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Developed Countries

The French manufacturing sector has already suffered from the decline in global economic activity. However, the service sector continues to expand, despite the strikes that hit the country this winter. The outlook for the French service sector is…
Yesterday, the S&P 500 weakened by more than 3% and the Dow Jones fell a headline-grabbing 1032 points. Yet, investors remain very long US stocks, which leaves the market vulnerable. Instead, equity prices warrant a greater risk premium. The spread of…
Germany’s IFO business survey for February came out slightly stronger than expected, rising from 96 to 96.1. Germany is highly sensitive to both global trade and China, which should make the German economy a prime casualty of Covid-19. However, as we…
Yesterday, BCA Research's US Investment Strategy service assessed the near-term outlook for US consumption. Consumption depends on household income, the condition of household balance sheets, and households’ willingness to spend. The labor market remains…
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Boeing’s 737 MAX grounding, China’s looming slowdown on the back of the coronavirus epidemic and weak industry operating metrics, all warrant a downgrade alert in the US aerospace index. Red hot demand for defense capital goods, defense industrial production that is firing on all cylinders, enticing industry operating metrics and pristine balance sheets, all suggest that it still pays to be long the pureplay defense index. Recent Changes There are no changes to our portfolio this week. Table 1 Feature Equities remained untethered last week, and floated skyward to fresh all-time highs. The second panel of Chart 1 shows that from a technical perspective the SPX has returned close to the early-2018 blow-off top level, when the deviation from its 200-day moving average reached a zenith. Similarly, drilling beneath the surface the percentage of S&P 500 groups trading above their 50-day and 200-day moving averages in absolute terms is also running high (third panel, Chart 1). Investor complacency reigns supreme. The coronavirus scare lasted a few days and despite AAPL’s recent warning, which is likely the tip of the iceberg and other companies are slated to issue Q1 profit warnings, investors are ignoring all the bad news and piling into equities in general and teflon-tech stocks in particular. Keep in mind that 12-month forward profit growth remains positively correlated with the 10-year US treasury yield. The former crested in early 2020, predating the coronavirus epidemic (bottom panel, Chart 1). The end result is a new multiple expansion phase with the S&P 500 forward P/E clearing the 19 handle. Chart 1Dizzying Heights Such complacency transcends the equity market and spills over to the junk bond market. The hunt for yield remains intact and the Barclays US total return high yield index is following up the path of the SPX. Momentum is also tracking closely the broad equity market (top & middle panels, Chart 2). Nevertheless, we remain cautious. Last week we highlighted that the “tenuous trio” cannot go up indefinitely and a simultaneous rise in all three asset classes (stock prices, bond prices and the US dollar) typically portends an equity market crack.1 The big risk is that a surging greenback will short-circuit EPS growth and our worst case EPS scenario of -1% profit growth in calendar 2020 as we highlighted in mid-January will materialize.2 Worrisomely, while the S&P 500 made fresh all-time highs last week, the DXY came close to breaking above par, the VIX stayed stubbornly glued near 15 and gold bullion eclipsed $1,600/oz (third & bottom panels, Chart 2). Something has got to give. Meanwhile, Chart 3 updates our Corporate Pricing Power Indicator (CPPI) that recently came out of the deflation zone. This tick up in the CPPI coupled with still softening wage inflation have pushed our S&P 500 profit margin proxy slightly higher but still below the zero line, signaling that the margin contraction phase will likely run its course this year (bottom panel, Chart 3). Chart 2Spiking Greenback And Bullion Signal Trouble Chart 3Modest Profit Margin Improvement Drilling beneath the surface, our CPPI remains soft and vulnerable to a deflationary shock if the coronavirus epidemic severely wounds the global economy. As a reminder, we calculate industry group pricing power from the relevant CPI, PPI, PCE and commodity growth rates for each of the 60 industry groups we track. Table 2 also highlights shorter term pricing power trends and each industry's spread to overall inflation. Table 2Industry Group Pricing Power A bit less than half of the industries we cover are lifting selling prices by more than 1%, and 35% are outright deflating. Worrisomely, 60% of the sectors we cover fail to raise prices at a faster clip than overall inflation. With regard to pricing power trends, roughly half of the industries we cover are either flat or in a downtrend (Table 2). Gold bullion remains on top of our table climbing at a 22%/annum rate despite the greenbacks recent rise, and only five additional commodity-related industries made it to the top thirty (Table 2). Most of the commodity complex is deflating courtesy of the appreciating US dollar, and the recent coronavirus epidemic will definitely sustain the downward pressure on commodity inflation as demand will likely suffer a major setback. Importantly, defensive sectors still occupy half of the top ten spots, similar to our last update in October 2019. On the flip side, four of the bottom eight industries are commodity related, a trend we expect to pick up steam in the coming quarters. This week we update our views on the two industrials sub-groups that are moving in opposite directions. Put The Aerospace Index On Downgrade Watch We are compelled to put the pureplay aerospace subgroup (currently