottom panel). Bottom Line: This week we trimmed the S&P banks index to underweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5BANKX – JPM, BAC, C, WFC, USB, PNC, TFC, FRC, FITB, SIVB, KEY, MTB, RF, CFG, HBAN, CMA, ZION, PBCT. For more details, please refer to this Tuesday's Strategy Report.