Developed Countries
Yesterday, BCA Research’s US Equity Strategy service wrote that investors with a higher risk tolerance and a long-term investment horizon should begin putting some of their cash to work. Equities have been unhinged and our Complacency-Anxiety index plunged…
HighlightsPortfolio Strategy“There is blood in the streets”. Investors with higher risk tolerance should be buying into this weakness and start to deploy long-term oriented capital. S&P 500 futures fell to 2394 which is a whopping 1000 points below the February 19, 2020 high of 3393. We cannot time the bottom, but future returns will be handsome from current SPX levels.Stick with health care stocks as the coronavirus pandemic will boost demand for health care goods and services, at a time when investors will also seek the refuge of defensive equities as the economy is in recession.Surging demand for pharmaceuticals, firming operating metrics, cheap relative valuations, an appreciating greenback along with the drubbing in the global manufacturing PMI, all signal that an underweight stance is no longer warranted in pharma equities. Recent ChangesLift the S&P pharmaceuticals index to neutral today. Table 1 Feature"Be fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful"- Warren Buffett"The time to buy is when there's blood in the streets"- Baron RothschildEquities were unhinged last week, as the trifecta of the corona virus becoming a pandemic, Saudi ripping the cord out of crude oil and the convulsing bond markets made for an explosive equity market cocktail. The result was two circuit breaker triggers at the -7% mark that (thankfully) worked as planned and brought some liquidity back into the markets.Our Complacency-Anxiety index plunged to a panic level that has marked previous equity market troughs (Chart 1A). CNN’s Fear & Greed Index fell from near 100 to 1. While it could fall further at least a reflex rebound is in order. The Monday and Thursday mini-crashes felt like a capitulation (Chart 1B). Whoever wanted to get out likely got out. Chart 1ATime To Buy Chart 1BThere’s Is Blood In the Streets Volumes in the SPX soared to the highest level since 2011 and the bullish percentage index1 fell to 1.4%2 below the low hit in 2008! Early last week six out of ten stocks in the broad-based Russell 3000 were down 30% or more from their 52-week highs. As a reminder, the SPX took the elevator down and erased 13 months of gains in a mere 13 trading days (Chart 2)! Chart 2Selling Is Overdone Chart 3Our Roadmap A big crack has now formed.Given the tremor we just experienced, we doubt a V-shaped recovery to fresh all-time highs is in store for stocks similar to the one following the 2018 Christmas Eve lows V-shaped advance. Instead, parallels with the early-2018, 2015/16, 2011 or 19873 market action are more apt (Chart 3).Historically, Table 2 shows that the median time it takes for the stock market to make fresh all-time highs following a minimum 20% bear market from the most recent highs is two years. Table 2Bear Markets Duration In other words, this will likely be a prolonged troughing phase and a retest near last Thursday’s lows is a high probability event, at which point we think the market will hold those lows, and this will serve as a catalyst to definitively put cyclical-oriented capital to work.Our purpose here is not to scare investors when a number of markets are in duress and already in a bear market. We have been sending these warning shots4 since last summer5 all the way until the recent SPX February peak. Now that we have reached the proverbial “riot point” we would recommend taking a cold shower and keeping calm and collected in order to put things into perspective as one of our mentors would always do in tumultuous times.Importantly, investors with higher risk tolerance should be buying into this weakness and start to deploy long-term oriented capital. We cannot time the bottom, but future returns will be handsome from current SPX levels. As a reminder, S&P 500 futures fell to 2394 which is a whopping 1000 points below the February 19, 2020 high of 3393.This drubbing blew past our most bearish SPX estimate of 2544,6 pushing the SPX from overvalued to undervalued overnight. In fact, the forward P/E has fallen to one standard deviation below the historical time trend (Chart 4). Chart 4From Overvalued To Undervalued Our sense is that we will avoid a GFC type collapse, and thus investors with higher risk tolerance should start putting long-term cash to work as “there is blood in the streets”.Recapping the sequence of recent events is instructive. Two Fed officials (Clarida and Evans) made a huge error in our view by relaying that the Fed should stand pat and refrain from cutting rates. This culminated in a Powell press release that the Fed is ready to act, basically canceling these misplaced statements from the two Fed officials.Following these communication whipsaws, G7 finance ministers and central bankers held a conference call and then, the Fed panicked and cut rates inter-meeting further fueling the blazing fire. Now the Fed is cornered and has to act anew and further cut the fed funds rate (FFR) on March 18 all the way down to the zero lower bound. As a reminder, the last time the markets fell roughly 20% in late-2018 it took the Fed seven months to cut rates, this time it happened a mere two trading days after the market had a near 16% decline from the February peak.All of this bred uncertainty and a bond market spasm. There is little doubt we are in recession. The 10-year US Treasury yield plunging below 0.4% has fully discounted a recession, 100bps of Fed cuts and QE5 in our view.Keep in mind that the bond market now knows the Fed will cut the FFR to zero and eventually resort to QE, so it really front runs the Fed. This is something the bond market never anticipated or discounted on the eve of the Great Financial Crisis.While it is definitely true that interest rate cuts and further QE will neither cure COVID-19 nor reverse work-related disruptions, the Fed has to act and cut interest rates and restart QE for three reasons:a) to instill confidence that it is doing something and it is not a bystander,b) to loosen financial conditions as the VIX at a recent high near 76 and a more than doubling in junk spreads are screaming “help” (Chart 5), andc) to jawbone the US dollar lower.Our sense is that the fixed income market hit an inflection point for stocks when the 10-year US Treasury yield breeched the 1.5% mark: the correlation between stocks and bond yields quickly snapped from negative to positive. Based on recent empirical evidence, stocks cannot stomach a 10-year US Treasury yield above 3%, and suffer indigestion below 1.5% (Chart 2). Crudely put, while lower yields act as a shock absorber for equities (via lifting the forward P/E multiple), below a breaking point they warn of a deflationary shock. Thus, we would view an eventual return of the 10-year US Treasury yield near the 1.5% as a positive sign for stocks. Chart 5Watching Spreads The other shock two weekends ago was the deflationary oil market spiral out of the OPEC meeting in Vienna where a fight apparently erupted between the Saudis and the Russians with regard to rebalancing the oil markets and resulted in $30/bbl oil. The timing could not have been worse. Oil related capex will fall off a cliff given the looming bankruptcies in the US shale oil patch (bottom panel, Chart 5) and that makes a fiscal package from the US even more pressing.We deem that only a mega fiscal package comparable to the $750bn TARP will definitively stop the hemorrhaging. A comprehensive