rated neutral) on downgrade alert. A little over four years ago, we split the aerospace & defense coverage into pureplay aerospace and pureplay defense, as the profit drivers of these two industries started to steeply diverge. True, the yet to be completed UTX acquisition of RTN will re-complicate matters, but we will continue to cover these two groups independently. From a technical perspective, a head and shoulders pattern has likely formed, warning that the next leg down will be a rather painful one, especially if support at current levels gives way (top panel, Chart 4). Boeing (BA) dominates the pureplay aerospace subgroup and sustained delays to recertify the 737 MAX have weighed heavily on share prices. While the FAA and other country air safety regulators may give the green light for flights to resume for Boeing’s workhorse commercial jetliner, consumers may be reluctant to board this plane given all the negative publicity. This remains a big risk to BA and thus to the aerospace index. Chart 4Prior To Coronavirus Epidemic… On the macro front, prior to the coronavirus epidemic, the global PMI was on the path to recovery with a plethora of countries climbing above the boom/bust line (middle & bottom panels, Chart 4). In China specifically, Bloomberg’s story count of China slowdown has returned to the historical lower band of this time series, at a time when BCA’s Chinese credit & fiscal easing impulses were ticking higher (second & third panels, Chart 5). Tack on the ongoing Chinese monetary easing, and factors were falling into place for a robust recovery in demand for US aerospace products (bottom panel, Chart 5). Chart 6 shows why China is so important to this industry. Not only is future commercial aircraft demand growth centered round China, but also China at the recent peak accounted for 15% of total US aerospace exports. In fact, aerospace exports to China tripled since the GFC. Chart 5…Macro Data Were Firming Chart 6China Matters Most To Aerospace Unfortunately, the coronavirus epidemic changes all the China-related calculus and will further dampen demand for aerospace products, at least in the near-term. Granted, US aerospace sales are already nosediving and so are operating profits. Industry new orders are in a freefall of late courtesy of the 737 MAX grounding and halt in production (second & third panels, Chart 7). As a result, profit margins have collapsed probing the Great Recession lows (bottom panel, Chart 7). Similarly, aerospace shipments have taken it to the chin and inventories are sky high, whereas backlogs are contracting, albeit mildly (top, middle and fourth panels, Chart 8). Worrisomely, aerospace industrial production ground to a halt last month, with the resource utilization rate gaping down a whopping 560bps on a month-over-month basis (second & bottom panels, Chart 8). Boeing’s production ails will likely remain in place for the next three months, and sustain the downward pressure on output growth and capacity utilization. All of this suggests that profits are in for a rough ride. Chart 7737 MAX Ills… Chart 8…Weighing Heavily Executives’ knee-jerk reaction has been to tap credit lines in order to fend off this profit contraction phase, which has pushed the industry’s leverage to the stratosphere. In fact, the aerospace industry’s 3.5x net debt-to-EBITDA reading is the highest since the history of the data set, even higher than the aftermath of the 9/11 induced recession Chart 9). Finally, valuations have skyrocketed, rising to over three standard deviations above the past four decade mean. In marked contrast, relative technicals are washed out, probing two decade lows (Chart 10). Chart 9Rapid B/S Degradation Chart 10Overvalued, But Oversold In sum, Boeing’s 737 MAX grounding, China’s looming slowdown on the back of the coronavirus epidemic and weak industry operating metrics, all warrant a downgrade alert in the US aerospace index. Bottom Line: We are awaiting a bounce before downgrading the US aerospace index to a below benchmark allocation. It is now on our downgrade watch list. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the pureplay US aerospace index are: BA, UTX, TDG, TDY, TXT, HEI, SPR, HEI.A. Defense Rules Unlike their aerospace brethren, pureplay defense stocks are on fire on multiple fronts, and we reiterate our cyclical and secular (ten-year time horizon) overweight recommendations.3 Defense industrial production (IP) surpassed the end of the Cold War highs and is now in uncharted territory. On a year-over-year rate of change basis IP is running over 7% or fifteen percentage points higher than aerospace IP (Chart 11). This is a remarkable feat as overall IP is contracting and the US is still fighting off a manufacturing recession. Meanwhile, relative defense performance is in a V-shaped recovery, whereas relative aerospace performance is moving down along the right side of a lambda formation (top panel, Chart 11). As we mentioned above, M&A activity is also boosting takeover premia and the reduction of defense stock supply is bullish for stock prices (Chart 12). Chart 11Defense Is The Mirror Image Of Aerospace Chart 12Supportive M&A Upbeat defense outlays underpin relative share prices. Given that a global arms race is ongoing, demand for weapons will remain robust for the duration of this decade according to SIPRI’s estimates (Chart 13). Importantly, defense capital goods new orders are flirting with all-time highs, industry backlogs are not far behind and defense related exports are running red hot (Chart 14). Chart 13Insatiable… Chart 14…Demand… Besides the global rearmament, a global space race along with the real threat of cyberattacks – especially on governments – underscores that defense companies are well positioned to benefit from these two additional sources of revenues for years to come. This firm demand backdrop is reflected in near double digit sales growth outshining