Developed Countries
BCA Research’s US Bond Strategy service continues to favor spread product over Treasuries. 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates in a range between 2.3% and 2.5% are a reason to turn more cautious on spread product, and the recent rise in…
Highlights Monetary Policy: The Fed will not immediately change its policy stance in response to rising inflation and inflation expectations. Rather, it will follow its current forward guidance and only lift rates off zero once the labor market has reached “maximum employment”. However, once the first rate hike has occurred, the Fed will shift its focus toward inflation and inflation expectations. Duration: The overnight index swap curve is priced for a total of 77 bps of rate hikes by the end of 2023. We see strong odds that more hikes will be delivered and therefore continue to recommend a below-benchmark portfolio duration stance. Corporate Bonds: High and rising inflation expectations will eventually pose a risk to credit spreads, but only once the Fed tightens policy in response. For now, we remain overweight spread product versus Treasuries, though we maintain a preference for high-yield corporates, USD-denominated EM Sovereigns and municipal bonds over investment grade corporate bonds. Feature Recent inflationary trends are making the Fed’s job more difficult. Not only was April’s increase in core CPI the largest since 1981, but measures of long-term inflation expectations have also jumped. The 5-year/5-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate has quickly risen to levels that are consistent with the Fed’s 2% inflation target (Chart 1). What’s more, survey measures of inflation expectations have also moved up, in many cases to uncomfortably high levels (Chart 2). Chart 1Back To Target Chart 2Inflation Expectations Have Jumped All of this makes the Fed’s zero-lower-bound interest rate policy look increasingly untenable. Can the Fed really just sit on the sidelines as inflation and inflation expectations rise to above-target levels? Our expectation is that the Fed will ignore rising inflation until the labor market is fully recovered, but it may then need to move quickly to contain inflationary pressures. The result could very well be a rate hike cycle that takes a long time to start, but then proceeds at a rapid pace. The Fed’s Liftoff Criteria Are Different Than Its Criteria For Pace A crucial point about the Fed’s forward guidance is that the criteria that will determine the timing of the first rate hike are different than the criteria that will determine the post-liftoff pace of rate hikes. Liftoff Criteria Table 1A Checklist For Liftoff For liftoff, the Fed has been very explicit that three conditions must be met before it will raise rates off the zero bound (Table 1). Of the three conditions listed in Table 1, the timing of when the labor market will reach “maximum employment” is the most uncertain. We have written extensively about how the Fed defines “maximum employment” and about the pace of employment growth that’s necessary to achieve that goal by specific future dates.1 To summarize, we calculate that average monthly nonfarm payroll growth of at least 698k is required to reach “maximum employment” by the end of this year and average monthly payroll growth of at least 412k is required to hit that target by the end of 2022 (Chart 3). Chart 3Employment Growth Chart 4Labor Demand Is Strong Our assessment is that “maximum employment” will be achieved in time for the Fed to lift rates in 2022, largely because employment growth must rise quickly in order to catch up with skyrocketing indicators of labor demand (Chart 4). The risk, of course, is that inflation continues to run hot as the Fed waits for its “maximum employment” condition to be met. If this occurs, we believe that the Fed will stick to its current forward guidance. It will ignore rising inflation until its liftoff criteria are met. Only then, will Fed policy turn toward containing inflation. Pace Criteria In a recent speech, Fed Vice-Chair Richard Clarida laid out three indicators that he will track to guide the pace of policy tightening post Fed liftoff.2 First, he pointed to inflation expectations. In particular, the Fed’s index of Common Inflation Expectations (CIE):3 Other things being equal, my desired pace of policy normalization post-liftoff to return inflation to 2 percent […] would be somewhat slower than otherwise if the CIE index is, at time of liftoff, below the pre-ELB level. [ELB = effective lower bound]. Chart 2 shows that the CIE index has already broken above its 2018 peak. It stands to reason that, all else equal, an elevated CIE index would speed up the post-liftoff pace of rate hikes. Chart 5Inflation Since August 2020 Second, Clarida noted that: Another factor I will consider in calibrating the pace of policy normalization post-liftoff is the average rate of PCE inflation since the new framework was adopted in August 2020. The annualized rate of change in core PCE since August 2020 is almost at the Fed’s 2% target already, and it will certainly rise to above-target levels when the April data are released, as was the case with core CPI (Chart 5). Finally, Clarida offered up a detailed Taylor-type monetary policy rule that he says he will consult once the conditions for liftoff are met: Consistent with our new framework, the relevant policy rule benchmark I will consult once the conditions for liftoff have been met is an inertial Taylor-type rule with a coefficient of zero on the unemployment gap, a coefficient of 1.5 on the gap between core PCE inflation and the 2 percent longer-run goal, and a neutral real policy rate equal to my SEP forecast of long-run r*. Chart 6Balanced Approach (Shortfalls) Rule* Recommendations Chart 6 shows the results of a very similar policy rule using median FOMC estimates for r*, NAIRU and the path of inflation. We use a slightly more pessimistic forecast for the unemployment rate and assume that it reaches 4.5% by the end of 2022 and 4% by the end of 2023. Even with those conservative assumptions, the rule still recommends a policy rate of 1.5% by the end of 2022 and 2.65% by the end of 2023. This is not to say that the Fed will immediately lift rates to those levels once it is ready to hike, only that the Fed will have a strong incentive to pursue a rapid pace of rate hikes once it finally lifts rates off the zero bound. Investment Implications For investors, the bottom line is that the Fed will not immediately change its policy stance in response to rising inflation and inflation expectations. Rather, it will follow its current forward guidance and only lift rates off zero once the labor market has reached “maximum employment”. However, once the first rate hike has occurred, the Fed will shift its focus toward inflation and inflation expectations. If inflation and inflation expectations rise further, or even remain sticky near current levels, the Fed will lift rates more quickly than many anticipate. At present, the overnight index swap curve is priced for a total of 77 bps of rate hikes by the end of 2023. We see strong odds that more hikes will be delivered and therefore continue to recommend a below-benchmark portfolio duration stance. Is Inflation A Risk For Spread Product? Yes it is, but not just yet. In past reports, we’ve often pointed to 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates in a range between 2.3% and 2.5% as a reason to turn more cautious on spread product (see Chart 1), and the recent rise in inflation expectations certainly does set off some alarm bells. High inflation expectations pose a risk to credit spreads because of what they signal about the future course of Fed policy. If the Fed responds to high inflation expectations by tightening policy into restrictive territory, then economic growth and credit spreads are at risk. All this remains true, but the Fed’s willingness to ignore rising inflation expectations – at least until “maximum employment” and fed funds liftoff are achieved – gives spread product a little more runway than usual. One way to illustrate this dynamic is with the slope of the yield curve (Chart 7). Historically, corporate bond (both investment grade and junk) excess returns are strong at least until the 3-year/10-year Treasury slope flattens to below 50 bps (Table 2). Currently, the 3-year/10-year Treasury slope is well above 100 bps and has shown few signs of rolling over. If the Fed was still following its old forward-looking policy framework, then the yield curve would likely be much flatter today. That is, the curve would be pricing-in some policy tightening in response to high and rising inflation expectations. However, as discussed above, inflation expectations are not currently the Fed’s primary concern and they will only become the Fed’s primary concern once “maximum employment” has been achieved and the funds rate has been lifted off the zero bound. Chart 7Spread Product Returns Are Strong When The Curve Is Steep Table 2Corporate Bond Performance In Different Phases Of The Cycle All in all, we are concerned that, if inflation expectations remain elevated, the Fed may quickly ramp up its post-liftoff pace of rate hikes, sending credit spreads wider. But we are reluctant to position for that outcome when we are still many months away from Fed liftoff and the slope of the yield curve remains so steep. Chart 8Low Expected Returns In IG Another factor to consider is that value in spread product is extremely tight. In fact, our measure of the 12-month breakeven spread for the quality-adjusted investment grade corporate bond index is almost at its most expensive level since 1995 (Chart 8). This doesn’t change our assessment of when restrictive Fed policy will cause spreads to widen, but it does reduce our return expectations in the interim. All else equal, since the rewards from being overweight spread product versus Treasuries are low, we will be quicker to reduce our recommended spread product allocation when our indicators start to point toward the end of the credit cycle. Though, at the very least, we will still want to see the 3-year/10-year Treasury slope start to flatten and approach 50 bps before we get too pessimistic on spread product. The bottom line is that high and rising inflation expectations will eventually pose a risk to credit spreads, but only once the Fed tightens policy in response. For now, we remain overweight spread product versus Treasuries, though we maintain a preference for high-yield corporates, USD-denominated EM Sovereigns and municipal bonds over investment grade corporate bonds. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Overshoot Territory”, dated April 13, 2021. 2 https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/clarida20210113a.htm 3 The CIE is a composite measure of different market-based and survey-based indicators of inflation expectations. https://www.federalreserve.gov/econres/notes/feds-notes/index-of-common-inflation-expectations-20200902.htm Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Portfolio Strategy The rising shadow fed funds rate and related flattening of the yield curve, eerie similarities with the 2009/10 episode, overbought technicals, and extended sector breadth, all signal that financials are due for a breather. Downgrade to neutral and lock in relative gains of 20% since inception. Early signs of housing related euphoria turning into consternation, lack of an overall bank credit impulse, relative share price overbought conditions, a looming increase in bank non-performing loans as government spending programs are set to expire in the autumn, will more than offset compelling bank valuations and rising interest rates. Trim the S&P banks index to underweight. Recent Changes We trigger our downgrade alert and trim the S&P financials sector to neutral today cementing gains of 20% since inception. Downgrade the S&P banks index to underweight today. Table 1 Feature Following the 9/11 attacks, the great Alan Abelson of Barron’s “Up And Down Wall Street” column, eloquently wrote: “The market is a mechanism for allocating capital and, of course, making us all rich. What it most decidedly isn't is a forum for venting civic sentiment. To equate buying stock with patriotism or selling stock with a lack of patriotism is balderdash, the equivalent of praising or damning a thermometer for the temperature it records (emphasis ours).” This last part of the quote has been with me ever since, and is relevant today in the context of rising inflation, the related further bond market selloff and the equity market’s looming reaction to it. Currently, one cannot blame the stock market for not really caring about inflation as it is the equivalent of blaming mercury-in-glass for taking the temperature. However, the Fed’s tapering of asset purchases is coming later this fall and there will be a market shakeout before the SPX reaches a new equilibrium, likely 10% lower than current levels. Over the past few weeks we highlighted ten reasons to lighten up on equities and five technical reasons not to chase equities higher in the near-term. Today we reiterate our short-term cautiousness on the prospects of the stock market and below is a detailed reminder of our thesis. Fourteen months ago we penned a report titled “20 Reasons To Buy Equities” and now that the SPX is up 2,000 points since that trough, the risk/reward tradeoff is to the downside and we are compelled to book gains and raise some cash. On May 3 we upgraded health care to overweight and added some defensive exposure to our portfolio and last week we highlighted five technical reasons not to chase equities higher in the near term. What follows are 10 reasons to lighten up on stocks and therefore await a better entry point to deploy fresh capital later this summer: 1. The Fed and other developed global central banks’ easing has reached a peak. In fact, taper has started at the BoC and the BoE announced a quasi-taper, the ECB is rumored to commence decreasing asset purchases this summer and the Fed will likely taper by yearend (Chart 1). 2. US fiscal easing has also hit an apex and a large fiscal cliff looms in 2022 a mid-term election year (Chart 2). Chart 1Yellow… 3. The bulls have taken full control of the equity market and our Risk Appetite Indicator recently touched the four standard deviations line (Chart 2). 4. The ISM manufacturing survey peaked near 65 and the non-manufacturing hit an all-time high (Chart 2). Chart 2…Flags… 5. China’s is in a slowdown mode and BCA’s total social financing projections indicate a further deceleration in the back half of the year (Chart 1). 6. Equity market internals have been signaling trouble since February, warning that this bifurcated market is in desperate need of a breather (Chart 3). 7. The VIX in mid-April had a 15 handle for the first time since early last year, warning that investors are complacent (Chart 3). 8. Similarly, the junk bond option adjusted spread is at cyclical lows, and financial conditions are as good as they get probing all-time lows (Chart 2). 9. SPX profit growth is slated to jump 34% in calendar 2021, according to the latest I/B/E/S estimates with EPS on track to hit an all-time high level of $188 (Chart 3). 10. Finally, valuations remain lofty with the forward P/E ratio hovering near 21 an historically high level (Chart 3). Bottom Line: The easy money has been made since the March 23, 2020 trough when the SPX was 2,000 points lower. Our sense is that the next 10% move in the SPX is lower (close to 3,800) rather than higher and a healthy and much needed reset looms. Thus, we recommend investors book some gains, raise some dry powder and be prepared to deploy fresh capital later this summer. This week we take profits on an early cyclical sector and trim to neutral, and downgrade one of its key industry groups to underweight. Chart 3…Waving Don’t Overstate Your Welcome In Financials Last November, we boosted the S&P financials sector to overweight as soon as we could following the Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine efficacy news, and since then this interest rate-sensitive sector has bested the SPX by 20%. Our sense is that the easy money has been made on this position and today we recommend investors lock in profits and downgrade exposure to neutral. There are a few reasons why we are compelled to monetize our handsome gains accrued over the past six months. First, this is a hedge to our rising inflation view, and we would rather stick to overweighting energy and industrials as ways to express our inflation protection theme as opposed to maintaining an above benchmark allocation in financials. The second part of our inflation Special Report on May 10 also warns against hiding in financials during bouts of inflation, further cementing our view of booking these significant relative gains for our portfolio. Second, the Fed’s easing cycle has reached a zenith and at the margin this will weigh on relative financials profits (fed funds rate shown as a year-over-year change and on an inverted scale, bottom panel, Chart 4). The shadow fed funds rate (courtesy of Leo Krippner)1 has troughed and is closing in on the zero line (shadow fed funds rate shown inverted, middle panel, Chart 4). Using the 10-year/shadow fed funds rate yield curve also signals that the yield curve may have peaked already, at least for this early part of the business cycle (top panel, Chart 4). Chart 4Don’t Overstay Your Welcome Chart 5Gruesome Parallel Third, typically, financials explode right out of the gate following a recession and if we use 2009/10 as a close parallel then there are high odds that financials stocks are entering a rather gruesome period as far as relative returns are concerned. Chart 5 plots relative share prices and has aligned the November 2020 bottom with the March 2009 trough. Early in the year, we posited that the SPX was following the 2009/10 episode to the tee and if history at least rhymes, financials are also in for a rude awakening. Fourth, technicals are overbought and near a level that has marked previous easing off phases in relative share prices (second panel, Chart 6). Moreover, breadth is as good as it gets: not only are the number of financials subgroups trading higher than their 40-week moving average glued to the 100% ceiling, but also earnings breadth has nowhere to go but down (third & bottom panels, Chart 6). However, we refrain from turning outright bearish on this early-cyclical sector as valuations remain bombed out and provide a large enough cushion to absorb any shocks (Chart 7). Chart 6Overstretched… Chart 7…But Undervalued In sum, the rising shadow fed funds rate and related flattening of the yield curve, eerie similarities with the 2009/10 episode, overbought technicals, and extended sector breadth, all signal that financials are due for a breather. Bottom Line: We trigger our downgrade alert and crystalize gains in the S&P financials sector of 20% since inception and downgrade exposure to neutral, today. Shy Away From Banks We execute our downgrade in the S&P financials sector to neutral by trimming the S&P banks index to a below benchmark allocation. Investors can treat this downgrade as a hedge to our oil & gas exploration & production and rails overweights, as well as a hedge against a failure of inflation rising further in the coming months. Importantly, there are clear elements of cooling in the red-hot housing market. 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 (top panel, Chart 8) made for grim reading, signaling that a key bank loan category, mortgage credit, is in for a rough summer/fall season. Chart 8Is Housing Cresting? 