fiscal package close to $1tn in order to deal with the aftermath of the corona virus would mark a bottom in the equity market.Health care stocks will benefit both from a fiscal package and from the corona virus pandemic automatic rise in demand for health care services and goods. Thus, this week we reiterate our overweight stance in the health care sector and make a small shift to our sub-sector positioning.Continue To Hide In Health Care…We recommend investors continue to take refuge in health care stocks within the defensive universe as the coronavirus pandemic unfolds. The S&P health care sector relative share price ratio recently bounced off the one standard deviation below the historical time trend line and is primed to vault higher in coming quarter (Chart 6). Chart 6Health Care Shines In Recessions If severe government measures are a prerequisite to stop the spread of the virus then growth will suffer a massive setback. Were President Trump to take draconian measures similar to what the Italian Prime Minister imposed recently and effectively shut down the country, then PCE will collapse.In fact, PCE excluding health care will take a beating. Health care outlays will rise both in absolute terms and relative to overall spending (Chart 7). Given the safe haven status of the S&P health care index and the stable cash flows these businesses command, when growth is scarce, investors flock to any source of growth they can come by and health care stocks definitely fit that bill.Not only is firming demand reawakening health care stocks that have been trading at a discount to the broad market owing to political uncertainty, but also their defensive stature is a heavily sought after attribute during recessions (Chart 6). Chart 7Upbeat Demand Profile… Chart 8…Will Boost Selling Prices And Sales Inevitably, demand for health care goods and services will rise in the coming weeks straining the US health care system, as the number of infections increases. This will sustain industry selling price inflation and underpin revenue growth at a time when the world will be deflating (Chart 8).The implication is an earnings-led durable health care sector outperformance phase, a message that our relative macro EPS growth model is forecasting for the rest of the year (Chart 9).Importantly, such a rosy outlook is neither discounted in relative forward sales nor profit growth expectations for the coming year and we would lean against such pessimism (third panel, Chart 10). Chart 9Macro Profit Growth Model Says Buy Chart 10Unloved And Under-owned Finally, valuations and technicals are both flashing green. On a forward P/E basis health care stocks still trade at a 15% discount to the broad market and momentum is washed out offering a compelling entry point for fresh capital.In sum, in times of malaise investors flock to defensive health care stocks, that are currently direct prime beneficiaries of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.Bottom Line: We reiterate our overweight recommendation in the largest market capitalization weighted defensive sector in the SPX, the S&P health care sector.Upgrade Pharma To NeutralLift the S&P pharmaceuticals index to neutral from underweight for a modest loss of -1% since inception.A structurally downbeat pricing power backdrop was the primary driver of our bearish call on the S&P pharma index as both sides of the political aisle were out to get Big Pharma (bottom panel, Chart 11). This portfolio position was up double digits since inception, but it has given back almost all the gains recently since the coronavirus pandemic took stage a few weeks ago.While our thesis has not changed, we do not want to be bearish any health care related equities in times of a health epidemic. In addition, there is a chance that one of these behemoths discovers a compound to beat the virus and could serve as a catalyst for a sharp reversal of the downtrend.Importantly, from an operating perspective, margins appear to have troughed following 15 years of declines (middle panel,Chart 11). Now that inadvertently demand for medicines will surge, sales and profits will expand smartly (third & bottom panels, Chart 12). Chart 11It No Longer Pays To Be Bearish Chart 12Firming Demand As a result of the coronavirus pandemic, we deem pharma factories will start to hum reversing the recent contraction in pharmaceutical industrial production (second panel, Chart 12).From a macro perspective, layoffs are inevitable from the coronavirus catalyzed recession and a softening labor market bodes well for defensive pharma profits (bottom panel, Chart 12).The collapse in the February global manufacturing PMI, primarily driven by China, is a window into what the future holds for developed market (DM) PMIs. DMs will feel the coronavirus aftermath in the current month and likely sustain downward pressure on the global manufacturing PMI print. Historically, relative forward profits and the global manufacturing PMI have been inversely correlated and the current message is to expect catch up phase in the former (global PMI shown inverted, middle panel, Chart 13).Moreover, the same rings true for the ultimate macro indicator, the US dollar. A rising greenback reflects global growth ills and a safe haven bid in times of duress as investors park their money in the reserve currency of the world. Therefore, defensive pharma relative forward EPS enjoy a positive correlation with the US dollar, and the path of least resistance remains higher (bottom panel, Chart 13).Finally, relative valuations are hovering near one standard deviation below the historical mean and technicals have returned back to the neutral zone underscoring that it no longer pays to be bearish pharma stocks (Chart 14). Chart 13Macro Backdrop Is Favorable Chart 14Value Has Been Restored Adding it all up, surging demand for pharmaceuticals, firming operating metrics, cheap relative valuations, an appreciating greenback along with the drubbing in the global manufacturing PMI, all signal that an underweight stance is no longer warranted in pharma equities.Bottom Line: Lift the heavyweight S&P pharma index to neutral today, for a modest loss of -1% since inception. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: BLBG: S5PHAR – JNJ, MRK, PFE, BMY, LLY, ZTS, AGN, MYL, PRGO. Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategistanastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes1 https://school.stockcharts.com/doku.php?id=index_symbols:bpi_symbols2 https://schrts.co/IfrNQmIu3 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Daily Report, “Gravitational Pull” dated March 12, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.4 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “A Recession Thought Experiment” dated June 10, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.5 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Special Report, “What Goes On Between Those Walls? BCA’s Diverging Views In The Open” dated July 19, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.6 Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “From "Stairway To Heaven" To "Highway To Hell"?” dated May 2, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.Current RecommendationsCurrent TradesStrategic (10-Year) Trade RecommendationsSize And Style ViewsJune 3, 2019Stay neutral cyclicals over defensives (downgrade alert) January 22, 2018Favor value over growthMay 10, 2018Favor large over small caps (Stop 10%)June 11, 2018Long the BCA Millennial basket The ticker symbols are: (AAPL, AMZN, UBER, HD, LEN, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, TSLA, V).