the broad market by a factor of 2:1. The last time defense sales were growing so briskly was during the Iraqi war in the early 2000s (Chart 15). However, one key difference between now and 2002 is margins. Back then profit margins were falling in the aftermath of the 9/11 induced recession. Fast forward to today and profit margins have doubled even eclipsing non-financial corporate sector margins (Chart 15). Given the industry’s high operating leverage, robust top line growth will flow straight to the bottom line and sustain the earnings-led relative share price outperformance phase. Keep in mind that not only are non-financial corporate sector profits contracting, but the sell-side community also expects defense EPS to continue to deflate in the coming twelve months (fourth & bottom panels, Chart 15). This represents a low bar for the defense industry to surpass. Defense stocks also have a fortress of a balance sheet: the net debt-to-EBITDA ratio runs below the broad market and the interest coverage ratio trounces the overall market. Tack on a soaring return-on-equity, and there is a long runway ahead for pureplay defense stocks (Chart 16). Chart 15…Underpins Operating Metrics Finally on the relative valuation front, while defense stocks trade at a massive premium to the broad market on a P/B basis, they are changing hands at a discount on both an EV/EBITDA and P/E basis. Defense stocks also command a higher dividend yield compared with the non-financial corporate sector (Chart 17). If our thesis continues to pan out, we deem that defense stocks will grow into their pricey P/B valuations, similar to what happened during the MAD doctrine era of the 1960s.4 Chart 16Fortress Of A B/S Chart 17Far From Overvalued On Most Ratios Netting it all out, red hot demand for defense capital goods, defense industrial production that is firing on all cylinders, enticing industry operating metrics and pristine balance sheets, all suggest that it still pays to be long the pureplay defense index. Bottom Line: Stay overweight the pureplay defense index both on a cyclical and secular time horizon. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: LMT, RTN, NOC, GD, HII, AJRD, BWXT, CW, MRCY.   Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com     Footnotes 1     Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Will The Fed Save The Day, Again?” dated February 18, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2     Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Three EPS Scenarios”, dated January 13, 2020, available atuses.bcaresearch.com. 3    Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Special Report, “Top US Sector Investment Ideas For The Next Decade” dated December 16, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4    Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Special Report, “Brothers In Arms” dated October 31, 2016, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Strategic (10-Year) Trade Recommendations Size And Style Views June 3, 2019 Stay neutral cyclicals over defensives (downgrade alert)  January 22, 2018 Favor value over growth May 10, 2018 Favor large over small caps (Stop 10%) June 11, 2018 Long the BCA  Millennial basket  The ticker symbols are: (AAPL, AMZN, UBER, HD, LEN, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, TSLA, V).
Highlights The coronavirus is a wild card that may have a significant impact on the global economy, … : The COVID-19 outbreak is unfolding in real time, half a world away, and its ultimate course is uncertain. For now, our China strategists think the worst-case scenarios are unlikely, but we will not remain constructive if the virus outlook materially worsens. … but as long as there is not a significantly negative exogenous event, the US economy will be just fine, … : From a domestic perspective, the US expansion is in very good shape. Easy monetary conditions will support a range of activities, and a potent labor market will give increasing numbers of households the confidence and wherewithal to ramp up consumption. … and if there’s no recession, there will not be a bear market: Recessions and equity bear markets coincide, with stocks typically peaking six months ahead of the onset of a recession. If the next recession doesn’t come before late 2021/early 2022, the bull market should remain intact at least through the end of this year. What We Do US Investment Strategy’s stated mission is to analyze the US economy and its future direction for the purpose of helping clients make asset-allocation and portfolio-management decisions. As important as the economic backdrop is, however, we never forget that we are investment strategists, not economic forecasters. We don’t belabor the state of every facet of the economy because neither we nor our clients care about 10- to 20-basis-point wiggles in real GDP growth in themselves. They do want us to keep them apprised of the general trend, though, and we are always trying to assess it. Ultimately, macro analysis benefits investors by providing them with timely recognition of the approach or emergence of an inflection point in the cycles that matter most for financial assets. We view investment strategy as the practical application of the study of cycles, and we are continuously monitoring the business cycle, the credit cycle, the monetary policy cycle and the squishy and only sporadically relevant sentiment cycle. This week, we turn our attention to the business cycle, and the ongoing viability of the expansion, which is already the longest on record at 128 months and counting. If it remains intact, risk assets are likely to continue to generate returns in excess of returns on Treasuries and cash. The Message From Our Simple Recession Indicator We have previously described our simple recession indicator.1 It has just three components, and all three of them have to be sounding the alarm to conclude that a