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Highlights Achieving 2 percent inflation, whether as a point-target or as an average over time, will continue to be a mission impossible. As central banks continue to push the monetary policy pedal to the metal, it will underpin the valuation of equities and other risk-assets. So long as bond yields do not spike, stock market sell offs will be short-lived rather than an outright bear market. Within bonds, steer towards those where the monetary policy toolbox is not fully depleted, namely US T-bonds. Within currencies, steer towards those where the monetary policy toolbox is already depleted, namely the Swiss franc and the yen. Inflationary fiscal policy, by spiking bond yields, risks collapsing the valuation underpinning of $450 trillion of global risk-assets and catalysing a deflationary bear market. Fractal trade: Euro strength is vulnerable. Feature Chart of the WeekUltra-Low Bond Yields Do Not Create Consumer Price Inflation, They Create Asset Price Inflation Five years ago, we published a Special Report, Mission Impossible: 2% Inflation. We predicted that 2 percent inflation would remain elusive. Or that in the rare economies that it did appear, it would be runaway, rather than a sedate 2 percent. Either way, the 2 percent inflation point-target that had become a quasi-religious commandment for the world’s central banks would be a ‘mission impossible’.1  Our August 2015 report was heterodox and provocative. Some people pushed back, arguing that the all-powerful central banks could pick and hit whatever inflation target they desired. Yet five years on, we have been vindicated. Last week, the Federal Reserve finally threw in the towel on the 2 percent inflation point-target (Chart I-2). Chart I-2"Forecasts For 2 Percent Inflation Were Never Realised On A Sustained Basis" “Over the years, forecasts from FOMC participants and private-sector analysts routinely showed a return to 2 percent inflation, but these forecasts were never realised on a sustained basis… (hence) our new statement indicates that we will seek to achieve inflation that averages 2 percent over time…”2   We suspect that, just like the Fed, European central banks will soon move their goal posts. Nevertheless, today we are doubling down on our August 2015 prediction. Achieving 2 percent inflation, whether as a point-target or as an average over time, will continue to be a mission impossible (Chart I-3). Chart I-3Mission Impossible: 2 Percent Inflation Price Stability Is A State, Not A Number The current school of central bankers have misunderstood price stability. They have defined it as an over-precise inflation rate: two point zero. Yet most people feel price stability imprecisely and intuitively. A recent IFO paper points out that households’ inflation perceptions are “more in line with the imperfect information view prevailing in social psychology than with the rational actor view assumed in mainstream economics.”3 The human brain cannot distinguish between very low rates of inflation or deflation, a range we just perceive as ‘price stability’. In Real-Feel Inflation: Quantitative Estimation of Inflation Perceptions, Michael Ashton confirms that “it would be challenging for a consumer to distinguish 1 percent inflation from 2 percent inflation – that fine of a gradation in perception would be extremely unusual to find.”4 The human brain cannot distinguish between very low rates of inflation or deflation. As the entire range of ultra-low inflation just feels like one state of price stability, it is impossible for central banks to fine-tune our inflation expectations within that range. Therefore, our behaviour in terms of wage demands and willingness to borrow also stays unchanged. And if our behaviour is unchanged, what is the transmission mechanism to 2 percent inflation – or for that matter, any arbitrarily chosen inflation rate? Hence, inflation targeting can ‘phase-shift’ an economy between the states of price instability and price stability. Most notably, its inception in the 1990s ultimately phase-shifted many advanced economies into the state of price stability (Chart I-4). But once in either state, inflation targeting cannot fine-tune inflation to a desired number such as 2 percent, 4 percent, or 10 percent. Chart I-4Inflation Targeting Phase-Shifted Advanced Economies Into Price Stability A recent NBER paper Inflation Expectations As A Policy Tool? points out that in advanced economies, “the inattention of households and firms to inflation is likely a reflection of policy-makers’ success in stabilizing inflation around a low level for decades. This price stability has reduced the benefit to being informed about aggregate inflation, leading many to rely on readily available price signals.”5  The ultimate proof is that even market-based inflation expectations just track realised inflation. Central Banks Have Gone Backwards In his must-read What’s Wrong With The 2 Percent Inflation Target, the late and great Paul Volcker argued that price stability is “that state in which expected changes in the general price level do not effectively alter business or household decisions. It is ill-advised to define that state with a point target, such as 2 percent, as false precision can lead to dangerous policies.”6 The irony, and tragedy, is that both the Fed and the ECB have gone backwards. Their original definitions of price stability were more correct than their more recent iterations. False precision can lead to dangerous policies. At the Federal Reserve’s July 1996 policy meeting, Chairman Alan Greenspan argued that if the aim of inflation targeting was a truly stable price level, it entailed an inflation target of 0-1 percent. But one of the persons present was not so sure. The dissenter was a Fed governor called Janet L. Yellen. She countered that if inflation ended up at 0-1 percent, the zero-bound of interest rates would prevent “real interest rates becoming negative on the rare occasions when required to counter a recession”, an argument that Jay Powell repeated last week. “Expected inflation feeds directly into the general level of interest rates… so if inflation expectations fall below our 2 percent objective, interest rates would decline in tandem. In turn, we would have less scope to cut interest rates to boost employment during an economic downturn.” Meanwhile in Europe, the ECB’s original inflation target of below 2 percent was close to Greenspan’s proposal of 0-1 percent. But in 2003 the ECB changed its inflation target to its current “below but close to 2 percent.” The reason, according to Mario Draghi: “The founding fathers of the ECB thought about the rebalancing of the different members. To rebalance these disequilibria, since the countries do not have the exchange rate, they must readjust their prices. This readjustment is much harder if you have zero inflation than if you have 2 percent.” Hence, the Fed, ECB and