Highlights The S&P 500 is in a bear market, and a recession appears to be inevitable, … : The longest bull market in S&P 500 history succumbed last week to the Saudi-Russia oil war, the relentless drumbeat of spreading COVID-19 disruptions and the realization that it will take even worse market conditions to prompt a meaningful fiscal response. … but it is BCA’s view that the recession will be short, if sharp: Although our conviction level is low, and our view is subject to change as more information becomes available, we expect that the recession is much more likely to produce a V-bottom than a U-bottom. Pent-up demand will be unleashed once the coronavirus runs its course, stoked by monetary and fiscal stimulus initiatives around the world. Are central banks out of bullets?: We are not yet ready to embrace the most provocative idea that came up at our monthly View Meeting last week, but the question highlights the uncertainty that currently pervades markets. First, do no harm: What should an investor do now? Watch and wait. It is too early to re-risk a portfolio, but safe-haven assets are awfully overbought. Cash is worth its weight in gold right now, and those who have it should remember that they call the shots. Feature The S&P 500 entered a bear market last Thursday, bringing down the curtain on the longest US equity bull market in recorded history at just under 11 years.1 We are duly chastened by the misplaced bravado we expressed in last week’s report, which crumbled under the force of the ensuing weekend’s oil market hostilities between Saudi Arabia and Russia. We see the plunge in oil prices, and the looming spike in oil-patch defaults, bankruptcies and layoffs, as the straw that broke the camel’s back, ensuring a 2020 recession. Now that it has slid so far, we expect that the S&P 500 will generate double-digit returns over the next twelve months, but we do not believe that investors should be in any rush to buy. Wild oscillations are a sign of an unhealthy market, and stocks don’t establish a durable bottom while they are still experiencing daily spasms. The Fundamental Take (For What It’s Worth) We nonetheless believe that the recession will be fairly brief, even if it is sharp. The global economy was clearly turning around before the virus emerged, and the US economy was as fit as a fiddle. Data releases across February were decidedly positive, on balance, and the year-to-date data, as incorporated in the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model, pointed to robust first quarter growth in an economy that was firing on all cylinders (Chart 1). We continue to believe that most of the demand that goes missing across the first and the second quarters will not be lost for good, but will simply be deferred to the second half of this year and the beginning of next year. The coronavirus has brought an end to the expansion, but the US economy was in rude health before it was infected, and we expect it will make a full and swift recovery. Chart 1The First Quarter Had Been Shaping Up Really Well Chart 2Old Faithful That pent-up demand will be goosed by abundant monetary and fiscal stimulus. We expect that China and the US will take the lead, and will have the most impact on global aggregate demand, but that policymakers in other major economies will also lend a hand. Central banks in Australia, Canada and England have all cut rates in the last two weeks, and British policymakers took the boldest step, pairing last week’s rate cut with an immediate 30-billion-pound infusion of emergency spending, and a pledge to spend 600 billion pounds on infrastructure upgrades between now and 2025.2 Australia announced a plan to inject fiscal stimulus equivalent to about 1% of GDP Thursday morning, and Germany’s ruling party indicated a willingness to run a budget deficit to combat the virus.3 Our China Investment Strategy team notes that the Chinese authorities are already supporting domestic demand via aid to threatened businesses and out-of-work individuals, and are poised to open the infrastructure taps (Chart 2). Global aggregate demand is also set to receive a boost from the oil plunge, although it will arrive with a lag. Energy sector layoffs and the tightening in monetary conditions from wider bond spreads and marginally tighter bank lending standards will exert an immediate drag on activity. Once that drag fades, however, the positive supply-shock effects will take hold, helping households stretch their paychecks and non-energy businesses expand their profit margins. Although the effect of falling oil prices is mixed for the US now that fracking has made it a heavyweight oil producer, more economies are oil importers than exporters, and global growth is inversely related to oil price moves. We are keenly aware that markets are paying no attention whatsoever to economic data releases right now. They are backward-looking, after all, and fundamentals are not the driving force behind current market moves anyway. The data are useful, however, for evaluating the fundamental backdrop once the non-stop selling abates, as it eventually will. When it becomes important to take the measure of the economy and where it’s headed, investors will be able to make a more informed judgment if they have a good read on how the economy was doing before it was exposed to the virus (Chart 3). Chart 3Layoffs Are Coming, But They Hadn't Started By Early March Investment Strategy The near-term equity view was cautious when we held our View Meeting Wednesday morning before the open. No one thought investors should be in any hurry to buy, and while not everyone shared the bleakest S&P 500 downside estimate of 2,400 (well within sight now), no one suggested that the index had already bottomed. One participant made the case for a negative 10-year Treasury yield, but we still have little appetite for Treasuries as a house. We expect the 10-year yield will be higher in twelve months than it is now, if perhaps only modestly. We like equities' 12-month prospects, but they may have to decline some more before Congress joins hands and puts a floor under them. For anyone expecting US fiscal stimulus to bail out the markets, our geopolitical team sounded a note of caution. A recession is kryptonite for incumbent presidential candidates, and the more the virus squeezes the economy, the greater the Democrats’ chances of capturing the White House and the Senate. Our Geopolitical Strategy service fully expects that Democrats will eventually agree to a sizable spending package, but only after allowing the situation to deteriorate some more. As long as they don’t look like they’re putting party concerns ahead of the nation’s welfare, they can dent the president’s re-election prospects by waiting to throw a lifeline to the economy and financial markets. The administration’s initial proposal, as alluded to in the president’s prime-time Oval Office address on Wednesday night, fell way short of what the market sought. Its small-bore items seemed woefully inadequate to stem the tide, and raised the unsettling prospect that the fiscal cavalry might fail to ride to the rescue because the administration didn’t think it needed to be summoned. The good news for markets is that governments get an almost unlimited number of do-overs.4 The first iteration’s failure ensures that the second will be more ambitious, and if that fails, the third iteration will be even bigger. Thank You, Sir, May I Have Another? News of disruptions to economic activity, and daily life, in the United States piled up last week. Colleges closed their gates en masse for what remains of the academic year; concerts and music festivals were cancelled; the NCAA basketball tournament was initially closed to fans, then cancelled altogether; and all of the major North American professional sports leagues have suspended their seasons. In many instances, city and state ordinances banning mass gatherings forced sports franchises’ and concert promoters’ hands. The relentless drumbeat of bad news did markets no favors, and it surely did not help business or consumer confidence as broadcasters, hotels, restaurants, bartenders, taxi drivers and arena staff totted up their lost income. Today’s pain may be tomorrow’s gain, however. While draconian measures weigh on peoples’ spirits and crimp economic activity in the immediate term, they increase the chances of limiting the virus’ spread and mitigating its ultimate effect. As our Global Investment Strategy colleagues have pointed out, there is a trade-off between health and growth. Bulking up health safeguards unfortunately involves some growth sacrifices. Are Central Banks Out Of Bullets? Chart 4If At First You Don't Succeed, ... The most provocative line of argument in last week’s firm-wide discussion was the idea that the coronavirus is a bit of a red herring, and that the true driver of the global market selloff is the failure of the policy put. That’s to say that the efficacy of, and the belief in, central banks’ ability to shore up markets and the economy has crumbled. So far, this round of emergency rate cuts has failed to stem the flow of red on Bloomberg terminals and television screens (Chart 4). Spending plans have underwhelmed as well, with British, Australian and Japanese equities all fizzling following the announcement of fiscal stimulus measures. The end of markets’ monetary policy era would mark a major inflection point, if not a full-on regime change. We are hesitant to make such a sweeping declaration now, however. As one of our colleagues put it in making the case for further declines in rates, the golden rule of investing is never to lean against a primary trend. Positioning for an end to central banks’ influence on markets would mean going against 33 years of history that began with the Fed’s post-Black Monday statement affirming its “readiness to serve as a source of liquidity to support the economic and financial system.” Central bankers are neither omniscient nor omnipotent, but there’s a reason why You can’t fight the Fed became a cherished truism. It affects the real economy when it turns its policy dials. If monetary stimulus is aligned with fiscal stimulus, as it just might be next week, it can make for a potent cocktail. A devotee of the Austrian School of Economics may grind his or her teeth to dust over the endless intervention in markets, but the results are popular with the public and elected officials, and we can expect that they’ll continue over most professional investors’ relevant timeframes. Public officials will let go of the Debt Supercycle controls only when they’re pried out of their cold, dead hands. What Now? It feels like it was a month ago, but just last week we were of the view that a correction was more likely than a bear market. As we wrote then: We remain constructive on risk assets because we think the selling has gotten overdone. There may well be more of it, and the S&P 500 could reach its 2,708.92 bear-market level before we can publish again next Monday, but we will be buying it in our own account all the way there. Compounding our embarrassment and regret, we actually did buy shares in a SIFI bank on Tuesday as they approached their tangible book value. Markets were unimpressed with the initial