recession is imminent. Our first input is the slope of the yield curve, measured by the difference between the yield on the 10-year Treasury bond and the 3-month T-bill.2 The yield curve inverts when the 3-month bill yield exceeds the 10-year bond yield, and a recession has followed all but one yield curve inversion over the last 50 years (Chart 1). The yield curve inverted from May through September last year, and the coronavirus outbreak (COVID-19) has driven it to invert again, but the unprecedentedly negative term premium (Chart 2) has made the curve much more prone to set off a false alarm. Chart 1An Inverted Curve May Not Be What It Used To Be ... Chart 2... When A Negative Term Premium Is Holding Down Long Yields The indicator’s second input is the year-over-year change in the leading economic index (“LEI”). When the LEI contracts on a year-over-year basis, a recession typically ensues. As with the inverted yield curve, year-over-year contractions in the LEI have successfully called all of the recessions in the last 50 years with just one false positive (Chart 3). The LEI bounced off the zero line thanks to January’s strong reading, and the year-ago comparisons are much easier than they were last year, but we are mindful that it is flirting with sending a recession warning. Chart 3Leading Indicators Are Wobbly, ... It takes more than tight monetary conditions to make a recession, but you can't have one without them. To confirm the signal from the yield curve and the LEI and make it more robust, we also consider the monetary policy backdrop. Over the nearly 60 years for which BCA’s model calculates an equilibrium rate, every recession has occurred when the fed funds rate has exceeded our estimate of equilibrium (Chart 4). Tight monetary policy isn’t a sufficient condition for a recession – expansions continued for six more years despite tight policy in the mid-‘80s and mid-'90s – but it is a necessary one. Our indicator will not definitively signal an approaching recession until monetary conditions turn restrictive. Chart 4... But The Fed Is Nowhere Near Inducing A Recession Bottom Line: In our view, the yield curve and the LEI both represent yellow lights, though the LEI has a greater likelihood of turning red, especially in the wake of COVID-19. Monetary policy is unambiguously green, however, and we will not conclude that a recession is imminent until the Fed deliberately attempts to rein in the economy. Bolstering Theory With Observation A potential shortcoming of our recession indicator is its reliance on a theoretical concept. The equilibrium (or natural) rate of interest cannot be directly observed, so our judgment of whether monetary policy is easy or tight turns on an estimate. To bolster our assessment of whether or not the expansion can continue, we have been tracking the drivers of the main components of US output. Going back to the GDP equation from Introductory Macroeconomics, GDP = C + I + G + (X - M), we look at the forces supporting Consumption (C), Investment (I) and Government Spending (G). (Because the US is a comparatively closed economy in which trade plays a minor role, we ignore net exports (X-M).) Consumption is by far the largest component, accounting for two-thirds of overall output, while investment and government spending each contribute a sixth. As critical as consumption is for the US economy, it is not the whole story; smaller but considerably more volatile investment is capable of plunging the economy into a recession on its own. The Near-Term Outlook For Consumption Chart 5Labor Market Slack Has Been Absorbed Consumption depends on household income, the condition of household balance sheets, and households’ willingness to spend. The labor market remains extremely tight, with the unemployment rate at a 50-year low, and “hidden” unemployment dwindling as the supply of discouraged (Chart 5, top panel) and involuntary part-time workers (Chart 5, bottom panel) has withered. The prime-age employment-to-population ratio trails only the peak reached during the dot-com era (Chart 6), which bodes well for household income. The historical correlation between the prime-age non-employment-to-population ratio and wage gains has been quite robust, and compensation growth has plenty of room to run before it catches up with the best-fit line (Chart 7). Chart 6Prime-Age Employment Has Surged, ... Chart 7... And Wages Will Eventually Follow Suit Chart 8No Pressing Need To Save, Or Pay Down Debt Households can use additional income to increase savings or pay down debt instead of spending it, but it doesn’t look like they will. The savings rate is already quite elevated, having returned to its mid-‘90s levels (Chart 8, top panel); households have already run debt down to its post-dot-com bust levels (Chart 8, middle panel); and debt service is less demanding than it has been at any point in the last 40 years (Chart 8, bottom panel). The health of household balance sheets, and the recent pickup in the expectations component of the consumer confidence surveys, suggest that households have the ability and the willingness to keep consumption growing at or above trend.   Household balance sheets are healthy enough to support spending income gains; there's even room to borrow to augment them.           