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 an underperformance phase in banks (bottom panel, Chart 8). Were it only for housing related credit, we would overlook it as a single yellow flag. However, our credit impulse diffusion indicator – gauging the eight credit categories that the Fed tracks – is sinking like a stone, especially on a 13- and 52-week basis (Chart 9). Such broad based weakness warns that organic growth in bank profits (as opposed to buybacks) will be hard to come by in the coming quarters. Stimulus checks and a sharply rising fiscal deficit have served as a shot in the arm for consumers, businesses, landlords and banks, and have kept the economy going. However, as these liquidity taps dry out come autumn, it will be more difficult to continue to kick the proverbial can down the road. In other words, delinquency rates should tick higher and further infect non-performing loans (Chart 10). Granted, banks had provisioned aggressively last year and have been releasing reserves of late, but at the margin this will likely prove a net negative for their earnings. Chart 9No Credit Pulse Chart 10NPLs On The Rise Two additional words of caution. First, cyclical momentum is as good as it gets for relative share prices. Banks have run too far too fast and a lot of the good news is already baked in as the middle panel of Chart 11 highlights. Second, while valuations remain bombed out, it is worrisome that banks have failed to make any real progress on narrowing the gap between ROE and P/B metrics since the GFC, unlike following the Savings & Loans and 9/11 catalyzed recessions (bottom panel, Chart 11). The implication is that banks are a value trap rather than a value opportunity. Finally, one key risk to our modestly bearish bank undertone, is the US 10-year Treasury yield. Relative bank performance and interest rates have been joined at the hip since the GFC aftermath as the Fed anchored short rates on the zero lower bound, thus shifting the sensitivity of bank profits to the long end of the curve versus the shape of the curve. If interest rates started galloping higher investors would initially seek the “safety” of bank earnings that would get a fillip from rising net interest margins and put our negative bank view offside (Chart 12). Chart 11Highest Momentum Since the GFC, But Valuations Are Nonresponsive Chart 12Risks To Monitor Netting it all out, early signs of housing related euphoria turning into consternation, lack of an overall bank credit impulse, relative share price overbought conditions, a looming increase in bank non-performing loans as government spending programs are set to expire in the autumn, will more than offset compelling bank valuations and rising interest rates. Bottom Line: Trim the S&P banks index to underweight, today. 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. Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 https://www.ljkmfa.com/test-test/international-ssrs/ Current Recommendations Current Trades Strategic (10-Year) Trade Recommendations Size And Style Views February 24, 2021 Stay neutral cyclicals over defensives January 12, 2021 Stay neutral small over large caps June 11, 2018 Long the BCA Millennial basket The ticker symbols are: (AAPL, AMZN, UBER, HD, LEN, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, ABNB, V). January 22, 2018 Favor value over growth
Highlights The number one risk to our upbeat view on European economic activity and assets is a Chinese economic slowdown. The second most important risk to our view is a potential deterioration in the global credit impulse, even outside of China. The third major risk is that the current bout of US inflation proves to be permanent, which, paradoxically, would prompt a deflationary shock for the global economy. Despite these risks, we maintain our favorable view on European assets over the coming 12 to 18 months. However, favoring industrials over materials, and financials over other cyclicals, Swedish equities and peripheral bonds in balanced portfolios mitigate some of these risks. Do not expect the ECB to announce a tapering of its asset purchases at the June meeting. The ECB will lag well behind the Fed and the BoE. Buy European steepeners and US flatteners as a box trade. Feature Over the past three weeks, a sustained marketing push gave us the opportunity to interact intensively with a large subset of our clients (albeit virtually, courtesy of COVID-19). Generally, our positive stance on European assets was well received, but investors are loosely committing themselves to this view and very few are willing to make an aggressive bet on Europe. In fact, in most meetings, we spent more time than usual discussing the risks to our upbeat view on Europe and European cyclical equities. Three risks to our 12- to 18-month view standout. The first is a serious slowdown in Chinese growth. The second is a greater-than-anticipated impact on economic activity as a result of a deterioration in DM credit impulses. The third is stronger-than-expected US inflation. An also-ran was the risk that the current vaccines do not protect against the two variants of the COVID-19 virus dominant in India. However, an increasing body of recent scientific studies demonstrates that this is not the case; hence, this risk has been lowered to minor. Risk #1: A Chinese Slowdown Authorities in China have been constricting credit policy over the past six months. The key tools used have been a regulatory tightening in shadow-banking activities and real estate transactions, moral suasion on small banks to limit the expansion of their loan books, and slowing liquidity injections in the interbank system. Beijing’s policy tightening reflects the following two worries. First, the financial stability risk has increased meaningfully over the past 16 months. China’s corporate debt-to-GDP has increased 13 points to 163%, and is among the highest for major economies (Chart 1). Moreover, Chinese policymakers remain concerned by the middle-income trap, which would become an increasingly likely outcome if the stability of the country’s financial and banking system were compromised. Second, the latest round of stimulus has worsened wealth inequalities. House prices have been robust, yet household disposable income growth is still low by the yardstick of the past 40 years (Chart 2). Thus, a large proportion of China’s population has experienced a decline in housing affordability. Chart 1China"s Financial Stabilitiy Risk Chart 2Chinese Households Are Not Doing That Well The Chinese economy recently started to feel the impact of the policy tightening. China’s April retail sales data missed expectation by 7.2%, and, as our China Investment Strategy colleagues have observed, the demand side of the economy has lagged behind the recovery in supply ever since China re-opened last year. Credit trends confirm this assessment. The decline in the excess reserve ratio of the Chinese banking system is consistent with the recent deterioration in the credit impulse, which accelerated in April (Chart 3). Since the Great Financial Crisis, weaker Chinese credit flows herald softer global industrial activity and trade (Chart 3, bottom panel). The Chinese slowdown could become a major problem for the European economy and its asset markets. As we recently showed, the sensitivity of European economic activity to global growth has been steadily increasing over the past 20 years (Chart 4). Moreover, the spread between M1 and M2 money supply growth in China best explains the gap between European industrial activity and that of the US (Chart 4, middle and bottom panels). Essentially, M1 minus M2 approximates the Chinese private sector’s marginal propensity to consume, because it captures how fast demand deposits are growing relative to savings deposits. Thus, the recent decline in China’s marginal propensity to consume constitutes a bad omen for European activity and profit growth, both in absolute terms and relative to the US. Chart 3A Policy-Induced Slowdown Chart 4Europe Is More Exposed Than The US The slowdown in China’s economy will hurt European asset prices via multiple channels. Importantly, cyclical stocks are expensive and overbought compared to defensive ones. A meaningful decline in Chinese growth could result in a deep fall in the cyclicals-to-defensives ratio, which would hurt the pro-cyclical EUR/USD exchange rate (Chart 5). A weaker China might also create a significant fall in global yields, because it would hurt global growth, accentuate deflationary forces, and upset investor sentiment. European stocks underperform US equities when global yields decline (Chart 6). Chart 5The Euro Is Pro-Cyclical Chart 6A Key Threat To European Stocks Despite the dire impact that a Chinese economic slowdown normally causes on European growth and assets, this outcome remains a risk and not a base case (albeit, the top risk in our view). First, today is one of the rare occasions when global and European economic activity can decouple from China. The Euro Area’s vaccination campaign is gaining steam, which will allow a re-opening of the economy this summer (Chart 7). The vast pent-up demand in durable goods evident in Europe and the positive impact of the European monetary expansion on the contribution of consumer expenditure to real GDP growth also create powerful offsets (Chart 8). Chart 8European Pent-Up Demand As An Offset Chart 7Improving Vaccine Rollout The global industrial cycle is more buffered than usual against a Chinese economic slowdown. The collapse in the inventory-to-sales ratios around the world will fuel several quarters of restocking, which will boost the global manufacturing sector (Chart 9). Moreover, governments across advanced economies are unleashing large-scale infrastructure plans, such as the $2 trillion bill proposed by the Biden administration in the US or the EUR250 billion budget proposal by the Draghi government in Italy. As the