monetary salvo, but there's more where that came from (and some fiscal artillery, too). We have learned our lesson and will wait before committing any more capital. We have also learned our lesson about “overdone selling.” Despite the dramatic gap between the S&P 500 and its 200-day moving average (Chart 5), every single sale over the last three weeks has proven to be a good one. Cutting one’s losses is a deservedly celebrated portfolio management rule, and we cannot object to any client who wants to take some exposure off the table. Chart 5The Equity Selloff Has Become Extreme We have little love for the havens that have already spiked, like gold, Treasuries, utilities and makers and sellers of hand sanitizer, disinfectant wipes and surgical masks. Insurance in the form of index puts is bracingly expensive. Our preferred way of taking advantage of the massive market disruption (Chart 6 and Table 1) is to write out-of-the money puts on individual stocks at strike prices where we’d be happy to own them. With the VIX in the 50s, much less the 60s or 70s, an investor writing puts 10% out of the money on a range of S&P 500 constituents5 can get paid double-digit annualized returns in exchange for agreeing to get hit down 10% between now and March 20th or April 17th. Chart 6Selling Insurance Looks More Appealing Than Buying It Right Now Table 1One Week, Two Historic Declines We recognize that not every investor has discretion to write puts, and it is not something to be done lightly in any event. The compensation is so high because it is a contractual agreement to buy stock in a relentlessly falling market. (Options only confer a right to transact for their buyers; they’re an iron-clad obligation to transact for their sellers.) Our species’ cognitive biases being what they are, however, we like the strapped-to-the-mast feature of writing puts because it commits an investor to following through on a course of action s/he decided upon before price declines had a chance to shake his/her resolve. It is one thing to have said that one would buy a 35-dollar stock if it ever got to 18, and quite another to follow through now that it’s gone from 35 to 21 in short order. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The bull market began on March 10, 2009, at 676.53, and ended February 19, 2020, at 3,386.15. Its 400% advance was achieved at an annualized rate of 15.8%. 2 Nominal 4Q19 UK GDP was about 560 billion pounds. 3 Believe it or not, this is kind of a big deal for Berlin. 4 As we were going to press, it looked as if House Democrats and the administration were nearing agreement on a package to protect vulnerable workers and small businesses, while the combined private- and public-sector efforts outlined in the Rose Garden suggested that the US might be capable of stemming the spread of the virus soon. 5 Type [ticker]-F8-PUT into Bloomberg for the full menu of maturities and strike prices for any given stock. The annualized return for writing the put is equal to the option premium divided by the strike price, multiplied by (360/the number of days until expiration). For near-month contracts, if the premium is around 1% of the strike, the annualized return on the notional capital committed is 10%.
Feature “People have been asking me whether this is the time to buy. My answer is more nuanced: it’s probably a time to buy.” Howard Marks, Oaktree Capital, Monthly Memo March 2020 Markets have moved dramatically since we published our Monthly Portfolio Update on March 2. Global stocks have fallen by 27% since then. The 10-year US Treasury yield fell from 1.2% to 0.4% before rebounding to 0.8%. And there have been some strange market moves: the US dollar fell then rebounded, and the classic safe haven, gold, has fallen by 7%. Investors are struggling with how to think about this environment, and how to position. Chart 1Risk Assets Should Bottom When New Ex-China Cases Peak Table 1US Healthcare Is Top Quality Our view has not greatly changed. We still believe that risk assets will bottom around the time when global COVID-19 cases peak. They showed signs of a rebound when cases in China peaked on February 13. And they started their recent crash when ex-China cases began to accelerate dramatically (Chart 1). It is likely – and well anticipated – that there will be a sharp rises in cases in the US (and probably the UK and Canada too) over the coming two or three weeks. It is wrong to think, though, that the US is particularly badly prepared for this. The US has a high standard of healthcare, with many more intensive-care beds per person than other developed countries (Table 1) – though it is worrying that some 20% of the US population is uninsured. We see two possibilities for how the pandemic will pan out in coming weeks: The US is the last big cluster and new cases peak there in early April. This causes a two-quarter recession. But if COVID-19 turns out to be seasonal (it has not spread much in hot countries such as Singapore, or in the southern hemisphere where it is now summer – Chart 2) and by April and May it peters out. US consumers stop going out for a while (the professional hockey, basketball, and soccer seasons have been put on hold) and so demand falls. Typically, stocks fall by 25-30% in a recession of this type (Table 2) – and so this is already close to being discounted. There are no longer-term impacts, and soon the world economy is getting back close to normal. Chart 2Will Hot Weather End The Pandemic? Table 2Peak-To-Trough Falls In Equities In Bear Markets The pandemic continues for months. Governments are able to slow contagion via social distancing in order to spread out the pressure on their health services over a longer period. But ultimately one-half to two-thirds of the world’s population gets the disease and the death rate among those people is 0.7% (the rate in Korea, which extensively tested for the virus and has a good medical system). This means worldwide deaths of about 20 million, disproportionately concentrated among the over-70-year-olds and those with chronic illnesses (Chart 3). The disease could spread to poor countries, such as India and Africa, where healthcare services would not be able to cope. The global economy would slow significantly, causing a severe recession. There would be second-round effects: for example, a blow-up in the US corporate credit markets, where debt is already high as a percentage of GDP (Chart 4), which could cause banks to drastically tighten lending conditions. This could cause problems with foreign-currency EM borrowers. It could trigger another euro zone crisis, as banks in southern Europe prove unable to cope with rising defaults. In this scenario, the peak-to-trough decline in global equities could be 40-50%. Chart 3COVID-19 Mostly Kills Old And Sick People Chart 4US Corporate Debt Is A Vulnerability In our last Monthly, we talked about the usefulness of a Bayesian approach in this sort of uncertain environment. We ascribed a “prior” probability of 10-20% for the latter scenario. The probability has now risen, to perhaps 25%. Chart 5Close To Capitulation But the potential upside from Scenario 1) is considerable. Central banks around the world are throwing everything at the problem. Countries from the UK and Italy, to Japan and Australia have rolled out big fiscal packages this week. The key now is what will the US do. How positively would markets react if the US in coming days scripted a coordinated announcement, with the Fed cutting rates to zero, and the White House and Congress agreeing an $800 billion fiscal package. The Fed is likely to do this – indeed the market is pricing in the Fed Funds Rate at zero by the next FOMC meeting on March 18. The dynamics of fiscal stimulus are more complicated – the Democrats don’t want to give President Trump a boost that will help his election prospects, but they don’t want to be seen to be obstructive in a time of emergency either.1 So what should investors do? We have been tempted in recent days to lower our Overweight recommendation on equities, which has evidently proved wrong, to Neutral. But we fear it is too late to do this, particularly with equities having fallen by 15% over the past two days. There is probably still some downside. We would now look for signs of a bottoming-out, most notably the peak in new COVID-19 cases outside China, but also evidence of capitulation by investors (Chart 5). Moreover, we would pay attention to potential upside surprises (in addition to a Fed/White House/Congress joint package, maybe a making-up between Russia and Saudi Arabia on oil production cuts). In the meantime, when markets move as violently as they have, often the baby gets thrown out with the bathwater. There are many individual securities, in both debt and equity markets, that look very attractively valued now. For example, we see a lot of attraction in high-dividend-yield stocks, which might appeal to investors who no longer see the point of investing in government bonds, where the upside – even in a severe recession – is likely to be very limited. Table 3 shows a screening of large-cap stocks in developed markets with a dividend yield of more than 10%, taken from BCA Research’s ETS quants screening service. While many of these are in the Energy sector (where the price/book ratio is now below the lows of 2008 and 2015 – Chart 6), quality names among European Financials and Asia Industrials are also prominent. Table 3Stocks With Dividend Yield Above 10% Chart 6Energy Sector Valuation At Record Low For investors who want to remain risk-off, we would not recommend government bonds as a hedge. It is notable that the Swiss 10-year government bond yield has not fallen in the recent melt-down. They are simply at their theoretical lower bound. German Bunds must be close. The Fed has been clear that it will not cut policy rates below zero, which means that the lower limit for US Treasurys is probably around 0% too. Even in the severest recession, therefore, the upside for Treasurys is limited to 9% (Table 4). This means returns are likely to be very asymmetrical since, in a rebound in risk appetite, yields could rise sharply. Table 4Little Upside From Government Bonds We prefer cash as a hedge. This gives investors dry powder for use when they do want to reenter risk assets. We have been recommending gold, and it will probably continue to serve as a safe haven in the event of our most pessimistic scenario happening. But it looks very overbought in the short term (Chart 7) – as demonstrated by the way that it has recently been correcting even on days when equities fall. TIPS offer a better hedge than nominal bonds, given how low inflation expectations have fallen – the 5-year/5-year forwards now point to CPI inflation in 2025-2030 averaging 1.5% (Chart 8). This implies – highly unrealistically – that the Fed will miss its 2% PCE inflation target by 1 percentage point a year over that period. Chart 7Gold Is Overbought Chart 8Inflation Expectations Unrealistically Low Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Chief Global Asset Allocation Strategist garry@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Geopolitical Strategy, Weekly Report, "GeoRisk Update: Leap Year, Or Steep Year?" available at gps.bcaresearch.com.