The Near-Term Outlook For Investment Table 1GDP Equation Recession Probabilities Chart 9A Budding Turnaround We previously identified investment as the individual component most likely to decline enough to zero out trend growth from the other two components (Table 1), and it was a drag in 2019, declining in each of the last three quarters to end the year more than 3% below its peak. We expect it will hold up better this year, however, as the capital spending intentions components of the NFIB survey of smaller businesses (Chart 9, top panel) and the regional Fed manufacturing surveys (Chart 9, bottom panel) have both pulled out of declines. The trade tensions with China weighed heavily on business confidence in 2019, but the signing of the Phase 1 trade agreement lifted that cloud, and we expect that capex will revive in line with confidence once COVID-19 has been subdued. Government Spending In An Election Year Chart 10State And Local Revenues Are Well Supported Heading into the most hotly contested election in many years, we confidently assert that federal spending is not going to go away. Regardless of party affiliation, everyone in Congress sees the appeal of distributing pork to their constituents. Spending by state and local governments, which accounts for 60% of aggregate government spending, should also hold up well, as a robust labor market will support state income tax (Chart 10, top panel) and sales tax (Chart 10, middle panel) receipts. Healthy trailing home price gains will support property tax assessments, keeping municipal coffers full (Chart 10, bottom panel). Coronavirus Uncertainties The coronavirus epidemic (COVID-19) is unfolding in real time, generating daily updates on new infections, deaths and recoveries. Any opinion we offer on the economy’s future is conditioned on the virus' ongoing course. If it takes a sharp turn for the worse, with more severe consequences than we had previously expected, it is likely that we will downgrade our outlook. For now, we are operating under the projection that the virus will cause China’s first quarter output to contract sharply enough to zero out global growth in the first quarter. Our base-case scenario, following from the work of our China Investment Strategy service, is fairly benign from there. For now, we are expecting that the worst of the effects will be confined to the first quarter, and that the Chinese economy and the global economy will bounce back vigorously in the second quarter and beyond, powered by pent-up demand that will go unfilled until the outbreak begins to recede. Our China strategists continue to be heartened by Chinese officials' aggressive (albeit belated) measures to stem the outbreak, revealed in the apparent slowing of the rate of new infections in Hubei province, the epicenter of the outbreak (Chart 11, top panel), and in the rest of China (Chart 11, bottom panel). They also expect a determined policy response to offset the drag from the epidemic (Charts 12 and 13), as officials pursue the imperative of meeting their goal to double the size of the economy between 2010 and 2020. Chart 11Stringent Quarantine Measures May Be Gaining Traction Chart 12The PBOC Is Doing Its Part, ... Chart 13... By Easing Monetary Conditions If the economy is expanding, investors' bar for de-risking should be high. Bottom Line: Our China strategists’ COVID-19 view remains fairly optimistic, though it is subject to unfolding developments. Our US view is contingent on BCA’s evolving COVID-19 views. Investment Implications As we noted at the outset, we are not interested in the economy for the economy’s sake; we are only interested in its impact on financial markets. The key business-cycle takeaway for markets is that bear markets and recessions typically coincide, as it is difficult to get a 20% decline at the index level without a meaningful decline in earnings, and earnings only decline meaningfully during recessions. No recession means no bear market, and it also means no meaningful pickup in loan delinquencies and defaults. The bottom line is that it is premature to de-risk while the expansion remains intact. We reiterate our recommendation that investors should remain at least equal weight equities in balanced portfolios, and at least equal weight spread product within fixed income allocations, though we may turn more cautious as we learn more about the progression of COVID-19.   Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see the August 13, 2018 US Investment Strategy Special Report, "How Much Longer Can The Bull Market Last?" available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 2 We use the 3-month/10-year segment instead of the more common 2-year/10-year because the 3-month bill is a cleaner proxy for short rates than the 2-year note, which incorporates estimates of the Fed’s future actions.
A broad-based rally in the US dollar is a risk to a bullish euro view. According to BCA Research's Foreign Exchange Strategy service, that risk could catalyze a fall towards 1.03-1.04. The possibility of either a synchronized recovery led by the US or a…
BCA Research may anticipate US yields to rise this year, but the upside is likely to be capped at 2.25%. The main factor driving the annual return of Treasurys is the Fed’s policy surprise, i.e. how hawkish or dovish the Fed turns out to be, relative to what…
Overweight Investors tend to overreact to events such as virus epidemics, but we deem that such fears typically create trading opportunities, especially in the hardest-hit sectors. Similar to hotels (that we upgraded to neutral last week), airlines are part of the tourism-related industries that have suffered disproportionately. Were we not overweight the S&P airlines index, we would not hesitate to initiate such a position. True, consumer and business demand for air transportation services will come under pressure in the near-term, however, looking further out such demand destruction will likely prove transitory. The chart on the right highlights that the cyclical demand backdrop is robust for the US airline industry. Overall consumer outlays jumped recently, PCE services momentum is perking up, airfare PCE is outpacing overall consumer spending – an impressive feat – and consumer confidence is perched near cycle highs sustaining a wide gap with relative share prices. Bottom Line: Stay overweight the S&P airlines index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG S5AIRLX – LUV, DAL, UAL, AAL, ALK. For additional details please refer to this Monday’s Weekly Report.  