EUR750 billion NGEU funds are disbursed, the tailwind to infrastructure spending will only grow (Chart 10). Additionally, the current spurt in inflation around the world is a relative price shock driven by scarcity created during the pandemic. This price shock incentivizes companies to expand production and capacity to meet demand. As a result, global capex intentions are rising, which will create an additional offset to China. Chart 9Restocking Ahead Chart 10More Fiscal Support This Way Comes Finally, constraints on Chinese policymakers limit to how far Chinese growth will decelerate. The Chinese Communist Party Congress, in which the make-up of the politburo is determined for the next five years, takes place in October 2022. However, the weak growth rate of household disposable income creates a headache for China’s leadership. While another round of massive stimulus is unlikely to shore up household disposable income (it has not worked thus far), Beijing will not take the chance to generate another deflationary shock. This constraint creates a natural floor under the growth deceleration that Beijing can tolerate. Thus, while a policy mistake is still possible, it is not our base case scenario. Investment Implication Faced with the aforementioned dynamics, BCA recommends that investors with a short-term investment horizon go neutral on cyclical equities relative to defensive ones. Practically, this means that EUR/USD is likely to continue to churn between 1.18 and 1.235 for the coming two to three months. Additionally, European equities are likely to move sideways relative to their US counterparts over this period. Within cyclical equities, we favor industrials over materials. Commodity prices, and thus the materials sector, are the most exposed to China. Meanwhile, the outlook for infrastructure spending and capex in DM economies has a greater impact on industrial stocks than on materials ones. Technically, industrials remain toward the bottom of their upward-slopping trend channel relative to materials, which suggests further catch up is likely (Chart 11). We also favor European financials over the rest of the cyclical sectors. The negative impact of a greater-than-expected Chinese economic slowdown on global yields will hurt financials. Nonetheless, domestic economic activity affects financials more than it influences the more internationally focused industrials and materials sectors. Thus, if the Eurozone service PMI can slingshot higher, a result of the re-opening of the economy this summer, then European financials will outperform industrials and materials stocks even if the Chinese economy slows (Chart 12). Moreover, financials trade at a large discount compared to these other two cyclical sectors (Chart 12). Chart 11Overweight Industrials Vs Materials Chart 12Financials As A Protection Against China Finally, we continue to favor Swedish equities. Industrials and financials account for 65% of the Swedish MSCI benchmark compared to 30% for that of the Euro Area. Therefore, they are particularly exposed to the positive outlook on global infrastructure spending and capex. Moreover, Swedish equities generate a return on equity of 15%, compared to 6% for the Eurozone stocks. To protect against the risk created by a weakening Chinese economy, we recommend investors hedge a long / overweight bet on Sweden with a short / underweight position in Norwegian equities that massively over-represent energy and materials. Risk #2: A Global Credit Impulse Deterioration According to the BIS data, the global credit impulse is on the verge of deteriorating, even outside of China. The G10 plus China annual credit impulse is elevated and peaking (Chart 13, left). Meanwhile, quarterly credit impulses in the US, the Euro Area, and China are negative (Chart 13, right), which often leads to turning points in the annual change in credit flows. Chart 13A Global Credit Impulse Problem Chart 13A Global Credit Impulse Problem A deterioration in the credit impulse could result in a sharp slowdown in global economic growth, because the deceleration in credit creation is broad-based among the major economies. If global growth decelerates, then European economic activity will also suffer. Table 1Essential Sector Breakdowns The impact on European financial markets will come from lower yields. A growth deceleration prompted by a falling credit impulse will put downward pressure on yields and will hurt the performance of value stocks relative to growth equities. Cyclical equities will also underperform defensive ones. In this scenario, European stocks will lag behind their US counterparts because of their relative sectoral biases (Table 1). Within the European benchmark, Tech-heavy Dutch stocks would perform best once yields begin to decline. The effect on growth of the slowing credit impulse remains a risk and not a base case scenario. Last year’s surge in credit intake mostly reflected precautionary demand. Companies around the world tapped their credit lines or the capital markets early in the crisis to build liquidity buffers. They then continued to borrow to take advantage of the exceptionally low interest rates that prevailed throughout most of the year. Similarly, a large proportion of household borrowing amounted to debt refinancing. As a result, last year’s explosion in credit growth had a limited impact on spending. Thus, the credit impulse’s decline in advanced economies should minimally hurt aggregate demand in the coming months. Investment Implication Investors can protect against this risk by overweighting Italian and Spanish bonds in a balanced portfolio. First, these instruments continue to offer better value than other government bonds around the world. Moreover, if global growth turns out to be weaker than expected, the ECB might have to increase the envelope of the PEPP program, which has greatly benefited peripheral bonds. Moreover, the NGEU and REACT EU program buttress weaker European sovereign borrowers. Therefore, yield-hungry global investors will resume their aggressive purchase of the high-yielding peripheral bonds if global interest rates decline anew because of softening economic activity. Risk #3: Stronger Than Expected US Inflation BCA’s house view is that the current surge in global and US inflation is transitory, even if the pressures could last a few months before ebbing. It is mainly a consequence of inadequate aggregate supply in the face of a sudden surge in demand. We cannot be dogmatic about the inflation risk. The price-components of all the major activity surveys in the world are rising, and, in the US, the inflation expectations of households have risen meaningfully (Chart 14). If an inflation mentality were to take root, then core CPI would not decelerate toward yearend. Stronger-than-expected US core CPI would put significant upward pressure on Treasury yields. First, long-dated inflation expectations could begin to converge to the breakeven rates in the shorter tenors of the curve (Chart 15). More importantly, the Fed would become more hawkish sooner. This faster policy tightening would lift the OIS curve and result in higher real yields as well. Chart 14Are Inflation Expectations Becoming Unmoored? Chart 15Long-Dated Market-Based Inflation Expectations Still Lag The euro would therefore weaken, and the dollar would rally across the board. European inflationary pressures are limited compared to those of the US. The Eurozone suffers from a larger output gap due to the lagging nature of the European recovery, which more timid fiscal stimulus and Europe’s late start to the vaccination campaign compounded. Consequently, the ECB will not match the Fed’s faster tightening of policy, even in this scenario. Higher US TIPS yields and a stronger dollar would ultimately be deflationary blows to global growth. The dollar would directly tighten EM financial conditions. Higher real yields would destabilize stretched equity prices around the world. The resulting shock to global financial conditions would cause a major slowdown in global growth to occur much earlier than we currently foresee. While yields would rise at first, they would end 2022 at much lower levels than we currently expect because of this deflationary outcome. This combination would be very harmful to European equities, both in absolute terms and relative to the global benchmark. At first, European stocks would probably briefly fare well. Once investors begin to digest the deleterious impact of stronger inflation on global growth, however, the pro-cyclical European market will begin to suffer. Tighter EM financial conditions and underperforming financials will only accentuate the European stock market ills. Much stronger inflation is a risk and not a base case for now, because the current bout of inflation is transitory. The supply-side of the economy is already responding to the signal created by higher prices. Firms are set to increase their inventories and capex intentions are moving higher. Moreover, many of the bottlenecks constraining global supply chains will loosen, as the global economy re-opens in response to the international vaccination campaign. Additionally, current labor shortages in low-wage industry will also dissipate, once the $300 weekly support by the US government ends after the month of September. Thus, the supply of labor will also pick up in the fourth quarter of 2021. Moreover, the Fed could remain tolerant of an inflation overshoot, which would limit the pain of its impact. That being said, there is a real inflation risk due to the global deterioration in the dependency ratio and the shift to the left in terms of the economic preferences of the median voter. However, this danger is backdated to 2024 and beyond, once global labor markets are closer to full employment. Investment Implication There is little protection in our current set of recommendations