other central banks are targeting inflation at an arbitrary 2 percent to always allow some leeway for negative real rates. The central bank argument can be summarised as: we desperately need you to expect 2 percent inflation. Because otherwise, we won’t be able to help you by cutting real interest rates in a downturn. Yet this argument is facile, as it takes no account of the true science of inflation expectation formation (Chart I-5 and Chart I-6). And it is dangerous, as it takes no account of the financial and economic risks of pushing the monetary policy pedal to the metal. Chart I-5Inflation Expectations Just Track Realised Inflation Chart I-6Inflation Expectations Just Track Realised Inflation Beware The Twists In The Inflation Story Now we come to a couple of twists in the story. When bond yields become ultra-low, their impact on consumer price inflation breaks down – because the economy is already in the state of price stability – but the impact on stock market inflation increases exponentially (Chart of the Week). We refer readers to previous reports in which we have detailed this dynamic.7 The good twist is that as central banks continue to push the monetary policy pedal to the metal, it will underpin the valuation of equities and other risk-assets. So long as bond yields do not spike, stock market sell offs will be short-lived rather than an outright bear market. Remarkably, this has held true even this year in the worst economic downturn since the Depression. The current school of central bankers have misunderstood price stability. Within bonds, steer towards those where the monetary policy toolbox is not fully depleted, namely US T-bonds (Chart I-7 and Chart I-8). Conversely, within currencies, steer towards those where the monetary policy toolbox is already depleted, namely the Swiss franc and the yen. Chart I-7Steer Towards Bonds Where Monetary Policy Is Not Fully Depleted... Chart I-8...Namely US ##br##T-Bonds Finally, given that any economy can ultimately phase-shift to price instability, when should we worry about inflation in advanced economies? Not yet. To expand the broad money supply, somebody must borrow and spend money. If policymakers really want to create rampant inflation, that somebody is the government. It must borrow and spend money at will, with the central bank creating the money. In other words, the central bank loses its independence and government spending goes vertical. So far, we are not remotely close to this situation because government spending has barely replaced the lost incomes and livelihoods of the pandemic. Indeed, things could get worse once the current income replacement schemes end. Yet, in theory at least, government spending could ultimately go vertical. This would lead to the final bad twist. As bond yields spiked in response, the entire valuation support of global risk-assets would collapse, catalysing a devastating bear market. Given that the $450 trillion worth of global risk-assets (including real estate) is five times the size of the $90 trillion global economy, we reach an important conclusion. The road to inflation, if ever taken, goes via deflation. Fractal Trading System* This week we note that the recent strength in EUR/USD is vulnerable to a countertrend pullback. However, as we are already exposed to this via the correlated position in long USD/PLN, there is no new trade. The rolling 1-year win ratio now stands at 59 percent. Chart I-9EUR/USD When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated  December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com.   Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report ‘Mission Impossible: 2% Inflation’, dated August 20, 2015, available at eis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see New Economic Challenges and the Fed's Monetary Policy Review, August 27, 2020 available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/powell20200827a.htm 3 Please see Households’ Inflation Perceptions and Expectations: Survey Evidence from New Zealand, IFO Working Paper, February 2018 available at https://www.ifo.de/DocDL/wp-2018-255-hayo-neumeier-inflation-perceptions-expectations.pdf 4 Please see Real-Feel Inflation: Quantitative Estimation of Inflation Perceptions by Michael Ashton, National Association for Business Economics available at https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1057/be.2011.35.pdf 5 Please see Inflation Expectations As A Policy Tool? NBER, May 28th, 2018 available at http://conference.nber.org/conf_papers/f117592.pdf 6 Please see https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2018-10-24/what-s-wrong-with-the-2-percent-inflation-target 7 Please see the European Investment Strategy Weekly Report ‘Risk: The Great Misunderstanding Of Finance’, dated October 25, 2018, available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Fractal Trading System   Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields   Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations  
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BCA Research’s US Equity Strategy service put the S&P banks index on downgrade alert. Following the recent Fed stress results and the resulting dividend cuts, banks have continued to trail both the broad equity market and their early cyclical peers:…
Neutral - Downgrade Alert Bank stocks fail to catch a break. Following the recent Fed stress results and the resulting dividend cuts, banks have continued to trail both the broad equity market and their early cyclical peers: consumer discretionary stocks. Worryingly, on all three income generation fronts, dark clouds are gathering for banks, the nervous system of the US economy. While the initial knee jerk reaction of corporates was to tap their existing credit lines in order to fight the pandemic that caused an exponential rise in C&I loan growth, going forward a steep reversal is looming (middle & bottom panels). Bankers are tightening lending standards at the fastest pace in a decade despite ZIRP, weighing heavily on relative share prices (top panel). On the price of credit front, the Fed’s recent perching of the fed funds rate on the zero line for as far as the eye can see all but guarantees a tough pricing power environment for banks. The latest FDIC Quarterly Banking Profile revealed that the banking industry broke the 3 handle on net interest margins coming in at 2.81%, the lowest level since the history of the data dating back to 1984. Finally, with regard to credit quality, a double digit unemployment rate, along with commercial real estate ails will propel non-performing loans, which are extremely lagging by nature. While credit quality deterioration is late to show up, it wreaks immediate havoc on bank income statements as loan loss provisions. Aggressive provisioning will likely continue at least until the end of the year. Bottom Line: Stay neutral the S&P banks index, but it is now on downgrade alert.  