Highlights The breakout in the DXY indicates the investment universe could become precarious. The euro could fall to 1.04 on such an outcome. The yen and Swiss franc should outperform in this environment, barring recent weakness in the Japanese currency. This will catalyze the Swiss National Bank to start weaponizing its currency. EUR/CHF could first undershoot 1.06 but will then become very attractive. We were stopped out of long AUD/CAD for a loss of 3%. Weighing In On Recent Market Developments The rally in the dollar has been broad-based, with the DXY index threatening to break above 100. What is peculiar about this rally is that it is not driven by relative fundamentals, but rather by 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-1). The risk is that as a momentum currency, the surge in the dollar triggers a negative feedback loop that tightens financial conditions in emerging markets, curtailing a key source of global demand (Chart I-2). Chart I-1Dollar Up, Rate Differentials Down Chart I-2A Strong Dollar Could Lead To Debt Deflation The most recent TIC data from the US Treasury confirmed that inflows into domestic bonds have surged, especially driven by private concerns. These inflows have been huge enough to alter the structural downtrend of outflows (Chart I-3). Given that hedged yields are currently unattractive for non-US investors, these flows are also a bet on an appreciating dollar. This fits anecdotal evidence that today’s sharp drop in the yen was driven by private investors, stampeding out of the local market, into the safety of US Treasurys and other assets. Chart I-3Positive Momentum Into US Treasurys We have elaborated in numerous reports why the risks to the dollar are to the downside, including expensive valuation and lopsided positioning. However, these obstacles fall to the wayside in a risk-off environment. As such, for risk management purposes, we are closing our short DXY position today for a loss of 2.5%. Bottom Line: The breakout in the dollar is at risk of becoming self-reinforcing in the near term. Stand aside on the DXY for now. Thought Experiment On A Few Scenarios Different market participants have taken different views on the durability and potential impact of the COVID-19 outbreak. Equity market indices in general are looking through a potential blip in the Q1 data on the assumption that the Q2 recovery will be V-shaped and powerful. The peak in momentum of new cases outside of Hubei province as well as a less-alarming death rate compared with the SARS episode certainly supports this view (Chart I-4). Chart I-4ACases Outside The Epicenter Have Peaked For Now Chart I-4BCases Outside The Epicenter Have Peaked For Now The disconnect has been in the dismal performance of procyclical currencies. SEK/JPY, a key barometer of greed versus fear in financial markets, is near capitulation lows, despite secular highs for the stock-to-bond ratio (Chart I-5). Meanwhile, the EUR/USD has once again begun to inflect lower, continuing a trend in place since the beginning of 2018. Chart I-5Pro-Cyclical Crosses Are Pricing A Malignant Outcome This suggests one of three outcomes: Equity markets are correct to price in a benign scenario, with an eventual synchronized growth recovery led by the US (Chart I-6A). This is dollar bullish. Currency markets are right to be pricing in a catastrophic fallout in growth, with anything linked to China/global growth getting slaughtered. This is also dollar bullish. The bond markets are spot on in pricing in a goldilocks scenario, where rates stay low and non-US markets lead an eventual recovery (Chart I-6B). This is dollar bearish. Chart I-6AEquity Markets Are Pricing A Benign Outcome Chart I-6BEquity Markets Are Pricing A Benign Outcome Bottom Line: Two of three scenarios lead to a higher US dollar. For most developed market participants, the adjustment towards a higher dollar would have to occur through a lower euro, given its weight in the DXY index. How Low Could The EUR/USD Fall? The possibility of either a synchronized recovery led by the US or a catastrophic fallout to growth is certainly valid for the euro area. Chart I-7 plots relative GDP growth between the two regions. The conclusion is very evident: The collapse in the euro since the financial crisis has been driven by falling growth differentials between the Eurozone and the US. Based on higher-frequency indicators, this remains the case as of January – the ZEW survey showed that the expectations component for euro area activity slowed markedly, while that of the US improved. In the absence of a synchronized pickup in global growth, a weaker exchange rate helps.  One way to arrest the rising growth divergence between the euro area and the US is to lower the cost of capital in the entire Eurozone, such that it makes sense even for the less-productive peripheral countries to borrow and invest. This will boost productivity, lifting the neutral rate. This has certainly been the case. Bond yields in peripheral Europe are collapsing relative to those in Germany. And, as expected, investment spending in the periphery is also picking up, which should close the productivity gap with the core countries (Chart I-8). Unfortunately, for the small, open countries that characterize the euro area, external demand is also needed to transform those productivity gains into profits Chart I-7Weak Growth Will Pressure ##br##The Euro Chart I-8Investment Spending Was Strong Going Into The Crisis In the absence of a synchronized pickup in global growth, a weaker exchange rate helps. Our intermediate-term timing model, which has been back-tested as a tool for profitably hedging portfolios, suggests the euro is cheap, but not excessively so. Medium-term bottoms have usually occurred when the euro is around 5% cheaper than current levels, or around 1.03-1.04 (Chart I-9). Since the peak in global trade in 2011, one of the few ways for countries to expand their trade pie has been via a “beggar thy neighbor” policy. This is even more important for the euro area, if the Phase One trade deal between the US and China results in less purchases of European machinery, cars, and aircraft. Coupled with a hiccup in Chinese growth in Q1, the euro will have to be the mechanism of adjustment. The European Central Bank has one powerful tool to ensure this occurs: quantitative easing. By crowding out locals from the domestic fixed-income market, investors will have to flock to either equities or foreign securities. This will weigh on the euro. This is especially the case since quantitative easing from the ECB is open-ended, while that from the Federal Reserve (not-QE) is not. Eventually, investors might begin to front-run the relative expansion in the ECB’s balance sheet. Since the peak in global trade in 2011, one of the few ways for countries to expand their trade pie has been via a “beggar thy neighbor” policy.  