against this risk, but this is a smaller threat than the previous two risks. However, when viewed alongside the first and second set of risks, the combined probability of a dangerous outcome for the market in general and for Europe in particular has grown compared to six months ago. Thus, while the jury is still out on these questions, it makes sense to de-risk portfolios temporarily, until the reward-to-risk ratio has once again improved. Hence, a tactical neutral stance on cyclical relative to defensive equities and on Europe relative to the rest of the world is appropriate for now. Will The ECB Join The BoC? At its April meeting, the Bank of Canada jolted the market by announcing a much earlier-than-anticipated start to its tapering program. We do not believe that the ECB will follow up at its June meeting. In a recent report, BCA’s Global Fixed-Income Strategy team highlighted the constraint that will prevent the ECB from adjusting policy next month. The main factors are as follows: The results from the ECB’s strategic review have yet to be announced. Adjusting policy before an eventual change in the inflation mandate of the central banks creates an unnecessary risk of policy whipsaw. Yet another policy flip-flop would further mar the ECB’s credibility. Chart 16The ECB Does Not Want To Upend Credit Growth Loan growth in Europe is slowing down, led by France. However, Italian credit activity is improving in response to the generous TLTRO uptake in the southern economy (Chart 16). At this juncture, a rapid policy adjustment would threaten the recovery, while Europe has yet to re-open. Italian spreads remain fragile. The ECB’s asset purchases are an important contributor to the easing in financial conditions across the periphery. The recent 25bps widening in the BTP-Bund spread is a reminder that European fixed-income markets are not fully tension-free. Thus, a rapid removal of support could prompt a reflex selloff in Italian bonds. The subsequent tightening in financial conditions would unnecessarily feed deflationary pressures in Europe. The euro is strong. If the ECB unsettled the market and removed monetary accommodation as fast or even faster than the Fed, the euro’s rally would suddenly accelerate. This would generate a powerful deflationary shock for Europe that would force the ECB to adjust its inflation forecasts downward. Chart 17Especially When China Creates A Threat The Chinese economy is weak, which increases uncertainty around European economic outcome via the trade channel (Chart 17). Instead, the meetings in the back half of the year are much more likely candidates for the ECB to begin talking about its tapering program. By then, the European economic re-opening will have taken place, to which growth will have responded. The results of the ECB’s strategic reviews will have been announced. Finally, plans will have been ratified for the usage of NGEU funds across the EU, and thus, fiscal clarity will improve. Even if the ECB starts talking before yearend of terminating the PEPP, its communications will indicate that the program’s full envelope will be deployed within the original time frame. Thus, the PEPP program will be in place until the end of March 2022. Moreover, to prevent a rapid deterioration in bank credit, the ECB will continue to provide generous financing to deposit-taking institutions via the TLTRO program. Under these circumstances, the ECB is unlikely to increase its deposit rate before 2014. These views imply that the ECB policy tightening (both on the balance sheet and interest rate fronts) will lag behind that of the Fed, the BoE, the Norges Bank, and the Riksbank. Only the BoJ and the SNB will move after the ECB. The continued involvement of the ECB in the European fixed-income market, along with the elevated likelihood that we remain years away from the first rate hike, confirms that an overweight stance in European peripheral bonds is appropriate. We also continue to overweight corporate credit within European fixed-income portfolios. Our fixed-income colleagues also share these views. Chart 18Justifying A Box Trade Finally, the German yield curve should steepen compared to that of the US. Even if the ECB lags well behind the Fed when it comes to tightening policy, the current terminal rate proxy embedded in the EONIA curve is too low (Chart 18). Meanwhile, the earlier lift-off date for interest rates in the US relative to the Euro Area points to rising short rates west of the Atlantic. In this context, a box trade buying steepeners in Europe and flatteners in the US is appropriate, especially since it generates a positive carry of 167 bps (hedged into USD). Mathieu Savary, Chief European Investment Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Currency Performance Fixed Income Performance Government Bonds Corporate Bonds Equity Performance Major Stock Indices Geographic Performance Sector Performance Closed Trades
Highlights Inflation is on everyone’s mind, … : Inflation has been a hot topic in our meetings with clients and in internal BCA discussions, but it has lately broken out among businesses and the general public. … but investors are mainly concerned with what it means for markets, … : When clients ask if and when inflation could become a problem, they really want to know if and when they should be repositioning their portfolios to prepare for it. … which ultimately brings the discussion back to the Fed: Inflation sensitivities vary among (and within) asset classes, but risk assets as a whole fare much worse when monetary policy settings are tight than when they are easy. If rising inflation drives the Fed to impose restrictive monetary policy, it will bring the curtain down on the equity bull market. Feature Inflation has been a hot topic with clients, for the internet-equipped public (Chart 1) and within BCA, where our latest monthly view meeting was entirely devoted to it. Client questions have addressed three broad themes: Chart 1Trending What constitutes too much inflation? How will you know too much inflation is on the way? How soon could too much inflation arrive? Economists have yet to establish exactly where inflation comes from and their attempts to build models that anticipate it have been woefully unsuccessful. The problem may be that prices are set at the micro level by a confluence of innumerable individual interactions. Just as Hayek pointed out that no top-down committee could determine how to allocate resources efficiently without the signals provided by prices, it’s fiendishly difficult to try to divine their aggregate future direction from macroeconomic inputs. Even if we can’t build an airtight model predicting consumer price moves, however, we can systematically assess several known contributors to inflation to try to gain some advance notice into its movements. Obtaining that advance notice is of great practical significance in the current market environment. In a Goldilocks-and-the-two-tails world where widespread vaccinations have rendered the too-cold left-tail outcome increasingly unlikely, overheating is the only obstacle to the potent-growth/easy-policy backdrop that would be just right for equities and other risk assets over the next twelve months. Troublesome inflation seems to be the only factor that could get the Fed to back off of its pledge to maintain ultra-easy monetary policy for an extended period and we see it as the biggest threat to the equity bull market. We are therefore introducing our inflation checklist and expect to revisit it regularly over the rest of the year and into 2022. It reveals what we’re watching to monitor inflation and how, with some interpretive discretion, we’ll know if it’s poised to break out. It will also allow US Investment Strategy readers to follow along with our thinking in real time. As long as the checklist does not point to a meaningful, persistent move higher in consumer prices, we will likely continue to be constructive on the prospects for financial markets and the economy. Checklist Design Table 1Inflation Checklist Our inflation checklist (Table 1) tracks price pressures in five broad categories: Labor Market Indicators, Price Indexes, Pipeline Pressures, Inflation Expectations and the Fed’s Reaction Function. We do not have a hard-and-fast scale of the categories’ relative importance, but we are especially alert to signals from the labor market and changes in inflation expectations. It will be hard to achieve persistently uncomfortable inflation readings without an upward inflection in the pace of wage growth and we do not see wage growth getting traction until inflation expectations rise enough to push workers to agitate for it. As we have previously stated, we do not think that core US inflation measures can break out of the range that has held them in check for three decades unless workers, households and businesses adopt a new inflation mindset (Chart 2). Chart 2Volcker's Gift We do not have a pre-determined rule for how many X’s it will take to signal that policy-altering inflation is on the way. Nor do we have pre-conceived notions about the various combinations of red flags that would herald the onset of a new inflation regime. The purpose of the checklist is to establish a consistent analytical framework for assessing the future direction of inflation and its impact on monetary policy settings. Interpreting the output of that framework will require judgment and we mean to maintain our flexibility in exercising it. The State Of The Labor Market The Phillips Curve, which posits an inverse relationship between unemployment and inflation, has fallen into disrepute with investors. Even the Fed has distanced itself from it, announcing last summer that it would no longer pursue a strategy of pre-emptively tightening policy when the labor market begins to heat up. Asserting that wage growth is inversely related to