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Over the past weeks, we have been cautioning investors not to chase the equity market higher as the risk/reward trade-off at current levels is tilted to the downside. While we maintain a 9-12 month bullish view on the broad market, a short-term correction due to technical and/or (geo)political reasons is likely in the cards. Consequently, patient investors will be rewarded with a compelling entry point likely in the coming months. Below are five reasons, in no particular order, arguing that a playable short-term pullback is in order:  Reason #1: The 200-day Moving Average Moving averages are a perfect tool to put the speed of any rally in perspective and to highlight  extreme investor optimism. Chart 1 shows standardized SPX and Nasdaq 100 (NDX) price ratios with respect to their 200-day moving averages. If we look at the current cycle, whenever both the SPX and NDX crossed above the one standard deviation (std) line, a sizable pullback was quick to follow. While NDX has been well above its 1 std line for some time, last week’s price action finally pushed the SPX into the overstretched column. The implication is that a correction is looming.  Reason 1 Reason #2: Monthly Moving Averages For the second reason, we look at the concept of price deviations from the moving average through a different lens – Bollinger bands (BBs). A traditional (20,2) BB includes a 20-period moving average of the price, as well as 20-period 2-standard standard deviation lines. While it can be plotted on any time frame, we use monthly data as set ups in longer time frames (i.e. monthly) dictate the behavior of the shorter (i.e. daily) time frames. Chart 2 shows the S&P 500 together with its (20,2) BBs on a monthly time frame. Whenever the market spikes above the 2 std line, a sizable correction ensues. Currently, the market is squarely above the 2 std line, which has historically been a precursor to a 5-10% drawdown. Reason 2 Reason #3: Growth/Value Staying on the topics of extreme rallies, Chart 3 shows the year-over-year growth rate in the S&P growth / S&P value share price ratio. In the entire history of the data, never has it printed a jaw-dropping 34% growth rate, not even after the depths of GFC or to the lead up to the dotcom March 2000 peak. Such a pace is clearly not sustainable and since growth stocks are dominated by FAANG-like companies that have done all of the heavy lifting year-to-date, a reset in the S&P growth / S&P value ratio will weigh on the overall market. A selloff in the bond market will likely serve as a catalyst to boost the allure of beaten down value stocks at the expense of overvalued tech titans.  Reason 3 Reason #4: Options/Volatility Markets Option and related volatility market movements reveal some vulnerabilities in the broad equity market. More specifically, the VIX and the VXN which by construction are inversely correlated with the S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100, respectively, serve as an excellent timing tool. We look at the 20-day moving correlation of those respective variables, and similarly to Reason #1, a reliable sell signal is given once both (VIX, SPX) and (VXN, NDX) 20-day moving correlations shoot into positive territory (Chart 4). While the (VXN, NDX) correlation has been going haywire over the past quarter as likely single stock call option buying has been heavily hedged by NDX put buying, the (VIX, SPX) moving correlation only slingshot higher at the end of last week - finally producing a decisive sell signal. Again, similarly to Reason #2, each sell signal resulted into a sizable correlation in the SPX, warning that a 5-10% pullback – the sixth since the March lows – is inevitable in the coming weeks. Reason 4 Reason #5: Bad Breadth Tech stocks have clearly been the work horse behind this rally pushing markets into uncharted territory in a very short period of time since the March lows. However, and as we highlighted in our previous research, it is only a handful of tech titans that propelled the markets to all-time highs. Overconcentration of returns in just a few tickers is not healthy, and a reset is only a question of time. Chart 5 highlights that today only 64% of NASDAQ Composite stocks are trading above their respective 50-day moving average, which stands in marked contrast to the all-time highs in the NASDAQ Composite. Such a divergence is unsustainable and typically gets resolved by a snap back in equity prices. While Chart 5 cannot be used as a precise timing tool, it has been consistently leading the NASDAQ Composite especially at peaks, cautioning that a healthy pullback is forthcoming. Bottom Line: While we maintain a cyclical and structural (see upcoming Weekly Report) bullish stance in the broad equity market, the shorter-term risk/reward trade-off is tilted to the downside, and presents a playable opportunity.  Reason 5