Chart I-10 shows that a rising basic balance in the euro area has been a key mechanism in preventing a further drop in the euro. This will change in the case of a catastrophic fallout to growth. Chart I-9The Euro Is Cheap, But Not A ##br##Screaming Buy Chart I-10A Positive Basic Balance Has Prevented A Much Lower Adjustment Eventually, all trends reverse, and there will be a pickup in growth, led by more growth-sensitive economies. Given both the internal and exchange rate adjustments in the euro area, the common-currency zone will be primed to benefit. The euro tends to be largely driven by pro-cyclical flows, and European equities, especially those in the periphery, are already trading at some of the cheapest cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings multiples in the developed world. Watch earnings revisions for euro zone equities versus the US. They tend to firmly lead the euro by about 9-to-12 months (Chart I-11). Chart I-11Watch Earnings Revisions For The Next EUR/USD Move Bottom Line: There is near-term downside to the EUR/USD towards 1.03. The SNB And The Franc The franc has been in a bull market against pretty much every European currency since the onset of the global growth slowdown, with the latest developments only supercharging that trend. The worst-case scenario for Switzerland is a global growth fallout, since the valuation starting point for the franc is expensive, not only vis-à-vis the euro (Chart I-12), but even more so against the Swedish krona and  Norwegian krone. So, the key question for the franc is the pain threshold for the SNB to step up intervention. Chart I-12The Franc Is Getting Incrementally Expensive The first mandate of the Swiss National Bank is price stability, consistent with inflation at 2%. On this front, it has clearly underdelivered. The central bank expects inflation to gradually pick up to 1.2% by 2023, but the backdrop for prices in Switzerland has been sub-1% for much of the post-crisis period (Chart I-13). Meanwhile, as a small, open economy, tradeable goods prices are important for domestic inflation, and import prices are deflating by over 1.9% year-on-year, in part driven by a strong currency (Chart I-14). If left unchecked, this could begin to un-anchor inflation expectations, leading to a negative feedback loop that the SNB will likely find very difficult to lean against. Chart I-13SNB Forecasts May Not Be Realized Soon Chart I-14The Risk From A Strong Franc Is Deflation Domestically, the Swiss economy was holding up well, but it is now an open question as to how much longer it can continue to defy the pull of a slowing external sector. As a highly export-driven country, the manufacturing sector usually dictates trends in the overall Swiss economy (Chart I-15). Sentiment indicators such as the ZEW expectations component were perking up ahead of the onset of COVID-19. It is now a sure bet that these will relapse in the coming months. More importantly, the impact on Switzerland might be bigger relative to its trading competitors, given the expensive franc. It is now an open question as to how much longer Switzerland can continue to defy the pull of a slowing external sector.  A key barometer for the SNB will be exports. Export volumes are already deflating (Chart I-16), yet the trade balance is still benefiting from the large share of precious metals exports, which are currently experiencing a terms-of-trade boost. This will not last forever, given the falling market share of precious metals in the Swiss trade balance Chart I-15How Long Can Employment Defy Gravity Chart I-16A Lower Franc Will Support Export Volumes There is a new twist for “operation weak franc.” The US Treasury department has put Switzerland on the currency-manipulator watch list. In general, the SNB is reticent on the issue of currency intervention, stating only that it intervenes to counteract negative effects on inflation and exports from an overly expensive franc. But it is encouraging that sight deposits at local banks started to accelerate at USD/CHF 0.96 (Chart I-17) and the SNB is also likely to act if EUR/CHF meaningfully breaks below 1.06. Economically, the SNB has to walk a fine line between a predominantly deflationary backdrop in Switzerland and a rising debt-to-GDP ratio that pins it among the highest in the G10. The good news is that a lot of the imbalances resulting from excess liquidity in recent years are being addressed. The housing market is a case in point. Growth in rental housing units, which usually constitute the bulk of investment homes, is deflating, which contrasts favorably with growth in owner-occupied homes (Chart I-18). Macro prudential measures such as a cap on second homes as well as stricter lending standards have helped. Meanwhile, a slowdown in the working-age population in Switzerland has neutered a meaningful source of demand. Chart I-17The SNB Is Stepping Up Intervention Chart I-18A Healthy Housing Adjustment     Bottom Line: We are lowering our limit-buy on EUR/CHF to 1.05 to account for a potential undershoot. Housekeeping We were stopped out of our long AUD/CAD trade for a loss of 3.0%. As highlighted above, currency markets are beginning to price in a malignant scenario for global growth, where anything non-US gets decimated. In such an environment, the best policy is to stand aside.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the US have been mostly positive: Retail Sales excluding autos grew by 0.3% month-on-month compared to 0.2% in January. Industrial production contracted further by 0.3% month-on-month in January. The Michigan consumer sentiment index increased to 100.9 from 99.8 in February. The core producer price index grew by 1.7% in January, from 1.1% in December. Housing starts decreased to 1.57 million from 1.63 million, while building permits increased to 1.55 million from 1.42 million in December. The DXY index appreciated by 0.8% this week. As a momentum currency, the rise could become self-reinforcing. Stand aside on DXY. Report Links: Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 Portfolio Tweaks Before The Chinese New Year - January 24, 2020 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Recent data in the euro area have been negative: The trade balance increased to EUR 22.2 billion, on a seasonally adjusted basis, from EUR 19.1 billion in December. GDP grew by 0.9% year-on-year in Q4 2019, slowing from 1.2% the previous quarter. ZEW economic sentiment declined to 10.4 from 