the unemployment rate simply applies the law of supply and demand to the labor market, and we have no problem with it, although it should be noted that the relationship is not linear. Wages only reliably rise once unemployment breaks below a minimum threshold level, such as NAIRU, the natural rate of unemployment (Chart 3). Chart 3The Unemployment Gap Matters For Wage Growth With that empirical relationship in mind, the category's components consider the available supply and utilization of labor inputs; demand for labor; and wage growth, which should reveal something about the current supply-demand balance. The 61.7% labor force participation rate remains far short of its 63.4% pre-pandemic level (Chart 4, top panel) while the prime-age employment-to-population ratio remains below its trough level of the two recessions that preceded the global financial crisis (Chart 4, bottom panel), making it clear that labor supply is still constrained. Chart 4A Lot Of Workers Are Still Idle ... Labor demand, on the other hand, is at levels topping the cyclical peaks of the last 20 years, according to the share of small businesses reporting job openings in the NFIB survey (Chart 5, solid line) and job openings as a share of total employment as reported by the Department of Labor’s Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (Chart 5, dashed line). One would expect that the combination of raging demand and constrained supply to lead to higher wages, yet the top wage measures remain quiet (Chart 6). We expect they will until the prime-age employment-to-population ratio starts to make a run at recovering its pre-pandemic level (Chart 7). Chart 5... Even Though Employers Are Looking For Help Chart 6Wage Growth Remains Subdued Chart 7The Labor Market Still Has A Lot Of Slack The bottom line is that the labor market is starkly bifurcated as vividly illustrated by the Atlanta Fed’s Labor Market Distributions spider chart (Chart 8). On the demand dimensions on the right side of the chart, the labor market is far ahead of where it was at the end of the last two expansions, but far behind on the supply dimensions at the top and bottom left and wages in the middle left. For now, we tick only the Labor Demand box, as it is the only element of the labor market that is back to full health. We expect that shadow supply, which will likely be released in earnest upon next term’s return of in-person instruction in schools across the country and the expiration of unusually generous unemployment insurance benefits, will keep wages from rising much higher until it is fully absorbed. Chart 8A Tale Of Two Markets Price Indexes The Fed’s preferred core PCE index remains in check, along with the headline PCE index (Chart 9, top panel), but the more widely followed CPI surprised to the upside in April (Chart 9, bottom panel), especially in month-over-month terms, with the headline index rising 0.8% and the core index rising 0.9% for its largest gain in 39 years. Last week’s report dove into the details of the core CPI print and concluded that it was driven by extreme outliers in a handful of categories that are unlikely to be sustained.1 The magnitude of the upside surprise nonetheless leaves us no choice but to check the Marquee Indexes box until the sequential increases settle down. Chart 9CPI Took Off In April The message from more refined measures like trimmed-mean CPI and PCE is more encouraging (Chart 10). Trimmed-mean indexes are akin to the Olympic judging method in which the top and bottom scores are discarded, and their proponents argue that they provide a truer measure of core inflation than the static series which exclude every food and energy category every month. The trimmed-mean CPI and PCE series are well behaved and suggest that the inflation genie has not yet gotten out of the bottle. Chart 10Outliers May Be Skewing The Core Indexes ... Pipeline Pressures Price increases across the commodity complex have drawn inflation watchers’ attention. Prices at the pump loom large in consumers’ perceptions of inflation and commodities are inputs in a range of manufactured goods; if manufacturers are able to pass price increases onto end users, commodity price increases may find their way into end-product prices. The BCA pipeline inflation indicator rolls the CRB raw industrials index, the ISM survey’s prices paid and supplier delivery time components, overtime hours worked and capacity utilization into a single measure that has moved in step with CPI. It is currently at its highest level in two decades (Chart 11). Chart 11... But Bottlenecks Are Inflicting Near-Term Upward Pressure Exchange rate moves are not as important for US inflation as they are in economies that are more reliant on trade, but they still matter at the margin. When the dollar weakens, the price of imports rises and when it strengthens, the price of imports falls. Trade-weighted indexes are our go-to series for gauging the dollar’s course (Chart 12, top panel), but the DXY index draws a lot of attention from market professionals and it is currently testing a multi-year technical support level (Chart 12, bottom panel). A break below 90 would presage a further fall and may push inflation expectations higher. Chart 12A Weaker Dollar Could Push US Import Prices Higher ... Services inflation is mainly a domestic phenomenon, but goods prices are globally determined. Inflation measures in major international economies can therefore provide some insight into the path of goods prices and the path of US inflation at the margin. Headline and core consumer prices in the Eurozone have yet to stir from their slumber (Chart 13, top panel) while consumer prices in China briefly deflated (Chart 13, bottom panel). The rest of the world is not yet exerting upward pressure on US consumer prices. Chart 13... But There Isn't Much Inflationary Pressure Outside The US Inflation Expectations Chart 14Investors Vote For Transitory Expectations inform behavior. If a widespread belief that troublesome inflation is going to return takes hold, individual workers and unions will demand higher wages to maintain their purchasing power, businesses up and down the supply chain will insist on price hikes to protect their margins and consumers may accelerate their big-ticket purchase decisions. Each of these actions adds fuel to the fire, and if economic participants come to believe that a new inflation regime has arrived, it could initiate a self-reinforcing dynamic in which higher prices beget higher prices. Think of it as the flip side of the deflation mindset that has left Japan with relentless disinflation in consumer prices and a relative plunge in asset prices. We are monitoring the inflation expectations curve very closely with the aim of detecting the arrival of a new inflation mindset. If the curve were to shift out – inflation expectations were higher across all time periods – and steepen, with inflation expectations rising across the entire time horizon, participants in the real economy might be on the cusp of changing their behavior to align with expectations. For now, we are encouraged that the inflation expectations curves as derived from the difference in TIPS and nominal Treasury yields (Chart 14, top two panels), and from the CPI swaps market (Chart 14, bottom two panels) suggest that investors agree that inflation pressures are likely to dissipate. We come to that conclusion from the fact that the 2-to-5-year and 5-to-10-year segments of the curve are inverted, which is to say that investors expect near-term inflation will exceed longer-term inflation. Inversion in both segments shows that investors expect a steady decline, with the inflation rate over the next two years exceeding the inflation rate over the next five years and the inflation rate over the next five years exceeding the inflation rate over the next ten years. We place greater reliance on market-determined measures of inflation expectations than survey measures, but we are monitoring a range of consumer and business surveys. The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment survey shows that households also expect that near-term inflation pressures will not persist. Its respondents see inflation soaring over the next twelve months (Chart 15, top panel) but rising much more modestly over the next five years (Chart 15, bottom panel). Chart 15Households Also Think Acute Inflation Pressures Will Be Short Lived Fed Reaction Function The investment implications of higher inflation come down to how the Fed reacts to it. For now, the Fed is sticking to its pledge that it has reduced its propensity to tighten policy. It remains outwardly committed to pursuing an average inflation target and to eschewing proactive policy tightening when the labor market appears to be firming. Though we expect that markets will periodically test the Fed when inflation seems to be gathering momentum, we do not yet see any reason to doubt its resolve. We will only check either of the Fed boxes in the event that Fed speakers begin to telegraph a change of direction or if the summary of economic projections (“the dots”) indicates that the bias toward accommodative policy is shifting. We see that bias as nearly fixed in the near term, given that the Fed has gone to considerable lengths to outline its policy goals for participants in the financial markets and the economy. It is not etched in stone, but we don’t foresee a material change in the next few months. Until we do, or until we become convinced that the Fed has allowed itself to get helplessly behind the inflation curve, we expect to stick to our recommendation to overweight risk assets at the expense of Treasuries over the twelve-month cyclical timeframe. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see the May 17, 2021 US Investment Strategy report, "The Data That Cried Wolf," available at www.bcaresearch.com.