We ran a simple exercise: what would be the deterioration in the US interest coverage ratio assuming that the EBITDA suffers the typical decline experienced in a post-war recession. As the above chart highlights, the deterioration would be substantial, but…
A positive side effect of the collapse in bond yields is the plunge in mortgage rates. The fall in borrowing costs has caused a spike in mortgage applications, driven by refinancing activity. While a spike in applications for purchases would have been…
The S&P materials sector is massively oversold relative to the S&P 500, while our valuation index is at a large discount to its normal relationship to the broad market. Moreover, its forward EPS breadth and relative EPS revision ratio are deeply…
Highlights The path of least resistance for the DXY remains up. The internal dynamics of financial markets remain constructive for the DXY. We explore more key indicators to complement the analysis in our February 28 report. Our limit buy on NOK/SEK was triggered at parity. We were also stopped out of our long petrocurrency basket trade, which we will re-establish in the coming weeks. Feature Riot points in capital markets usually elicit a swathe of differing views. But more often than not, the internal dynamics of financial markets usually hold the key to a sober view. Given market action over the past few weeks, we are reviewing a few of the key indicators we look at for guidance on buying opportunities as well as false positives. In short, it is a story of standing aside on the DXY for now, while taking advantage of a few opportunities at the crosses. Currency Market Indicators Chart I-1The Dollar Has Scope To Rise Further Many currency market signals continue to point to a higher DXY index for the time being. One of our favorite risk-on/risk-off pairs is the AUD/JPY cross. Not surprisingly, it tends to correlate very strongly with the dollar, which is a counter-cyclical currency. The AUD/JPY cross has consistently bottomed at the key support zone of 70-72 since the financial crisis. This defensive line held notably during the European debt crisis, China’s industrial recession, and more recently, the global trade war. The latest market moves have nudged it decisively lower (Chart I-1). This pins the next level of support in the 55-57 zone, at par with the recessions of 2001 and 2008. The yen appears headed towards 100. A rising yen is usually accompanied by a dollar rally against other procyclical currencies. Outside of the Fukushima crisis, this was a key indicator that the investment environment was becoming precarious (Chart I-2). We laid out our conviction last week as to why we thought 100 is the resting spot for the yen.1 That said, in our trades, our 104 profit target for short USD/JPY was hit this week. We are reinstating this trade with a target of 100, but tightening the stop to 105.4. Chart I-2The Yen Rally Usually Stalls At 100 The recent drop in the dollar is perplexing to most, but it fits the profile of most recessions we have had in recent history. As the world’s reserve bank, the Federal Reserve tends to be the most proactive during a crisis. This means US interest rates drop faster than in the rest of the world, which tends to pressure the dollar lower. Eventually, as imbalances in the economic system come home to roost, the dollar rallies (Chart I-3). 62% of global reserves are still in dollars, suggesting it remains the currency of choice in a crisis. Currencies such as the Norwegian krone and Swedish krona that were already quite cheap are still selling off indiscriminately. Granted, the Norwegian krone has been hit especially hard due to the fallout of the OPEC cartel. But the Swedish krona and Australian dollar that were equally cheap are selling off as well. This suggests the currency market is making a binary switch from fundamentals to sentiment, as we highlighted last week. Chart I-3The Dollar And ##br##Recessions Chart I-4Carry Trades: Long-Term Bullish, Short-Term Cautious Correspondingly, high-beta currencies such as the RUB/USD, ZAR/USD and BRL/USD are plunging into uncharted territory. These currencies are usually good at sniffing out a change in the investment landscape, specifically one becoming precarious for carry trades. The message so far is that the drop in US bond yields may not have been sufficient to make these currencies attractive again (Chart I-4). On a similar note, it is interesting that the USD/CNY is still holding near the 7-defense line. We suggested in a previous report that this represented a handshake agreement between President Xi and President Trump during the trade negotiations. Should USD/CNY break decisively above 7.15 (for example, if Trump’s reelection chances dwindle), it will send Asian currencies into the abyss. The velocity of asset price moves is both surprising and destabilizing. At this rate, previously solvent countries can rapidly step into illiquid territory, especially those with already huge levels of external debt. Granted, this is more a problem for emerging markets than for G10 currencies. So far, it is encouraging that cross-currency basis swaps for the dollar (a measure of currency hedging costs) remain muted (Chart I-5). Chart I-5Hedging Costs Remain Contained In a nutshell, the message from currency markets warns against shorting the DXY for now. Bottom Line: Our profit target on short USD/JPY was hit at 104 this week. We are reinstating this trade with a new target of 100 and a stop-loss at 105.4. Currency market dynamics suggest the DXY is headed higher in the near term. The Message From Equity And Commodity Markets Equity and commodity market indicators continue to suggest the path of least resistance for the DXY remains up over the next few weeks. Since the 2009 lows, the S&P 500 has respected a well-defined upward-sloped trend line, characterized by a series of higher highs and lows. Given this defense line has been tested (and broken), it could pin the S&P 500 around 2200-2400 (Chart I-6). A further drop of this magnitude is likely to unravel financial markets as stop losses are triggered and reinforced selling is supercharged. Non-US equity markets have a much higher concentration of cyclical stocks in their bourses. Thus, whenever cyclical sectors are underperforming defensives at the same time as non-US markets are underperforming US ones, it is a clear sign that the marginal dollar is rotating towards the US (in this case fixed income). During the latest downdraft, what has been clear is that cyclical (and non-US) markets have been underperforming from already oversold levels (Chart I-7A and Chart I-7B). As contrarian investors, we tend to view this development positively, but catching a falling knife before eventual capitulation can also be quite painful. Chart I-6A Break Below The Defense Line Is Bearish Chart I-7ANot A Bullish Configuration For Cyclical Currencies Chart I-7BNot A Bullish Configuration For Cyclical Currencies The 2015-2016 roadmap was instructive on when such a capitulation might occur. Even as the market was selling off, certain cyclical sectors such as industrials started to outperform defensives ones (Chart I-8). So far, it appears that selling pressure in cyclical markets have not yet been exhausted. Chart I-8Equity Market Internals Are Worrisome In commodity markets, the copper-to-gold and oil-to-gold ratios continue to head lower from oversold levels. Together with the fall in government bond yields, it signifies that the liquidity-to-growth transmission mechanism is impaired (Chart I-9). The speed and magnitude of the latest drop could signify capitulation, but since the European debt crisis there has been ample time to catch the upswings, since they tend to be powerful and durable. Earnings revisions continue to head lower across all markets. Bottom-up analysts are usually spot on about the direction or earnings. Not surprisingly, the downgrades have been driven by emerging markets, meaning that return on capital will be lower in cyclical bourses. Chart I-9Commodity Market Internals Are Worrisome A selloff in equity markets has tended to occur in cycles. The speed and intensity of the first selloff usually wipes out stale longs, especially those that bought close to the recent market peak. It is fair to assume with yesterday’s selloff that the process is near complete. The next wave comes from medium-term investors, making a judgment call on whether they are at the cusp of a recession. Unfortunately, this phase usually involves a cascading selloff with capitulation only evident a few weeks or