25.6 in February. The current account surplus decreased to EUR 32.6 billion from 35.2 billion in December. Construction output contracted by 3.7% year-on-year in December, from growth of 1.4% the previous month. The euro depreciated by 0.5% against the US dollar this week. The disappointing ZEW numbers for the Eurozone and Germany and concerns about persistently low growth were a major headwind for the euro this week. Report Links: Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 On Money Velocity, EUR/USD And Silver - October 11, 2019 A Few Trade Ideas - Sept. 27, 2019 Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan have been negative: GDP contracted by 1.6% quarter-on-quarter in Q4 2019, compared to growth of 0.4% the previous quarter. Industrial production contracted by 3.1% year-on-year in December. Capacity utilization decreased to -0.4% in December. The merchandise trade balance fell to a deficit of JPY 224.1 billion in January. Machinery orders contracted by 3.5% year-on-year in December. Imports contracted by 3.6% and exports contracted by 2.6% year-on-year in January. The Japanese yen depreciated by 1.9% against the US dollar this week. Domestic data was very disappointing, with GDP contracting more than expected. Meanwhile technical factors such as portfolio flows were also responsible. That said, short USD/JPY remains cheap insurance. Report Links: Building A Protector Currency Portfolio - February 7, 2020 Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 Portfolio Tweaks Before The Chinese New Year - January 24, 2020 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the UK have been mixed: The Rightmove house price index grew by 2.9% year-on-year in February. The ILO unemployment rate remained flat at 3.8% in December. The growth in average earnings including bonuses slowed to 2.9% from 3.8% in December. The CPI grew by 1.8% while the retail price index grew by 2.7% year-on-year in January. Retail sales grew by 0.8% year-on-year in January. The British pound depreciated by 1.3% against the US dollar this week. The key worry for incoming BoE governor Andrew Bailey is a stagflationary environment, with increases in inflation driven by weak business investment and productivity growth. Stand aside on GBP for now. 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 six month annualized growth rate in the Westpac leading index fell to -0.46% from -0.28% in January. The wage price index grew by 2.2% year-on-year in Q4, staying flat from the previous quarter. The unemployment rate increased to 5.3% from 5.1% in January. The Australian Dollar depreciated by 1.4% against the US dollar this week. Much of the decline was driven by the perceived dovish tone of the minutes from the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) February meeting. The RBA’s primary concerns were slow consumption growth and the effects of the bushfires on growth in the near-term.  However, the housing market, led by Sydney and Melbourne, is picking up quickly. We remain positive AUD/USD but will stand aside if it breaches 60 cents. 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 mixed: Visitor arrivals declined by 0.2% year-on-year in December. The ANZ monthly inflation gauge remained flat at 3.2% year-on-year in January, The REINZ house price index grew by 0.3% month-on-month in January. The Global Dairy Trade price index declined 2.9% in February. The New Zealand dollar depreciated by 1.6% against the US dollar this week. Dairy trade was hampered by weak demand from China and Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern warned of a negative impact on GDP growth in the first half of 2020 from Covid-19.  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: Manufacturing sales contracted by 0.7% month-on-month in December. Headline CPI grew by 2.4%, while the BoC core measure grew 1.8% year-on-year in January. The Canadian dollar appreciated by 0.1% against the US dollar this week. The rally was driven by the surge in oil prices over the past two weeks coinciding with a decline in the number of new Covid-19 cases. While acknowledging the negative demand shock from China, our Commodity and Energy strategists currently believe that Chinese policy stimulus will help shore up oil demand going into the second half of this year. This will be bullish CAD. 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 Recent data in Switzerland have been mixed: Import prices contracted by 1.9% year-on-year in January, compared to a contraction of 3.2% the previous month.  The trade balance increased to CHF 4,788 million in January from CHF 1,975 million the previous month. Industrial production grew by 1.6% year-on-year in Q4 2019, slowing from 7.9% the previous quarter. The CHF depreciated 0.4% against the US dollar this week. The SNB has repeatedly emphasized that it stands ready to prevent rampant appreciation in the Swiss franc which could hurt exports. Report Links: Currency Market Signals From Gold, Equities And Flows - January 31, 2020 Portfolio Tweaks Before The Chinese New Year - January 24, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 There was scant data out of Norway this week: The trade balance decreased to NOK 21.2 billion in January from NOK 25.6 billion the previous month. The Norwegian krone depreciated by 0.7% against the US dollar this week. The past two weeks saw a remarkable rally in oil prices, which should help the petrocurrency, but a strong dollar has weighed on NOK/USD. However, our NOK/EUR position, a part of our long petrocurrencies basket trade, has benefitted from the oil rally and weakness in the euro. In an annual speech this week, Governor Olsen of the Norges Bank stressed the need for Norway to decrease reliance on the sovereign wealth fund and transition to a less oil-dependent economy. In the long run, this could mean krona leaving behind the “petrocurrency” moniker. 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 Recent data in Sweden have been negative. The unemployment rate increased to 7.5% in January from 6% the previous month. The CPI grew by 1.3% year-on-year in January, compared to 1.8% the previous month. The Swedish krona depreciated by 1.9% against the US dollar this week. In the February monetary policy report released last week, the Riksbank revised down inflation forecasts due to lower energy prices in 2020. However, they expect this to be a transitory shock and see inflation moving closer to 2% once it subsides. Although the krona depreciated on the unemployment and inflation data this week, it looks unlikely to be enough for the Riksbank to change its policy stance. 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