With prospective returns from major asset classes so unattractive, investors continue to pour money into illiquid assets such as private equity (PE). PE funds last year raised $660 billion (compared to only $185 billion in 2010), and have already raised $345…
Dear client, In addition to this weekly report, we also sent you a Special Report on cryptocurrencies, authored by my colleagues Guy Russell and Matt Gertken. The conclusion is that government authorities are likely to lean against the proliferation of cryptocurrencies, something we suspected in our most recent report on the topic. Regards, Chester Highlights Net foreign inflows into US assets probably peaked in March. Meanwhile, there are strong reasons to believe outflows from US securities will accelerate in the coming months. As such, the 12-18-month outlook for the US dollar remains negative. Cryptocurrencies are correcting sharply amidst a crackdown in China, a risk we warned investors about in our Special Report last month. We are increasingly favoring the yen. Lower the limit-sell on USD/JPY to 109. Hold long CHF/NZD positions recommended last week. Feature Chart I-1Current Account Deficit = Capital Account Surplus The US runs a sizeable trade deficit. As such, it must import capital to finance this deficit (Chart I-1). Over the last year, this has been driven by equity and agency bond purchases by foreigners. However, we might be at the apex of a shift, where foreign appetite for US securities starts a meaningful decline. Financing The US Deficit TIC data is usually a lagging indicator for FX markets, but still holds valuable insights into foreign appetite for US assets. On this front, the March data was particularly instructive: There were strong inflows into US Treasury notes and bonds, to the tune of almost $120 bn. This was the greatest driver of monthly inflows. This was also the largest monthly increase since the global financial crisis. Net inflows into US equities stood at $32.2 bn in March. This is on par with the three-month average, but a sharp deceleration from December inflows of $78.3 bn. Corporate bonds commanded particularly strong inflows in March to the tune of $43.1 bn. It appears that foreign private concerns swapped their agency bond purchases with corporate bonds. US residents repatriated $54.1 bn back home in March. Official concerns were big buyers of long-term US Treasury bonds, but this was offset by a large sale of US T-bills. Net foreign official purchases of overall US securities were just $6.5 bn. With the dollar down since March, it is a fair assumption that the strong inflows we saw since then have somewhat reversed. The question going forward is whether there has been a regime shift in US purchases, specifically the purchase of equities (and agency bonds). And if so, can the purchase of US Treasurys pick up the slack (Chart I-2). Foreign inflows into the US equity market tend to be driven by expected rates of return, either from an expected rerating of the multiple or from profit growth. A rerating of the US equity multiple, relative to the rest of the world, has inversely tracked interest rates (Chart I-3). This is due to the higher weighting of defensive sectors in the US equity market. Concurrently, we showed in a recent report that profit growth on an aggregate level also tends to move in sync with relative economic momentum.1 Chart I-2Equity Inflows Have Financed ##br##The US Deficit Chart I-3Rising Bond Yields Would Curtail Equity Inflows If growth is rotating away from the US, and global bond yields still have upside, this will curtail foreign appetite for US equities. This appears to be the story since March, as non-US bourses have outperformed (Chart I-4). Chart I-4ANon-US Markets Are Bottoming Chart I-4BNon-US Markets Are Bottoming In terms of fixed income flows, the rise in US bond yields towards a peak of circa 180bps in March undoubtedly triggered strong inflows into the US Treasury market. Since then, yields outside the US have been moving somewhat higher, especially in Germany. This should curtail bond inflows, and also fits with a growth rotation away from the US. While foreign central banks were net buyers of US Treasurys in March, the “other reportables” category from the CFTC data show a huge short position in US 10-year futures. Foreign central banks are usually grouped in this category. This will suggest the accumulation of Treasurys should reverse in the coming months (Chart I-5). Chart I-5Did Central Banks Hedge Their March Purchases? A rotation of growth from the US towards other parts of the world would also make it more difficult to finance the US current account deficit. This is because it will compress real interest rate spreads between the US and the rest of the world. From a historical perspective, inflows into US Treasury assets only tend to accelerate when real rates in the US are at least 50-100 bps above that in other G10 economies (Chart I-6). That could explain why despite a positive Treasury-JGB spread of 165 basis points, Japanese investors were very much absent buyers in March (Chart I-7). Chart I-6Real Rate Differentials And Bond Capital Flows Chart I-7The Big Boys Did Not Buy Much Treasurys In March Critical to this view is the outlook for US inflation. On this front, we note the following: First, the output gap in the US should close faster than most other economies, at least according to the OECD (Chart I-8). Ceteris paribus, US inflation should outpace that in other countries in the near term and put downward pressure on real rates. Chart I-8The US Should Generate Higher Inflation Fiscal spending has been more pronounced in the US compared to other countries, which will further fan the inflationary flames. The Fed is the only central bank in the G10 committed to an inflation overshoot. In a nutshell, there is compelling evidence to suggest US inflows peaked in March from both foreign equity and bond investors. Upside surprises in inflation are more likely in the US in the very near term compared to other economies, which will depress real rates. Meanwhile, higher global yields are also a negative for the US equity market. There Is No Alternative Chart I-9A Deep And Liquid Pool Of Treasurys My colleague, Mathieu Savary, has made the case that there is no alternative to US Treasurys. The treasury market is the most liquid and the deepest safe haven pool in the capital market universe (Chart I-9). Ergo, a flight to safety will always bid up Treasurys, as we saw in March 2020. We do agree that Treasurys will continue to act as the world’s safe haven benchmark for now. However, that privilege is fraying at the edges, and it is the marginal changes that matter for dollar investors. Competition for safe haven assets continues to intensify as the narrative switches from 40 years of disinflationary forces to the rising prospect of an inflation overshoot. Inflation is anathema to fiat currencies, including the dollar. For investors, precious metals have been a preferred habitat for anti-fiat holdings. That said, cryptocurrencies are also rising in the ranks as an alternative. In our Special Report2 released a month ago, we suggested government regulation was a huge risk for cryptocurrencies. But more specifically, the degree to which cryptocurrencies can benefit from a shift away from dollars will depend on whether private investors or central banks drive the outflows. Since the peak in the DXY index in 2020, the biggest sellers of US Treasurys have been private investors. Cryptocurrencies benefited from this diversification. That has changed since March, which partly explains the big drawdown in crypto prices. In general, you always want to align yourself with strong buyers who are price indiscriminate. Foreign central banks (the biggest holders of US Treasurys) prefer