months later. The fact that cheap and deeply oversold currencies like the Norwegian krone and Australian dollar are still falling suggests we are stepping into the second wave of selloffs. What remains peculiar about the dollar is that it continues to be whipsawed between relative fundamentals and sentiment. Bottom LIne: Equity market internals continue to suggest we have not yet hit a capitulation phase for pro-cyclical currencies. Stand aside on the DXY for now. On Interest Rates, The Euro, And Petrocurrencies Chart I-10The Bear Case For The US Dollar What remains peculiar about the dollar is that it continues to be whipsawed between relative fundamentals and sentiment. For example, interest rate differentials across much of the developed world have risen versus the dollar, in stark contrast with the drop in their exchange rates (Chart I-10). The risk is that as a momentum currency, a surge in the dollar triggers a negative feedback loop that tightens global financial conditions, reinforcing the same negative feedback loop. A few questions we have fielded this week have been in surprise to the rise in the euro. What has been remarkable is that the drop in Treasury yields has wiped out the carry from being long the dollar for a number of countries. For example, the German bund-US Treasury spread continues to collapse. The message is that at least initially, room for policy maneuvering remains higher at the Fed, which corroborates the market view of a disappointing European Central Bank meeting this week. A drop in oil prices is also a huge dividend on the European economy, which partly explains recent strength in the euro. Within this sphere of multiple moving parts, one key question is what to do with oil plays. Usually recessions are triggered by rising oil prices that impose a tax on the domestic economy. But rather, oil prices have fallen dramatically in recent weeks as the pseudo-alliance between Russia and OPEC appears to have broken down. Our commodity and geopolitical strategists believe that while some sort of resolution will ultimately be reached, the path of least resistance for oil prices in the interim is down, as market share wars are re-engaged.2 Risks to oil demand are now also firmly tilted to the downside. Oil demand tends to follow the ebb and flows of the business cycle. Transport constitutes the largest share of global petroleum demand, and the rising bans on travel will go a long way in curbing consumption (Chart I-11). Balance-of-payment dynamics also tend to deteriorate during oil bear markets. Altogether, these forces combine to become powerful headwinds for petrocurrencies. A fall in oil prices tends to be bullish for the US dollar. This is because falling oil prices reduce government spending in oil-producing countries, which depresses aggregate demand and leads to easier monetary policy. Meanwhile, a fall in oil prices also implies falling terms of trade, which further reduces the fair value of the exchange rate. Balance-of-payment dynamics also tend to deteriorate during oil bear markets. Altogether, these forces combine to become powerful headwinds for petrocurrencies. Chart I-11Oil Demand Will Collapse Further Chart I-12Resell CAD/NOK NOK Will Outperform CAD We were stopped out of our long petrocurrency basket trade for a small loss of 0.9% (on the back of a positive carry). We are standing aside on this trade for now. We were also stopped out of our short CAD/NOK trade which we are reinstating this week. Further improvement in Canadian energy product sales will require not only rising oil prices, but an improvement in pipeline capacity and a smaller gap between Western Canadian Select (WCS) and Brent crude oil prices. With the US shale revolution grabbing production market share from both OPEC and non-OPEC producing countries, the divergence between the WCS (and WTI) price of oil versus Brent is likely to remain wide (Chart I-12). Rebuy NOK/SEK Our limit buy on long NOK/SEK was triggered at parity this week. Relative fundamentals, especially from an interest rate perspective, still favor the cross. The cross has approached an important technical level, with our intermediate-term indicator signaling oversold conditions. Should the NOK/SEK pattern of higher lows and higher highs in place since the 2015 bottom persist, we should be on the cusp of a reversal (Chart I-13). Interest rate differentials continue to favor the NOK over the SEK (Chart I-14). Meanwhile, Norway mainland GDP growth continues to outpace that of Sweden. Chart I-13Rebuy NOK/SEK Rebuy NOK/SEK Chart I-14A Yield Cushion The risk to this trade is that we have not yet seen a capitulation in oil prices. This will largely be driven by geopolitics. But given that the cross is already trading near the 2016 lows in oil prices, this has already largely been priced in. We are placing a tight stop at 0.94 to account for volatility in the coming weeks. Housekeeping Our short CHF/NZD trade briefly hit our stop loss of 1.75. We are reinstating this trade today, with a new entry level of 1.74 and a stop-loss of 1.76. We were also stopped out of our short USD/NOK trade, and we will look to rebuy the krone in the near future. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled “Are Competitive Devaluations Next?”, dated March 6, 2020, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Special Report, titled “Russia Regrets Market-Share War?”, dated March 12, 2020, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the US have been positive: Nonfarm payrolls increased by 275 thousand and average hourly earnings grew by 3% year-on-year in February. The NFIB business optimism index ticked up to 104.5 in February. Core CPI grew by 2.4% year-on-year from 2.3% in February. The DXY index appreciated by 0.8% this week. Core inflation has consistently printed at or above 2% for the last two years, but with inflation expectations plunging to new lows, the February print is likely to mark an intermediate-term high in CPI. As a counter-cyclical currency, the DXY is likely to continue getting a bid in the near term, even if we get more aggressive stimulus from the Fed. Report Links: Are Competitive Devaluations Next? - March 6, 2020 The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar - February 28, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Recent data in the euro area have been mixed: GDP grew by 1% year-on-year in Q4 2019, from 0.9% in Q3. The Sentix investor confidence index plummeted to -17.1 from 5.2 in March. Industrial production grew by 2.3% month-on-month in January from a contraction of 1.8% in December. The euro appreciated by 0.5% against the US dollar this week. The European Central Bank (ECB) kept rates unchanged at its Thursday meeting but implemented measures that support bank lending to small and medium-sized enterprises and injected liquidity through longer-term refinancing operations. The ECB also introduced additional net asset purchases of EUR 120 billion until the end of the year. This will help ease financial conditions in the euro area, but until global demand picks up, the exodus of capital from cyclical European stocks could continue. Report Links: On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 On Money Velocity, EUR/USD And Silver - October 11, 2019 Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan have been negative: The current account surplus increased to JPY 612.3 billion from JPY 524 billion while the trade balance went into a deficit of JPY 985.1 billion from a surplus of JPY 120.7 billion in January. Machine tool orders contracted by 30.1% year-on-year in February. The outlook component of the Eco Watchers survey plummeted to 24.6 from 41.8. The Japanese yen appreciated by 2.2% against the US dollar this week. An increase in foreign investments boosted the current account surplus, helping offset the deficit in goods trade. The government announced a package totaling JPY 430.8 billion to support financing for small businesses squeezed by the virus. The sharp rally in the yen could begin to garner discussions from both the MoF and BoJ on further actions. Report Links: The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar - February 28, 2020 Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the UK have been negative: GDP growth was flat month-on-month in January. Industrial production contracted by 2.9% year-on-year in January, from a contraction of 1.8% the previous month. The total trade balance shrank to GBP 4.2 billion from GBP 6.3 billion in January. The British pound depreciated by 2.2% against the US dollar this week. The Bank of England (BoE) responded to the Covid-19 shock with an emergency rate cut of 50 basis points. This dovetailed with the government’s announcement of a GBP 30 billion stimulus package financed largely by additional borrowing. With the policy rate at 0.25%, the BoE has ruled out negative rates so further easing will likely come in the form of QE if rates go to zero. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 2019 United Kingdom: Cyclical Slowdown Or Structural Malaise? - Sept. 20, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Recent data in Australia have been negative: The Westpac consumer confidence index fell to 91.9 from 95.9 in February, a five-year low. National Australia Bank business confidence decreased to -4 from -1 while business conditions fell to 0 from 2 in February. Home loans grew by 3.1% month-on-month in January, from 3.6% the previous month. The Australian dollar depreciated by 3.9% against the US dollar this week. The Australian government joined other economies in announcing a stimulus package worth more than $15 billion that includes an extension of asset write-offs and measures to protect apprenticeships across the country. Reserve Bank of Australia Deputy Governor Debelle confirmed that the bank would consider quantitative easing if necessary. Report Links: On AUD And CNY - January 17, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 A Contrarian View On The Australian Dollar - May 24, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Recent data in New Zealand have been negative: Manufacturing sales grew by 2.7% quarter-on-quarter in Q4 2019. The preliminary ANZ business confidence numbers plummeted to -53.3 from -19.4 in March. Export intentions, at -21.5, hit an all-time low in March. Electronic card retail sales grew by 8.6% year-on-year in February, picking up from 4.2% in January. The New Zealand dollar depreciated by 1.9% against the US dollar this week. The government is planning a business continuity package that will be ready in coming weeks. Reserve Bank of New Zealand Governor Orr stated that the bank would consider unconventional policy such as negative rates, interest rate swaps, and large scale asset purchases only if policy rates hit the effective zero bound. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Place A Limit Sell On DXY At 100 - November 15, 2019 USD/CNY And Market Turbulence - August 9, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Recent data in Canada have been mixed: Average hourly earnings grew by 4.3% year-on-year and 30.3 thousand new jobs were added to the Canadian economy in February. Imports fell to CAD 49.6 billion, exports fell to CAD 48.1 billion, and the deficit in international merchandise trade swelled to CAD 1.47 billion in February. The Ivey PMI decreased to 54.1 from 57.3 on a seasonally-adjusted basis in February. The Canadian dollar depreciated by 3% against the US dollar this week. The petrocurrency sold off as oil plunged in its biggest decline since the Gulf War in 1991. Exports of motor vehicles and energy products were down, contributing to the widening deficit. Supply and demand factors are bearish for oil, which will put a floor under our long EUR/CAD trade. Report Links: The Loonie: Upside Versus The Dollar, But Downside At The Crosses Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Making Money With Petrocurrencies - November 8, 2019 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 There were scant data out of Switzerland this week: The unemployment rate remained flat at 2.3% in February. Foreign currency reserves increased to CHF 769 billion from CHF 764 billion in February while total sight deposits ticked up to CHF 598.5 billion from CHF 503.6 billion in the week ended March 6. The Swiss franc appreciated by 0.7% against the US dollar this week. The franc was driven by safe-haven flows at the beginning of the week but sold off as the market posted a tentative rally. Sight deposit and reserve data suggest the Swiss National Bank (SNB) intervened to keep EUR/CHF above the key 1.06 level. The ECB’s decision to hold rates will take some pressure off the SNB. Report Links: On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 Portfolio Tweaks Before The Chinese New Year - January 24, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Recent data in Norway have been negative: Headline CPI grew by 0.9% from 1.8% while the core figure grew by 2.1%, slowing from 2.9%, in February. Manufacturing output contracted by 1.4% month-on-month in January. The PPI contracted by 7.4% year-on-year in February, deepening the contraction of 3.9% the previous month. The Norwegian krone depreciated by 8.2% against the US dollar this week. As expected, the currency was hit hard by tumbling oil prices. The government is set to present emergency measures which will target bankruptcies and layoffs in sectors hit hard by Covid-19, such as airlines, hotels, and parts of the manufacturing industry. There may also be scope for the government to directly stimulate demand in the oil industry. Report Links: Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 On Oil, Growth And The Dollar - January 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 There were scant data out of Switzerland this week: The current account surplus shrank to SEK 39 billion from SEK 65 billion in Q4 2019. The Swedish krona depreciated by 3% against the US dollar this week. The Swedish government announced a SEK 3 billion supplementary budget bill to combat the shock from Covid-19, in addition to preexisting tax credits and an extra SEK 5 billion promised to local authorities in the upcoming spring mini-budget. Riksbank Governor Ingves emphasized the need to maintain liquidity via more generous terms for loans to banks or direct purchases of securities. A rate cut, however, does not seem to be on the table. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Highlights China is moving from virus containment to normalization and economic stimulus. The full weight of the virus panic is only now hitting the US public and has not yet peaked. The US – and western democracies in general – have the raw capabilities to manage the virus outbreak. The profile of global political risk is shifting as a result of the economic shock stemming from the virus. This implies that while equity markets are close to their bottom, they face more volatility. Feature Chart 1No Peak In New Cases Outside China China’s President Xi Jinping visited Wuhan, the epicenter of the coronavirus breakout that has triggered a global bear market, on March 10. While he did not declare outright victory over the virus, his symbolic visit reinforced the fact that China has drastically reduced the number of new daily cases both within and without Hubei province. Meanwhile the virus is spreading rapidly across the rest of the world (Chart 1). It is not clear if the outbreak and emergency response in the United States will follow the Italian or South Korean trajectory. The initial US response is not encouraging, but the US has latent institutional strengths. Either way the US is facing a tsunami of new cases in the very near term. Hence the panic among the American population can still escalate from here (Chart 2). Panic among households translates to a drop in economic activity that will ensure financial markets remain volatile, even if US equities are close to their bottom. Chart 2US Public Panic Has Not Peaked Yet Can Democracies Manage The Crisis? Chart 3Developed Economies Have Better Health The question has become salient because of the poorly managed cordon sanitaire in Italy and the slow and halting initial reaction of the United States. Moreover, to distract from China’s domestic crisis, the Communist Party has turned up the volume of its propaganda organs, advertising the success of China’s draconian containment measures and warning that the virus cannot be contained if the rest of the world does not follow suit. However, it is not the case that the pandemic can only be managed through absolutist policies. To date, developed economies and democracies – including westernized countries like Japan – have the best record in the world of improving public health and reducing mortality from infectious diseases. This is apparent simply by looking at life expectancy for those aged 60. Europe and Japan have the longest lives beyond 60, including extension of life when dealing with late-life health problems, while other regions lag, including Asia. The United States is on the low end of the developed countries but