gold as their anti-dollar asset. This puts an solid footing under gold prices, compared to cryptocurrencies or other anti-fiat assets. It is worth noting that competition between the dollar and gold often run in long cycles. In the 1970s, as inflation took hold in the US, the dollar depreciated and gold soared. In the 1980s, the dollar took off and gold fell sharply, as the Federal Reserve was able to bring down inflation. The 1990s were relatively disinflationary, which supported the dollar (Chart I-10). A whiff of rising inflation in the early 2000s hurt the dollar, while the 2010s were characterized by very low inflation, supporting the dollar. More recently, the dollar is weakening as inflationary trends accelerate faster in the US (Chart I-11). Chart I-10The Dollar And Inflation Move Opposite Ways (1) Chart I-11The Dollar And Inflation Move Opposite Ways (2) One of our favorite indicators for gauging ultimate downside in the dollar is the bond-to-gold ratio. The rationale is that the bond-to-gold ratio should capture investor preference at the margin for either US Treasurys or gold. This in turn has been a good measure of investor confidence in the greenback. On this basis, the bond-to-gold ratio (TLT-to-GLD ETF) is breaking down to fresh cycle lows (Chart I-12). This has historically pointed towards a lower US dollar. Chart I-12The Dollar And The Bond-To-Gold Ratio Within precious metals, we like gold but love silver. As such, we are short the gold-to-silver ratio since an entry point of 68. Our bias is that initial support for this ratio is 60. Meanwhile, we also like platinum, and will go long versus palladium at current levels. A Few Other Indicators A few other market developments are pointing to a lower dollar in the coming months. The dollar tends to decline in the second half of the year. This has been true since the 1970s (Chart I-13). Importantly, even during the Paul Volcker years in the 80s when the dollar staged a meaningful rally, it often fell in the second half of the year. The winner in the second half of the year has usually been the Swiss franc and the Japanese yen (Chart I-14). Chart I-13The Dollar Usually Strengthens In H1 Chart I-14The Dollar Usually Weakens In H2 The OECD leading economic indicators still suggest US growth remains robust relative to the rest of the G10. However, our expectation is that this gap will decrease sharply in the second half of this year. That said, the current reading is a risk to our dollar bearish view (Chart I-15). Chart I-15US Exceptionalism Is A Risk For Dollar Bears Lumber has started to underperform Dr. Copper. Lumber benefits from solid US housing activity, while copper is more tied to global growth and the emerging investment in green technology. As a counter-cyclical currency, the dollar also tends to underperform higher beta currencies when lumber is underperforming copper (Chart I-16). The copper-to-gold ratio has also bottomed, suggesting ample liquidity is now fueling growth (Chart I-17). We suggested last week that the velocity of money across countries was a key variable to watch in getting the dollar call right. So far, the collapse in money velocity is least acute in China, explaining the rise in the copper-to-gold ratio and the improvement in non-US yields compared to the US. Chart I-16Lumber/Copper Prices And The Dollar Chart I-17Copper/Gold Prices And Bond Yields In summary, many cyclical indicators still point to a lower dollar. The key risk to this view is an equity market correction, and/or persistent relative strength in US growth. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Report, "Trading Currencies Using Equity Signals," dated May 7, 2021. 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Special Report, "Will Cryptocurrencies Displace Fiat," dated April 23, 2021. Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
The SPX has been striving to find direction over the past couple of weeks in the seasonally weak month of May, as “transitory inflation” may actually morph into more semi-permanent inflation. The Fed’s latest minutes signaled that tapering is likely on its way, especially if non-farm payrolls resume increasing month-over-month near the one million mark as the economy will be in full reopening mode this Memorial Day. Historically, there is some turbulence that comes with the transition from ultra-easy monetary policy stance to, at the margin, less easy monetary policy warning that a shakeout equity market phase still looms. Tack on the modestly negative signal from investor positioning in the options market (top panel) and a volatile summer is likely upon us. Finally, news of China’s crackdown on cryptocurrencies has taken a bite out of Bitcoin that has been experiencing wild intra-day swings of late. Some of these apparent liquidation pressures have spilled over to the S&P 500 and, given the recent tight positive correlation between Bitcoin and the SPX (bottom panel), warn that some caution is still warranted in the equity space, at least in the near-term.
Weekly Performance Update For the week ending Thu May 20, 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 -0.41% 1.18% Top Contributors AM:US AMKR:US TXN:US GOOG.L:US NWSA:US Weekly Return 26 bps 19 bps 10 bps 10 bps 9 bps Top Detractors SCCO:US UHAL:US AN:US UGI:US PII:US Weekly Return -26 bps -17 bps -14 bps -11 bps -11 bps Top Prospects TX:US UHAL:US ESGR:US SCCO:US AN:US BCA Score 99.58% 98.02% 96.67% 95.30% 93.87% BCA Canada Portfolio Total Weekly Return BCA Canada Portfolio S&P/TSX TRI 1.71% 2.17% Top Contributors AUP:CA DCBO:CA NXE:CA NPI:CA NWC:CA Weekly Return 43 bps 32 bps 31 bps 15 bps 15 bps Top Detractors IFP:CA CFP:CA CS:CA CCA:CA FTT:CA Weekly Return -23 bps -22 bps -9 bps -8 bps -6 bps Top Prospects CS:CA IFP:CA CFP:CA LNF:CA RUS:CA BCA Score 99.90% 99.70% 98.56% 98.20% 98.13% BCA UK Portfolio Total Weekly Return BCA UK Portfolio FTSE 100 TRI 0.99% 0.95% Top Contributors DRX:GB PLUS:GB PZC:GB TYMN:GB FDEV:GB Weekly Return 35 bps 21 bps 16 bps 12 bps 12 bps Top Detractors ROSN:GB FXPO:GB CNE:GB TEP:GB SPI:GB Weekly Return -16 bps -14 bps -10 bps -7 bps -6 bps Top Prospects SVST:GB NLMK:GB TUNE:GB GLTR:GB BPCR:GB BCA Score 99.76% 98.66% 97.58% 96.58% 94.88% BCA Eurozone Portfolio Total Weekly Return BCA EMU Portfolio MSCI EMU TRI 1.43% 1.32% Top Contributors VGP:BE KESKOB:FI SOL:IT CNV:FR AOF:DE Weekly Return 23 bps 20 bps 17 bps 14 bps 13 bps Top Detractors MOL:IT PHH2:DE EDNR:IT STR:AT FSKRS:FI Weekly Return -20 bps -9 bps -8 bps -6 bps -4 bps Top Prospects SOLV:BE POST:AT STR:AT FSKRS:FI SO:FR BCA Score 99.43% 98.67% 98.00% 97.29% 96.66% BCA Japan Portfolio Total Weekly Return BCA Japan Portfolio TOPIX TRI 2.31% 2.54% Top Contributors 3291:JP 9543:JP 8795:JP 4326:JP 8850:JP Weekly Return 36 bps 35 bps 31 bps 25 bps 22 bps Top Detractors 2791:JP 6458:JP 4839:JP 8133:JP 4708:JP Weekly Return -29 bps -26 bps -22 bps -8 bps -7 bps Top Prospects 6960:JP 4966:JP 1766:JP 9436:JP 3291:JP BCA Score 99.26% 98.18% 97.92% 97.60% 97.41% BCA Hong Kong Portfolio Total Weekly Return BCA Hong Kong Portfolio Hang Seng TRI 2.52% 2.81% Top Contributors 990:HK 1830:HK 1600:HK 327:HK 867:HK Weekly Return 56 bps 41 bps 28 bps 28 bps 21 bps Top Detractors 323:HK 1898:HK 316:HK 1606:HK 43:HK Weekly Return -34 bps -16 bps -14 bps -11 bps -6 bps Top Prospects 1606:HK 990:HK 316:HK 323:HK 116:HK BCA Score 99.19% 99.16% 98.80% 98.71% 98.53% BCA Australia Portfolio Total Weekly Return BCA Australia Portfolio S&P/ASX All Ord. TRI 0.25% 0.67% Top Contributors ADH:AU HT1:AU PDN:AU BLX:AU FLN:AU Weekly Return 22 bps 18 bps 16 bps 16 bps 14 bps Top Detractors MGX:AU STX:AU GRR:AU PSQ:AU MVF:AU Weekly Return -27 bps -26 bps -21 bps -16 bps -13 bps Top Prospects GRR:AU BSE:AU PSQ:AU MGX:AU CAJ:AU BCA Score 99.66% 99.31% 97.84% 95.43% 94.79%