still considerably better than emerging market economies at prolonging life, even for unhealthy elderly folks (Chart 3). Chart 4US Has Reduced Flu/Pneumonia Deaths Dramatically The United States, like other countries, has done battle with a range of infectious diseases over the course of its history – in which it was the leader in economic, scientific, and technological advancement. These include cholera and viral epidemics like smallpox, Yellow Fever, the Spanish Flu, and SARS. The death rate for influenza and pneumonia has generally declined since the 1950s, although a counter-trend increase is conceivable given what occurred in the 1980s-90s (Chart 4). The strategy that the US and developed economies have used, embodied in documents like the World Health Organization’s interim protocol for rapid operations to contain pandemics, is one of creating a containment zone with movement restrictions and a closely watched buffer zone in which a combination of anti-viral treatment and non-pharmaceutical treatment (e.g. social distancing) is employed. “Containment and isolation” strategies are generally successful even though they often fail to establish an impenetrable geographic cordon sanitaire, must rely on voluntary behavior, and will never receive total compliance. The survival instinct and social pressure are powerful enough to convince most individuals and households to keep their distance from others once they are informed of the risks. Targeted government measures by credible regimes with a monopoly on the use of force – in cases where strong restrictions are necessary – are effective. And in democracies they are kept in place only as long as necessary (the incubation period of the virus plus a few more weeks). Developed economies and democracies have the best record of improving public health and reducing mortality from infectious diseases. The overall effect is to “flatten the curve,” e.g. to slow the spread of the virus, and delay and reduce the peak intensity of the number of cases and burden on hospitals and doctors.1 Of course, nations need institutional capacity and leadership to deal with a pandemic and the indirect impacts on their economies, trade, and supply chains. When businesses grind to a halt, will households be able to get what they need? If not, civic order could break down. Supply security is a fundamental national interest and governments that cannot provide it risk a loss of legitimacy and control. Major nations devote extensive resources to building and maintaining internal lines of communication so that neither natural nor man-made disasters can stop them from ensuring security and essential goods and services. Europe and North America will ultimately deal with the crisis successfully. A look at some basic indicators and indexes of national capabilities shows which nations are best and worst positioned to meet the logistical and supply challenges of the virus’s economic shock: The US ranks close to Japan in logistical capabilities, while Italy ranks between these two and Iran, which is woefully lacking (Chart 5). Chart 5Italy Suffers From Logistic Weaknesses Italy resembles China in having significant supply chain vulnerabilities (Chart 6), including quality of infrastructure (Chart 7). Obviously China has made leaps and bounds, but interior regions are still underserviced. Clearly China has benefited from greater government authority and capacity relative to Italy. Chart 6US Supply Chains Are Resilient Chart 7US Infrastructure Is High-Quality Even when it comes to basic food security, Italy and China are more vulnerable than others (Chart 8). Yet China has kept food shortages to a minimum throughout the crisis. The US is large enough that different regions will have greater vulnerabilities when it comes to the health crisis. The National Health Security Preparedness Index shows California, Florida, Georgia, Texas, and Michigan are below the national average in the ability to execute countermeasures to health crises (Chart 9). Chart 8Food Security Risks Under Control In China Chart 9US: Regional Differences In Health Preparedness These institutional factors suggest that Europe and North America will ultimately deal with the crisis successfully, although in the near term the consequences are unpredictable. Italy’s experience has made it apparent to all nations that if the reproduction rate is not suppressed through containment and isolation, then the health system will be overwhelmed and the death rate will go up. But clearly this has nothing to do with Italy’s being a democracy, as neither Japan nor South Korea have had the same experience. Investment Conclusions The United States is moving more aggressively to mitigate the problem, beginning with President Trump’s ban on travel with continental Europe and declaration of a national emergency. With a bear market having occurred, and a recession likely, President Trump is losing the primary pillar of his reelection campaign. He will continue to make reflationary efforts to salvage the economy. He has announced $50 billion in emergency spending and a waiver on student debt loan payments worth as much as $85 billion. But he has also become a “crisis president.” This means that he may take dramatic, surprise actions that are market-negative in the short term in order to delay the spread of the virus. Emergency powers are extensive and he will utilize them not only to combat the pandemic but also to double down on the narrative that got him elected: closing off America’s borders and reducing its exposure to the risks of globalization. This can include the movement of people, from places other than China and continental Europe (already halted), and even capital flows. This is another reason to expect greater volatility in the near term despite the huge discounts on offer. We are not bottom-feeding yet. The profile of global political risk is shifting as a result of the virus and its economic shock. If Trump is seen as having mishandled the health and wellbeing of the nation, then he loses the election regardless of whether stimulus measures help the economy rebound by November. Whereas if he takes drastic, economically painful measures now to control the virus, and ultimately the virus subsides, there is still a slim chance he can win election. His approval rating, at an average of 45%, has lost its upward momentum but has not yet collapsed. Regardless of the election, the financial bloodbath should not obfuscate for investors the fact that the US is the world’s most advanced economy and longest continuously running constitutional republic. It has survived a total Civil War, two World Wars, a Great Depression, and countless outbreaks of disease. It has the ability to take emergency action and mitigate pandemics. This means that a great buying opportunity is just around the corner. The profile of global political risk is shifting as a result of the virus and its economic shock. The above should make it clear that the US and Italy face the most immediate ramifications – both are much more likely to see changes in ruling party over the next year than they were. Policy, however, will remain counter-cyclical (reflationary) regardless. Rogue regimes like Iran, Venezuela, and North Korea face renewed risks of regime failure and/or military confrontation with the US and its allies beginning in the immediate term, especially if President Trump becomes a clear “lame duck” in the coming months. Down the line, the Japanese, German, and French elections will be affected by the economic fallout of the virus scare. China and Russia face medium-term risks due to new difficulties in improving their populations’ quality of life. Their leaders and ruling parties have an authoritarian grip, but political risk will increase as a result of slower growth. China retains the ability to stimulate aggressively – which it is doing – but that will slow the reform and rebalancing process. Russia, meanwhile, faces another wave of internal devaluation if it does not call off its emerging market-share war with Saudi Arabia. Presidents Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping are likely to re-consolidate power by 2022, but they face much greater risks of domestic instability than they did before this year’s turmoil. Matt Gertken Vice President Geopolitical Strategist mattg@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Martin S. Cetron, “Quarantine, Isolation and Community Mitigation: Battling 21st Century Pandemics with a 14th Century Toolbox,” September 20, 2006, available at nationalacademies.org.